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:More Steps V ATICAN CITY (NC) .:.... The'striking new changes in the Mass made by the in struction of the Vatican Liturgy ,Commission aim at stressing the community nature of Christian worship and taking full advantage of the liturgy's educational or formative possi bilities.. The new changes, which go into effect March 7, 1965, the first Sunday of Lent, must be regarded 'as a preliminary step in the overall liturgical reform decreed last December by the
Fr. Hackett
The CHOR
In
Mass Revision
Second Vaflcan r!ouncil. All priests exercising the fac ulties of the Diocese of Fall River will meet on Tuesday. Nov. io, at 3 o'clock in the audi torium of Jesus Mary Academy, Fall River, for a Conference dealing with the new liturgical changes. Rev. John H. Hackett, vice chancellor and secretary to the Most Reverend Bishop, will speak on "The Constitution on the Liturgy and the New Ritual". Rt. Rev. John j. Hayes, pastor of Ho~y Name Church, New
Music Workshop Set at Stonehill
College, Nov. 11
A workshop oli Music in the Renewal of the Liturgy will be held for parish priests parish organists, and parish ·:r choir directors of New England Wednesday, Nov. 11, at Stone hill College, North Easton. The program will begin at 10 o'clock with a general session at which the nature of the liturgical re newal will be outlined. In aft ernoon sessions detailed facets of the role of music in the re IT.PA"" newal will be investigated. The program is sponsored by the New England Committee of the National Liturgical Confer ence and the Music Department PRICE lOc of Stonehill College. © 1964 The Anchor $4.00 per Year The renewal of the liturgy of the Catholic Church e\lolving over several decades has re ceived special significance most recently by the promulgation of the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy by the Second Vatican Council. One of the seven chap Though important and momentous decisions have al-. ters of this document concerns ready been taken by the F'athets in Council, deeis.ions con itself with the role of music in cerning far reaching cOMequeIices for the future of the the liturgy. In addition to the world still face the Fathers. The Bishop~ had made an ex- important theoretical insights offered, several practical con ception to the rule and had Easte;n Churches Proposition siderations are suggested which deeided to di.scuss the mat- also came under strong criticism. be discussed at the work ters of the Priesthood and "Now the Bishops will, take up si).op. the Eastern Churches even the Schema entitled " The The Stonehill College program, though it had been decided to Church in the Modern -World" while not attempting to resolve simply vote on these subjects (No. 13). This is a schema. all the practical problems, will and not discuss them. The Priest- Therefore, it shall be fully dis attempt to offer guidance and hood Proposition was rejected as cussed-point by point-and a direction to the organists and it stood and sent back to its long series of votes, suggestions choir directors. The program is Turn to Page Twenty commission for re-writing. The Turn to Page Two
Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Oct. 22, 1964
Vol. 8, No. 43
Council Fathers To Treat Problems A.ffecting World
will
Catholic _Youth Week Begins Sunday Events throughout the Diocese will mark the open ing of National Catholic Youth Week this Sunday, the Feast of Christ the King. Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, Dioc esan director of youth activities, will celebrate a televised Mass at 10 Sunday morning over New Bedford Channel Six. It will be attended by area and Diocesan officers and chairmen of the Catholic Youth Organization, who will participate in dialogue responses. At 7 Sunday night Fall River area CYO officers will be in stalled in a ceremony at St. Mary's Cathedral, to be followed ~t Anawan Street CYO Hall by an awards ceremony and social hour. To be installed are James Gib ney, St. Mary's Cathedral parish, area president; Irene Gagnon, St. Anne'S, vice-president; Mark Mancini, St. Anne's, treasurer: Judy Gagnon, St. Jean Baptiste, secretary; Collin Matton, St. Anne's, publicity secretary. Also Geraldine Rapoza, st.
Mary's Cathedral, spiritual com mittee chairman; Michael Mc Nally, St. Joseph's, cultural committee; Louise Casavant, St. Jean Baptiste, social committee; Fred Campos, Santo Christo, athletic committee. At the Anawan Street center, awards. will be presented to the year's outstanding CYO person ality, past officers, and the top parish CYO unit. Tuesday and Wednesday nights at 7:30 a penny sale will be sponsored at the Anawan Street CYO by the area organ ization and units from St. Jo seph, Sacred Heart, Our Lady of Angels and st. Mary's Cathe dral. From noon to three Thurs day, Oct. 29, Father Sullivan will sponsor an informal lunch eon at the Catholic Community Center on Franklin Street for parish CYO moderators; and on Saturday night, Oct. 31 the ,De La Salle Academy band will play for the regular CYO dance at Franklin Street. Taunton area activities win begin with CYO attendance at 8 o'clock Mass SWlda)' mornfiig
at St. Mary's Church. A Com munion breakfast will follow at CYO Hall at 10 o'clock, with Robert Hill Jr., Diocesan spiri tual chairman, as guest speaker. Area officers will be installed at the breakfast. They are James Murphy, 'Sacred Heart parish, president; Rosemary Gallagher, Sacred Heart, vice-president; Jay Hill, St. Mary's, treasurer; Turn to Page Twenty
Msgr. Hayes
Bedford, wil'l speak on "The Constitution on the Liturgy and the New Missal". . The Vatican 'instruction has simplified the beginning and the end of Mass. Psalm 42 in the preparatory prayers as said by the priest and the server will be dropped. The Mass will end at the blessing, with the last Gospel and prayers after Mass entirely eliminated. The s e omissions will not shorten the Mass very much, nor is this the intention of the change. The time saved is need Turn to Page Fourteen
Council Is to Restudy Priesthood Schema The Proposition on "Pries~ly Life and Ministry" had not been adopted by the Council. This is not because the Bishops have no true appreciation for their closest col laborators; just the contrary is empha'sized. By special ar. rangement, the Fathers de do justice to the subject of the cided to discuss the propo apostolate, a full schema on the sition before they gave their priest is required . . . it seems votes. The discussion reveal to deal only with the priest's ed a near general disap obligations, and this in a way proval of the Proposition as it will hardly encourage them Ol' stood. Why? inspire them to higher things .... Criticisms were: "Not too ae "too little too poorly done ceptable because it is not clear an insult to the priesthood •• a treatment of the bishops' "co< what its aim is . . . the aposto late depends so much on the laborators in a second rate man apostolate of the priest that to Turn to Page Twenty 0
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Asks Vincentians To Face Three 'New Work Trends PORTLAND (NC)-A call for «new blood" to rein vigorate" the St. Vincen,t de Paul Society was issued here br the society's international officer in charge of youth activities and new conferenoes. Such a transfusion is al ready under way in Europe, . . D T Calling this a "very delicate A mm e errazi, youth con- subject, especially in Anglo sultant from council general Saxon countries," he added: headquarters in Paris, told "But we need the gifts of women a' group of Portland Vincentians, in works of mercy. Certailli adding that the "new blood" , Turn to Page Fourteen , should come from among young people, women, and members of other faiths. He noted these three "new trends:" Youth. Formation of hundreds The annual meeting of th«f of youth conferences in western Europe-and some in other Catholic Pharmacists Guild of St. James of the Fall River Dio< countries-is returning the soci ety to its "youthful origins," cese will be held at 7:30 to said DeTerrazi. He recalled that night at St. Jean Baptiste church Frederic Ozanam was only 20 hall, Stafford Road, Fall River., when he founded the society in Officers will be elected. It is also announced by Norm. 1839 with five or six fellow an H. Caron, president, that the Parisian students of like age. annual Mass for living and de Women. A two-year experi ceased members will be offered ment is now underway for mer at 9:45 Sunday morning, Oct. 25 ger of the society with a paral lel women's society which has at St. James Church, New Bed remained separate, with offices ford, by Rev. Albert F. Shovel and administration in Italy, ton, spiritual director for both since its foundation in 1856, local and national pharmacists' guilds. DeTerrazi said.
Druggists to Hold Annual Meeting
Explanation'of Common Prayer Use Probably the best explan ation of the u,se of the com mon prayer with members of ~ther faiths has been pub B'!hed in the Catholic Transcript, official paper of the Archdiocese of Hartford. This article should answer many questions that have been propounded. The ar ticle, published with permission, follows: We have encountered among Catholics two aets of reactioRi
to two recent happenings abroad and at home. The happenings are: (1) the vote 'in Vatican Council II authorizing some prayers and services in common by Catholics 'and non-Catholics, and (2) Cardinal Cushing's rec ommendation that Boston Cath olics attend the meetings of evangelist Billy Graham. One reaction is of horror and dismay~ as if in both instances an aban donment, or even a betrayal, of Catholic principle \Yere invQlvrd..
The other reaction is of gratified assumption that ,at long last participation in any kind and form of,non-Catholic religious services is permissible. Both re actions are based on misunder- standing of what actually waf said and done in each case. The vote in the council merelT. was in favor of granting per mission to participate in a spe cial kind of prayers and services iP "proper circumstances." Tu T.urn 1lo Page Six
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Anti-Poverty Ad Is :Opportunity For'Service
THE ANCHOR-':Oioceseof Fall River-Thurs. Oct. 22, 1964
Catholic Bishops Sponsor t Annual Clothing Collecti.on ·~;I;<
WASHINGTON (NC)-The 16th annual Thanksgiving Clothing Collection sponsored by the U.S. Catholic Bishops in behalf of the needy overseas will be conducted in the more than 17,000 Catholic parishes throughout the nation during November. In a let that of, the previous ter to the bishops of the exceeds year, is, I think, ample proof eountry, Archbishop Patrick that our good Catholic people A. O'Boyle of Washington, look forward every November to chairman of the administrative board, National Catholic Welfare Conference, formally launched the appeal. The consistently generous re sponse of American Catholics to the annual Thanksgiving Cloth ing Collection has made it pos sible to bring help and hope, without regard to' race, religion or color, to millions of needy people in 55 countries of Europe, Africa, Asia and Latin America, the archbishop stressed. "This is surely a magnificent record of achievement for hu man ·betterment, carried out in the name of God and Christian charity, in which we have rea son to take proper pride and which is attested to by the ver itable deluge of letters of hum ble thanks reaching Catholic Relief Services-N.C.W.C. from every quarter of the globe," Archbishop O'Boyle stated. Value $21 l\lillion "The fact that the amount of serviceable used clothing, foot wear, blankets and bed linen contributed each year regularly
the Bishops' Thanksgiving Clothing Collection," the arch': bishop said. Last year, 15,028,424 pounds of clothing, shoes, blankets, bed linen and other materials, hav ing an estimated value of $21 million, were donated !o the Bishops' Thanksgiving Clothing Collection. Distribution of the clothing to deserving needy persons is made under American supervision by CRS-NCWC, the overseas aid agency of U. S. Catholics, which maintains relief programs in more than 70 countries.
World. Problems
Continued from Page One and amendments will be made before it is finally accepted as a result of Vatican II. This schema is particularly important because it involves the entire world-Catholic and non Catholic alike. Great hopes and expectations have been placed in such a discussion by Church Fathers and! interest in the sche ma has possibly even been Sheed Will Lecture greater in the non-Catholic world. At Paulist Center The schema does not deal with doctrine on the Church, Reve Frank J. Sheed of Sheed & lation, Ecumenism, Canon Law Ward Company, Catholic pub or Liturgy. And yet it deals with lishing house of New York and all of them. It speaks of civiliza London, lecturer and lay theo logian, author of many books tion, transformations w h i c h on theology, his latest being ''To characterize present day society, Know Christ Jesus," will be the the development of our civiliza second speaker, in the current tion under the influence of sci series of Christian Culture Lec ence and technical progress. tures at the Paulist Informa Vatican Radio pointed out that tion Center, 5 Park Street, Bos "it deals with the need for brea~ tOn, at 8:15 Wednesday night, the fear of war, the longing for Oct. 28. ' peace, the sense of unity-not .His tor' , vill be "The Luxury withstanding deeply rooted con of Knowing the Faith." Program trasts-but the sense of the cliairman will be'Rev. John J. unity of the human family which G'rant, associate editor of the, seems to be the goal toward Boston ArchdIocesan paper, The . which things are moving. Pilot. ' . "On the one hand, a develop ing civilization, i. e., a civiliza Necrology tion of men, Is curious to learn the attitudes of the Church; the. OCT. 25' Bev. Reginald Chene, O.P.,' Church, on her part;-precisely :1935, Dominican Priory, Fall because .she is. becoming more River. ' aware of herself-recognizes the Rev. Raymond .B. Bourgoin, necessary' contrasts, which she has with reality, takes an in 1950, Pastor, St. Paul, Taunton. tense i~ierest in it. For any OCT. 27 interests the 'Rev. Francisco L. Jerge. 1918, thing, human Church which is, after, all, com A$sistant, Mt. Carmel, New,Bed posed of men. ford. . .Church Contribution, OCT. 28 '''The Church wants to under "Rev. Alfred E. Coulombe, i923, Pastor, St: George, No. Westport. stand men and to make herself ~Rev. Stanislaus Kozikowski, understood by men. She wants O:F.M., COD-v., 1956, :Pastor, St. to let them know .her. mind on Hedwig, New Bedford. the trends ,of present day civil- : ization; on what 'is near their hearts. She wishes to offer men her collaboration, to help them to be lesS dissatisfied, more trustful. '''In all, the Church cannot for Oct. 25-8t. Michael, Fall get her own specia1 way of doing , River. things, i.e., in the light of the St. Patrick, Somerset. Go.spel. And _so the voice of. t!Ie Nov. 1-8t.' ThomaS 'M 0 r e , Church is an encouragement on Somerset. their paths. This exchange can Sacred Heart, Oak Bluffs. have far reaching consequences Nov. 8-8t. John the Baptist, for the future of the world,' New Bedford. 'which in turn is why great ex Notre Dame, Fall River. pectations are built .around this Nov. 15-St. Stanislaus, Fall schema." River. Therefore, with one eye on Our Lady of the Immac the Gospel, with a new aware-. ulate Conception" New ness of herself and her role, the ' Bedford. Church now turns to view thoSe problems that perplex so many' THE AIICHOI men today. She will attempt to" 'Second Class Postage Paid at fall Rive,. ' carefully, 'paternally and pastor- ' Mass. "Ublished every Thursday al 410 • h er View, . s-no Chrl'st's . H.ighlano IIvenue. Fall RIver M.ass. by the a 11y gIve Catholic Press of the Diocese 01 Fall RIver. views--on population, war, birth ' Subsl;rIIlIIOIl p~l~ bJ .mall, p~tpa!d $4.00 I}.t,ral,· :etc. .... _ _', '" . CO
DIRE NEED: Inhabitants in more than 70 countries where Catholic Relief Services-NCWC distribute clothing and other relief material such as bed and household linens are awaiting to be clothed by the generosity of Americans who might find extra clothing so that the above scene out side a hospital in Dahomey, new West African nation, might be repeated. NC Photo
This Week's Mass Ordo MONDAY-Mass of XXIII Sun FRIDAy-St. Anthony Mar y day after Pentecost. IV Class, Claret. Bishop and Confessor. Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria IiI Class. White. Mass Proper; or' Creed; 2nd ColI. St. Evar Gloria; no Creed; Common Pref ,istus, Pope and Martyr; Com ace. mon Preface. SATuRnAY-8t. Raphael, Arch- . angel. It Class. White. Mass TUESDAY-Mass of XXIII Sun Proper; Gloria; no Creed; . day after Pentecost. IV Class." Common 'Preface. Green. Mass proper; No Glo ria or Creed; Common Preface. SUNDAY - Our Lord Jesus, Christ, . King. I Class. White., WEDNESDAY - SS. Simon arid Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; Jude, Apostles. II Class. Red. Preface of Christ the King. Mass Proper; Gloria;. Creed; Preface of Apostles. THURSDAY - Mass of XXIIi: Religious Life Sunday after Pentecost. IV LOS ANGELES (NC) - A Class. Green. Mass Proper;'No total of 332 students from Cath or Creed; Common Preface. olic high schools of the Los Angeles . archdiocese have en tered seminaries and convents since graduation last June.
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av8iiable to Catholic agenciet and individuals under the pro visions of the Economic OportQ nity Act of 1964. This is the view of Msgz. Paul F. Tanner, general secre tary, National Catholic Welfare Conference, who announced the pUblication of a handboo~ "The, War on Poverty," by the National Catholic Coordinating Committee on Economic 6~ pQrtutrlty. .. , The' purpose of the handbook is' to alert private agencies and organizations to the important leadership role they can play in this expanded approach to an expanding problem and to suggest specific projects - that they might undertake by them selves and in cooperation with: other groups, both public and p.rivate. Moral Responsibility Msgr. Tanner pointed out that by this legislation "the Federal government has committed i13 resources, including soml'! finan ial aid, to join with those of the traditional public and pri vate agencies in waging war a gainst the chronic, poverty-bom social ills whih afflict nearly one fifth of the citizens of a country blessed by abundance.Citing the moral responsj.;. bility of those who ''have'' for those who "have not," he ex plained that "the act presentll opportunities for private agen cies and organizations to parti cipate and for needy indivi duals to benefit." "Everyone," he said, "who loves his brother can-indeed, must-contribute to this eHort to reduce deprivation and depen dence. What is required is the willingness, initiative, and deter mination to aid one's neighbor.-
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K- of' C 'Schedule Rites to Honor Christ 'the- ,King , The Feast of Christ the King will be observed Sun chly by Damien Council No. 4190, Knights of Columbus,
Taunton/ -Priest' Says Interest in Antiques Way ~,to Demonstrate EcumeniCal'Spirit
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Oct. 22, 1964
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See Differences
, , By Marion Unsworth "Just the archaelogist and the geologist look to'artifacts to ten them about ttre-' 'In Doctrine Main vious eras of the woi-ld, so we too must study artifacts of this area to, know about our Block to Unity ~n, local history. And one of our major artifacts in Southeastern Massachusetts is' the , NEW YORK (NC)-Dif. antique glassware, which was so instrumental in building up communities .such as Sand ferences in doctrine were wich and New Bedford," listed as the biggest obstacle St6tes Rev. John F. Moore to Christian unity in a sur of St. J oseph!s P.arish, Taun vey of leaders of member ton, in explaining his interest
as
Mattapoisett, with a' full day's schedule of events. 'Council 'members, together with the parish Holy Name Soci-' ety, will receive Holy Commu denominations of the National nion at the 8 o'clock Mass in in old and precious glassware. Council of Churches. "The study of glassware not Anthony's Church. A Com The survey of, Protestant and munion breakfast will follow at only reveals the story of the en Orthodox leaders was conducted tire community but this industry O· in K of C hall on Route 6, during the December, 1963, gen also was instrumental in the with Rev. Father Alves, a bomb eral assembly of the National development . of the Catholic 81" pilot in World War II, as Council by its' research and sur Church in this area, for many' guest speaker. vey bureau. Results were pub , Dedication' ceremonies will be Catholics came from Ireland and lished in the council's biweekly held at the National Wayside other European countries to public Information Service. ' Shrine of the Sacred Heart on work in the glassworks." Questions on a wide range of Damien Council grounds at 10:30, , Father Moore, who has an ex topics were put to 800 persons at when steps depicting the 15 tensive collection himself, par the general assembly. The re lnysteries of the Rosary of the ticularly of Sandwich, Pierpoint, port on responses concentrates' Blessed Name of Jesus will be and Waterford glass, is most in on the replies of the 260 official blessed. st. Anthony's Holy terested.in spreading his enthu voting dele'gates in this group. Name Society members will be siasm for antique pieces, espe In publishing the findings, guests of the council. cially among young adults, and' Information Services notes that The ceremonies will consist of feels "It is important to ,know they represent the actual a procession, a living rosary of our history, not for knowledge "power structure" 'from the the Blessed Name of Jesus, and of antiquarianism, but to under member-churches and that, also, an address. stand the present. there was a' "very close corre In accordance with the wishes spondence" between the replies Antique Exhibit of the late Pope John XXIII the of delegates and visitors. To make this history more Wayside Shrine of the Sacred Dlajor ()bstacles vital to residents of the Taunton Heart now encompasses three On the question of Christian area, at least, the young priest devotions-the main grotto and unity, those present were asked recently held an antique exhibit monument dedicated to the Sa to list the three major obstacles. and sale at St. Joseph's School, cred Heart of Jesus as Christ, "Doctrinal differences" was King of the Highways; the seven the first event of its kind to be placed among the first three sponsored by a C;ltholic church steps of the main approach to by 69 per cent of the delegates. the monument dedicated to the , of the area. "Dealers have been Other obstacles listed by the amazed that Catholics, partic seven mysteries of the short delegates included: Rosary of the Precious Blood; ularly a priest, are interested in Institutional competition, 47 antiques," Father said. "I even and the three interim steps to GLASS COLLECTOR: Rev. John F. Moore, St. Jos per cent; inertia, 42 per cent; recei ved one letter from a dealer be dedicated to the 15 mysteries eph's parish, Taunton, displays items from his glass col , fear of loss of freedom, 37 per of the Rosary of the Blessed addressed to st. Joseph's Epis lection. He recently organized antique exhibit and sale at cent; man's innate sinfulness, copal Church!" Name of Jesus. 24 per cent; world cultural dif parish school, first ever held by Catholic church in area. Afternoon Ceremony Father Moore feels Catholics ferences, 24 per cent; vested A 2:30 P.M. ceremony on the have been remiss in this field. belonged to the family for many community spirit and interest. property interests, 22 per cent; "This is a wonderful opportu grounds of Sacred Hearts Mon opposition of some leaders, 19 years. " We learn from them and have nity to meet different people astery, 17 Adams Street, Fair , "There is more connection be a means of communication with per cent; and distance in world haven, will include a procession, and sbow them that we are not tween English and Irish glass setting five per cent. them." Father is especially in sermon, outdoor consecration limited in interests and fields of and American. glass than we terested in the current enthusi endeavor. We can accomplish a and outdoor Benediction honor realize," Father said, "for work asm of young people for an great deal of good, something ers came from those countries tiques. "So many homes have ing the Kingship of Christ. In NO JOB TOO BIG vited ,guests will include Holy which is right in line with the with their skills, to Sandwich important pieces of our past; Name Societies, Legion of Mary, spirit of the Ecumenical Coun and New Bedford. I understand and, unfortunately, so much has NONE TOO SMALL Damien Council members and ell." that many of them had to be been thrown out because peo ,Circumstances, he thinks, ac other church organizations. sneaked into this country, for ple did not re~lize its value. In count in great part for previous English law forbade the emigra This will be the second annual the 1930's glass could be bought program honoring Christ' the lack of Catholic participation in tion of such craftsmen' as glass by the bushel. Now some single PRINTERS King sponsored by the Sacred historical societies and antique blowers to America. pieces go into three figures in Hearts Fathers under the direc circles. "When the majority of '''When the glass companies price." Main Office and Plant
tion of Very Rev. Daniel J. Catholics emigrated to the wer.e established, they were re ,Concluding, Father added, 95 Bridge St., lowell, Mass.
McCarthy, 58.CC., provincial of United States 100 to, 150 years sponsible for establishing whole "Ours is a heritage of pride in ago, other. Americans had been the Sacred Hearts Fathers, and Yel. 458-6333
communities," he continued. craftsmanship. Some of this here for generations, were very Rev. Albert Evans, SS.CC., supe "We owe one of our richest debts glass represents the work of four ' conscious of and. interested in to these companies. They formed rior of Sacred Hearts Monastery, Auxiliary Plants tradition, and, pel:haps most im Fairhaven. much of our past, and the more ' or five days for a single piece. BOSTON portant, were established finan we understand the past, the These pEtOple were true artists, CAMDEN, N. J. just as are oil painters and mu cially and educationaily. Catho more we understand the present. lics arrived· as immigrants, for OCEANPORT, N. J. Besides the glass makers" there siCians.As New Englanders, and particularly as Catholics' who_ eigners, and were - concerned were clock makers, furniture MIAMI have not seemed as conscious of Wholly with scraping a living. and cabinet makers, ship outfit tradition as others in the past, PAWTUCKET, R. NEW YORK (NC)-The Paul Life was very difficult for them. ters and the like." we can ite proud and knowledge 1st Press will receive the 1964 But we no longer have this PHILADELPHIA In the glass industry, the able of this past." Edith Stein Award in a cere excuse." Mount Washington' Company, mOny here Saturday, Oct. 10 Lo~al History' which was founded in the mid for promoting' Catholic-Jewish History was, Father Moore's nineteenth century, came first. .nderstanding. Late in the century, .the c:om The award will be presented, introduction to antiques. He pany' closed and Mr. Pierpoint, holds a master's degree in his at the annual Communion It. 6-Between Fall River and New Bedford
breakfast of the Edith Stein tory and also received a master a silvers'jl1.ith in the rear of the company building, started the Guild. Leon Paul, president of of education degree, at Bridge One Of· the Finest Facilities in Southern New England
Pierpoint Company, which was the organization which seeks water State College, where he studied with Dr. Jordan Fiore, in existence until the 1930's. , Available for:
to foster improved relations be "Unfortunately," Father Moore tween Catholic and Jews, will an expert in local history. Per explained, "all the Pierpoint BANQUETS • TESTIMONIALS
give the award to Father Neil J. haps the origin of his study pre dates his schooling, for Father molds and formulas were cleared McEleney, C.S.P., of Washing FASHION SHOWS and SPECIAL PARTIES
ton, D.C., editor of the Paulist Moore was brought up in New out then and thus can never be duplicated. This ,situation, of FOR COMPLETE INFORMATION CONTACT:
Press' Pamphlet Bible Series Bedford, site of the former course, makes' both Mt. Wash as the "primary reason" for the Mount Washington Glass Com WYman 9-6984 or MErcury 6·2744
pany and the Pierpoint Glass ington and Pierpoint glass very choice. He noted that the series valuable." contains the books of the Old Company which succeeded, it, Shows Community Spirit site, too, of the whaling industry, Testament, each with an intro which also has provided a study duction by a Scripture scholar, Returning to the importance ON CAPE COD and called it "a major publishing for historians, including Rev. of these crafts, not only in the Barry Wall of Immaculate Con area and elsewhere, Father said, event." ception Church in Taunton. Both "We have short memories and Father Moore and Father Wall forget what these companies are members of the Old Dart meant in the world. In addition, mouth Historical Society of mlmy of the craftsmen went to Wives of Knights of Columbus, work at the Pittsburgh Plate Fall Ri ver Council, will hold New Bedford. Father's collection began at Glass Co. and Corning Glass. Mr. their annual harvest supper Libby, who' founded Lib~y, from from 6:30 to 8 Saturday his ordination, when cousins night, Oct. 24 at Eagles Hall, from Ireland sent him altar Owens, Ford, origin~lly work~ cruets of Waterford glass as a in this area.,·' . Locust Street. Dancing will fol ',"The big thing is that b,. be gift. Soon. after that hii mother low supper; according to' an . AMPLE ,PA~KING traveled to Ireland ' an(" ' Wail ~i~g )ntereste9. 'in ihe~ -thinp ilouncement made by Mrs. Ro lend, Thibault, a:eneral chairmaa. liven se,veral.pleeell wbi¢A had , ,.-e s~o.. otheF1iI ~: w:e ,u:ve
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Oct. 22, 1964
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i
The Parish Parade
OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HELP. NEW-BEDFORD The Women's Guild announces an auction for 8 Saturday night, Oct. 24 in the church hall. Mrs. Bruno Tobojka and Mrs. John Izdebski will be aided by a large committee. Next regular meeting is set for Sunday, Oct. 25 and members will receive corporate Communion at 8:30 Mass Sunday morning, Nov. 8. ST. ELIZABETH, FALL RIVER New officers of the parish sodality are Mrs. Delores Am aral, president; Mrs. Lorraine Massa, vice-president; Mrs. Mil dred Cantin, secretary; Mrs. Alice Souza, treasurer. ST. JEAN BAPTISTE, FALL RIVER Members of the Council of Catholic Women and their fam ilies will attend a Communion breakfast following 8 o'clock Mass Sunday morning, Oct. 25. The meal will be served in the parish hall and Sister Maureen of Nazareth Hall will be guest speaker. Chairman is Mrs. Theo phane Lavoie. ST. KILIAN, NEW BEDFORD .The Ladies Guild will hold • eake sale at the Star Store to morrow and cakes may be brought to the parochial school basement between 4 and 8 this evening. The unit's annual tur key whist is scheduled for Wed nesday, Nov. 18 and a Christmas bazaar is set for 10 to 5 Satur aay, Dec. 5. ST. PATRICK, FALL RIVER A public whist party Is sched uled for 8 Saturday night, Oct. 24 in the school auditorium by the Women's Guild. Mrs. Mar garet Wimsett is chairman. A rummage sale is planned from 9 to 2 Saturday, Oct. 31, also at the school. An open meeting is planned for Monday, Nov. 2 and a cake sale for Sunday, Nov. 8. The annual Christmas sale will be held from'lO to 10 Saturday, Nov. 28 with a supper served from 6 to 8. SANTO CHRISTO, FALL RIVER Mrs. Mary Almeida heads a committee planning a turkey whist Thursday Nov. 12 under sponsorship of the Council of Catholic Women. HOLY CROSS, FALL RIVER PTA officers are Mrs. Helen Uchman, president; Mrs. Jennie Raskiewicz, vice-president; Mrs. Joan Podesky and Mrs. Norberta Abisla, secretaries; Mrs. Mary Silva, treasurer. The group's annual turkey social and cake sale is set for Sunday, Nov. 22. OUR LADY OF THE CAPE, BREWSTER A Christmas card sale is the current project of CYO mem bers. The unit has as leaders Thomas Fox, president; William Bohlin, vice - president; Kathy Conors, secretary; Conie' Swift, treasurer. SACRED HEART, FALL RIVER Mrs. Willard Piper and Mrs. Owen P. O'Shaughnessey, co chairmen, have announced that plans for the Women's Guild fashion show have been com pleted. Scheduled for 8 o'clock, Sun day evening, in the school hall on Pine Street, the various com mittees are headed by Mrs. Francis A. Gillespie, Mrs. James deMelo, Mrs. Benjamin B. Staf ford and Mrs. Kenrieth J. Kelley. CYO members will attend a hockey game in Providence Fri day, Oct. 30.
ST. ANTHONY, MATTAPOISETT The Rosary Altar Society has slated a Communion breakfast for Sunday, Nov. 1 in the church hall. Officers of the society in clude Mrs. Anthony Secia, pres ident; Mrs. Timothy J. Manning, vice-president; Mrs. Frank Wa caser, secretary; Mrs. Noah Gomez, treasurer. ST. JOHN BAPTIST, NEW BEDFORD The Ladies' Guild will hold its installation of officers and Christmas party Sunday, Dec. 13 at the Sail Loft, South Dart mouth. Mrs. Frances Ferror is in charge of arrangements. ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, FALL RIVER A membership tea will be held by the Council of Catholic Wom en at 7:30 Tuesday night, Oct. 27 in the parish hall. It is post poned from Tuesday, Oct. 20. SACRED HEARTS, NORTH FAIRHAVEN The annual Fall chicken sup per will be held from 6 to '7 Sunday night, Oct. 25 in the parish hall. Tickets are available at the rectory. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, NORTH EASTON The Women's Guild will have its installation ceremony at 4 Sunday afternoon, Oct. 25 in the parish hall. To be seated are Mrs. Marlene Owens, president; Mrs. Mary Rose Linehan, vice president; Mrs. Louise Neuman, treasurer; Mrs. Margaret McEn tee, recording secretary; Mrs. Grace'McDonald, scribe. ST. MICHAEL, FALL RIVER A committee planning observ ance of the Feast of the Holy Ghost next June will meet Tues day, Nov. 17. Advance plans in clude religious and social activ ities, a solemn High Mass and a band concert. ST. JOSEPH, FAIRHAVEN New members of the Associa tion of the Sacred Hearts will be invested at 7:30 Sunday night, Oct. 25. A sermon and Benedic tion will close church ceremo nies and a reception will follow in the parish hall. ST. LOUIS, FALL RIVER A bean supper and ~zaar are anounced for 6:30 Tuesday night, Nov. 17 in the church hall. In charge are Mrs. Wilfred St. Michel and Mrs. Gill Raposa. ST. ANNE, FALL RIVER An Annola and penny sale are planned for Saturday, Nov. 14 by the Council of Catholic Women. A turkey whist party will be held Saturday, Dec. 5 in the . school auditorium. ST. PIUS X, SOUTH YARMOUTH The Women's Guild will hold a public harvest supper in the church hall on Station Avenue from 5 to 7 tonight. Co-chairmen are Mrs. Richard Norman, Mrs. Norris Gladding and Mrs. Wil liam Griffith. The menu will in clude turkey, ham, meatballs and casseroles. The unit will hold a fashion show in November under chair manship of Mrs. Bernard Mul cahey of the Ways and Means committee and a meat-cutting demonstration will feature the regular November meeting.'
.OLDEST: Francesco Card inal Morano, 92, the oldest Cardinal at the council at tends sessions daily. A priest for 67 years, Cardinal Mor ano has served the Holy See in various scientific and ad ministrative posts since 1900 NC Photo. HOLY ROSARY, TAUNTON The Children of Mary Sodality will hold its annual Thanksgiv ing Dance on Thursday evening, Nov. 26, 8 to midnight, at the Roseland ballroom. Al Soyka will provide the music. S8. PETER AND PAUL, FALL RIVER The public is invited to a whist party scheduled for Mon day night at 8 in the Church Hall. Mrs. James Quinn is chair lady and Mrs. Markland is co chairman. A harvest supper will be served Tuesday evening at 6:30 in the hall and will be followed by a penny sale under the spon sorship of the Women's Guild. Mrs. William O'Neil will serve as chairlady and Mrs. Noel Harrison will be co-chairlady. A rummage sale is being spon ~ored from 9 to noon today in the parish hall by the Woman's Club. Mrs. James Wholey and Mrs. John Pacheco are in ,charge.
ST. MARY, NEW BEDFORD A hayride is planned for 7:30 Saturday night, Oct. 24 by the eyo. Members will meet in the ,~hurch parking lot. :,ACRED HEART, :S-ORTH ATTLEBORO CYO and CYAO groups will J-eceive corporate Communion at 1> o'clock Mass this Sunday afternoon, Feast of Christ the King. A supper for parents and members will follow in the I:hurch hall and installation of officers will take place. The parish Christian Family Movement unit will meet at 8:30 Sunday night. OUR LADY OF LOURDES. ~rAUNTON
The third annual harvest ball lor the benefit of the parochial school will be held at 8 tomor row night at the Cotillion Ball room, Taunton. Co-chairmen of the ball, Mr. and Mrs. Roland Forti and Mr. and Mrs. AlIjert Moitoza, will lie assisted by Mr. and Mrs. Peter Mazzoleni, tickets; Mr. and SACRED HEART, Mrs. Gilbert Furtado, publicity; OAK BLUFFS Mr. and Mrs. Harry Jacobs, re The Women's Guild will hold' freshments; and Mr. and Mrs. a father-son breakfast for the Arthur Botelho, booklets. Don Holy Name Society Sunday, lVIello and his orchestra will Oct. 25 at the parish hall. Ilrovide the music.
ST. JOSEPH, ~ FALL RIVER Senior CYO members will hold a cake sale following all Masses this Sunday morning. Cakes may be left in the school between 7 and 8 Saturday night.. The unit has been opened to ninth grade students who may contact Michael McNally Jr. for information about membership. Senior CYO girls' have organ ized a baby-sitter program. In formation may be obtained from Rev. James W. Clark or Kath leen Fitzgerald. The parish theology class for adults will meet at 7 Tuesday nights, a change from the pre vious meeting time of Friday night. A rummage sale is being held in the parish hall by the Wom_ en's Guild today and tomorrow. Boy Scout parents' night will be held in the school hall Sunday night and a Communion break fast for the Women's Guild will be held in the hall Sunday morning with Rev. Edmund T. Delaney as guest speaker. Parishioners will collect penny sale prizes from donors Sunday, . Nov. 1.
ST. MARY, SOUTH DARTMOUTH Mrs. Raymond A. Robichaud in charge of a penny sale and Mrs. Herbert Arruda are planned for Wednesday, Nov. II ey the Women's Guild. OlJR LADY OF ANGELS, FALL RIVER The Holy Rosary Sodality win sponsor a spaghetti and meat ball supper at 6:30 Saturday night. Dancing will follow. Mrs. Emily Correia will serve as general chairman and Mrs. Gloria Benevides .as ticket chair man. The Junior CYO will conduct a cake sale Sunday in the Church following all the Masses. A halloween party will be held for the Junior CYO on Thursday night, Oct. 29, and for the Senior CYO on Friday, Oct.
30. Following the 10 o'clock Mass on Sunday, there will be a meet ing "!1nder the direction of Jo seph O. Braga to make plans for a parish band. All interested grammar and high school pupils are asked to report with their instruments. A silent auction will feature the Council of Catholic Women meeting Wednesday, Nov. 4. A Christmas party is set for Sat urday, Dec. 5 by the unit. ST. MARY,
NORTH FAIRHAVEN
The Association of the Sa cred Hearts announces its annual mammoth penny sale and auc tion, to be held at 7 Saturday night, Nov. 14 in Oxford School auditorium. Proceeds will ben efit the church building fund. A special prize will be a stereo radio combination. Co-chairmen are Mrs. Leo Grenon and Mrs. John Wojcik. SACRED HEART, NEW BEDFORD The following slate of offi cers for the Parish CCD will serve for the coming year: Don ald Dufresne, president; Pierre Paradis, vice-president; Mrs. V. Rita Lefrancois,. secretary-treas-, urer.
Pope as Missioner To Visit India "Yes, I am a missioner." With such words, Pope Paul an nounced to the world that be would attend the International Eucharistic Congress in Born . bay, India, in early December. This he will do "as a missionary Pope, as an apostle on the move." The earlier journey this year to Palestine had been "some thing which hitherto has been completely outside the ordinary scope of papal apostolic minis try," the Pope confessed. "The Pope is becoming a mis sionary, you will say," the Pon tiff explained, "Yes, the Pope is becoming a missionary, which means a witness, a shepherd, an apostle on the move." New Beginning Such an announcement was termed the true beginning of Pope Paul's pontificate. The Rev.. Albert C. Outler, Protestant the ologian, Council observer and professor at Southern Methodist University said: "He (the Pope) has devoted two years to getting the work of Pope John done in the Council. Now he is starting en his own work with the most important restatement of global outreach of Catholic missionary activity, I should say, in the· last .200 years."
.Two New Priests Hold 10 Degrees onAWA (NC)-Two Univer sity of Ottawa science graduates. 'Who hold a total of ten degrees in four fields of learning, were ordained to the priesthood ia the university chapel. Fathers Rem i Vaillancourt, O.M.I., 30, of Maniwaki, Que., and Marc Aurele Vincent, 30, of Ottawa were ordained by Auxil iary Bishop Raymond Windle, of Ottawa. Father Vaillancourt hoI d 8 bachelor and master degrees in science, a bachelor degree and license in philosophy, a bachelor degree in theology, and an hon orary bachelor of arts degree. His master of science degree 'was awarded "summa cum laude." Father Vincent holds bachelor degrees in arts, science and the ology, a license in philosophy, .and is completing his master of arts degree in philosophy.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Oct. 22, 1964
Priests Using Irish TV Make Impact by Films
Pre'late Says Youth Delinqu·ency Entwined Around Vicious Circle
DUBLIN (NC)-A five-man team of young priests ()f the Dublin Archdiocese h-as achieved distinction for work in Irish television. After special study they considered the V'arious possibilities in the presentaton of relgious programs on television and concluded in a remote' mountain valley; that films might prove a manners at Mass; blessing of the .better source of popular re Aer Lingus (Irish air line) fleet. ligious program than elec Effects tronic studio work. The first of the Radharc (Gaelic name chosen by the unit to denote view or aspect) films was transmitted by Telefis Eireann on Jan. 12, 1962. Since then nearly 20 have been shown, mostly in half-hour programs, with the exception of one longer film. Impact These films made an immedi ate impact for their freshness, their imaginative use of film, and, above all, their down-to earth approach. Many people were surprised that films about religion could really be enter taining. This, indeed, was some thing of a revolution in Ireland, where for so long religion was something that was not talked about, and if it was, then only with a capital "R" and in rather solemn tones. The very first Radharc film set the key by attacking the problem of religion among work ing men. It went right into the heart of Dublin, into the pubs and tenements of what used to be Joyce's famous "Night town" and is now the area .from Amiens Street to Summerhill": en the north side of the city. 1t was a dramatic revelation of religion. ift life. It jolted many eomfortable ideas, yet never sermonized. Pictures and v@iees spoke for themselves more than pious parables. This has been the leitmotif of the whole series-an attempt to show the integration of religion with daily life, with the familial', the commonplace. The films were always practical; they looked at things everybody in Ireland knows. The catalogue of the subjects to date reads like an index to everyday Irish life: the surpris ing number of vocations in the eounty Limerick village of Doon; the Croagh Patrick pilgrimage~ emigration to England; the struggle of the small westerR farmer; the origin of penal erosses; life in monasteries and eonvents as illustrated in Kyle more A b bey (Benedictines); the enclosed retreat; the work: behind tourist development; the young offender in Borstal (re form school); honesty on fair days; religion at Irish holiday centers; building a new church
New York. Maps Attack on"Smut NEW YORK (NC) - A new and direct attack on the pornog raphy racket has been launched here by a citizens group formed by Mayor Robert F. Wagner. The Citize1ls Anti-Pornogra phy Commission said it will seek legislation striking at publishers and distributors of salacious ma terial rather than the small shopkeepers who retail it. Misjudge Standards At a closed organization meet ing. commission members agreed that steps must be taken as quickly as possible to "try to put a stop to the flood of por nography now coming into the city." Wagner, chairman of the group, told members that he hoped to "enlist the support of the community" through them. "It is my judgment, shared by Dthers," he said, "that the courts in determining these questions have misjudged the standards in
OOlUmunities such as·New YGl'k."
A series of films will be pre sented in eight programs during the Winter months. This series includes one on the poor, three on the work of Irish priests among emigrants in England, one on politics as a career, short items on monasteries and an item on the Catholic Social Center in Kilkenny. There is also in preparation a film deal ing with the life of Edel Quinn -the Irish Legion of Mary en voy to Africa-who died in Nai robi, Kenya, in 1944 and whose beatification cause has been in troduced. In summing up, it can be said that Radharc has achieved two very admirable effects: it has let in light and air on religion in Ireland, and it has deman $trated the enormous possibili ties for "shoestring" film mak ing generally. Besides it has given great satisfaction to tele vision viewers, Catholic an~ non-Catholic, who have all been impressed with the programs.
Pope Canonizes African Martyrs VATICAN CITY (NC)-Twen ty-two Africans have been en rolled among the Church's de clared saints by Pope Paul VI in a ceremony attended by 1,500 of their fellow Africans and by the Fathers of the Second Vat icaft Council. The canonization of the Ugan da martyrs struck three notes characteristic of the modern Church and the modern world: The emergence of the peoples of Africa (all 22 were Negroes). A fresh realization of the lay man's role in the Church (all were laymen). Emphasis on ecumenism (15 Anglicans died side by side with Catholics for refusing to give up the Christian faith and its moral code).
Canticle of Praise A chorus of 50 Ugandans sang a specially-composed canticle of praise in the language spoken by the martyrs themselves. It was composed by Joseph Kyagam biddwa. It was the first canonization of Africans of the Bantu race. St. Benedict the Moor was an Ethi opian while St. Martin de Porres was half Spanish. Laurean Cardinal Rugambwa of Tanganyika, the country neighboring on Uganda, acted as deacon of the Mass celebrated 'by Pope Paul. The subdeacon was Msgr. Peter Waswa, vicar general of Kampala diocese, Uganda. Two Ugandese prelates, Bishop Joseph Kiwanuka of Rubaga and Bishop Hadrianus Ddungu of Masaka, were also at the altar.
Urges People Help Rebuild Churches JACKSON (NC) - Bishop Richard O. Gerow, spiritual leader of Mississippi Catholics, has urged his people to help re build burned-out Negro churches ift the state. He praised' the Committee of Concern, formed here by an interdenominational group of religious leaders to solicit money, labor and material for rebuilding the burned-eMIt
oltul'ches.
5
SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Msgr. Frederick L. Stevenson, director of the Youth Department, Na tional Catholic Welfare Confer ence, said here much of the blame for increased juvenile delinquency is entwined around a "vicious circle" in which young people fail to find leader ship qualities in adults and adults are "imitating teenagers." He told 1,500 young people at the San Antonio Archdiocesan Catholic You t h Organization convention here: "Every young er generation is merely a reflec tion of its elders - and many teenagers today no longer look to adults for inspiration." The youth work leader cited a report by FBI Director J. Ed gar Hoover regarding the rise of rebellion and delinquency in the
nation's young people. The mon signor told his youthful audi ence: "This is not your fault." He said when adults do not pro v ide Christian 'guidance, youth has no example to follow. He added when adults adopt the irresponsibility associated with' teenagers, the "vicious circle" is completed. He called upon the young people to "break the chain of this vicious circle" and set the pace for Christian living.
Enrollment Record CHICAGO (NC)-The current enrollment of 11,757 students is the highest in the 94-year his tory of Loyola University here, Father James F. Maguire, S.J., president, said.
REV. JAMES A. CLARK
Boston Meeting
For Directors
Of PAVLA
"Papal Volunteers key to overwhelming problems plaguing America," said Rev.
Ask Not What Your
Country Can Do For YOU •••"
Ie• • •
are a human Latin James
Clark, Fall River Diocesan priest and PAVLA Eastern Region di rector, who announced a Thu,rs day, Oct. 29 meeting in Boston for P AVLA directors from 10 area dioceses. Rev. Raymond A. Kevane, national director, and Father Clark will conduct the day-long session at St. John's Seminary, Creagh Library, Brighton, at the invitation of Rt. Rev. Msgr. . Thomas J. Finnergan, Jr., Bos ton P AVLA director. A model diocesan P AV-LA program dem onstration and group discussions as part of the schedule. PAVLA sends skilled U.S. lay men in answer to requests from Latin American bishops seeking to alleviate pressing social, ec~' onomic and religious problems. Volunteers serve three years which include four-months lan guage and culture training. The Boston meeting will in clude Rev. James W. Clark, Fall River Diocese; Rev. John T. Ar senault, Portland Diocese; Rt. Rev. Msgr. Philip J. Kenney, Manchester Diocese; Very Rev. Msgr. William A. Genuari9, Bridgeport Diocese; Very ReI'. Msgr. William J. Mullen, Hart ford Diocese; Rev. Thomas Di vine, Springfield Diocese; Rev. Leo Barry, Worcester Diocese; Rev. Henry J. Shelton, Provi dence Diocese, and Rev. Omer L. Dufault, Burlington Diocese. Similar meetings are sched uled for Baltimore and Newark next Tuesday and Wednesday.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fa". River- T~urs. Oct. 22, 196.ol.
r~ristian
Royalty
Common Prayers
Apostolic Vo"aqe
Continued from Page One
Pope Paul's announced intention to visit India aL the
time of the Eucharistic Congress has touched the hearts
of men not only for the fact but for the language he uses
to describe his trip. He says that he goes as an apostle, a
missioner.
Pope Paul, like Pope John before him, is anxious to
show men the Papacy not as a power rivaling that of a
political earthly state but as the extension of Christ on
earth in the service of God and men.
The Pontiff has expressed many times his desire to -throw aside the trappings of Byzantine pomp and glory, the vestiges of princehood, and to appear before men as the Servant of the Servants of God-a title that the Popes seem to esteem over that of all others, reminding, as it does, of their role as Vicar of Christ for the glory of God and the service of men. During his coming trip the Holy Father will be seen
by many millions of men in his simplicity and in his apos
tolic role as a missioner, one carrying Christ.
Catholics everywhere should pray that the Pope's
apostolic voyage be a truly Pauline one in its ef~ects on
men.
PEAST
Devotion to Saints
The Council Fathers had ordered all pastors of souls . to correct any "excesses, defects or abuses in devotion to the Saints," and has called for the stress to be an internal devotion arid not external devotion. The admonition further insists that nothing be said or done to give the impression that devotees are giving to the Saints the worship that belongs only to God. As in many other of the statements of the Council,
the Fathers are not changing doctrine but are concerned
that it be understood in all its purity and exactness by Catholics and non-Catholics alike. All too often Catholics have been so carried away by a particular point of doc trine that they have done it the disservice of mis-stating it or speaking of it in language that-to say the least-is ambiguous and open to different and, at times, frightening interpretations. The Church's strongest weapon is truth. That is why she speaks to non-Catholics with the greatest amount of charity but always with the gentle insistence that they . must understand clearly exactly where she stands, for her . teachings are those of her Head, Jesus Christ, and she must be faithful to him. . Catholics, .tOo, must know that they should be exact in their beliefs and in the expression of them. Exaggera tions, oversentimentali~ing, carelessness-all these are not signs of devotion but are, albeit well-meaning, sources of confusion and even scandal.
OF
CHRIST THE KING
<ThnolA.CJh thE <wEEk <With thE Chu.nch By REV. ROBERT W. HOVDA, Catholic University
TODAY-Mass as on Sunday. "Whose is this likeness?" is the answer to all hypothetical ques tions, whether about Church and state or about liturgical reform or anything else. God's likeness, in the profound concept of Gen esis, is in the human person. And even sacraments are for people. The Council's reform is deep'y personalist, conscious all the while that the person is both in dividual and social and that if either aspect is minimized the person is diminished. TOMORROW· - St. Anthony Mary Claret, ·Bishop, Confessor. The bishop's great task is that of the faithful servant in the Gos pel: "to give them their food at appointed time." As he Along with rejoiCiing that Dr. Martin Luther King _ the preaches God's Word and cele has been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, men who believe brates the holy sacraments, he in the equality of all men before God and the law of the . breaks the bread of life for the land can appreciate all the more the justice of the award community. This is the notion of when they consider what Dr. King and Negro leaders like the bishop's meaning, office, .to which today's Mass him have kept in and brought to the integration struggle. function, calls us. The attitude of the Negro in his pressure to attain It is also the notion we find the status of first-class citizenship in fact as well as in in ·the Council's constitution on name and on paper has been outstan,ding for the Christian the sacred liturgy. When we pray for our bishops, then, we forebearance it contains. are praying not for indulgent True, there are some, as was evidenced in the riots bosses nor for shrewd adminis of this Summer, who have resorted to violence, but these trators but for effective pastoral were not advocates for integration or apostles of equality care. SATURDAY - St. Raphael, -they were hoodlums. Archangel. Today we celebrate The. serious and dedicated and many workers for the appearance in scripture of Negro rights have shown extraordinary patience in the one of those mysterious beings faoo of almost unbearable daily indignity and provocation. we call "angels." A creature of Had their leaders been men of less restraint and quicker God, of a higher order than the temper the history of integration in the last few years in human-he reminds us not only of God's glory but also of God's this country could easily have been written in blood and care for man. That such a crea violence· and hatred and unmatched terror. ture could serve as messenger But Christian perseverance have prevailed. Dr. King and epiphany. of God's favor to and all for whom he. accepts the Nobel Peace Prize have us is itself as mysterious as his very being. indeed a right to the distinction it confers. SUNDAY-Feast of Our Lord Jesus Christ, King. We can tell, of course, that this is a feast of modern invention, since it cel ebrates a static quality of the Lord, His Kingship, rather than a deed that God has done. All the traditional feasts of our pub OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER .OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER lic worship are feasts of action, of God's saving deeds: His com Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River ing, His Passion, His Resurrec tion, His sending of the Spirit, ·410 Highland Avenue etc. Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 Nevertheless, we can under PUBLISHER :stand this feast, too, in terms of Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD•. ,action, in terms of the exercise GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER 'of the universal lordship of the Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll . :risen Christ. "It was God's good MANAGING EDITOR :pleasure to let all completeness Hugh J. Golden dwell in Him, and throW!& l1ial
Peace Prize
@rheANCHOR
circumstances ar-e not defined. They are l~ft to the bishops to determine; and the permissiOll is entirely in the bishops' hands. It is not clear whether the indi vidual bishop is empowered to determine circumstances and to decide permissions entirely 0lIl his own responsiblilty, or wheth er a national conference of bish ops is to lay down norms for iUI membership to apply severally. It may even be that formulation. of norms will be reserved to a representative body of bishops meeting in Rome. ift short, the application of the council's deci sion (which still remains to be promulgated) is at present im possible and can only come after authoritative clarification. In any case, the authorization, when it comes into force, win apply to only a very special sort of interfaith service, such as has been virtually unknown hitherto and comprises shared prayers for the advance of Christian unity. Car din a I Cushing's recom
mendation is highly specific. It
is not, nor is it intended to be,
general as to persons or places.
He was speaking to the people
under his own jurisdiction. He
was suggesting that these people
hear a non-Catholic evangeli~
not that they participate in non
Catholic worship. He was en
dorsing one particular evangelist
who, in his judgment, preaches
nothing which is incompatible
wi.th the Catholic Faith. The
cardinal was not addressing his
recommendation to people not
under his jurisdiction. He was
not advocating participation in
religious services which are not
CatholiC'. He was not giving ap
proval of attendance at meetings
in which, for example, funda
mental, immemorial, and un
changeable Christian doctrine,
such as that of the Holy Trinity,
is attacked and its jettisoning
advocated.
to win back all things" (First Reading). "Whoever belongs to the truth listens to my voice" (Gospel). In a sense, then, this is a feast · of Christian witness, Christian · social action, of the Church's mission. For this is the task of : the worshiping community dur ing ·this age of the Church-to "win back" all things through · Him. His Kingship is not a forced domination, but an invi · tation to faith and free commit ment. This makes it not less real Therefore, neither the scandal
but more respectful of the crea :ture's dignity, an aspect of and fear felt· by some, nor the
assumptions that all restrictions
· God's love. are discarded made by. others,
MONDAY-Mass as on 23rd are warranted. The Church is
Sunday After Pentecost. We are concerned these Sundays, and not casting away its teachings
or its discipline. It is evidently
particularly in the Advent sea going to be possible, some time
son to come, with a climax, a · fulfilment, an ultimate manifes . in the future, for Catholics and tation 'of truth which we call the under certain exactly indicated circumstances and auspices, to Lord's "coming in glory." offer joint prayer for the ending One could not misunderstand of divisions and separations. this hope, this vision, any more utterly than to conceive it in This, it goes without saying, will be a welcome development, and some kind of anti-matter, anti time, anti-"this world" sense. It overdue, and it may be confi dently predicted that it will be is only a further testimony to but a first step, with further the Christian's basic respect for developments to follow. On the matter, his confidence in time, other hand, there is no sanction his love for the world God loves. whatever for Catholics to par TUESDAY-Mass as on Sun ticipate in non-Catholic forms of day. It is a sick person He heals, a dead person He raises to life worship, in churches, in assem bly halls of various sorts, in col again (Gospel)-so plain does lege or school chapels, etc. He want to make it to us that eternity is not some kind of Every 'ecumenical improve
anti-creation, something that is to be appreciated. But the ap
stands in opposition to the world preciation must be precise, and
we know. exaggeration is to be avoided.
These mircales are signs of the If exaggeration takes the form
fulfilment to come * '" '" when of unjustified horror and dismay,
everything we now know blos
it does great harm; no less great
soms into its full reality'" '" • is the harm when exaggeration
when "he will form this hum
takes the form of assumptions
bled body of ours anew, mould
that change has been wrought
ing it into the. image of his which in fact has not even been
glorified body" (First Reading). considered.
WEDNESDAY - SS. Simon and Jude, Apostles. Our Lord speaks of the 'world hating us, when He advises those chosen Mrs. Daniel Almeida and
to bear His message (Gospel), but not of our hating the world. Manuel Roque are co-chairmen
Our· fidelity and our resem of a joint Communion breakfast
blance to· Christ is· measured by to follow 8 o'clock Mass this
the extent to which we can af Sunday morning at St. Dominic's
firm with Him: "They hated me Church, Swansea. The bl'eakfa~
without cause" (Gospel). For our .mission·, like that of for members of Bis;hop Cassidy
the Apostles we honor today, is Council, Knights- of Columbus,
to the .world, to "build up the and St. Patrick's Circle, Somer
frame of. Christ's body, until we set Daughters of Isabella, will be
all realize our common unity through faith in the Son of held at VenuS de Milo restau
God" (First ReadinJ'.) J'ant.
Plan Breakfast
•
Thurs., Oct. 22,
BOSTON (NC)-The' Massa chusetts Supreme Court has dis missed two suits seeking to have Bible reading and prayer re stored to public schools.
public schools" to make clear that they serve a public pur pose. Father William M. Rochet superintendent for the Rochester, N. Y., diocese, "In most of our states," he said the term "parochial added, "we shall be a long time school" has taken on' some in obtaining justice in this re "rather u-nfortunate mean gard, because most state consti
of
1,500 Take Courses For Lay Cathechists CINCINNATI (NC)-A Ci~ einnati archdiocesan official has attributed a "phenomenal" response to new training cours es for lay catechists in part to a "sense of crisis" resulting from the decision to close first grades in Catholic parochial schools here. Father Jamees E. Shappelle, director of the archdiocesan catechetical office,' noted that nearly 1,500 men and women are enrolled in courses for lay catechists - several hundred more than the total number of instructors giving Confraternity, of Christian Doctrine courses in the archdiOCese a year, ago. Last year about 30,000 Cath olics pupils, about one-fourth of the total number, were in public grade in high schools. 'l'his year's figure has not yet been tabulated but is expected to be higher in view of the closing' of first grades in paro chial schools to save money and, personnel. ' .
Aid Retarded" RIDGEFIELD PARK (NC) A day study center to' help men-, tally' retarded children attain their maximum potential has been opened here in New: ~ersey' by the Mount Carmel Guild, so-, cial service agency of' the Mew ark archdiocese. The center will serve trainable children between the ages of i and a.
tutions specifically prohibit aid to schools operated by religious institutions, whereas the Federal constitution does not. "However, the way to correct this discriminatory situation is not by crying abOut it, but by beginmng now to plan for changes in our various state constitutions wherever t his might be necessary."
Slovaks Repaying Spiritual Debt CLEVELAND (NC) -
The state high court, in a 35 word ruling, cited decisions by the U. S. Su~reme Court against prayer and Bible reading.
MISSIONER IN PHILIPPINES: Rev. Victor Gaboury, Columban missioner to the Philippines, here officiating at wedding, will return next month for a year's stay in the United States. He will raise funds for Columban missions while making his headquarters' with his parent'S, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Gaboury, High Street, North Attleboro.
Ameri
cans of Slovak descent are re paying a century-old debt to, their native land which sent missionaries to the U. S. to care' for the spiritual need$ of their grandfathers and fathers. A new, partially completed seminary now operating in Rome is being built largely' through donations from U. S. Slovaks, although, ,con~Iibutions also are coming from Slovaks all over the world. The seminary's purpose is to train priests for missiOnary work in Slovakia-when they can get back. It is called the SS. Cyril and Methodius Institute, in hon or of the two brothers who were apostles to the Slavs 1,100 years ago. The institute now has 20 sem inarians, but when completed will have room for 200. The present student body consists of refugees or their sons from com munist:'ruled Slovakia. The seminary is expected to be entirely finished and dedi cated in 1965.
Bible Priest Makes Gift to Lutherans PITTSBURGH (NC) - Father John Lenhart, 92, O.F.M.Cap., regarded as one' of the world's greatest scholars of the Guten berg Bible, in an ecumenical gesture sent part of his Bible collection to two Lutheran sem Inaries. Recipients of the Bibles were ,the Lutheran seminary in Er langen, Bavaria,' and the'Luther an theological seminary in Phil,- ' adelphia. Besides the Bibles the gift included a copy of the first Lutheran Catechism printed in Pennsylvania, a history of the Protestant German Church in America and a biography of Martin Luther.
The bearded. Capuchin histo
rian works daily writing arti cles and books at St. Augustine monastery here.
Fo, Y ft••; r."
Study Marriages, Broken Homes MADISON (NC) - Financed
by a $1 boost in Wisconsin mar riage license fees, a state Advis ory Council for Home and Fam ily has been appointed to con duct a study of marriage and divorce laws, and the causes of broken families. One of the 16 members ap pointed to the council is Msgr. Edward M. Kinney, rector of St. Raphael's cathedral here. The council also includes' 'two other clergymen, four state legislators, two family court judges, two at torneys, a sociologist, a family court commissioner, a county corporation counsel, a county welfare director and a represen-' tative of a voluntary social wel fare agency. Effects 01 Divorce The council's job will be to: study the scope and operation of laws in Wisconsin and other states relating to marriage, ac tions affecting marriages arid support of children; exaIriine the need for future publicly and pri vately sponsored programs to promote wholesome family life, and to investigate the effects of divorce on public welfare costs. Appointments for two-year terms to the agency are made by the Legislative Council, an interim study group set up by the state Legislature. The coun cil will have a $24,000 a year appropriation to hire profes sion~l staff.
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Court Dismisses Prayer Suits,
TRENTON '(NC)-A Catholic school superintend~nt proposed here Church~s schools should, be called "Catholic
Ings." He told the Trenton Diocesan Conference of Parent-Teacher Associations that the word "pa rochial" gives the connotation ·of being provincial or' limited" and raises "the question of the proper function"'of civil and reli gious authority in the minds of many outside the Church." He said he believes there are Catholic public schoolS, Jewish public and Protestant : public schools and community-operated public schools. "All' these schools perform the' same public function and all should be given precisely the same standing in the community," he said. "We must consider our schools as positive contributions to the welfare of this nation/' he said. Rilrht to Title .
"They have a right to the title of public schools. They are not divisive and they do not separate any American children fro'm the so-called 'main stream of ~ie.' "Perhaps we have ,unfortu nately caused. the wrong inlpres sion. We do not keep our chil dren 'out' of the public schools, we rather put them in a setting where they will learn in an at nlosphere of Christian moral ity," he said. Father Roche described ade quate financial support of Cath olic schools as an "urgent prob lem." He said a part, of their support should come from public funds and he felt that state aid rather than federal assistance is, more important. Plan for ChanWe8 The northeastern and New England states, he s~d, can do more to help themselves than they could realize through fed eral aid. "We shouid beg~n to· think in terms of the. state aid rather than federal aid," he com..: ' mented.
7
THE ANCHOR -
Superin'tendent Proposes 'Catho.lic ."Public Schools~
Treasurer
142' SECOND STREET OSborne 5-7856
FALL RIVER
Donald A. Waite of Newton and Leo Kahian of Middleboro filed suits against public officials in their respective communities seeking to compel them to en force a 3OO-year-old state law which made daily prayer, man datory in schools.' . The state Supreme Court com mented only that "this 'statute has been held unconstitutional."
Make no-bake cheesecake the easy d~licious way with these, 3secret ingredients
NO-BAKE CHEESECAKE
I Crumb Mixture 3 tablespoons mefted butter 2 tablespoons sugar I cup graham cracker 14 teaspoon each cinnantOll
II % crumbs and nutmeg
I Combine ingredients. Press 'n cup of mixture into 8 or 9·inch I I spring fomi pan. Reserve remaining crumbs for toP. 'I 2 envelopes KnOll UnflavoredFillingI ta"blespoon femon jutce II I teaspoon vanilla I I Gelatine cup sugar, divided ,. cups Hood Small·Curd I eggs, separated Cottage Cheese, sieved I 2I cup Hood Milk . I cup Hood Economy All· I grated lemon rind Purpose Cream, Whipped I 1 teaspoon 1 Combine gelatine and *cup sugar in saucepan. Beat egg yoHts t and milk, together; stir into gelatine mixture. Stir over low heat I
untit gelatine dissolves and mixture thickens, 3 to 5 min. ,Re·
I move frpm hllat; stir in lemon rind, juice and vaniUa. Chill, stir. J
I ring occasionally, until mixture is' cool. Sieve or beat cottage
I cheese in electric mixer until smooth; blend in cooled gelatine I
mixture. Beat egg Whites until stiff but not dry. Gradually add I IJ4 cup sugar and beat until very stiff. Fold into gelatine' mixture; I fold in whipped cream. Turn into spring form pan. Sprinkle witt! I reserved crumb mixture. Chili untUfirm, 3 to 4 hours. I YIELD: 12 serviniS~1 I
; 6~"'''_'''''''_'I",el84. ~ ;
---------------
Wareham Chinese Family Aids 'Noodle Priest' Suggests Ideas for Hallowe'en Of Hong l(ong in 'Eff~rts to Feed Refugees
Costumes to Uninspired Moms
By Mary Tinley Daly Witches afld spooks, ghosts and goblins and M'I file ether pseudo spine-tingling paraphernalia of Hallowe'en are about to descend, at y~ur llouse and ours. From teenagers who want, to have a party-and nothing eould be easier than a party on such a night ' -to little bits wanting their found, are perennially success share of the fun everybody ful. Tho~gh t~e! require sewing • ' for theIr orIgmal appearance wants to be m the Hallow they last for years are suitabl~
e'en. Parade. We';e .yet to" meet a chIld who doesn t lIke to dress up" and some times the ones who are seem ingly most shy glory in the occasion more than the bolder types. They can express them selves by being Mickey Mouse er one of the . :Beatles or whatever. Trick or Treat The delight of presenting themselves at a door for tbe annual "Trick or Treat" and asking you to "Guess who I am!"' is a never-failing challenge. Providing those dress-ups is a never-failing c h a II eng e for mothers, as well,' but one that need not cause consternation. Encouraging a child's imagina tion in figuring out what he wants to "be" for the night is part of the fun, though steering that imagination along some what practical lines is also part of Mom's job. For instance mak ing an "automobile" out of a lit tIe boy would be a pretty taxing assignment. If you have an old trunk of duds from flapper days of the '20s, you have it made. There is truly something for everybody in such a treasure trove: monkey fur, dangling beads, chandelier earrings, plumes, feathers. Few houses nowadays, however, have sPa~~ to store such fun luggage, 80 it's up to Mom to do more modem improvisation. Some Ideas A few suggestions that hcwe worked at our house might be .. order here: One Of the favorites :lor • little girl who likes ti) look pretty, not funny, would be to go as "Night" - any old long black dress, studded with silver stars, such as teacher sticks Oft school .papers, and in her hair a crescent moon, cardboard eov ered with aluminum foil and secured by a headband. Clown costumes, we ItMIlt
for both boys and'girls and al low for wearing a sweater or even a coat underneath. The peaked cap can be bought at the five-and-ten or made from a piece of cardboard and painted. A "nurse" is. an 'easy one: w~ite dress and shoes, an apron, pamted red cross on an armband and a cap shaped of paper and stapled together. . A "nun" can be assembled even more quickly: black skirt of Mom's coming floor-length on daughter, black stockings in lieu of sleeves, towel for a head piece and a white cord around the waist. Another quickie and one that seems almost too trite to men tion is the "ghost" but like meat and potatoes, it is a never-fail ing source of fun and ever suc ceeding year the sheet and pH low-cased "ghost" has as much of a thrill "scaring" people as' his older brothers did. A "gypsy" and "dancing girl" -it's pretty hard to tell one from the other-can be dressed with bouffant skirts, a peasant blouse, teased hair with a flower stuck behind the ear and all the junk jewelry you can find. Comic strip characters are a limitless source'of matedal and an ingenious mother can, by studying the comics, concoct costumes to transform her favor ite children into thek favorite characters. This year, we assume, the Hallowe'en parade will be re plete with spacemen, moon landers, Beatles and political aspirants - all assortment 0« ehallenges. Anything goes on this would be eerie night-just 80 it's fun aRd·safe.
Protestant Groups Aid Novices Donate Blood
. . Mrs.Yue Joe,. an energetic. Chinese lady who with her husband operates the Chill'll .MaId ~~staurant.m ~areham, IS an outstanding supporter of Msgr.. John Romaniello fa ~nous. oodl~ PrIest .<r! Hong Kong. Mrs. Joe, who isn't a Catholic, first heard of'the JMo~sIgnOr.VIa .a teleVISIon program she watched last Spring. He is dil'eCtor of C th lie RelI~f SerVICes In Hong Kong a 0 and 'IS best known for his in troduction to the Orient of noodles made from Ameri (:an surplus foods. They have proved a solution to the prob lem of feeding the hordes of ]'efugees continually streaming into Hong Kong from Red China. Although born in California Mrs. Joe has very much at heart the problems of the Hong Kong Chinese. When she learned of Msgr. Romaniello. she pegan sending him contributions for his work. Her. efforts for Hong Kong have mcluded a clothing drive (with personnel at Otis Air Force Base lending her 'a build ing for storage until the clothes (:ould be shipped overseas), and ~l clambake, with proceeds going to Msgr. Romaniello. Others have helped her ef forts, she says, noting that friends gave a benefit dinner for her recently, with proceeds go ing to Msgr. Romaniello. A high point in Mrs. .Joe's . personal foreign aid program came last month when Msgr. Homaniello, en route to the Ecu ,menical Council, VIsited Ware ham to thank her ift person for her assistance. On 10 days' notice Mrs. Joe (lrganized a "noodle party" to welcome the prelate. Area par ishes cooperated in announcing it from their pulpits, she said, including St. Margaret's in Buz:" 2ards Bay and St. Patrick's in W'areham. ,Some 200 attended the party 2nd met Msgr. Romaniello and a total profit of $1350 was turned over to him. It will purchase a "Buzzards Bay Wareham" noo dle machine to turn out stiB J1llore noodles for Hong Kong'. hungry refugees. Mrs.' Joe said she heard last week from Msgr. Romaniello, '-lOW in Rome, 'wbo said he'el I!lever forget the Wareham noodle party. She and her fam ily, including a married daugh ter, intend to continue their aid to Hong Kong. Msgr. 'Romaniello, a Mary knoll missioner and native of New Rochelle, N. Y., was sta . tioned in China from 1928 until .1951 when he was expelled by the Communists. He served ill .}long Kong thereafter QIld it
IPSWICH tNC) - Twenty eight healthy novices at Our Lady of La Salette Seminary here wanted to donate blood to the Red Cross-but the bank was iR Beverly, 1'2 miles away. '" So Masons of the John ".r. Herd Lodge provided transpor Fund-Raisers tation. And Ascension Memorial Planned by St. Catherine7B Plan Tea, Tark Episcopal ehurch in Beverly • P'und-Raising Committee of Do Upcoming on the calendar of was used as donor headquarters. minican Academy, Fall River, Fall River Catholic Woman's "Everything worked out won are a Halloween party and, pot derfully," commented WillilllJ1 11llck supper at 7:30 Tuesday Club is a membership tea at I Sunday afternoon in the group's . Matous, heard of the Masonie njght, Oct. 27 and a whist committee. Rock Street clubhouse and a 'J'uesday, Nov. 17. Next regular talk Wednesday, Oct. 28 by Sis Jl1eeting k; 7:30 Tuesdav night, ter Helen William, Poor ClaN Assttinption D of lrov. :w. nun who Will serve in: a convent New officers of Assumptioa in Africa for leper religious. Circle, Fall River Daughters of St. Francis
Th~ public is invited to the lat Isabella, are beaded by Mrs. Ana ter event and slideS wi. be Hoar, regent; Mrs. Cecilia MellO, Residence
shown. . yice-regent; Mrs. Doris Azevedo. FOR YOUNG WOMEN
secretary; Mrs. Sally Trainor, 196 Whipple St., Fall River
treasurer; Mrs. eecelia Kelleher, Eq~ai School Aid Conducted by Francisca.
financial secretary. They will be SYDNEY (NC)-The delegates installed at a banquet at 7 Mon Missionaries of Mary
at the annual cOnferertce of the day night, Nov. 9 at the Heart~ ROOMS-MEAU
Australian ParentS' Council for stone Inn, Seekonk. OVERNIGHT "OSPITAl'"
'the Advancement of 'Education Inquire OS 3-2892
have appealed to the federal Friends of Novitiate government for an education Friends of the Presentatioia policy in which revenue' will be spent equitably 011 public ucl Jiovitiate win hold a harvest supper and penny sale at 6:45 private schools. Wednesday Right, Oct. 28 ia St. Anne's Hospital cafeteria, Fall Open Meeting River. Mrs. Alfred Berthiaume l'few Bedford District of the is chairman of both events. The L1NCOLN·MERCYRY-COMET
Diocesan Council of Catholie 'lInit, also plans a snowflake sale FALL RIVER·NEW BEDFORD
Women will hold its first ope and supper Friday and Saturday., meeting at 8 Tuesday night, Nov. 13 and 14 at Marian Manor, "Where Service
Oct. 27 in St. John Baptist Taunton, wit h the supper Is a ~A'1tter of Pride-
church hall, New Bedford. planned for .:30 SaturdQ¥ Diibto
r
RICHARDSON
LINCOLN·
MERCURY'
MR. AND MRS. YUE JOE
was the plight of the refugee. that catapulted him into his noodle career. He notes that his methods of large-scale feeding are being tried in South Amer ica, Africa, India, Viet Nam, Formosa, Korea and the Philip-
pines. "The noodles cost on_ a cent a pound to manufactureo" he says.
Announce Sucota The Sucordium Club of Sa cred Hearts Academy, Fall River, will sponsor a Sucola at 7:30 Tuesday night, Oct. 27 at the school auditorium on Prospect ·Street. Over 100 prizes will' be awarded. Mrs. Stanley Bochenek, chairman, is aided by Mrs. David Bishop and Mrs. David Boland as co-chairmen•
BLUE RIBBON
LAUNDRY
273 CENTRAL· AVE.
WY 2-6216
NEW BEDFORD
New higher
rate' of
interest
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An
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Dividends compounded GAd paid . four times a yem. C.,eAt Dividend Rate 4*% per, annum OR 011 types of Savings'
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opposite Post Office
OB
Winthrop St.
·Kitchen and Garden Become
Thurs., Oct. 22, 196.( THE ANCHOR-
Sources ofCcmtentment
Open Meeting For District One
By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick ;... Early this Summer ·1 ni.ention~ 'tq. a· friend of mine 'that I needed day lilies as a foil for my roses. He said . that his mother had l~ of them growing untended in the back of her garden and that he would bring some to Ine. It wasn't too long be· and his father told many stories fore he brought them to of the days and weeks spent in Rae wrapped in newspaper. saving their Summer harvest for When I saw them I couldn't the Winter's table. My father-inhelp but laugh. He bad so little law had seven sisters and this respect for them that he had not task had become such it chore to even bothered to dig them out them that when they finally had et the ground,. but had pu)1ecl homes of their own they pre. them up. They were thesiekest ferred to buy their produee off looking plants I have ever seen:. the super market shelves. However, I planted them and However I firmI7 believe that was amazed when two or three .. the pioneering spirit still e:'""~<; lays later, they ~ to in tbeyoung Christian .o~ ,f have regained their vigor. They today and after obtaining a picabloomed continuously for three liDiieteipe P'oiD my cousin (:Mrs. weeks in .JuJy.' . Louise Garvey of st. MatTs ParI mention this as proof that . Jab, Fall' River) 1 found to1D7 the day lil7 Is the most depeo<iutter amazement that.· making able and ~ of garden plants. relishes was one of the easiest 'l'hey are not particular as to soil and most rewarding ezperie:nQw and drainage and will thriye any cook eould encounter. anywhere· with a reasonabte Loa's pieaHBI amount of SUD. They are to be found in most established gar- To Prepare: 1 hour dens and are to be had for the . To'Cook: 41lOmW _king since they hlive to be 30 medium tomatoes. either thinned out from time tetime red. or green or • Duxture er they will take over a garden. of both. The dQ' lily grows from 4 large onions tabers which look like miniature 3 .-een peppers z hot peppers ""eet potatoes. If you transplant them, dig Z cups vinegar !leeply 80 as to damage as few 2 cups sugar tubers as possible, although 2 t. salt 2 t.nutmeg lIOme damage is inevitable. Cut 2 t. cin:ilamon elf the leaves approximately six Or seVen inehes above the tubers 2 t. cloves before planting. They should be (1) Wash tomatoes and pepplanted SO that the tubers are pers. Cut tomatoes into quarters and remove seeds from peppers. spread out just below the sur. faee of the soiL Throw in a little (2) Put first four ingredients peat moss If it is available. through a grinder. I found it easier to lIqueeze tomato pulp My preference runs to the out by hand and then push the lemon colored day lily which I Skin through the grinder. At this and serves as an exeellent foil lor red and pink roses, but there point you'll be te8IY eyed from the onions and peppers but don't are any number of attractive eolon in day lilies. They can be put your hands near your face, taIed very effeetively planted in the hot peppers leave a slight front of foundation plantings ~o bIIrniilg lleDBatioo on lIllY skin add Summer color or can be areas they touch. WIlled. in beds by themselves. (3) Add remaining 1ngred1ftey reproduee very rapidly so ents . to tomato·· m:iDure in a _ doeS not need many to start large .kettle,. bring to • boil. and ·with especially if you can buy ~il«ently for. four hours, stiriIlem with three or four pips, ring occasionally. The aroma at that .is stalks coming up from this point is heavenly. -.e basal tubers. They Should be , (4) Pour into steri1ized. jan ~ l e in. this region now and· seaL .mce mDst nurseries divide es· tablished plants for sale in ~P Rubinstein Foundation tember.· Gives Nuns $10,000 IN THE KITCHEN MJ:NDHAM (Ne)-The Hele. Watching Joe in the gardell na Rubinstein Foundation has :jdeking tomatoes for our. friends donated $10,000 to the Sisters of .Zeminds me of the first time we .. attempted to .preserve lIllY of CIlristian Charity here in New : ~ fruits of our labors.. As nov- 3eney after the nuns congrat. ···lee vegetable prdeners we were uJated oosmetics lD8Dufacturer " IAldden17 overwhelmed by the Helena Rubinstein on her feat of chasing three holdup men ibundaDClJ of thoee rosy, lush ;,.egetables in the early part of from her New York apartment ,lJeptember. . We reali2ed we last May. The nuns wrote to :Miss Ru~ ;Would haft to do sometbing ';i!rith them OUJ'8elves or enlarge ; instein, praiSiDg bet for' "cour,ear circte of frieuda. Up to this age and remarkable presence 01. ;fime stories'of the ~ ~ mind" in bravinC· the armed 'ene eseounters t"JIJrmfng aDd pre- bandits aild'1 foIdn& them tD 1e\w:e her)lome. .' 'ferving bad kept me . . . , tro. In reply the SiIIters at MaRine:1 . . project. 'Ioe'. ~ . a J8J1Ie farm ill DiPtoa kiodt· Convent beIe reeeiveel a note of t.baaIm from Miss. Rubinstein.·Now: they haYe heeD noItBall Tomorrow Night lied oC a $10,000 grant from the New Bedford: CathoIie w~, Rubinstein Foundation to be ·fID's Club 17th annual charity ~ for the education of nUIIL 'balI is slated for ~ night ,from 9 to 1 in the Gold Room of A ;AMlLY.~1 )lew Beclford Hotel. Mrs. Ray_. n ~-.ond Cabral and· Mrs. Henrique BAR-B-Q CHICKENS . :;Itogers are co-chairmen.
Fall River District One of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women will hold its first open meeting of the season at 7:30 tonight at St. Michael's Church, Ocean Grove.· . A living rosary will be led by Rev. Peter M. GrazianO, moderator of St. Mary's Cathedral Guild, and will be directed by Mrs. William J. King, spiritual development chairmail for the district. Participants win include offieers, Diocesan and district chairmen and affiliate presidents. . Mrs. Saylor, Confrater'nity of· Christian Doctrine ehairinan, is in eharge of the meetiq 1':hich will follow the church serVIce. Rev. Richard P. Demerit will' speak on the work .of theCCD, and a Coffee hour will foUowunder direction Of hOstess·· unit president Mrs. Charles V'lenS and her commit-
Horace
tee.
:NEW BEDFORD OFFICERS: the new slate·of officers of the New Bedford Catholic Woman's Club for the coming year, are, left to right: Mrs. John W. Sullivan, Jr., corresponding secretary; Mrs. John W. Glenn, first vice.p~ ident; Mrs. Joseph C. Motta, president; MrS. WiIliaat P. Walsh, second vice-president. .
Nun Coun·ci.1 ObserYeI Mother .Mary luke Heads Conference . Of Maior Superiors NERINX (NC)-The U. S. n_ named one of the 15 women ob-
servers at the Second Vatican CoUncil directs ORe of the na':' tion'sbigger sisterhoods and heads the major national organization of women Religious. Mother Mary Luke is a Denver -native who joined the Sisters of Loretto at their motherhouse here in Kentucky in 1924. She· ro8e from parOclrlal school teaebiilg assiinments to become •. principal figure not only in her own commuirlty, but in movements 3ffecting the direCtions being taken by U. S. sisterhOOds in today's society. ·Her community was founded in the United States 152 ye8l'S ago and today has about 1,120 profel!8ed Sisters teaching in 9't schools and two colleges in It dioceses and tlrree Latin American mission stations. She has taught at St. Pius school, St. Louis; St. Mary High School, Colorado Springs; 8t. Patrick High School, Kankakee, lU.;· and Nerinx Hall High
School, st. Louis. Twelve years ago, she was elected by her community as a councilor to the mother general. Six years ..ago, she was elected mother general and in July, 1964, was re-elected to a second sixyear term. , Outside her community, Mother Mary Luke has been active in. the Conference of Major Superiors of Women, a five.year-old voluntary association of heads of women'. religious comiDunities.· In: mid-AUgust, Mother Mary Luke was elected chairman of the .conference .after serving a term as its vice ch8irman.
Hyannis.O of I Father McSwiney Circle, Hyannis Daughters of Isabella, will meet at 8 Tuesday night, Oct. 2'1 in St. Francis Xavier church hall. Plans for installation of officers will be diseussed and a nominating committee will present a slate.
Co-hostesses for the evening are Somerset Catholic Women's Club; Our Lady of Fatima Women's GuUd, Swansea; St. Dominie's Women's Guild, Swansea~ and St. Mathieu's Council of Catholic Women, Fall River.
.·New Bedford 01 Sets Benefit Fete A .commIttee meeting will be held at 7 tOnight in the DaughtersOf .Isabella Home, 11 Robe~ Skeet, New Bedford, to plan dessert whist card party for the benefit of the White Sisters. '!'he event win take place at 8 Tuesday night, Oct. 27 in Holy Name Hall, County and Studley Streets, and will be sponsored by Hyacinth Circle of the organization. High score prizes and atteRdance awards will be given and the public is invited. Mrs. Ernest R. LeTendre, general chairman, is aided by a large committee.
a
.A. D. McMUllEN Inc. MOVERS SHYING
Fall River, New Bedford . Cape Cod Area A.....
AEROMAYFLOWER
TRANSIT CO. INC. NatiollawWe ___ wy_ 3-0904
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Junior foresters·
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:; ~r .i:.ady.. of Fatima Court, 145 Washington St., FairhaYetl ;,-all River .Jumor Foresters, will Just Iff Route 6 . . hold ah$yride tomorl'()w' New wy 7.9336 . effioors Of. the uirlt are JacqueWatcll for SIps •. Une MeQough. ·ehiet- ianger; ;3ameS ··Heywood, vice diief While out for a DIM ,ranger; Donna Hinehcliffe and.. . Stop at tIlis deliglltfuf Soot .t:oleen LllJiibert, secretarieS.· .. ~~~~~~~~ . . . . . . . .
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10NUS ACCOUNTS MAY EARN UP TO .
51-% B 'fstematic mlRthlJ savings
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of pta" Inver-Thurs. Oct. :2-2, 1964
Nearly every CathoDe hae ~ favorite' l'eligious artic~~ rt: might be a rosary belonging to a loved parent, possibly aJ' especially beautiful statue or picture of Our Lady, maybe -a' contemporary painting ,or crucifix. At any rate, it's a ,cherished
part of life and there'd be a painful gap if it were lost or.
Artistjc Possessions· Are Numerous Throughout Diocese of Fa II River ,
~estroyed.
Just so with religious communities. Each has a possession: with special and meaningful associations. The Sisters of the Holy Cross and Seven Dolors at St. Anthony's parish in New Bedfc;>rd, Ifor instance, cherish a large ivory crucifix from Rome with yery beautiful mosaic insets. '" And the Sisters of Charity at St. Joseph's Home in Fan River are proud of a beautiful portrait of Msgr. J. A. Prevost, founder of the home, painted by Sister Mary of the Eueharist f)~ their co~munity• Sister St. :Pierre Gonzales says "The home-': less and orphaned loved and reverenced Msgr. Prevost as a; \ father and protector, while his Christlike cha.rity and magna-' nimity were an inspiratioJl' te all."
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The Virgin is clad in a Greek tunic, surmounted by a: short" gown of Renaissance style. In her, right hand she holdsa. , oliye branch and on her left arm rests the Infant Jesus. k
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The statue belonged to the De Joyeuse family of Franc. in its early history. It passed to the Duke of Joyeuse, a Capu,chin monk.' The Capuchins placed it in a niche above a doorway of their convent in the' Rue St. Honore in'Paris, where, it remained 60 years. By 1651 it became the scene of "constan* pilgrimages and innumerable miracles," including the cure 0:1 Louis XIV, King of' France, in 1658. The popular title for th~ statue became 'Our Lady of Peace" and eventually Pope Alex--. ander VII instituted a feast of Our Lady of- Peace and grante4 • plenary indulgence to visitors to her shrine., g
1Juring the French Revolution the,statue passed into othet' hands and finally was entrusted to Madame. Henriette Ayme1;, . de, la Chevalerie, foundress of the Sisters. of the Sacred' Hearts. . Today devoti~n to Our Lady under the title' of ,Queen of Peac.: has spread throughout the world.. ', ' , .
Contemporary Art
, From 'Fatima At Villa Fatima, provincial house of the Sisters 'of St. Dorothy in Taunton, the chapel hosts a statue of Our Lady of! Fatima blessed on the site of the Fatima, apparitions at Cova de Iria, Portugal, by the Bishop' of Leira•. Proudest possession of the Religious of the ;Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts' in Fall River is the Gothic altar at their Prospect Street, academy, which, was brought from France at the time of the community's expulsion during :r:eligious persecution and was lovingly reconstructed in this country. Also cherIshed are an ivory triptych of St. Augustine and a Vatican mosaic of the Madonna of Olives, both gifts from Bishop Stang at'the time the Academy's main building was opened'in 1906. Sacred Hearts Academy in Fairhaven has a replica of a miraculous statue of Our Lady, Queen of Peace, that has beeR venerated in the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts and Perpetual Adoration at their Paris motherhouse since 1806.
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An outstanding example of contemporary art is a focal point of the chapel at Bishop Stang High School,North Dartmouth. It is described in the 1959 issue of The Anchor dedicated to the then new school as "a great apse window around th. altar, centered by. the Euc~aristic figure of Christ on a cruciform background. Rendered in stained glass, through which the chang.. ing lights of day and dusk will play to form '. an ever-changing! tapestry, the window will inspire all to devotion. '~ "Our Lord 1s shown holding the chalice and host, agailf''" emphasiz,ed in a symbol above his head, and in representations of bread and wine supported at either side of the fish motif ot ,the early Christians. The Last Supper is carried through a greaj arch, suggesting the table and the twelve Apostles. The euchal'istic theme again occurs through the field in symbols of grap. and wheat. lIThe hand of God and the descendin~ dove of the Holl Spirit complete the Trinity. '
The statue, carved in dark wood, measures just 11 inches, but its aspect is at once "individual and enchanting," say the Sisters. The original is thought to be by a 16th century artist of southern France, strongly influenced by Graeco-Roman culture.
Schema 13 Manifests Church's Interest In Man's Daily Life
St. Louis Jesuit Says Ecumenism Must Permeate .the Life of' All ST. LOUIS (NC)-Christians should not let ecumenism become "only a passing fad," a spokesman for Joseph Cardinal Ritter told an ecumenical dinner during the general convention- of the Protestant Episcopal Church. Father Paul C. Reinert, S.J., representing the Cardinal who is in Rome,' called ecumenism a "burgeoning spirit" and "a hope that must be kept alive and progressing toward the achievement of concrete results." "T,he danger, as I see it," he said,''fs that the ecumenical spirit can remain a vague, vapid and formless idea; in time it might prove only a passing fad," Fr. Reinert said. "The ecumenical spirit must be for all of us an abiding attitude,/ a permeating atmosphere, a milieu in which we work and think and have our being. "It must become for us what water Is to a fish-the only medium in which we are at home.' Outside of it we should feel uncomfortable; outside of it we fear we may die," he said. Cardinal Ritter, in Rome for the 'Second Vatican Council, sent a ,message to the church's triennial convention. He said ,his regret· at being, absent waf) "multiplied by the realization that mud:- of the ecumenical spirit abroad 'in the world today 'can trace its origin to movements within your Communion 4iuring the past 100 years/' , "At thesametime," he addedt "1 am
_'_H_E_,~_NC_H_O_R-_D_loc_es_e_of_'_F_a_n_R1_v_er_-_T_h_u_rs_._O_ct_._~_2_'_~
VATICAN CITY (NC)-In an attempt to understand the modern world ,arid to interpret the Church's message to that world, the council Fathers began discussion of one of the most talkedabout 'and 10Rg-awaited schemas on its agenda., Eight cardinals took the floor (Oct. 10) and all but one expressed. general satisfaction with the text of schema 13 Oft the Church in the modern world. They asked the council to accept lit all a basis for discussion. Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York hailed it all "representing the basic hopes of the Second Vatican Council" and asked. that in recommending changes, eouncli Fathers take care not to weaken but. rather to strengthen the text and improve its clarity. Both Julius Cardinal Doefiner of Munich, Germany, and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna, Italy, cautiOJ;ted against speed in deliberations.. The latter observed that "perhaps there is not even time enough left in' this sessionespecially if there is going to be a fourth session next year." Bishop Emilio Guano of Leghorn, Italy, ehairman of a special sub-committee said the aim of schema 13 is different from that of au other schemas. It does not concern doctrine or theoretical principles, he stated, so much as the transition of the council to the treatment ei the probleDUl that- concern man today•. It is an attempt to promote a dialogue in which man can know more about the Church and at:the same time the Church , eaJ1' gain' a d~'per understanding of man and his p~blem8., , The Church love. ihe :world just •
happy to be taking part at this time i. the third session of the Vatican Council, Which I am convinced will seal our de';' termination 'to participate to the fullest extent possible in. the ecumenical encounter." The El?iscopal convention sent a message to the Vatican Council, assuring Pope Paul VI of the continued prayers of Anglicans and pledging' prayers that the Holy Spirit may guide the deliberations of the council "to the salvation of souls, the further refreshing and inOo vigorating of the Holy Church and the good of all men everywhere!' As one feature of the Episcopalian gathL. ,ng, delegates visited area Protestant and Catholic seminaries with spokesmen for one church speaking itl an institution operated by another. Dr. Allen O. Miller, a member of the United, Church of Christ and professor of systematic theology at EdeR Theological Seminary, St. Louis, spoke at Kenrick Seminary, a Catholic sem.. inary, Dr. Miller called 'it imperative that the Christian Chur'ch today "become utterly what her Lord i&-a Christ-bearer., sUffering servant." . Father Robert Coervet, e.M" vice ,rector of Kenrick, major seminary for the St. Louis archdiocese, spoke at Concordia Lutheran Seminary here. en-he day when. any. Christian could say 'that is nbt my businel!s; 1'_ only a parishioner," ia long past."
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God did giving His only Son for its He.' demption, he. continued. But the Church also recognizes the presence of original sin in the world and condemns sin and: intends, to liberate the world from si~ Bishop Guano concluded. The council's secretary general, Archbishop Pericle Felici,announced that after some debate on the general prin-·. ciples of schema 13, a vote would W taken to determine whether the Father, were ready to open discussion of the in- ' dividual points. Contrary to previo\UI procedure, he said, this vote would be secret. If favorable, discussion would proceed in three parts: on the introductioJi and first chapter, on chapters two and three together, and then on chapter four which, since it contains much detailed material, would be discussed one topi. at a time. These topics include the dignity of the 'human person, marriage ami the family, the lIight promotion of cUI-. ture, economic and social life, huma..-; solidarity and' Peace. " Cardinal Lercaro cautioned thf Fathers not to fear di:(ficulties in the present .~i9Cussion, adding that the council, has committed itself to schema 13 and must keep its word. i "We 'must expect contradictorY," viewpoints and we must face. them,. the cardinal said. . He urged th~ Fathers not to.send thtt text back to the commission, because then the commission would not have the benefit of their opinions to guide it. He said a thoroughgoing discQssion is essen- ' tial, especially since the text admittedl~ has not achieved the proper balance . . " many delicate points. '
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~~E~NC~OR-:Diecese of Fa~l River-Thurs. Oct. 22, 1964
Bishops Who Have Nothing-
Cleveland Diocese Quickly Heeds EI Salvador Prelate's Appeal NEW' ORLEANS (NC)-The bishop in El Salvador laid it on the line--bluntly, dramatically detailing the shortcomings in his diocese. And the Cleveland, Ohio, diocese lost no time responding to the appeal. , That accounted for the presence of Fathers Thomas Sebastian and Penis L. St. Marie of Cleveland, who stopped off here enroute to the diocese of San Miguel in western El Salvador. Bishop Miguel Angel Machado fit San Miguel told the folks in Cleveland: Of 146 parishes in his diocese enly 15 are staffed by resident priests. There are nearly a half million persons in his diocese and onl7 19 priests. . Each parish in the diocese embraces an average area of three ei.ties or towns with from 18,000 to 31,000 inhabitants - 96% of whom are Catholics. The Bishop added that any priests sent' from Cleveland
to help would have a choice of five parishes in which to work. Gives New Hope Father St. Marie, 31, said within two weeks after Bishop Machado made his plea, Archbishop Edward F. Hoban, Bishop of Cleveland, had help on the way. He selected Father Sebas"· tian because he had worked among the Spanish speaking in the Cleveland area. He instructed Father st. Marie to find suitable quarters for a group of nuns he will send to lit Salvador in the near future. He assigned three Papal Volunteers to the San Miguel diocese. And he established 12 'mission centers in his own diocese to map arrangements for future' '. help. Father st. Karie said there is "tremendous interest" among the folks in Cleveland over the situation in El Salvador and Bishop Machado said the response bas given "new nope'" to his diocese.
Morally Unobif!ctioil.able for Everyone A1JacheRifIes
Battle trJIIIR Brass Bottle Circus World Day Mars Invalded Dream . Maker Orum Beat EartIl Dies Screaming Fall of Roman Empire Fate Is tile Hunter Great Escape
lamlet
Incredible Mr. Utnpet
It's Mad Mad Mad World !tide tbe Wild SUff' umes of Field 'Iomeo & Juliet ' . Longest Day Sampson & Slave' Queen Modem TIMS Sergeants 3 . Mouse 'lIll Moon Summer flQliday
Murder _
Murder Most ,rout Never PlIt it 1ft Writillll One Man's Way Papa's Delicate Concrrtioll Patsy. The Pepe Ready for .the People
Unearthly Stranger,
WJIen the Clock Strilles Who's Mbllfing Store Wild & WDAderfui Wmdjamlner Yank in Viet Jlam,A You Have to Run Fast
Young Swingers, T.
Unobjectionable '-Adults, Adolescents Act I
Advance to Rear Aphrodite, BefloId A ... Horse
Black Zoo Blood on the Arrow
Captain Newman, MD
Chalk Garden CIll1dren of Damned Charade Citizen Kane Come Fly Witlt lie Distant TrUlllP8t Donovan's Reef Fail Safe Evil Eye
Hamlet HOtTor of It All . I'd Ratber Be Rich king of SuR lawrence of Arabia Man from Galveston Mary, Mary Miracle Worker
Secret Invasion Shock Treatment 633 Squadr08
South Pacific
Surf Party
Tagprt Twenty Plus Two Twice Told Tales U41$IIIbbIe Molly ....... Voice of Hurricane' Walk Tightrope WaDs of Hell
Muscle BeICll 'artJ Night Wlilker : POiAt of Order Rilll af TrelSM RllIIStabout "Weekend Wrth ·luIlI SaniUro Wheeler Dealers Sing and Swing World of Henry Oriellt
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MoraRy Unobiectionable for Adults
Wort..
• Nighfs Allerica America AIle Womao
Seduced • Abandofted Hypnotic Eye Term of Trial loneliness of Long TIrift Red line Bedtime Story Distance Runner Third Secret Bikini Bed los Tar_os lJIImder of Drums 8IiIld --Comer tuck of Ginaer Coffey To Bed or Not to Bed Buddha Mafioso' TOWlI Without PitJ s,e Bye BinfieMail Order Bride Two Are Guilty Cardinal Man's favorite Sport We$t Side Story e.t0llChe No. My D..liag Daughter Hard DaYs Might Darby's laRIel$ OUtrage Where Love Has GoIIt Right from Ashiya Pillow Talii Woman of StllIw Fun in Acapulco Pink PantI1er lulu Gulls at Bltai Rio Conchos 'YOIJllg Lowers
God Love You By Most Rev. Fulton J.
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BRO. PJETltOSANTE, C.s.C.
Vocation Office Now at Stonehilt, The Northeastern Vocation Office for the Brothers 9f Ho17 Cross has been transferred fronl. Valatie, N. Y. to Moreau Han at Stonehill College, North Eastoo. · it is announced by Brother,Joseph Pietrosante, C.S.C., di~ tar of vocations. The office handles New England; New York state, Englisb.speaking Canada, Pennsylvania and ,West Virginia. It is now located at the four year scholasttcate for Holy Cross Brothers at Stonehill. College. arother Joseph attended Notre Dame High Sqhool, West Haven, Conn., and St. Edward's University,' Austin, Tex. He taught with the Holy Cross Brothel'll a~ Notre Dame International School in Rome for one year before entering the community. He holds a master's degree in education and hist()ry from Notre Dame University. Prior to his assignment two yeaN ago as vocation director, , h~ taugJlt in one of the community's schools. The vocation office was formerly located at the Holy cross postulate, anel novitiate in Valatie.
Another writew: "My cathedral. is· a tiny little shack which holds only 80 people. If I had an)"personal needs I would never dare to write you, ~tbecause ot.JD)' love for :my liWe flock· ,t have to und~ this torture and I hope not., your ~." And still another: "In order to come to· the Council I sold an ieebox, a little portable and a portable typewriter. With aid from :my old mother, I had $400. What wealth! The other clay a pick-pocket took all I had Jeft.--$33O. Wlll you give me sometbhig?" TIlls Is a PIe of the c..nen tIp& few bow alJo'at., 4he povert:r ot tile bishops. ftese IeUera eome'lrom. aD over the wor'" for TIle SoeIet:r for the PropaptIon ef the Paltll . . . fer -.I ODe ~ ",eDe croup, . . tile _tire wort.. Wlur.t a pK:r It ill tIud _ . . write eritteally· et tile CInInII, wIUle prof.esdn&' to be 'le7a1 DCJtknow of tile aplrit of saerlfioe Ia widell IIIaIl7 ItIld ........ live b:r
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We received another letter from a bishop in' the United States who had been a missionary in China. He lived in China for 'ft years and spent some time in a .Ta,P8J1e8l! concentration camp. When the Chinese Reds took over, he was in solitary confinement for two yeanJ, spending four months of this time in a amaH ceIL He was served two meals a day: one of poor grade rice and the other of boiled leaves. He writes: "Whereas it is impossible for tn"e to send 8D7 money to China, and whereas I am. privileged. able and happY to confer ordinationS and confirmations, give a feW days of recollection and receive a little honorarium, I feel I should give some of this superabundance to help the Ho17' Father's Missions. Enclosed is a eheckfor $500." This ill not the first time this Bishop bas sent $500. to the Holy F~ther. Only the woundell bow how to care for those .who are wounded. Bishops and priests who have suffen!d for the Church are alw~ the first; to come forward to help.
Canon Law Society Schedules Debates SAN FRANCISCO
(NC)-~
bates on marriage questiorts Win feature the 26th annual threeday meeting of the Canon ~w Society of America here' next
PERSONAL SERVICE
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GOD LOft YOU to fElr $100 "Encloeecl is a token for-ell the blessingS' God has showered OIl JB7 faml17. 1DY 'business and myself." " : • to a new R.N. for $10 "Todq I ~ved notice that I passed my exannnations and am. DOW a registered nurSe. I promised' God what when I became a Il1II'lIe I would send $10 to TJie Society for the Propagation of the Faith. Here it ill for those who h8ve, 80 UttIe" • • • to M.M.H. for $70 "This year I received a generous increase in salary. ThU gootl fortune I wish to share with the poor of the world!' .
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Poverty has been mentioDed m.any times here " the COIIIldI. bat the most eoaerete testimony of its esfstence Is the real poverty of over half the bisbops presenL We from tile . . . . . . wealth daily look on our brothers in. Christ who ~ve nothing! Here are extracts from letters written to me by mfssional7 bishops attending the Council here in Rome: "In my diocese neither I, the bishop, nor any of my priests have enough Mass stipends to buy food for daily living. Our people are too poor to make aDJ' offeriag." Another letter reads: "My diocese extends sqaare miles. In this area there are 151,000 inhabitants, bat onIT Beven priests and seven sisters to care for them. We have DO cathedral or seminary, neither I have a house. Our priests Berve the faithful - on horsebaek. A jeep is necessal7 for this area, IHdwe are'''o pOOr 10affQrd one and so are the peeple., "7be7" . . .d help. 118 witIa" _ e Mass stip.ends?"
Tuesday. The question of whether or not a Catholic should continue to be required to marry before a priesf under penalty of invalidity will be argued in the af· finnative by Father William For Adults (With Reservations) cahill, Valatie, N; Y., while This classifrcation is given to certain f i1ms, which, wille tIOt ,morally 'offHstW·" ..-thet '.James O'Connor, S.J., .. tilemselfts, ~In caution ... SOllIe analysis and explanation as a ~ North Aurora, Ill., will take the Ie the uninformed' apillst wronc illter pretations and false conclusions. opposite pOsition· lest Mall Martia lutller 11lis Sporti Life In another debate, Father 8Iacll UIIe lie OrpIIizer fa. Jones III Charles Curran of St. Bernard's 8horce: ItaIiM _ JJolhiIII But the Best Uader Yum .,.. fref Seminary, RDche8ter, N.Y., wiu Cool World ' Pressure Point Victim IIdvocate that tile Church ntt Dr, stranplow Servant 'VIsit, 11Ie longer require the signed prom;' ,Sty AboIe & Mitd Below . . . . Wild ... Ues which, DOW accompany a reCIrI With . . . . £yes' . Stranpt's ill u.eCity' ' ' ' ' & Willilll UIitts SuddeftIy last . . . . . quest for a dispensation in a marriage between a Catholic Morany Obiectionable in Part for EveryoJl8.. and a non-catholic, while Father Americanization of Emily Kissi'" CousinS 'Strangler Robert Wesselmann, Chancellor Mack Sabbattt Kltte1I W'rtlt A Wllip ,Sunday lit New YOtt · of the Bellevjlle;, Ill., diocese, Comedy of Terrors lllfy in Cage The Devil and the will suPPOrt the status quo. Conjugal Bed love, the ttaUan Way 10 Commandments ClIBe of Uving Corpse Man In Middle Three Fables of LM Female Jungle Mesqoe of the-.ed Death TIara Tahiti CBrJ 4 for Texas Night Must fall ' Under Age Frightened City '. . Psyche 59 Vice. lind Vil't\le From Russia W"rttl love 'Racing fever 'Viva las Vegas iNSURANCE AGENCY, INC. GI Blues Sex 1IfId the Single Girl What A Way To Go HoIleymoon Hotel Shock Corridor 'Where Boys Are 96 WlLUAM STREET Horror of Party Beach Small World of Sammy lee Yesterday. Today and NEW BEDFORD, MASS. House Is Not A Home Soldier in the Rain Tomorrow Jessica Some Came Running .. WY 8-5153 WY 7-9167 ,Joy House Solendor in Grass liilenc:e
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TIle· tea letters of GOD LOVE YOU _ _IDe a IIeeaIIe .. tile .....,. .. tIle7, eaeireIe tile .eU1 0I'IdBaW b7 ....... SIaeea te tile ........, ef, the \VorIlL WIIat better wa:r .. reaabMI 7 " to pnT for tile . . . . . . . _ed"b' ....... the bildIo... eI tile worl4l in CewmeU! $ 2 small sterliDc 1IiI~ $ 3 small 11k oJd lOW $ 5 laree sterJiDc silver $1' larce 11k pW ~
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Cut out this coupon, pill 7OUl' saerifiee to It and mail It .. ibe Most BeY. Fulton .T. SbeeD, JlatlonaI Direetol' of the SecIeIr for the Propqation ()f the Faitb, . . rtftIl Avenue, Be. Ycit • 1, N.Y.,
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7ourDiocesan Director, RAYIIOlQ) North Maia Street. ~ KiWI',""
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'FAll RIVER
ational··· ..B.ANK
.... cmer, wItn Eawara MIgneault assistant editor; Vincent Bes
In
maae their annual retreat, which closed yesterday with a Bible
I
cency in Reading program. Also at DA, candid shots are being . ....,
DIAL 1-677-9357.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Oct. 22, 1964 .
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Poverty. Thi·rd Leading Cause of Death in New York
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Oct. 22, 1964
o!~} Food is a
Author Relates Personal Details .of Conversion
.lJ!rggJil
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy In More Than Sentinels (Doubleday. $4.95).-Naomi Burton, for many years a literary agent and now editor in a publishing house, tells of her progress into the Catholic Church. Hers was not a straight path, nor is this a straight forward account. She alter sent her a bulky manuscript, nates chapters of autobiog which proved to be the story of raphy with passages from his life. She took the manuscript home, her journal. Inasmuch as the journal seems to date back only two or three years, and she has been a Catholic fo I' almost a decade, there is immediate jux taposition of in cidents from her pre - Catholic days with re flections fro m her Catho lic days. A little curious t his, but it makes for a book which keeps the reader alert. Miss Burton says that her an swer to the question "What led you into the Church?" would have to be; "Everything in my life." Looking back, she can per ceive that things' whieh; at the time of their occurrence, seemed anything but steps along the way to the Church, actually were so. Rappy Rome She was born in England in, one gathers, 1911. Her father was a writer, the family was rather comfortably situated, and the home was a happy one. Her parents were Church of England, and high church at that. The family atmosphere was touched with religious faith, and prayer was the common practice. Miss Burton was sent to a school conducted by Anglican nuns; of it and of them, she gives' an ex eellent report. She was switched to another, larger school, fine in its way, but religion there was a formality rather than a living force. Finished with school, she was finished with religion. Her mother had died, her father had remarried, and after a year in secretarial school she was ready for a job in London. Influenced by Merloll She went to a literary agency as a week's replacement for a vacationing secretary. She stayed en for 29 years. She had now left home, and was leading a rather hectic existence. Her ideal was freedom; and, indeed, free dom became a sort of idol re placing the God whom she had been brought up to serve. In 1938 she came to NeW York on a vacation visit and immedi ately fell under the city's spell, and determined to make it her home if ever the chance came. Come it did, the very next year, when she managed to get trans ferred to the agency's New York office. A manuscript which came to the agency, and which she read with great pleasure, was that of a novel by an unknown named Thomas Merton. She met· Mer ton, liked him, but, along with many others, doubted the com mercial success of the first two books he produced (they were n eve I' published) . Merton then dropped out of sight, later to be reported as having done an utterly bizarre thing-he had entered a monastery. From the monastery, a few years later, he
Honors Author ST. BONAVENTURE (NC) Francis J. Sheed, author and publisher of New York and Lon don, has been named for the 1964 Catholic Action Medal of St. Bonaventure University here itt. New York.
began to read it, and was fasci nated from the very first para graph. It was as you will have guessed, The Seven Storey Mountain. It had tremendous impact on Miss Burton, as it was destined to have on hun dreds of thousands of others. Merton's rehearsal of his con version sent Miss Burton scurry APPOINTEE: Msgr. Ray ing to find and read the Thirty mond P. Etteldorf, Dubuque, Nine Articles of the Anglican Church. By' then she was non 'Iowa, has been named secre tary g'eneral of the interna practicing, but she wanted somehow to assert her resistance tional headquarters in Rome to Catholic claims. for the Propagation of the The book gave her a new view Faith. Monsigrror Etteldorf of the Church and of Catholics. is a former editor of The She had always thought of. the Witness, Dubuque archdio former as dictatorial and repres sive, an obscurantist relic of a cesan newspaper and in re dead, irrelevant past. And the cent years has worked in latter were, to her, a strange Rome with the Congrega bunch, as she puts it, without for the Oriental Church tion any intellectual or cultural life es. NC Photo. whatever. Reading Merton, she says, forced her to learn about Catholicism, and what she learn ed was a revelation to her. Seeks Advice But she did not move toward the Church-or so it seemed. In WASHINGTON (NC)-Dedi stead, she resumed attending cation of Our Lady of Siluva Anglican services. However, chapel in the National Shrine when she went to Gethsemani of the Immaculate Conception Abbey in Kentucky to COnfer here has been scheduled tenta with Merton about other books he was producing, she suddenly, . tively for September, 1966. and to her own surprise, asked COll!itruction of the chapel him whether she should become now well under way is being a Catholic. His advice was that sponso:red by the Lithuanian she take no hurried step, but. Ameri<:an community of the na learn more of the Church and tion" at a cost of nearly $400,000._' pray for guidance. The chapel is one of four After her marriage, in 1951, major chapels planned in the she did not actively pursue the upper ,~hurch of the shrine. The subject of Catholicism, but again fund raising goal, it was re in 1954 she began to think about ported, is now past the halfway becoming a Catholic. By then mark. she certainly knew enough of Auxiliary B ish 0 p Vincent the Church's teaching to require Brizgys of Kaunas, Lithuania, little, if any, instructions. But she sought and obtained instruc.. exiled by the communists and now residing in Chicago, is in tion, and finally, after what ap charge of. the dedication plans. peared inexplicable delays, -was He has estimated that some received into the Church. 50,000 persons, including digni At first she enjoyed the spe taries (If Church and State, will Cial consolations and the glori attend the dedication rites. ous delights which are granted the convert. But afterward there came the hard days, the disillu sionment, the trials of faith which test and mature the per son no longer a neophyte. How she weathered these experiences, and what they did for her, she explains frankly and movingly. Encouraging for All The autobiographical part of • .-11 WYman the book is not especially dis tinctive in its contents. By this "TIll 3-6592 I mean that there is considerable CHARLES F. VARGAS similarity, in essentials, between 2 54 ROCKDALE AVENUE it and many another convert's history. It is, of course, distinc NEW BEDFORD, MASS. tive in the personal detail. And here Miss Burton displays a notable gift for recalling and making vivid a host of particu lars-about her home, the mem bers of her family, career, etc. All these are treated not just as characters and incident in her life story but also as instruments and occasions of grace. The other part of the book, the recent journal, should be en lightening and encouraging reading for all of us. It deals with the minutiae of Christian daily living. It is a record 9f as piration, intended reform, fail ure and depression, fresh starts, mistakes, inching Improvement, gradual attainment of realistic attitudes and practical applica tion of principle.
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14
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Oct. 22, 196,£ :.
•
J
C~uncit Approves Mass· Revi'sion
Continued from Page One ed for the preaching insisted upon by the council as an inte gral part of Mass and also for the new "Prayer of the People." The latter brief series of invo cations or petitions is to be said or sung at the completion of the Service of God's Word (read ings homily, creed) just after the ,priest say: "Let us pray." The actual text of the prayer of the faithful, however, has been left to the decision of the na tional conferences of bishops. Three of the most solemn and public prayers recited quietly by the priest up ~o the present will be sung or said aloud for all to hear and responC to. They are: 1.) The prayer over the offer ings, called the secret prayer, which completes the preparation of bread and wine. 2.) The concluding doxology of canon of Eucharistic prayer. 3.) The prayer for deliverance from evil and for peace which is added to the Lord's Prayer. Of the "public" prayers of the Mass which the whole c'o'n g r e' gation shQuld read arid fol low, 'only the body 'of the canon, which Ii tIll awaits revisiE)D, will be said quiet ly.' B r'o a d e r changes' are also indicated. On principle, the celebrat ing priest will no longer reFr. McManus cite privately or quietly any text of a prayer or reading that is !laid or sung by others, whether by 'the peo ple, or by the choir in case of chants and hymns, or'by the lec tor in case of readings. This eliminates a curious duplication. In the past the rule' prevailed that the priest should recite the Gloria, for example, eve n though the. hymn. was sung by the people. This change, making specifi a decision of the council, is not intended to relieve the priest of a small burden. It is intended. to make clear the distinction of roles or parts in ·the liturgy, with each one-priest or min ister or layman-taking .bis own part. In countries where parts of the Mass are already said in the vernacular or wbere this change will be introduced soon, the Epistle and Gospel should, of course, be proclaimed or an nounced facing the people to whom the words are addressed. The 'new instrUction goes fur ther, however, and describes the whole new lite for this "Liturgy of Word of God." At low' Mass, for example, it is preferable that the lector, whether cleric or layman, should read the Epistle while the cele brant listens. The same lector
may read the chants which fo1·· low the Epistle unless these are sung or recited by others. The Gospel reading is reserved to the deacon, second priest or cele·· brant himself. Even at low Mass, the celebrant may remain at hill seat through these readings, thus emphasizing his office o:E presiding over the service, and take his place at the altar onlJ' for the celebration of the Eu·· charist itself, peginning at the Offertory. Various possibilities are pro', vided for readings: at the lee.. tern or the pulpit, at the edge of the sanctuary area, the rail·· ing, even at the altar. The alter.. natives are a step toward break.. ing down the rigidity and form.. alism of ceremonial directives or rubrics. Great flexibility is pro-· vided, according to the circum·· stances, so that reading to thE! people will be well' planned be·· forehand and not conducted rou.. tinely according to a rigid pat.. tern. To help popular participation and to show that the Mass is II sacrificial banquet or meal, thE! instruction allows and prefers, but does not require, that thE! altar be arranged, for Mass with the celebrant facing the people. It is made very clear that Masll may be celebrated in this waJ' even if there is a 'small taber·· nacle on the altar. Few directions are given on church building and planning to encourage the congregation to participate with understanding. The widest freedom is given in locating the tabernacle, which has sometimes appeared to bE! an obstacle to the celebration OlE Mass toward the people. ThE! tabernacle may be on the mairL altar or on another altar (ideal·· ly in a separate chapel or other such area, according to the in.. struction). But it may even be, according to local custom, and in particular cases with approval of the bish·· op, in some other fitting plaCE! in the church. The Commission's instruction provides for use of the vernac·· ular whenever there is a con.. .gregation. But if a priEl$1 is cel·· elebrating Mas~ by himself with only an altar boy present, Latitl is to be the language. of thE! Mass. One welcome concesSIon al·· lows the faithful who receiVE! Holy Communion at the Eastel~ Vigil Mass or at Christmas Mid.. night Mass to receive Commu·· nion again at Mass on Easter Sunday morning and ChristmWI Day.
Pa1v-erty. Third Leading Cause of Death in New York NEW YORK (NC)-Pov erty' was pinpointed as the "third leading cause of deMlh" in this richest city of
the problem of poverty in New York and the U. S. could not "yield to the efforts of any single agency," but would have to be
the most prosperous country on earth. Dr. George James, City Health Commissioner attributed 13,000 deatbs annually to the conditions of poverty in w:hich he estimated that 1,400,000 New Yorkers one-fifth of the city's population -are living. After citing studies in which the five leading causes of deaths were compared in middle class and poor sections of the city, Dr. ~rames said: . ComprehensIve Basis "It is no exaggeraUon to say that these deaths are caused by poverty'" '" '" For these dreadful figures of unnecessary death, poverty is the common denomi nator." The commissioner said that
Teachers Preview Mass in English
Notre Dame.Man To High Office
CASA' .BLANCA
Pilgrims Walk, Pray BOMBAY (NC) Pilgrims walked for about 11 miles through the deserted streets of Bombay during the night to at tend a Mass offered for the suc cess of the 38th International Eucharistic Congress to be held here in India, the ecumenical council and the Silent Church.
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ContinUed from Page One problems can be handled onlJr by women." Ecumenism. Some youth con-· ferences in colleges and univer.. sities in Europe and the Near East have already moved to eg.. tablish links with groups of stu·· . dents of other faiths, while re·· taining their own autonomy. JilL one case a conference includefl Moslems as auxiliary members, said DeTerrazi. "We speak a lot about ecu.. menism, but what do we me all by it?" he asked. "We must seell: Paul H. Lamontagne, a mem the collaboration of our separ·· ber of Notre Dame Parish, Fall ated brethren in all our workll River, has b~n installed as a of mercy. Charity is where aIll High Court Trustee for the Christian religions meet." Catholic Order .of Foresters at the society's home office in Chi cago. . . H~ was elected to office at the society's international conven Just Acroo', The
tion inMilwaukee,J3st AugUst:" Cosgesh"aii' St. Bridge
Mr.' Lamontagne. 'qas bee,n Fairhaven, Mass.
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COVINGTON (NC)-Teachers from all schools in the Coving ton diocese joined in the offer ing of an English Low Mass and an English High Mass here in Kentucky as a teachers meeting developed into a liturgy insti tute. The occasion marked the first time that the Mass in English had been offered in the Coving ton diocese, a practice that will become general Nov. 29. Per mission for the two Masses was given by Bishop Richard H. Ackerman, C.S.Sp., of Covington so that teachers in grade and high schools could prepare their pupils for the change.
attacked on a comprehensive basis. "And if we who labor in our urban and rural areas' cannot end poverty in this favored land, in this nation bursting with vigor and prosperity, then what hope is there for success among the multitudes of poor in South ern Asia, in Latin America, in Africa, who look to us for those real solutions which a strong democratic society must prove exist for this troubled world?" he asked.
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..
National Elections Have Influence On Student Activities at Twelve High Schools of Diocese
THE ANCHOR- .
Thurs., Oct. 22, 1964
Propose ReIQ~"~~g
School
Coming elections are having am influence on the Dio ces·an high school population even as on the country aJt large, regardless of the fact that teenagers are non-voting citizens. At Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro, Problems in Democracy classes are spon and Paul Garant, library soring campus-size "national sette and science writers; Gerard elections." There will be vo Goulet and Timothy Jewell, ac .t~r registration, election to tivities writers; Salvatore Staz the electoral college and the usual routine of ballot casting. Rallies will be called at which issues will be explained, and campaign posters will increase political spirit in the halls of ·Feehan. One class has been as signed the Johnson-Humphrey cause, while another is in the Goldwater-Miller camp. Stu dents, however, may vote as they they choose, no matter which candidate they've pro moted. Meanwhile, Holy Family High in New Bedford has gone almost all the way for LBJ. A student poll gave 297 votes to Johnson, 50 to Goldwater. Not lacking are elections with in the schools themselves, with results still arriving on class and club voting. Feehan freshman officers are John Mandeville, president; Thomas Brennan, vice-president; Francis Fitzpat rick, secretary; Michael Shea, treasurer. No girls in that class? And Feehan debaters have chosen Raymond Stafford, pres ident; Frederick Garland, vice president; Paul McGowan, sec retary; Roger Watson, treasurer. National Honor Society officers are Ronald Cawley, Martin Funke, Susan Connor and Lea Meunier. At Fall River's Dominican Academy Sharon Andrade heads the freshmen, aided by Patricia Maurano, vice-president; Eliza beth Murray, secretary; Sharon Correia, treasurer; Linda Ward, Student Councillor. Plan School Paper A school paper is in the works at Bishop Cassidy High in Taun ton and it'll be the project of the journalism clqb, which has elected. as president Maureen Fahey and as vice-president Bonnie Briody. A staff will be appointed at a later date and Sister Mary Hortense will be faculty sponsor. At St. Anthony's High in New Bedford debate club off~ers are Paul Despres, president; Armand Gadbois, vice-president; Pauline Savaria, secretary; Ric h a r d Racine, librarian. The unit plans a novice tournament in Decem ber to which all Narragansett Debate League member schools will be invited. Class, student council and glee club elections at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fairhaven, have re turned the following results: Freshmen: Joan Cotter, presi dent; Pat Ledoux, vice-presi dent; JoaQn Daigle, secretary; Cheryl Economos, treasurer. Sophomores: Estelle Smith, president; Rosalind Bosse, vice president; Cindy Moniz, secre tary; Debbie Rodericks, treasu rer. Juniors: Jeanne St. Onge. president; Mary Kate McKenzie, vice-president; Colleen Murray, secretary; Mary Lou Penler, treasurer. Student Council: Carol Oli vier, president; Claudette Plaud, vice-president; D ale Wingert, secretary; Rosanna V e n t 1.1 r a , treasurer. Glee Club: Carol Bernard, president; Julie Fortin, vice president; Rosanna Ventura, sec retary-treasurer. ' Maple u The staff for Maple Leaf, the school paper, has been an nounced at Prevost High in Fall River. Richard Dugal is editor in chief, with Edward Migneault assistant editor; Vincent Bes
15
D~5c;r"~~e
WASHINGTON (NC)-Catho lic high school administrators have been urged to relax disci pline in Catholic high schools. ··In the spirit of the times it would seem that a bit of relaxa tion is in order," suggests the Secondary School Department of the National Catholic Educa tional Association in its publica tion for administrators, "Point ers for Principals." In an editorial entitled "Per haps There is Too Much Regi mentation," the publication com ments that "religious orders and diocesan seminaries know very well that the older spirit of blind obedience has long since past." Reasonable Basis "Subjects must be listened to
and authority must rest on a
reasonable and reasoning basis,"
says the publication which is
edited by Father C. Albert Koob
O. Praem., of the NCEA staff. ',,-The typical Catholic school
breathes order and discipline,
the publication says. "And this
refreshes the hearts of most
supervisors and administrators.
Such conditions are to them a
JOY to behold."
~ it adds: "Yet we need to ink a bit about those long files
of boys and girls who so obedi
ently and silently march from
class to class, who so obediently
leave off their lipstick and keep
their cigarettes hidden. Are they
truly being formed?"
zone, sports writer; Robert Rheaume, miscellaneous writer. Brother Damian is moderator. And at Bishop Stang in North Dartmouth elections are also literary, with the memory book staff having been named. James Hendricks and Sandra Briggs are chief editors; Rachel .Fredette and Nancy Vogel, literary edi tors; Diane Desrosiers and Mara Stebene, art editors; James Quinn and Carolyn Correia, sports editors; Michael McNally and Wilton Wiles, photography editors; Nancy Barker and Jo anne Guillotte, business mana gers. Sister Kat~ryn Lawrence is faculty advisor. Still in the literary world, the STUDENT COUNCIL: .Student council officers at junior staff of the Mercian, Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, are, from left Norma school paper at Mt. St. Mary Pereira, vice-president; Mary Kelly, president· Jan~ Duffy Academy, Fall River, has been " announced. Named were Lynne secretary; Ellen DemetrIUS, treasurer. Chrupcala, Ann e Sullivan, Sheila Sullivan, Monica Polak, Vigil. Underclassmen made their Julie Urban, Jeanne Berner, retreat at the academy, while taken for the memory book. St. Margaret's team at SHA Elsie Pelton, Linda Waite, Karen seniors had a closed program at Fall River has come out tops in Lowney, Carolyn Perry, Nancy Cathedral Camp. a chocolate bar sale. Individual Lord, Jo-ann Medeiros, Paula Bishop Cassidy students have high salesmen were Judy St: Rezendes, Maureen R 0 g e r s , also been on r~treat, closing John, Sheila Bshara and Ann Carol Sheehan, Linda Sheehan, their exercises today. As at SflA, Mary-Jo Trainor, Janet Couture, underclassmen stayed at school, Heroux. A special prize of a trip for two to the World's Fair and Paula Guimond. while seniors journeyed to Our went to junior Karen Fletcher. Lynee Chrupcala has also Lady of Fatima Retreat House, been chosen to help write for ""Manville, R. 1. Fifteen young lay apostles at DUBUQUE (NC)-Sister Mary
The Anchor. New at St. Anthony's High Bishop Cassidy are attending Richardine, who served six years
Lastly, the World Affairs is a dramatics club, which will weekly CCD training classes. All as associate secretary in charge
Forum at Holy Family High has debut with a play at a Thanks are already teaching catechism of the elementary school depart
named David Camillo, president giving assembly. Sister Mary in their home parishes. Congrat ment of the National Catholic
and Madelyn Arujo, secretary. Antoinette is moderator and ulations! Educational Association, has
Sister Michael Mary is faculty committee heads are Diane Le Also at Cassidy, 17 National been named dean of the new
moderator. The forum is a new vasseur, acting; Lorraine Char graduate program for elemen Honor Society seniors will take school organization dealing with ette, decorating; Louise Roy, tests on Saturday to compete . taryeducation at Clarke College current events. costuming; Pauline La France, for scholarships. Juniors will here in Iowa. Light Fantastic organizing. take the same tests as a matter What is Fall without dances? "Men have entered the hal of record. A student council sponsored lowed halls of SHA Fairhaven," Senior Latin students at St. Harvest Moon Dance is on the reports Jeanne St. Onge, Anchor calendar for Saturday at SHA writer as well as junior class Anthony High are working on projects in the .field" of Roman Fairhaven, and "Shades of Au president. "The student body mythology," due Tuesday Dec. tumn," a dance sponsored by the wishes to welcome to the faculty Helen Aubertine Braugh
' senior class of Holy Family Mr" DiPrato, Mr. Kasap and Mr. 22. William .H. Aubertine
High, will be held in the Gold Cooksyn. We wish them the best And seniors at Dominican Brian J. Aubertine
Room of the New Bedford Hotel of luck; they'll probably need Academy will hear a talk by Friday night, Oct. 30. Spacious Parking Area
Miss Mary SUllivan, a repre it." . Debate club activities are sentative of Katherine Gibbs WY 2-2957
National Honor Society mem news everywhere, with 30 boys School, at an assembly today. 129 Allen St. New Bedford participating at Prevost High, bers "at Bishop Stang have or ganized a Help Corps under di where Salvatore Sazzone and rection of Sister Aloysia. They Richard Dugal are looked to as will offer tutoring in academic Enjoy Dining top Narragansett League con tenders, with Richard Charland subjects to interested students. IN THE Officers of the NHS are Emile and Roger Lizotte also consid Desroches, president; Sandra ered a team to watch. Briggs, vice-president; Carol JOLLY WHALER Debaters at Holy Family at tended a U. of Mass. forum on Ethier, secretary; Florie Gobeil, -ANDthe chosen Narry League topic treasurer. • So. Dartmouth • SPOUTER INN Cheerleaders are in full for the year: Resolved that nu • and Hyannis .• voice at Mt. St. Mary's, says Re clear weapons should be con RESTAURANTS
porter Monique Demers. Squad trolled by an international or • So. Dartmouth WY 7·9384. ganization; and members are captain is Joan White and other Always Free Parking
sponsoring their annual cake team members are Diane Allflire, • Hyannis 2921 • sale from 9 until closing time Gayle Kerrigan, Carole Laroche, this Saturday at Stop and Shop Marjorie Lowney, Cynthia Bish op, Nancy Sayward, Vivianne Market, Dartmouth and Rock dale Avenue~. Proceeds wi.ll help Prevost. Janice Novo is a sub stitute. finance the club program. Also at the Mount, juniors At Bishop Feehan a Photog raphy Club has been organized have been measured for class as a subdivision of the Science rings, which they'll receive at FALL RIVER Club. Members will offer their traditional ceremonies in De cember. services to the school paper, At Bishop Stang, seniors re Feehan Flash. Sister Mary Incar DIRECT FROM DUBLINI ceived their rings this month nata is moderator. and, says Reporter Frances FIRST TIME IN AMERICA Head VoJleybaJl Teams Przybyla, they "proved to be Volleyball captains at Domin good luck charms in winning ican Academy are Madeleine Brodeur, Julie Melvin, Mary the Durfee game." O'CONNELL GIRl. PIPERS • TARA BOYS BANb
Spiritual Bouquet Bento, Arline Belanger, Celeste Gariepy and Cathy Sullivan. A spiritual bouquet has "gone KERRY DANCERS· IRISH SINGERS· BAND
Teams have such menacing ·to Sister Mary Jamesine, R.S.M. . PATRICK O' H AGAN MARY SHERIDAN
names as Mustangs, Sting Rays, of La Ceiba, Spanish Honduras, Cobras, Barracudas, and such al who spoke to Mt. St. Mary stu TICKETS ON SALE NOW phabetical enigmas as GTO's and dents about her work. And at Dominican Academy XKE's. A WONDERFUL FAMILY ATTRACTION - Ideal for CYO, It was very quiet at SHA Sophomore C has attained its Parish Sodality rheatre Parties class quota in the imnual De Fall River this week as students made their annual retreat, which cency in Reading program. Also DIAL 1-677-9357 closed yesterday with a Bible at DA, candid shots are being
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16
THE ANCHOR-Dioce$e of Fall River-Thurs. Oct. 22, 1964
Author Relates Personal Details of Conversion By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy In More Than Sentinels (Doubleday. $4.95).-Naomi Burton, for many years a literary agent and now editor in a publishing house, tells of her progress into the Catholic Church. Hers was not a straight path, nor is this a straight forward account. She alter sent her a bulky manuscript, nates chapters of autobiog which proved to be the story of raphy with passages from his life. She took the manuscript home, her journal. Inasmuch as the journal seems to date back only two or three years, and she has been a Catholic fo r almost a decade, there is immediate jux taposition of in cidents from her pre - Catholic days with re flections fro m her Catho lic days. A little curious t his, but it makes for a book which keeps the reader alert· Miss Burton says that her an swer to the question "What led you into the Church?" would have to be; "Everything in my life." Looking back, she can per ceive that things· which; at the time of their occurrence, seemed anything but steps along the way to the Church, actually were so. Happy Home She was born in England i~, one gathers, 1911. Her father was a writer, the family was rather comfortably situated, and the home was a happy one. Her parents were Church of England, and high church at that. The family atmosphere was touched with religious faith, and prayer was the common practice. Miss Burton was sent to a school conducted by Anglican nuns; of it and of them, she gives an ex cellent report. She was switched to another, larger school, fine in its way, but religion there was a formality rather than a living force. Finished with school, she was finished with religion. Her mother had died, her father had remarried, and after a year in secretarial school she was ready for a job in London. Influenced by Merion She went to a literary agency as a week's replacement for a vacationing secretary. She stayed en for 29 years. She had now left home, and was leading :i rather hectic existence. Her ideal was freedom; and, indeed, free dom became a sort of idol re placing the God whom she had been brought up to serve. In 1938 she came to NeW York on a vacation visit and immedi ately fell under the city's spell, and determined to make it her home if ever the chance came. Come it did, the very next year, when she managed to get trans ferred to the agency's New York office. A manuscript which came to the agency, and which she read with great pleasure, was that of a novel by an unknown named Thomas Merton. She met' Mer ton, liked him, but, along with many others, doubted the com mercial success of the first two books he produced (they were n eve r published). Merton then dropped out of sight, later to be reported as having done an utterly bizarre thing-he had entered a monastery. From the monastery, a few years later, he
Honors Author
"-,
ST. BONAVENTURE (NC) Francis J. Sheed, author and publisher of New York and Lon don, has been named for the 1964 Catholic Action Medal of St. Bonaventure University here .. New York.
began to read it, and was fasci nated from the very first para graph. It was as you will have guessed, The Seven Storey Mountain. It had tremendous impact on Miss Burton, as it was destined to have on hun dreds of thousands of others. Merton's rehearsal of his con version sent Miss Burton scurry APPOINTEE: Msgr. Ray ing to find and read the Thirty mond P. Etteldorf, Dubuque, Nine Articles of the Anglican 'Iowa, has been named secre Church. By then she was non tary general of the interna practicing, but she wanted somehow to assert her resistance tional headquarters in Rome to Catholic claims. for the Propagation of the The book gave her a new view Faith. Monsigaor Etteldorf of the Church and of Catholics. is a :former editor of The She had always thought of. the Witness, Dubuque archdio former as dictatorial and repres sive, an obscurantist relic of a cesan newspaper and in re dead, irrelevant past. And the cent years has worked in latter were, to her, a strange Rome with the Congrega bunch, as she puts it, without tion for the Oriental Church any intellectual or cultural life es. NC Photo. whatever. Reading Merton, she says, forced her to learn about Catholicism, and what she learn ed was a revelation to her. Seeks Advice But she did not move toward the Church-or so it seemed. In WASHINGTON (NC)-Dedi
stead, she resumed attending cation of Our Lady of Siluva
Anglican services. However, chapel in the National Shrine
when she went to Gethsemani of the Immaculate Conception
Abbey in Kentucky to confer here has been scheduled tenta with Merton about other books he was producing, she suddenly, . tively for September, 1966. and to her own surprise, asked Construction of the chapel him whether she should become now well under way is being a Catholic. His advice was that sponsored by the Lithuanian she take no hurried step, but American community of the na learn more of the Church and tion· at a cost of nearly $400,000._' pray for guidance. The chapel is one of four
After her marriage, in 1951, major chapels planned in the
she did not actively pursue the upper church of the shrine. The
subject of Catholicism, but again fund :raising goal, it was re
in 1954 she began to think about ported. is now past the halfway
becoming a Catholic. By then mark.
she certainly knew enough of Auxiliary B ish 0 p Vincent
the Church's teaching to require Brizgys of Kaunas, Lithuania,
little, if any, instructions. But she sought and obtained instruc~ exiled by the communists and
now residing in Chicago, is in
tion, and finally, after what ap charge of the dedication plans.
peared inexplicable delays, -was He has estimated that some
received into the Church. 50,000 persons, including digni
At first she enjoyed the spe taries of Church and State, will
Cial consolations and the glori attend the dedication rites.
ous delights which are granted the convert. But afterward there came the hard days, the disillu sionment, the trials of faith which test and mature the per son no longer a neophyte. How she weathered these experiences, and what they did for her, she explains frankly and movingly. Encouraging for AU The autobiographical part· of WYman the book is not especially dis tinctive in its contents. By this 3-6592 I mean that there is considerable CHARLES F. VARGAS similarity, in essentials, between 2 54 ROCKDALE AVENUE it and many another convert's history. It is, of course, distinc NIEW BEDFORD, MASS. tive in the personal detail. And here Miss Burton displays a notable gift for recalling and making vivid a host of particu lars-about her home, the mem bers of her family, career, etc. All these are treated not just as characters and incident in her life story but also as instruments and occasions of grace. The other part of the book, the recent journal, should be en lightening and encouraging reading for all of us. It deals with the minutiae of Christian daily living. It is a record 9f as piration, intended reform, fail ure and depression, fresh starts, mistakes, inching improvement, gradual attainment of realistic attitudes and practical applica tion of principle.
Ploll1 Lithuanian Chclpel at Shrine
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Tells Teen-agers Maturity Implies Real Generosity
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Oct. 22, 1964
Laymen R·eceQve Papal Ho~ors
By Rev. Joseph T. McGloin, S.J. There's afI; least one advantage to being a teen-ager you can reverse your field when you're cornered. At least you encounter teen-agers who are experts at this, protest ing pretty loudly that nobody trusts them or gives them any responsibility, and then, life is, somewhat understand when they goof up the little ably, "What's in it for me?"\ responsibilities they are giv Regard for Others But, for the teen-ager, who is en, protesting just as loudly that they are "just poor little teenagers." Now no one with any sense 'imagines that teen-age dom is a syn onym for Para dise any more than some other periods of life, and it's not helped any, in any case, either by babying on the part of par ents and supe J'iors, or by self-pity on the part of the teen-ager. A teen-ager is suspended be tween childhood and adulthood, and so he does have his own unique problems and misun derstandings. But children, too, have their uinque problems, and 116, surprisingiy enough, do atNilts. What I am trying to say ill that teen-aged problems are not the only variety, nor are they always the toughest te handle. Leads to Misery It is, of course, an understand .able form of human blindness which sees only the magnitude, real or exaggerated, of one's own problems. But the genuine adult (and not one who is just old without being mature) real izes that many personal prob lems come down to selfishness or at least to a lack of generos ity. He knows, too, either in stinctively or from hard expe rience, that the words "self centeredness" and "immaturity" are often synonyms. The conviction that we are not the sun around which the rest of the world revolves is, it is true, the work of a lifetime. But one should not waste a whole lifetime discovering that self seeking leads only' to misery, largely because "he who seeks shall find." Now for an infant to seek only himself is one thing. It's natural to him, and we expect it of him. A baby has little else to do than lie around comfortably, raising a fuss when someone pins the diaper to him instead of around him, screaming when he's hun gry and so on. The child, too, can be excused a certain amount of self-cen teredness because he is still rel atively helpless, and you don't particulary mind it when he clutches his old worn out toys to himself at the first indication that anyone might try to borrow one. The child's philosophy of
Italian Editor Hits
Rc:ice Disinterest
WHEELING (NC) The Jesuit editor of an Italian mag azine said here a coast-to-coast tour of the U. S. has convinced him much more can be done' by the Church lor Negroes and the poor. Father Angelo Macchi, S.J. editor of the Milan monthly "Aggiornamenti Sociali," said in an interview he found that in "some areas and in some dioceses there is an attitude that says there is no racial prob lem as such and that the Church has done all she can." But, he added, talks with Negro leaders have shown that they feel "that the action of the Catholic Church has been 100 little and too late."
nearing adulthood, this sort of self-seeking is an anachronism. The baby's crying when he wants to be fed, and the child's pouting when someone threatens to take one of his toys are rather natural reactions. The teen-ager should be dis covering that there are others, some of them fairly important, too, in the world, that he is not the sun around which the world revolves at all, and that it would be a crummy world if he were. He should be learning that maturity and giving go hand in hand and, that he must now put behind him the childish con cept that he will ever find hap piness in self-seeking and sel fishness. The immature teen-ager will go . on a date, not because he wants to show someone else a good time but only because he's looking for a good time. Should he ever grow up, he will come to see that real maturity (and real happiness too) will be indi cated by his wanting to show someone else a good time on a date, not for any "reward" to himself, but solely out of his regard for this other person. This is maturity. This is the way to genuine happiness. It is inci dentally, the only way. Further Step There is a further and a high er step up to happiness, which comes with maturity-the real ization that even giving, when it is only to one's friends can be just another form of selfishness. Maturity will point out the wis dom, natural and supernatural, in Christ's command to love our enemies. This is real generosity, real maturity. Oddly enough, it is also real happiness. Marriages break up because at least one partner is too imma ture to realize that happiness and genuine success ~n marriage are not going to come to the person who is "willing to go half way." (And this may be some clue to the reason that five times as many teen mar riages break up as more mature marriages. ) They will only come to those who are willing to "give and not to count the cost," to ask for nothing in return for what they give. Marriage break-ups come from childish, immature disappointments, because some one was too immature to give rather than always wanting to receive. St. Joseph Model Maybe one of the most mature men on record is St. Joseph not just mature, but also su premely happy, because 'he was doing the only thing worthwhile if you have any mature sense of values at all-serving God. His constant query was that of a happy man, "What more can I do for Jesus and Mary?" and not the child's immature whine "What must I <l,o?" or "What's in it for me?" Or' maybe you can best see the secret to happiness and maturity in the simple prayer St. Ignatius use«;l to say. "Dearest Lord, teach me to be generous. Teach me to serve you as you deserve to be served, to give and not to count the cost, to fight and not to heed the wounds, to work and not look for any rest, to labor and ask for no reward - except that of knowing that I'm doing Your holy will."
17
NEW YORK (NC)-Francis Cardinal Spellman has an nounced papal honors for two prominent laymen, one of whom is an auditor at the Second Vat ican Council and· the other the man who directed the successful transportation of the "Pieta" from Rome.
NEW BEDFORD GUILD: Officei-s of the New Bed ford Physicians 'and Dentists Guild who attended a Com munion brunch with Guild members following their TV Mass over Channel 6 were, left to rigrt: James Bolton, D.M.D., secretary; Paul Corley, M.D., treasurer; Rt. Rev. Hugh A. Gallagher, moderator; George Riley, D.M.D., president; Ambrose Finnell, M.D., past president.
James J. Norris, the lay audi tor at the council, and Edward M. Kinney, who directed the transportation of Michelangelo's "Pieta" to the New York World's Fair, were awarded the Order of Chamberlain of the Cape and Sword by Pope Paul VI, the Cardinal said. Both men are connected with Catholic Relief Services - Na tional Catholic Welfare Confer ence here. Norris is assistant to the relief agency's executive director, Bishop Edward Eo Swanstrom. Kinney is CR8 NCWC purchasing and shipping director. Cardinal Spellman presented the award to Kinney at a brief ceremony at his residence. Norr ris" who is in Rome, was notified of the honor there.
Michelangelo's Pieta To Remain at Fair Grounds NEW YORK (NC)-Michel angelo's masterpiece, the gleam ing white "Pieta," will disap pear for the next six months- placed under human and me chanical guard at the New York World's Fair. The priceless statue of the Virgin Mary holding her lifeless Son in her arms, lent by the
Vatican, has been seen by nearly 14 million visitors to the fair, the Vatican Pavilion said in 8 statement. During the Winter, the statue will be covered with a super-soft artificial fabric and a drop cloth. A special cage, which completely encases it, will be locked into place. The cage will be con-
nected to an "ultra-sonic" alarm system. Temperature will be kept constant, officials said. Two additional alarms on the entrance and exit to the "Pieta area" of the Vatican Pavilion will be activated. A 24-hour-a day' guard system maintained since the statue arrived at the pavilion will be continued.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fe;tn River-Thurs. Oct. ZZ, rV64
Mich.igan' Jurist Asks Adoption· Of Pre-Marital, Counseling
Asks Greater Appreciation Of Single Life as V'ocation
DETROIT (NC)-The adoption of pre-marital counseling as a remedy to hasty and illadvised marriages has been urged here' by Circuit Court Judge Benjamin Burdick. Addressing a combined meeting of the Lions, Rotary and ~wanis Clubs of Wayne County, he pointed out that courts are almost powerless in the face of the mounting divorce rate. "A judge may only examine the legal aspects and act within the letter of the law," Judge Burdick said. "It is heartrending to make decisions that adversely affect people when a little pre ventive 'medicine' might have made it all unnecessary." He said that couples should be told "the facts of life" before marriage. They should know that marriages come equipped
By John J. Kane, Ph.D. One of the most consistent source -of letters has re sulted from one or two columns dealing with unmarried women who seek husbands. Several men have written me a~king for the names and addresses of such girls, which, of course, as a matter of· She points out that they can ethics, I withhold. Some sin gle girls have written vit give all their love to God shar it with no one else, to me riolically regarding my com aingdebatable kind of statement.
ments, and seem prepared to castigate all men. Others have written rather positive letters about how they h a v e adapted themselves to the single life, "~:, and in particu lar consider it a vocation. For
this reason, I.
should like to
~ make some gen eral comments
about the single state. As a married person, I must confess that for a number of years I was inevitably irrita ted when I heard priests and nuns talk of vocations as referr ing exclusively to the priesthood Of religious life. About the first, and for years the only intimation I ever had that the married state could be considered a vocation was a Triduum given by our pastor in which he dealt with the priest hood, the second with religious life, and the third with the mar ried state, and the fourth with the single state. Today, I think it is quite clear that the vast majority of Catholic lay people are keenly aware that marriage is a vocation. Countless books, articles and sermons have dealt with this matter. Various marriage organiza tions have strongly stressed the vocational aspect of married life il;\ the sense of a religious call ing. But, unfortunately, I am compelled to admit that so far much less has been said about the single state as a vocation. , A vocation in the sense refer red to here is a calling by God to a certain way of life or state of life. It is not used in the sense of an occupation or a pro fession. Permanent State A teacher, for example, could very well be a priest and/or a religious, a married man or woman, or a single man or woman. Perhaps much less has been said of the single state be cause it would appear that the (WIIovast majority of persons do enter . the married state. Because the priesthood a'nd the religious life have such a high status in Cath elic circles, and because they are so essential to the continuation of God's church, they too have been dealt with at length. Perhaps one of the great dif ficulties about the single life as a vocation is that very many persons, and I include the un married, do not even regard it as a vocation or a permanent state of life, but rather a tran sitory period. This certainly has been true of some of my correspondents who state quite bluntly that they are looking forward to marriage and are amazed and dismayed that they have not yet achieved this state. But what about the man or woman who feels that God has called him or her to a per manent state of singleness? Acceptable to God One writer has told me about aQ organization, Mary Immacu late, Sponsor of Seminarians, of which she is the president and co-founder. She believes that she and her fellow members lead very fu~. and purposeful
.ves.
.",»
She also points out that single life is a vocation and living it for the love of makes it as acceptable as other vocation.
the that God any
I have had other letters from women who belong to similar types of organizations engaged in various kinds of good works.
This one, as the name implies,
apparently aids students in the
seminary. My only knowledge of this organization, of course, comes from the letter. Therefore, I am in no position to say more about it. Love for God But I have taken issue with one statement in the letter and I should like to expand a bit upon it. There are many ways of loving God and there are many ways of showing our love for God. Within the Church, we have religious societies ranging from the pu_rely contemplative to those that are almost exclu sively active. Obviously no reli gious organization could be ex clusively active. But those who do engage in various kinds of action are dem onstrating their love for God by helping their fellow man. I would not consider it quite fair to maintain that married couples cannot do the same. A great deal has been made of the superiority of one type of vocation over the other. I think certain distinctions ought to be made about this matter. Certainly, no vocation can ap proximate that of the priesthood, for to the priest has been given the power of changing bread and wine into the Body and Blood of Christ, and to administer the sacraments. But, on the other hand, all are not called to the sacramental priesthood. So really the highest state of life, in the sense in which I mean it, is the state to which God has called the indi vidual. For some this will be the married state, for some the sin gle state or the religious state. Organizations Godsend Compared to the religious or married state, the single state can be an extremely lonely one. (Soo, too, can the priesthood.) The religious and the married generally live with a family. For the religious, this may mean her community; for the married it is their biological families. This is why some of the or ganizations formed for single persons can be a true godsend. While single persons. may have the disadvantage of loneliness, they do have the advantage of being able to work actively in
the field of charity and good works.
Certainly, none of us should show disrespect for the vocation to the single life. I think if we look deeply. enough into the reasons for our criticism of it, we find out some unpleasant things about ourselves. While it seems unlikely that the vast majority of people will ever embrace the single state of life as compared to the mar ried, it would be good if much more were said of it so that it may be appreciated by' those who have not embraced it a ~rsonal .vocation.
as
AUDITOR: Mrs. Joseph
McCarthy of San Francisco, president of the National Council of Catholic Women Bince 1962, is the first Amer ican laywoman named by Pope Paul VI to be a Coun eil auditor. A native of Wor eester, Mrs. McCarthy is widowed and has two daugh ters. NC Photo.
leBA President :5tres;ses Value lOf '·elevision CINCINNATI (NC)-The president of the Catholic JB r 0 a d casters Association said here that more people (:an be reached in a half-hour televisio~'1 program than Chri!lt l;aw in His lifetime.
Father Kenny C. Sweeney of Indianapolils, stressing the use fulness of the Church's apostol ate of "these marvelous and mir aculous" media of radio and TV also said more people ar~ reached in a TV half hour than St. Paul saw on all his journeys. At a conference on public re lations for some 2'&0 officials of Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee religious institutions, Father Sweeney deplored failure to make use of the broadcasting media. He said "very little is known about the Church by those outside the Church." Challenge for Church "Radio and television," he lldded,'''make it possible to reach vast numbers of people, not just for publicity purposes but to let them know the work you do lmd why you are doing it." He suggested that at least one member of every religious com munity should receive high hivel professional training in the use of radio and television. ''This is a challenge which must be met by every religious (~ommunity and by the Church i.tself," he said.
'Tells Presbyterians ,Joint Action Needed JERS:E:Y CITY (NC)-Areas of possible Catholic-Protestant eooperation were outlined by a
priest here in a .talk to the
Presbytery of the Palisades. Father Aloysius J. Welsh, director of social action for the :~ewark archdiocese, spoke to
100 min~sters and elders at ftIte
Jlfirst Presbyterian church.
He said there was ·much room ~Eor cooperation on such matters as world peace, interracial jus 1:ice, refugee resettlement, ju 'lTenile delinquency, family life :md the raising of moral stand IlrWl .
with mothers-in-law, indigent brothers-in-law, spinster sisters in-law and other -"non-optional equipment." . ., . . "Pre'-marital counseling would surely do much to reduce the' .backlog, of divorce cases now. clogging the court dockets. We require much more rigorous testing for driver's licenses and. in addition, provide driver edu cation courses. Surely we should be even more concerned about the thousands of lives involved in broken homes," he said.
Back to School DENVER (NC) - Some 300 priests of the Denver archdio cese are going back to school these days. They're attending classes at St. Thomas Seminary -learning how to say the Mass in English.
SISTER JUDITH: LOTS OF LOVE SHE GAVE UP THE RIGHT TO HAVE CHILDREN whe. Ihe vowed virginity and became a Sister. In MARIAPURA~ INDIA, nonetheless, she is "mother" to dozens of infants • • • SISTER JUDITH smiles at the "Joke God played" on her. "To make room for the babies," she says, "the Sisters sleep on the floor." ••• The babies are carried to the convent anemio and covered with sores. Most of 1hem are orphans; some were simply abandoned, left to die •.. "We wash them, feed them, watch them 'the HoI, p,,'her's Mission /lid grow-and we give them lots of love," says SISTER JUDITH. "We lor Ihe Orienlal Church pray they'll become good women. India needs good women." ••. What does SISTER JUDITH need? She needs four more rooms, room for 40 children. Until she gets them, she and her Sisters will have to sleep on the floor ..• Will you help? You'll have a share in caring tenderly for babies nobody wants •.. Each room will cost $'725. The four rooms, all told, will cost $2,900. Why not give one room, or more, ia memory of someone you love? • • • SISTER JUDITH will be grateful for whatever you give-$2, $5, $10, $20. Send it with lots of love.
HONEYMOON IN THE HOLY LAND?-Blshop George
Hakim of Nazareth suggests that couples begin married life 'by
visiting the Holy Land. They'll see families by the thousands
Why not FEED A'
living in squalor in refugee camps . . FAMILY for a month? It costs only $10 • , • We'll send yOIl
an Olive Wood Rosary from the Holy Land. SOMETHING FOR THE FAMILY-Mother, dad, sisters and brothers all benefit when you enroll your family in this Associa. tlon. Everyone shares In the thousands of Masses offered by our missionary priests, and In the prayers and l'oocI works of our heroiC! Sisters. The dues FOR A FAMILY (onb '5 a year. $100 for life) help lepers, orphans, the aging, priests and Sisters. Write to lUI. TO LIGHT UP THE DESERT-DOCTOR FANNY TORNAGO and her four lay assistants, who give the only medical care avail able to 25,000 penniless villagers in the SYRIAN desert, lack $525 to complete Installation of a small electric generator. The generator will provide llghts for their unique clinic. Would JOU car. to help? BEFORE NOVEMBER-"What are GREGORIAN MASSES?," people ask, because November is dedicated to the Souls In Pur. I'atory • • • GREGORIAN MASSES are a series of 30 Masses celebrated on 30 consecutive days for the 80ul of a deceased person • • . Our missionary priests will be pleased to offer the Masses you request. U you'd like to arrange now to have GREGORIAN MASSES offered for you after death, ask lUI abo'" our "Suspense Cards." EVEN IF IT'S TOO LATE NOW to go to the missions, you can be part of what we do. Simply mention the missIons in your Will. Our legal tUlel CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION. Dear Monsignor Ryanl
Enclosed. please lind .••••••••••••••••••. for
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~'l2earbstOlissioDS. FRANCIS CARDINAL' SPELLMAN, p,••ident
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CATHOUC NIAI lAST WILPARI ASSOCIATION
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THE ANCHOR '- '
Coyle Game at Attleboro Tops County, Grid Card ,
,
:By Frtid Bartek
Church in Malta Lifts Interdict On Socialists
'
Coaell Carlin Lynch's 'Stang gridiron combine is the " team to beat in the Bristol County schoolboy league this and no one appreciates this fact any more than the Attleboro High Jewelers who are cunently in a first place tie with the North Dart New Bedford, smarting from mouth Spartans. an 8-0 setback at the hands of The Jewelers, who moved Weymouth last weekend, will into the lead deadlock by be playing host to Revere in a
year
trouncing New Bedford Voca tional 30-6 last Monday, meet the scrappy Coyle High of Taunton aggre gation at Attle boro on Satur day. The Lynch- r men, denied a;: crack at the State ClassC champion ship when their Rindge Tech game at Cam bridge was rained out last Sat urday, should have easy going against the winless Whaling City Vocational club, under the floodlights at Sargent Field, New Bedf~rd, at 8 Friday night. Coyle Seeks Upset Coyle, which romped to a 24-0 victory over North Attle boro last Monday, usually im proves as the season progresses and this corner looks for Coach Jim Burns' Warriors to upset the Jewelry City eleven in the Hayward Field encounter. The Warriors must depend upon some other team to help get them into a tie with Stang while an Attleboro triumph will keep it deadlocked with the Spartans who thus far have looked like the best club in these parts in their all-around play. Fairhaven and North Attle boro clash at the latter's field next Saturday. Neither has done very much this season. Coach Chet Hanewich's Feehan grid sters pasted Fairhaven 25-6 in ankle-deep mud during last Saturday's rain. North was hu miliated by Coyle two days later. Feehan, playing its first year in the county circuit, will be seeking its fourth consecutive victory when it tackles Durfee High at Alumni Field, Fall River, on Saturday afternoon. Feehan, with a, three-and-one record, suffered its only loss of the, season in a game ill., which it stalled on the six-yard line. Hanewich's charges have not re peated that mistake. Feehan at Durfee The oddity of Feehan's lop sided win over Fairhaven, was the fact that Co-captain Kerry Horman, a lineman, was the high scorer for his club with seven points. He kicked two field goals and added a point after, touchdown. The reserves played a good part of the Fair haven game but Coach,Hane wich d()es not expect to be able to repeat this tactic against the Durfee Hilltoppers who have a two-and-two county league rec ord. " ," Trailing at, the end of the first half, Durfee turned around to march to a 20-8 win over Taun ton last Monday, to gain a two and-two .500 mark in the county pennant race. Taunton, with a two-one-one league record, will host Oliver Ames of North, Easton in a non-league fray on Saturday. The Durfee setback was the first of the season for the Herring City lads.
State Class A title tilt. The Crimsonites actually have played well enough to have won their last two games but instead are just even, two and two, for the season. Bourne on Top Dartmouth High which plays' independently of any school league, marched to its third straight win with a 20-0 victory over Barnstable at Hyannis last Saturday. Bourne, encouraged by a 32-0 walk-away over Old Rochester last Monday, is in first place in the Tri-County schoolboy con ference contests. Old Rochester faces another dismal Saturday. It will oppose Dartmouth at the latter's field.' Bourne, mean while, will be playing a non league encounter at Dennis Yarmouth. Two of the top Tri-County contests will see Case of Swan sea at Falmouth and Somerset visiting Dighton-Rehoboth. Fal mouth topped Somerset Monday by a 13-0 score while Case dropped a 6-0 count to Dighton Rehoboth. Barnstable, which has dropped both its Tri-County games, will travel to play at Wareham, which has won both its conference contests. Norton Grid Program Norton High School inaugu rated its football days by play ing a scoreless tie with Medfield. The Lancers have embarked on a football program for the first time in t-Pe school's history. Coach Pete Bartek started the season with 44 hopefuls. Bartek says the team will not engage in varsity games until the 1966 season. At, present only Fresh men and, Sophomores make up the team and two J-V games were scheduled this year. The remaining game will be played against Lincoln High School of' R.I. ,The Lancers actually had ,the best of, the game against Med field ,possessing the ball several times within the opponent's, 10 yard line. Although Coach Bar tek was pleased with the initial showing of his poys he said, "it is the final score that counts and we didn't win." Next season the Norton chargers will be playing a full eight or nine game J-V schedule. In the Bi-State League West port and Durfee remained un beaten and New Bedford Voke and New Bedford High each moved into a ::;econd place tie in ~pst week's action. Durfee registered its third deadlock of the season and added the first blemi'sh to Westport's perfect 4-0 record, playing the Villagers to a scoreless tie at Westport. ,Enterilig the' final games of the first half, Westport leads with. nine points, Durfee, Voke and New Bedford each have seven, Attleboro, four, and Di man, two.
VALLETrA (NO) - The Catholic Church in newly-in dependent Malta has lifted its interdict on the leaders of the opposition Labor party in:
a gesture of national unity. The end 'of the official Churcl1 censure was announced by Ach bishop Michael Gonzi of Malta at a Mass celebrated in St. John's cathedral marking Malta's emer gence as an independent nation' in the British Commonwealth.' Interdict - an ecclesiastical, censure barring those named from certain Church ceremonies and sacraments - was placed over Labor party leader Dom Mintoff and his executive coun cil in April, 1961, after the party had publicly assailed the Maltese hierarchy. To Achieve Unity
Mintoff has opposed indepen dence for Malta as a Common wealth' member and has been" bitterly critical of the island's new' constitution which gives the Catholic Church a privileged status. Malta is more than 98 per cent Catholic, but Mintofl has warned that the Catholic bishops would continue a "cler~ ical form of colonialism," In announcing the end of the C h u r c h censure, Archbishop Gonzi said he was doing SO in an effort to achieve unity and peace in the new nation. The Maltese constitution, ap proved in a referendum last May 3, gives the Catholic Church control of marriage ceremonies and education. However, it grants full freedom of religion and rejects discrimination oa race or religion.
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I' • ST. LOUIS (NC) - The uit's 15-year period of post-high -I 9 CROSS ST., FAIRHAVEN I" I ' I,' St.. Louis University school school education. WYmctn 2-4862 • The, divinity school will be I , of divinity, transferred to St.. housed in the former Coronado ~ ~ Marys, Kan., in 1931 will re Hotel, purchased by the univer-, turn to the university's eentral s ity Aug. 7. The building will be campus ,here by September, renovated to provide living 1965. quarters for 200 students and 25 The divinity school provides f aculty, members, as well as theological training to semina- , classrooms, a library, a chapel rians of the Jesuits', Missouro, kitchen and dining facilities: Wisconsin and New Orleans publications issued by the divin provinces. ,Latin America, the, i ty school-Theology Digest' and ,NEW BEDFORD Philippines, ,Germany, Spain, Review for Religious. India and Ceylon are also repre INDUSTRIAL OILS sented in the student body. Its course of studies occupies, HEATING OILS the 10th to 14th years of a Jes offiees, and headquarters for two
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Annual Mee~ing Alumni of -Mt. St. Joseph's School, Fall River, will hold their annual meeting at 2 Sun day afternoon, Oct. 25. Officers will be elected and committees' appointed for the' school's 75th anniversary celebration. -Mt. St. Joseph's was ,former~y.known as St. Joseph's Home.
19
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THE ANCHOR
'Thurs., Oct. 22, 1964
Set Up Juniorate For Young Nuns Near Catholic U. Mother Mar y William, S.U.S.C., Provincial Superior of the Religious of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts, and Sister Mary Daniel, Provin cial Superior' of the Maryland Province, Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur, have agreed to co operate in a new project for the education of their young teaching sisters. Junior professed sisters of these two and some half dozen ~ther communities will do their upper division college work at a new cooperative juniorate to be established in Washington, adjacent to the Catholic Univer sity of America and across the street from Trinity College. Aca demic responsibility for the pro gram will rest with Trinity, but the faculty, on which each par ticipating community will be represented, will do curriculum planning. Holy Union Representative Sister James Miriam Keezer, now a doctoral candidate in Mathematics with a brilliant record at St. Louis University, will represent the Holy Union Sisters. The new Sister Education Center is expected to open in the Fall of 1966. On the Center campus sister students will take their required courses, leaving it to take more specialized work at whichever of the 10 universi ties and senior colleges within eommuting distance seems most suited to individual needs. Other faculty members al ready nominated by the commu nities and approved by, the Trinity administration include Mother Marie du Bel Amour Hamlin, of the Religious of Jesus and Mary, who holds a Ph.D. in English from Fordham University.
Yo'uth Week Continued from Page One Kathy McCarthy, St. Paul's, secJletary. ' Also John Perry, St. 'Peter's spiritual committee chairman; WilliaJll Linhares, St. Anthony's, cultural committee; Pam Men ard, St. Joseph's, social commit tee; Bob Kostka, recreational committee, Immaculate Concep tion. Cape Observances , Cape Cod parishes with CYO units will have members attend Mass and receive corporate Communion on Sunday. New Bedford area officers will be installed Sunday at Kennedy Center and the center's athletic facilities will be open Monday, Tuesday and Friday of nsxt week to all newly. regis tered CYO members. A 8 Saturday night, Oct. 31 a registration dance will be held at the center and the week's events will climax at 2 Sunday afternoon, Nov. 1 with the an nual area Holy Hour at St. John Baptist Church. Attleboro area parishes will hold Youth Week observances on a unit basis, with each CYO planning such activities as Com munion breakfasts and installa tion ceremonies. At a later date election and installation ot' area officers will take place.'
Music Workshop Continued from Page One structured to allow participants to contribute their own views and raise questions. Advance registrations are being accepted by George Pelletier at the Col lege. ,
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SIGN AGREEMENT: Representatives of Religious of the Holy Uunion of the Sacred Hearts and Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur sign agreement setting up cooperative juniorate for student Sisters in Washington, D.C. From left, -
Sister Therese Anna, S.U.S.C.; Sister Mary Daniel, S.N.D., Provincial Superior of Sisters' of Notre Dame; Mother Mary William, S.U.S.C., ProvinciaI'Superior of Holy Union Sis ters; Sist-er Joan, S.N.D.
Fathers Cor.sider Socio-Ec:onomic Side 'of Mionistry Advisory Boards of Priests in Consultive Capacity Continued from Page One ner . . . it now consists largely of admonitions and gives the impression that abuses are ram pant . . . superficial • • • frus trating . . . . . The text of the Proposition fs divided into twelve individual propositions: r. A priest is related to the laity not only as father and teacher but as brother to brother . '.. II. Priests must feel the need for holiness and reflect the sanc tity ,of Christ Whom they repre sent. III. Spiritual exercises stres sed, esp. mental prayer. IV. Evangelical co u n s e Is, avoidance of vanity, insistence of celibacy, common life. V. Further studies-theolog. lcal and other sciences. VI. Special centers and n braries for study of catechists, liturgy and sociology. VII. Extra-parochial and ex tra-diocesan interests. VIII. Redistribution of clergy over regions, nations and conti· nents. IX. Goods acquired through exercising their ministry are destined for purposes of wor ship, necessary support, apostol ic and charitable work. X. Revamping of benefices. XI. Normal compensation. XII. Common fund to have richer dioceses help the poorer. Some Suggestions Sick Strong plea for understanding and care of psychologically dis turbed and psychotic priests. No penalties should be used against such priests nor should they simply be retired to monasteries or houses of penance. Common Life Stressed especially for young er priests. Disapproved as an ob ligation for all priests. Some choose the diocesan priesthood precisely because they do not feel called to a common life. Housekeepers Should have adequate salaries -demanded by justice and pru dence (they might seek other work elseWhere). Should be
norms in Canon Law. Where efices (income a pastor may re bodily' needs of the priest are ceive from an endowment at not t~ken care of, his pastoral . tached to the parish or post.) and apostolic works are likely Btshop after bishop decried to decline. the possible abuses of both sys Pensions tems. All asked for an adequate Should not speak of retire and equal salary fpr all priests, ment ':n text since so few priests even if this must be "the equal do retire. Pensions should be distribution of funds through a discussed only for disabled diocesan administrative com priests. mission. All priests should share Last Wills equally in this because all are Canon Law should make it priests to the same degree." Also mandatory tbat priests in their suggested were a form of social last wills leave their property not to their families but to the good works in the diocese. Relationships With Bishop: the priest should be protected from the "arbitrari ness of bishops who are neither confinned in grace nor infallible. Pastor-Assistants: The relation ship needs to be clarified. Cur ates should receive proportion ate compensation. There should be "that unity of mind and heart so necessary for the smooth op eration of the Church and for domestic peace." Salaries There should be a change in the means of supporting priests. There must be a revamping of stole fees (donations received in connection with the administra tion of the sacraments) and ben-
security and health insUl'ance Oft a diocesan basis. Boards Advisory boards of priests who truly represent their fellow priests-should' act in consult ative capacity before their bish op. . Also discussed were celibacy, vocations, further training of priests. By a very narrow mar gin, the Fathers decided to close debate on, the proposition. (OCt. 15).
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