11.01.62

Page 1

FAVOR .LAITY ROLE IN WORSHIP Council Work Moves Slowly

The ANCHOR

Propose Pastoral Liturgy Institutes VATICAN CITY (NC) His HoI i n e s s Pope John XXIII brought to 90 the number of churchmen he

Pope was Coadjutor Archbishop book was enthroned by Melkite John P. Cody of New ,Orleans. Rite Archbishop Philippe Naballl He was appointed to the Com- , of Beirut, one or'the five undermission for Seminaries, Studies secretaries of the council. Preand Catholic Schools. siding officer was Antonio Car_ chose to complete the 10 workActually' Archbishop Cody's dinal CaggIano, Arch.bishop of ing cQmmissions of the Ecumen_ name was included in the list of Buenas Aires. ical Council. They were read to elected members as announced . The first part of, the. day's the 2,277 Fathers attending the on Oct. 20. Inclusion of his name, meeting saw the conclusion. of ninth general session: however, was an error. The man the first chapter of the liturgy Pope John surprised the elected is Bishop John C. Cody pro j e c t2. Sixteen churchmen Council by naming nine, not of London, Onto As a result of eight churchmen to each com- the Pope's action, both Arch- spoke. Next in order of business was the opening discussion on. mission. Originally, it had been bishop John Patrick Cody and the second chapter of the projannounced that each commission Bishop John Christopher Cody ect, which deal!! with the Holy would have a cardinal president will Eucharist. Before the adjournnamed by the Pope, 16 members, sion. serve on the same commis' ment at 12:15 P.M., Francis elected by the Council, and eight Cardinal Spellman of New York, The names were announced more appointed by the Pope. It Ernesto Cardinal Ruffini of was assumed that the Pope following the usual rites which begin each day's sessions. The Palermo and Paul Emile Carnamed nine instead of eight to dinal Leger of Montreal read eliminate problems of procedure Mass of the day was celebrated prepared remarks; by Archbishop Paul Yamaguchi in case of tie votes. Turn to Page Twenty of Nagasaki, and ,the Gospel. , Among' those named by the

Fall River, Mass."Thursday, N~v. 1, '1962'

Vol. 6, No. 45 ©

1962 The Anchor

PRICE lOe , $4.00 per Year

Liturgy Experts Recommend

·Use of less Latin· in Mass' CINCINNATI Less Latin in the Com m u n ion species of both

(NC) Mass. Holy under the bread and .

wine. More emphasis on the

Franciscans Pick Judge Considine For High Post MEN'S RETREAT: Participating in retreat for :{Den

At the recent Quinquennial Congress of the Third Order of St. Francis meeting in Detroit, Judge Walter L.

of Diocese at Our Lady of .Good Counsel Retreat ~ouse are, ' Considine of "l'ew Bedford was

elected to the Provincial Council of the' Third Order of, Holy Name Province. 'The Provincial , Council is made up of a priest from the Diocese of Buffalo, three Franciscan Fathers and six laymen. Its purpose is to direct and supervise the 115 Fraternities which a·re under the jurisdiction of 'Holy Name Province. ,These fraternities extend , The nation's Clltholics observed a day of prayer on the from Maine to Florida and are Feast of Christ the King, asking a{xI's blessing on the,Presi- al.90, located 'in 'Denver, the d.ent and the government and petitioning for continued South and the, West Indies. Judge Consi,dine who begins a. peace. The observance was in response to an appeal from the . five year term as Councilor is, Bishops of the country. They States request 'tI~ei~" Catholic presently Pi'efect of the Men's asked for p~aye!s ip. a me~- peOple to observe Sunday, the Fra~ernity of Our Lady's Chapel in New Bedford. sage released in, Washington ~,ast of Christ the King, as Tllrn to Page FourteeD by the Executive. Office of Turn to Page Twelve . the National Catholic Welfare Conference. 'With direct' reference to the U.S. selective blockade of Cuba and the ramifications of this act, the Bishops' statement said: "In view,of the present world erisis, the Bishops of the United

left, Henry McCracken, St. John's parish, Attleboro; Rev. William McMahon, retreat house director; Joseph Kelleher, St. La wrence, New Bedford.

Nation's Catholics Respond. To Appeal for Prayers

a,

Scripture lessons and preaching in the Mass. More responsibility for church administration en-, trusted to laymen. These are some of the hopes of a priest whose Minneapolis parish became nationally known for its program of active participation in the Mass and of lay responsibility for parish affairs. . Father Alfred C. Longley told a Xavier University Forum audience that the Second Vatican Council may realize his hopes. A leader in the liturgical movement in the U.S;, Father Longley returned recently from Belgium where he was a member of a commission engaged in revising the St. Andrew Missal. 'lie came back ~onvinCfXt that

Council of Cat~olic Women Mee'ts Saturday in Detroit WASHINGTON (NC)-Nearly 10,000 delegates and guests are expected to gather in Detroit Saturday for the' 3'1st biennial convention of the National Council of 'Catholic Women. 'Registrants, who will be representatives of the 14,000 organizations affiH- on the conv~ntion theme: "The ated with the council, will be Christian in a Changing World." , offered five days of workNCCW 'officials describe' the shops and panel ,discussions 'allscinbly: as Ii "working' converi- , , ,.

Council Fathe r$ Are·Considering Divine Office in Vernacular

Transfers Effect Two Pa rishes By virtue of a special mandate, the Most Reverend James J.' Gerrard, D.D., Vicar General 'of' the Diocese of Fall River, approves the nominations submitted by Very ltev. George' M. Roskwitalski, O.F.M.Conv,' Minister Provin. cial of st Anthony's Province of 'the Order of Friars Minor Conventuals and transfers Rev. loachim Dembeck, O.F.M. Conv., assistant at Holy Cross Church, t-all River,' to Our' Lady of Perpetual Help Church, New Bedford, as assistant. The Most Reverend' Vicar General also ~provcs the nomination of Rev. Turn to Page. ,Fifteen

"the liturgy is in for a drasUe revision" by the Fathers of the council. "We can look for the vernlllcular," he said, "at least in the prayers offered in the name of the people." Thus, in Englishspeaking countries the Introit, Gradual, Gloria, Creed, Our Father, and prayers of thanksgiving would be in English, as well as the Epistle and Gospel. The cannon will remain irl Latin "for the time being,'" Father Longley believes, but he added that. "there may be pro- . vided a new companion prayer to' be read by' the laity irl their . OWrl language while the priest secretly prays the canon." 'As a result' of the council'. T.urrl'to PQge Twelv.. '

By Rev. Edward J. Mitchell

By James M. Johnson

As the Vatican Council began to pick up steam this week in long and lively discussions on the worship' of the Church, brooding clouds of war darkened the Carib-

Almost every morning of the week, mOre than 2,500 fathers of the Second Vati· can Council enter the main door of St. Peter's Basilica to continue the task of seek-

bean Sea and raised the possibility of an early adjournqle~t,' to the 21st Ecumenical Council. Romans sadly recalled that a war in 1870 brought the First Vatican Council to an abrupt . en9. The Holy Father, d~ply troubled that war could put an end not to, the 'Counc~l, but perhaps to ,the human race it:' self, took to the airwaves to deliyer a strongly.. worded message for peace. It was one' of the' few times in his fouryear reign that the pontiff spoke out on political affairs. Revealing that tbe " TUrn to Page' Eleven .

ing the best course for the Catholic Church in a troubled world. About. 250 of these fathers are the Bishops' of the United States. As the council plunges ever deeper into its work, it has, become more and more ap';' parent ,that, whiie they will not - generally ~ take a commanding role in the deliberations, the American· Bishops will occupy an important place. ' To understand the importance ~f the role of the U.S. Hierarch,y, It is nee-Turn to Page Tell. '

tion," noting that sessions will tackle subjects 'such' as the role of Christians in areas such as public morality, children and youth, literature and the arts, lay participation in the Church and rural and urban ,life. Msg'1'. Cla'rence D. White will open the program with an analysis of the convention'!! theme. Msgr. White is assistant general secretary of the National 'Catholic Welfare Conference, the parent organizatiorl of the women's council. Mrs.' Arthur Zepf of Toledo. Ohio, retiring after a two-yeat' term' as president of the 42-yearold council,' will preside at the opening' session. Miss Margaret Mealey, executive director of the NCCW, wiiI outline the organi. zational plan of the conventiorl which will be held in Detroit's municipal '. 'aUditorium,' Cobo Hall. Philip Scharper, American editor of Sheed and Ward, publishers, will address an evening civic meeting. The religious highpoint of too assembly will be an afternOOla Turn to Page '1)vel~


THE

ANCHO~-Diocese oJ':',

~.,.

,.1".,.,

,Urges ,~ospitals ,',Allow E'mployees To 'Unionize - :

of Fall, River..,-Thurs., Nov. 1, 1962 ~ .~""

",' .',

't

-.-

...:'

.

'.

..'

c.:

;

Diocese of Fall River'

TACOMA (NC)-A Catholic relations specialist said here that hospitals have aD obligation to permit employ-

OFFICIAL

ees to form unions and engap in collective bargaining. Urging, "modern, mature, just CLERGY TRANSFERS and equitable industrial relaThe 10110wing nominations have been approved by His tions policy" flmong hospital adExcelle~cy, the Most R'everend Bishop, by special mandate ministrators, Father Jerome Ie. through the Vicar General:, . ,.,,' . Toner, O.S.B., said it is "almost unbelievable" that American. Rev. Joachim Dembeck, O.F.M. Conv., assistant at Holy hospital management "with rare Cross Church, Fall River, to Our Lady of Perpetual Help excepti()ns still denies and vioChurch, New Bedford, as assistant. lates the natural moral right 01 Rev. Pacific Baldyga, O.F.M. Conv. to Holy Cross workers to organize into unions." Father Toner, dean of indusChurch, as assistant. trial relations at St. Martin's Appointments became-effective Tuesday, October 30th. College, Olympia, Wash" spoke at the 34th annual mee-ing of the Washington State Conference of the Catholic Hospital Association. NEW BEDFORD GROUP: Newly-installed officers of He said the Catholic hospital the Whaling City CYO are, left to right, Cynthia Fernandes, must exercise ''Christ-like charWalter T. Ellison, Rita M. Estrella and Brian M. Healy ity and justice" toward the pubBishop of Fall River. lic, toward employees and talking wi~h Area Director Rev. Edward C. Duffy. toward patients. No Strikes, Lockouts He put particular emphasis em the responsibilities of hospital administrators :toward employees, citing the teaching of modTULSA (NC) - Most lay Sister Mary Agatha Burke, ern popes to back up his argo-VATICAN CITY (NC)-It~lian and U. S. prelates teachers in Oklahoma Catholic principal of Marquette, "gr;lde' ments for' adequate 'wages and serving in elective posts on council commissions now number schools thinks' the schools should school here. , the right to unionize. 19 each. Pope John has named Archbishop Matthew Kavu- always have lay people on their About 70 per cent of the high "If the employees vote for • school teacljers and 56 per cent,', union or unions' to' represent katt of Changanacherry; India, to replace Archimandrate faculties. them in collective,' bargaining The reason most frequently of the grade school teachers Teodoro Minisci, Abbott NulThe other countries reprehaving lay instructors negotiations, then Catholic Hoslius of the Basilian monas- sented on the commissions are: given in a. survey is the convic- favored tion that the presence of the in all schools, regardless' of , 'pita! management should entel' tery of Grottaferrata near Germany, 11; Spain, 10; Canada, . lay teacher gives students a whether Or not there are . into good faith collective b~ Rome and Superior General eight; Brazil, seven; Argentina, better· balanced, view of their enough Sisters to fill all' posi- gaining." of the Italian Congregation of Belgium and 'England' have tions. Father Toner said that because own role in the Church. Inadequare Salariec of the nature of hospital activ1Basilian monks, on the Commis- fOur each. This belief was' turned up in Austria, 'Chile, Mexico, Neth,sion for the Oriental Churchee. Sister Agatha made the surties, contracts with hospital ema survey of the 144 lay persons ,This change cut the number of erlands and Yugoslavia are rep- teaching in schools of the Okla- vey as part of her studies 'for a ployees must contain non-strike, Italian Fathers serving in elec- resented 'with three members homa City and Tulsa' diocese. master's degree in eduCation no-lockout clauses and provision tive posts to 19. French Biohops,' each. The, fQllowin'g countries Ninety-six lay teachers an- from the Catholic University' of for a grievance procedure thati are each represented with two holding 15 posts, form the third ends in '~voluntary, compulsor~ swered a questionnaire from America, W'ashington, D.C. largest national group on the members: Australia, China, the Ninety-threee of the 96 rebinding arbitration." Congo, Japan, Paraguay,· the council commissions. spondents said ,that salaries are Philippines" Syria and Tan-Seton Hall To Have the reason more teachers do not 'The Pope appointed Archi- ganyika. Promises Prayers One member was seek employment in 'Catholic mandrate Minisci to the Secreelected from each of the folComputet; Center BALLARAT (NC) - An .Anschools. Many, of them added tariat for Promoting Christian SOUTH ORANGE (NC) that CatholicJaypeople lire not glican synod which met here has Unity the secretariat was made lowing co u n t r i e s: Bolivia, equal in status to the 10 couricil Cameroun, Colombia, Ecuador, Seton Hall University will aware of the need to' pay lay sent a message to the Second Vatican Council expressing incommissions. The change in the G,uatemala, Indoneeia, Ireland, establish a computer center in teachers adequately. In' the survey, made during' terest in the council's work and secretariat's status made' its Luxembourg, Panama, Per u, "a new $250,000 building now un1951 and 1960,', the majority of assuring "pr,ayers 'that God may members "ineligible for elective Portugal, South Africa, Switzer- der construction., land, Tunisia, Uruguay" and the teachers earned' ,between guide aU its deliberetions." , positions. . Venezuela: Msgr, John'J. Dougherty, $2,000 and $2,095 a year.' Only' J Pope John also named ArchIn addition, one of the elected president" said operation· of the bIshop Thomas Morris of Cashel, ,members, Arc h b ish 0 p Ivan facility will be provided by a four got more than $4,000 a year, " 'IreJat:td, to replace Stefan Car- Bucko, Apostolic Visitor :for fOur-year grant' of $243,906 , dinal' Wyszynski, Archbishop of ~yzantine Rite Ukrainians in from the National Institutes of Vincentian CounCil 'Ghiezno 'and Warsaw, on' the Western Europe,· was born in Health. . .' 'Commission for the Lay· Apos- what is now part of' the Soviet' The center' WIll aId resear~ . tolate,the Press and Entertain- ,Union 1 'programs now under ',wa,y' 10 Members of 'Fall River Partie-:-, 'inent. The Polish Cardinal has . biology and biochemistry as well ular Council; ,Society of SkNin- ';, been named' by the Pope to serve as contributing to, instructional " cent de Paul, will be ,guests 01 Mass Ordo . on' the Secretariat for E:x;traor., : functions: " ' Sacred Heart Conference at, the , dinary Affairs. , FRIDAY ~ Commemoration' of DOAN~· 8UL.AMt:S monthly meeting at 8· next Tues_ I' A.."!' it' result of, the changes, INCOA.I'OIlAT£O all the,· Faithful Departed; I day night. , 'Legion of DecenCy indIa now has six Fathers Class. Black. Mass' ,Proper; The meeting in the school hall serving in elective posts, PoIimd The following films are to be will follow Benediction of the Three Masses may, be oHered ,has four and Ireland two. by, every priest; the first Mass added to the lists: in thea reMost Blessed Sacrament at 7:45 spective classifications:· is offered according to the inin the upper church. e HYANNIS Unobjectionable- for adults and Necrology tention of the celebrant, the As there 8ft many important • HARWICH PORT second, for all the Faithful adolescents: Devi. matters to .be discussed, it" is NOV. Z Unobjectionable, for adults: ,Departed, and the third ae• SOUTH YARMOUTH hoped that there will be a large A memento for the repose of cording, to the intention· of Crime Does Not Pay; Period of attendance; th~ souls of our priests. Adjustment; Warriors F i ve the Pope. Rev. Joseph S. Fortin, 1923, (classification for first and third' The Sequence is said in the Founder, St. John the Baptist, titl~ applicable only to prints principal, Mass only. ;Fall River. ' Votive Mass in honor of the , shown in U. S;): , Funeral Sacred Heart of jesus not pel'- " SeparatecJassification: DiRev. Michael V. McDonough, "FUNERAL HOME: mitted. Tomorrow is', the' First vorce ,Italian ,Style (rather irrev- , 571 Sec:~nd St, 1933, Chaplain, St. Mary Home, 986 Plymouth Avenlle erent satire on Italian marriage New Bedford. ' Saturday of the Month. Fall River, Mass. Fall 'River, Mass;' SATURDAY - Mass of the legislation; use of 'religion ill NOV. 6: OS 9-6072 T~. OS, 3>2271-, Blessed Virgin fflr Saturday. background calls fOr reserva,. Rev. Plitrick S. McGee, 1933, tion and showing oil1y to mature MICHAEL J.. McMAHON IV Class: White. Mass Proper; DA.NIEl .. HARtINGTON Founder, St. Mary, Hebronville. 'Gloria; no Creed; Preface of audience; classification app~ic­ Licensed Funeral Director linn..... Fun...a1, Dlr.ctor able only to prints shown in ,Blessed Virgin. and, Reglster<td Embalm.,. Registered Embalmer SUNDAY - XXI Sunday After ,'U.S.): Pentecost. II Class. Green. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect' (under one conclusion) D~ of the Pope; Creed; Preface"of Nov. 4-St. Thomas M 0 r e , FUNERAL HOME, INC. Trinity.' Anniversary of the FUNERAL HOME Funeral BotKe , Somerset. a. lIlareO! Roy -0. Lorraine ~ , Coronati~n of Pope JQhn Notre Dame, Fall River. , 46,9 LOCUST ~TREET RoRer rAP"';"e-,. XXIII. ,,550 ~om 8t. , Nov. l1~t; John 'the Baptist, MONDAY-Mass of 'previous Fall River., ¥aa. FALL" RIVER, MASS. . , ru,NERAL I)IR~qO~, New Bedford. Sunday. IV,Class.. Green.;J\':ass i' , , 'os ~ 2~3381 " ""c' , • - Sacred Heart; Oak Bluffs. ,OS 2-2191' 11 IRVINGTON CT; Proper; No Gloria' or Creed; : Wilfred 'Co' ~ '.' ,·Nov. l~t., .Stanislaus, , Fall. C6minonpreface. '" "- \,' . , .wV" 7-7830'" " Rose E., S~I:v.n River. , ' 'Driicoll ' Sulliv'an~ Jr. Jeffrey E. Sullivan ,'" , TUESDAY - Mass of pre:vious' :NE.~".B~DFQRD . .!'.'"; ~ ',~ Our Lady, of the Isle, , Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass ' Nantucket. . , Proper; No Gloria or· Cre~d; Nov. 21-8t. Catherine's Con'. Common Preface. , " .' .Y~UR~: T~("L<?VE,A.~D, '~~ GIVEI vent, Fall River. WEDNESDAY-Mass of previ,Ih. li'a,ofo,'OAUGHTER,,~,~T.,'~UL Loy. Gotl Nov. 25--St. Anthony, Matta_ mo.... and give, '-! ..u~ lmo~lod80 attd , _ ." ous Sunday.' IV Class. Green. poisett. God by ••rvin.: film in a MiiJion Which _ .... Mass Proper; No Gloria or' St. Anne, New Bedford. ...... Radio, MotiOn Pldur.. and TV. to b.... Creed; Common Preface. Helen Aubertin. hugh HiS Word to sovls' OftfYWhor.,'· ZeaIoos .-". THURSDAY-Mass of previous. Owner and, Director girls. '4-21 years i.......ted .. this IIlIiqw 'l'IU; UICBoa Sunday. IV Class. Green. Apostolate may write to, ! Spacious P.arking Area lIecond CI"n l'oaUll'e ""Ia .t r.u RiYal', . Mass Proper; No Gloria;, SecREVEREND MOTHER S,UPERloa ..... Publla_ "'''"7 l'lnandQ .t no ond Collect Four Crowned WY 2~2957 B ..blallO " ..nile P'rJJ Ri..e, at. . . 0, DAUGHTERS Of ST. "AUL the :::..UIoI~ P _ >t the DIoc!eM ... Martyrs; DO, Creed; Common, 129 Allen 8t. New Bedford '50 n. "AUl'S AVE. ,Il0nON •• MA.SI. Vall RI.... Sabllerillitoll price ... ...u. Preface. _*pal. ".00 _ 7aU'.

Italian,

u.s.

Bishops

EQch Have 19 Posts

Stress Lay Teachers' ,Value On 'Catholic School Facult'ies

To Meet Tuesdayl ",

'---...

c. P• HARRINGTON:

FORTY HOURS DEVOTION

BROOKLAWN

D. Sullivan & Sons

CYROURKf Home

JEFFREY E. SULLIVAN "

Jam.. 'E.

AU'BERTINE

Funercd,Home

,------------_.

'


'U.S.Home Missions Program Needs 500

~ay

Rico will be added in the 1963 program, The director said the volunteers are assigned only to home missions where local personnel it! not available to fill specific needs. They are serving as teachers in elementary and high schools, as census and catechetical workers, nurses' in home mission clinics and parishes, Newman Club organizers at secular colleges and as, social workers in the dependent chiIdren field.

Says Ireland's Role in World Is Missiona ry CINCINNATI (N C) Ireland, whose missionary .scholars re-Iit the lamps, of Europe, in the dark seventh

and eighth centuries, may repeat' that role in the days and', years to come, an Irish scholar predicts: I Thomas Roseingrave, Dublin sociologist and historian, said here that "the real role of Ireland is a spiritual one." And he told an interviewer that the work of today's Irish missionaries may have even more significant results for world civilization than that of their' early medieval counterparts whose 'labors· won the Dame of "the miracle of Ireland." Roseingrave spoke to the Cin_ cinnati Medievalists and to students of Our Lady of Cincinnati CHICAGO (NC) - "The Endowed," a half-hour documen- College. Carry Hope Message tary motion picture dealing with the work of the Extension lay "Today as in the seventh and Volunteers, had its premiere eighth centuries," he declared, here today and now is available "Ireland's greatest contribution through the Catholic Church Is to send its missionaries into a Extension Society. world floundering in the morass The movie was filmed on loca- of materialism, strife, and distion in a number of states where cord. The real role of Ireland is the lay volunteers support the a spiritual one, best exemplified '¢forts of· priests in U. S. home in the hundreds who go' forth missions. from our' seminaries to the for, Father' John S. Banahan of eign missions. It is they. who Chicago' wrote, directed, narcarry the message of hope for a . rated and filmed "The En-· sick and distressed world." dowed." He ,has produced sevIreland's ,most significant lay eral other motion pictures on cont,ribution to the world, he fi:atholic subjects. continued, is the legion of He is director of the Chicago Mary. Archdioc~san Radio-TV Office In the Legion, he said, we see and writes a weekly column for "history in the making." the New World, Chicago archdi_ "The Legion possesses an unocesan newspaper. told potentiality and could be"The Endowed'" may be ob- come the means of assuring the tained from Visual Aids, Exten- primacy of the spiritual over the sion L~y Volunteers, 1307 South soul-destroying materialism of Wa'bash Avenue, Chicago 5, ill. today's world," he said.

Film Docum'ents Volunteer Work

Cathc;»"ic School~ Students to Keep Books Pending Court' Ruling" PORTLAND (NC) Paroehial school students in the Portland Area will keep the taxpaid textbooks lent them by public schools pending a U.S. Supreme Court ruling on the eonstitutionality of the practice. This was the upshot. of a d-:cision of the Portland publIc ilChool board' to make no further efforts to recover the· estimated 98,640 books it has lent to parac:hial school students. The school board announced It would accept a ruling handed down earlier by Circuit Court ludge Virgil Langtry permitting the parochial school students to keep the books until a decision ,

Thurs., Nov. 1, 1962

Volunteers

WASHINGTON (NC) - Plans for a campaign to re,eruit 500 laypeople to serve in the American home mis'sions in 1963 were disclosed here by the director of the , Extension'Lay Volunteers. "Thi~ is not a program for ,weak , Catholics," said Father John ' I. Sullivan of Chi c ago. Wyoming, Nebraska, Kansas, "There is no room in' the Ex- Arkansas, Oklahoma, Colorado and New Mexico. He added that tension Lay Volunteers for several other states and Puerto escapists who are running away from the obligations of their state in life." The director of the program sponsored by, the Cat h' 01 i c Church Extension Society which (has headquarters in Ohicago said the 500-volunteers' goal llIlust be met by mid-March, 1963, so that definite home mission assignments can be con, :firmed by June 1. Stringent Test The program director em.phasized that only qualified laypeople who meet stringent screening requirements will be accepted. "Our volunteers must be solid, balanced Catholics," he said. "They must be willing to giv;e themselves fully for at least a year, leaving their homes, their £amilies and their financial opportunities to give themselves entirely to Chri,st. In return, filey receive only enough to live on - and the satisfaction of knowing that they are doing something significant for their Church." Father Sullivan said the 1963 program will begin formally with a week of orienta,tion on August 23, 1963. 180 Volunteers He said that today there are some 180 Extension Lay Volunteers from 59 U.S. Sees working in 65 parishes and institutions m Louisiana, Texas, Missouri,

,THE ANCHOR-

is reached b¥ the U.S. high

court. ' The Portland llchool board was the only one in Oregon that had sought to recover textbooks from parochial school students before the Supreme Court acts. Rules Violation . . An appeal IS now pendmg before the U.S. high court from.an Oregon Supreme Court ~ling that the 20-year-old ?ractlce of lenqing textbc.>0k~ VIolates the Oregon Constitution. , Under Oregon law, tax:-pa~d textbooks, selected by public school authorities, were lent to aU children in "standard" elementary schools or in grades' and eight of ,..standard" Tariff Commission secondary sch90ls. Following the Oregon court's NOTRE DAME (NC) :...- James W. Culliton, 51, has resigned l'Ullng that the practice violates as dean of the University of the state constitution, State Notre Dame business adminis- Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton, tration college to fill a six-year ' ,held that parochial school pupils appointment by President Ken- c:ouId continue to use the books 'Iledy as a member of the U~ untn. legal action in the matter was oompleted. l'ariff Oom:mission.

seven

3

Says Loneliness, Boredom, Fear, Chief 'Prob~ems WASHINGTON (NC) Loneliness, boredom and fear are the three greatest problems facing the common man today, a national Carmelite Third Order meeting was told here. Father Peter-Thomas Rohrbach, O.C.D., gave this analysis of modern ills in a talk to the fourth national congress of the Third Order of Discalced Carmelites. Some 400 persons attended the three-day meeting whose theme was "St. Therese and the Tertiary," relating St, Therese of Lisieux to the needs and aspirations of Third Order members. Had Childlike Trust Father Rohrbach, prior of the 'Washington Carmelite monastery and author of several books on Carmelite saints and other WHITE MASS: Among the members of Sf. Luke's SUbjects, called St. Therese "the Guild, Fall River, who attended the annual White Mass at saint of the common man." He St. Anne's Hospital Chapel, were left to right: Dr. Joseph said the example of her life can in the solution of the probJ. Shea; Dr. Francis J. D'Errico, Guild president; and Dr. '" help lems of loneliness, boredom and John C. Corrigan, K.S.G. . fear. ' He said St. Therese was never lonely because she remained , , •• close to Christ. She turned her attention away from herSelf and Ill..l outward to the needs of the B~ WASHINGTON .(NC) - The Father Hartman said that per_ world, he declared. Father Rohrbach said St. executive secretary of the Cathjury is the original context, but Therese's cure for fear was conolic Biblical Association con-' .said there is also justification side,rs as representative of deep for the traditional translation fidence in God. St. Therese scholarship a new Jewish transagainst profanity. "The literal feared nothing because she trusted God with a childlike lation of parts of the Old Testa_ translation," he said, "is a prohibition against 'taking up the trust, he said. ment. Father Louis F. Hartman, name of the Lord for worthless_ ness.' " C.SS.R., professor of Semitic languages at the Catholic UniFather Hartman said that the versity of America, said most of new translation's version of the the changes in the English- first' sentence in Genesis is Inc~ude language Jewish translation "open to some dispute." The new COVINGTON (NC) - Msgr have been accepted by critical translation begins "When God William E. McManus, superinBiblical scholars within Catholic began to create." The traditional tendent of schools in the Ohicago ranks as well. translation is "In the beginning, archdiocese, said here that eduThe volume represents eight God created the heavens and the cators should seek to bring paryears of work by seven Jewish earth." ents into a more active role in scholars who translated from the But Father Hartman said that, the school. ancient Hebrew text. To be pubMsgr. McManus, speaking at on the whole, the new translation . lished in January by the Jewish the annual teachers' institute ,in is being well received by BibPublication Society of America, the Covington diocese, said eduin Philadelphia, the volume is lical scholars across the country. cators should "break down the the first of three contemplated. wall that prevents parents from It contains Genesis, Exodus, 'contact with the school." One P~ug Pinl:lPS Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuter- !. means of doing this, he said, is onomy. CLEVELAND (NC) - John , the' Parent-Teachers A!!sociation. Carroll' University is plugging Msgr. McManus also urged Correct Translation n,ew kind. The educators to take a close look at Noting the J.ewish version's "pinups" reference to having Moses cross Jesuit university is urging stu- their discipline' policies. "Every the "Sea of Reeds" instead of '. dents to rent and pin up in their principal shQuld' reexamine' the the Red Sea, Father Hartman rooms a selection from 160 "pin- policies of discipline and abolish anything tpat smacks of regisaid this has been accepted by ups" at the university library most Catholic scholars as well. Rental fee is $1.25, but $1 will mentat~on," he said. "It is the correct literal trans- be returned when the "pinup" lation of the ancient language," it! likewise. The "pinups" are he said. "The context also speaks reproductions of famous old of an East wind drying up the masterpieces, inc Iud i n g the waters. This implies a swampy works of Rembrandt, Van Gogh region of low water rather than and others. Said Father Nicholas Predovich, S.J.: "Students can't a deep sea." ' look at ·masterpieces' day after Open' to Dispute ~ The Jewish translation Pl!t the day without developing some NEW BEDFORD emphasis 0/1 perjury i~ the com- ' sort· of appreciation for good art." 'inandm~ritagainst using God's INDUSTRIAL OilS' , nahle 'in' vain. The Third Commandment, "which is the seMnd HEATING OilS in Catholic versions, is translated:' "You shall not swear ,COX TIMKEN . falsely by the name of th~ Lord, Home made your God; for the Lord will not . OIL BURNERS clear one who swears falsely by CANDIES His n;lme." CHOCOLATES

CUP roessor f Lau ds Scholarship Of ew ' Jew.·sh Old TeSitament

Schools Should ,Parents

HATHAWAY

OIL CO. INC.

Doro~hy'

:Sal.s & Service

L E M.I E U X

150 Varieties

PLUMBING & HEATING, INC. for Domestic -...a ~ &: Industrial ~ Sales and Oil Burners Service

ROUTE 6 near

Fairhaven Auto Thean fAIRHAVEN, MASS.

501 COUNTY ST. NEW BEDFORD WY 3·1751'

WY 5-1631 2283 ACUSHNET AVE. NEW BEDFORD

,CASA BLANCA Just Across The Coggeshall St. Bridge

Finest Variety of , SEAFOOD Served Anywhere - Also STEAK5~CHOPS:-C:HICKEN

FRESH NATIVE . I . SAY' SCALLOPS Maclean's Sea Foods UNION WHARF, F~IR~~VEN


4

'Weill ~ury You· Stresses Spread Of Communism

THE ANCHOR-Diocese oHall River-Thurs., Nov. 1, 1962'

Explolirns Ameri.cG n!s6 C:hange' In Attitude Towar'd: Church. -1

,

'

WASIDNGTON (NC) Film clips dating back to the infancy of movies are knitted together with the modem

By Rt. Rev. Msgr., John S. Kennedy "This. baok suggests that a signilicant change has occurred both in the attitudes most Americans take toward' the Catholic Church and in the J70le af the Church in the 'life of the total community~" Thus does Monsignor Francis J. Lally put the point which of Europe, a larg.e pro.he sets out to make in The parts portion of them strangers to' the Cat hoI icC h u r c h· in a ,tongue and the kind of society -Changing Ameriea (Little, characteristic of the United!

product in chronicling the sto", coinmunism's threatening worldwide spread· during !!he last 40 years. The result is "We'll Bu:tiV You," a feature length doc\llmentary production by the COlumbia Pictures Corporation which was shown to an audience composed mainly of newsmen ·:BrGwn. $3.75). The occasion of States and considered! by the at a Columbia projection room the reflections here ,gathered is nativist unassimilable. They saw here. The film has drawn tJw it as· chiefly, if not exclusively, the presence in praise of the American Legion, a power struct1:1i'e,. incempatible' the White H(juse members of Congress, govern;.. with demGlcracy. for the fi r s t ment officials and others. time in. AmeriThese' imwressitms: were' firmly The film draws its title from can history, of fixed!, and they were not offset the well publicized threat attriba Catholic. by first hand knewledge of the uted to Soviet Premier Nikita T·his,. u n til nature and the workings of the Khrushchev. It documents ths fairly 1 ate Ly, q:turch. march of Marxism from the d~ had' been held! 1l1Jniversal Education of Lenin down to the Red take.u nth i' n kover of Cuba under Fidel Castr<!>. For' their part, Cathelic9 able. T hat it tended to keep largely to· themImposed by Force has come about, selves. Meeting with hostility, indicates t hat The film documents that com.. they stayed apart. But there radical change CATHOLIC YOUTH SUNDAY: Reciting CYO pledge muni~ never won a popular has, occurred. How was, it ac- were forces at: work which a.l!- at St. Mary's Cathedral during Catholic Youth Sunday proelection anywhere, but has been chieved,. and what does it por- tered that. imposed by force on the peoples tend? Monsignor Lally proposes One, for example, was univer- gram are Fan River area officers, from left, Henry Gillet, of various countries. One seto- give. us his opinions on the sal education. It gave the chil- Immaculate Conception parish, president; Marion Mellen, quence records the refusal ~ dren of immigrants· the oppor- Notre Dame, vice-president; Robert Berube, St. Jean Bap- Russian people to; support .. a question.. . He does so succinctly yet t4nity to better themselves, and tiste, treasurer; Gloria Raposa, Santo Christo, secretary. - Lenin program by "ballot-and gracefuily. Anyone conversant doing so entailed their invol.. its .subsequent enforeement with . , , bullets. with the: editorials.in The Pilot vement in the affairs of the of Boston,. of which Monsignor community. They began to. ~:rhe film producer said "We'IEI . · 'Lally is editor,. knows that he long. . Bury You" contains. factual and MCilnsignor. Lally sees the: ·'bas' Unusual: breadth and inciauthenticated scenes from seerefJ siveness of mind', that he ad- presidential campaign (}f 1960 and private files, as it documentll NEW YORK (NC}-A Brookmusic publishing hQuse, which .the spread of . communism dresses. himsell to any matter of .. and the election of Mr.. Kennedy lyn parish priest and a cloistered ,brought the two together'moment to the American com- as' signaUy speeding the prothrough Europe, across Chi~ · munity as well as to the Church, cess'. Thle, ·that campaign had .nun in New Mexico who have . through postagi! stamps. , the Far East and into Cuba, .that he always, has something . ugly features reminiscent of the never met collaborated in the ·.fresh. and telling to· say, and orgy of bigofuy in 1928. But· production of an off-Broadwa,y ·that he expresses his ideas with these did not play the principal musical which opens next month at the Bla9kfriars theater here. force and verve. All these qua- and d'edsive part in. '1960 that they did 32 years earlier. lities are evident in his book. Father Joseph Roff, a curate Count~y Instead, as the author shows Qualities. of Minority at the Sacred Hearts and St. iIll his reheID"Sal of' the campa·ign, MIAMI (NC) - A collegiate ministered by the DominicD Stephen parish' in Brooklyn, He begins by reviewiJng the an, OPPoL"tunity to, commlil11icate prayer program inaugurated Sisters of Adrian, Mich., the history of Catholicism in Amer- a trae, rather than the ancdent 'wrote the' music for the three- here last year to unite persons PPC secured a campuswide com.act operetta" "Lady of Mexico." ica. The materiaL in this section . false,. image of the Church in of all faiths in daily prayer for mitment to the daily prayel'& It is' based on the play "Counted is, faIDiliar to one· who has conAmerican life was given and As Mine," written by S'ister the President, the United States, The program was suggested _ siderecl' the subject even cursori- used. Mary Francis, a cloistered Poor and' the world has now spread other colleges. ly.. But even the. expert will l.ook Ahead As a result, U U.S. colleges, Clare nun of Roswel1, N. M., who to college ca m pus e s, high profit biY the neat outline,. with schools and elt"nentary schools as well as high school groups., Perhaps the best chapter in also wrete the lyrics. emphasis (}n the. most consethroughout the country. the book, and the most original, elementary school pupils, sociequential developments. Father Roff, a native· of deals with. the. image of the The Pres i d: e n t i a 1 Prayer ties and individuals through the Italy, studied piano and organ. Corps' was organized a year ago . nation, now are participating. This chapter should send ChW"ch from this; 'day forward. More than 300 of his. musical by students at Barry College in l'eaclers who· are making the The· work o£ communicating the Included are Holy Cross, WO!lcontributions· have been pub- response to an appeal for cester, and' Merrimack College, acquaintance of its: contents truth in· this: res]!lect has by no the first Hme, to the growmg means been finished. Every' lished' in this country. Some' of prayers made by President Ken- North Andover. ....; .... :library ef' special' works on the Catholic must be concerned his orchestral works have be-en nedy during his address to the .. ~"" . performed in Toronto, Montreal, nation in July, 1961. It has only varIous phases: of the planting abou't his. part in it. and' grewth of' the Faith on this Monsignor Lally suggests that Detroit and' New York; one membership requirement 'the proper way is to stress and conti:nent. Sister Mary Francis is the au- the promise to offer some ',' The beginnings were chancy, exempl'fJ!y the i m m e mol" i al -thor of "A Right. To Be Merry," prayer d!aily for' Divine assis:.. the advance iIreg,ular and dif- marks of the Church as th~y published in 1956, an account of , tance for the Cl'!ief Executive, to, contemporary Ameri,. life behind convent walls. She is the nation, and the world. ficult. Maturity has, it seems. apply can life. . Sponsored' by the' Sodality of .;also the author of two volumes · finally come. But,: as. the author The four marks - unity, Our Lad'y at the college: adof,poetry and four other plays. remarks, "At the present time. the Catholic Church in America sanctity, universality, aposto11: was the Greger-ian Institute still reflects the various forces Hcity - he discusse,s one by one, of' America in· Toledo; Ohio, a and' in each case he makes a that went into .its development.. lit still has, for example, some very pertinent application. Q Bnder unity, he dwelts on the OIARU~S F~ VARGAS qualities of a minOl'ity Church> lKJeW'<dIs: IE@GIT<dl 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE CAN SAVIE YOU UP TO exhibited in the aggressive and! present interest.in ecumenism;. NEW BEDFORD. MASS. WASHINGTON (NC)-Archuncertain attitudes which char- under sanctity, the sacramental 25·% acterize, people. in the saII).e' sit- rife; under universality" racial bilshop Patrick A. O'Boyle was j'ustice and' Christian brotherON' YOUR FUEL BillS elected chairman of the admin, nation.'" hood'; under apostolicity, scripistrative bo'ard of the National Encouraging Climate Brokston Chem. Co. tura~ studies, history, the deCathol:ic Welfare Conference at Nonetheless, it is· by now in-, vel'epment of doctrine, the anBrockton 1,9, Mass. disputable that "the Church has: cient Church's adaptability to . the board's meeting, it was announced following the annual found in. the l!Jmted States of, modern times and challenges. meeting of the U. S. Bishops, America a climate which en:m conclusion, he examines courages: its gl'owth and ex-· the debate on federal aid to edu- heM' this year in Rome. pansion and a society in which. , cation. 'Ji'his. has: been heated and' the ideals of the: Church and the not unmarked by bitterneS& OPTICIAN ideals of the State are neve]; :But he sees: it as; a meaningful DISPENSING seriously in. con:fll:ict."·· Prescriptions dialogue, with Cal1helics making INSURA'NCIC AGENCY, INC. Cardinal Gibbons said much, a reasoned case. which others' for Eyeglasses Filred the same, tl<I:iJng. decades: ag<il,. andl. cannot but consider on its· ~~, Waft,&lAMo SiliillElEl' happenings in the interval I1ave, - merits. This sort of exchange Office H'ours NIEW BlElOlFORi!lI, MASS. 9:00 -5:00 , more j,ustilied his judg- must continue. except Wed. ment and fulfilled' his hope. WV 8-5,1,53 WY 7-9T67 Fri. Eve. Why was thel'e, ever' any res-· If(JjU ~OY<a!i' ffJ'(JllriSih 6:30 - 8:30 ervation as to 'such an outcome?' f.IERSONAL SlERVIClE 7 ·No. Main, St., fall' River 058-0412 For generations. there, prevailed! if'c 1P~lJ1 ~@''\f~.I7M:l1; a caricature of the Church in Our Lady's Crusade for Peace the, minds, 0:£ many AmeJricans~. Novena begins this Sunday eveThey saw it as; foreign·,. not ning at 6:30' in- the C'hurch of ID~ founded here and never, in the Our Lady of the Angels, Fall Binl~; .exact sense, established here. River. and! will continue every , They saw it as immigl'ant,. its· Sunday evening at the same ,M'©'''IE~§ ,I, .ranks swiftly swelled by the time. The central theme of the: $ IEIiIlVDINIG·. '!I ..... 'waves of newcomers from all Novena is "For Peace Through Fcd~! ~i",~rr, Niaw' lB\'a«l!~@~clI ~ :j Pra~er."· The; congregation will ClaJjple C@«l!i AIl'l!G sign hymns and; recite prayers: &gent:. from a Novena booklet prepared! AERO MAVlFlOWER WASHINGTON (NC)-Twelve' by Rev, Raymond A. Punda, a Catholic institutions are among former Army chaplain. Sale of lRANSiT CO. iNC~ 653; the 217 sharing: in research the: boekle1:'. has; reached neady Nation-wide Movers <,grants announced for September a million copies. Words of Our·' ,W~man, 3>-0904 . WVnian:,;:+5058 ',by., . the· B.S. PUblic Heilltli"'; l.ad;y spoken~at.;'Fatiina; are in304, K.empton. St.. New' Bedfol',d · ~ervice., . , '_ corp_o~ated in. the)~:ov~a~ . of

Srcoklyn Priest, Cloistered. Nun Pool' Ta tents for. MU$9Cal Play

. CoUege· Spreads Pra,yer Plrogram To Schools Throu'ghout

!or

SAV~ MONEY ON

.WO~~ ~!l H~ AlJ •

bMJ~

'c611 ::;;.

[fORMULA 7

ANIONES. fENO, JR.

1e@J~lr'

19&5Ir£I·T

:fo'tll/lelt tlellNfY"

~SS~

than

HleA1fIN.G OIL

0>

;A.

MieMJkJlll!E1N!

BISAILLON'S, GARAGE

24..Hj@ur Wrecker Service

Washington ·Street, Fairhaven


. THE ANCHORThurs., Nov. 1, 1962

Council' Fathers Weigh Pleas For Liturgy. Changes

Vatican Must?· Makes Exch@ll

VA'rICAN CITY (NC) The Ecumenical Council is giving' special consideration to "the goal of the liturgy iI.n strengthening the .spiritual lifc of the faithful." Thc council fathers have diseussed the relative merits of Latin and of local languages in the mass and the sacraments. . A press bulletin spoke of the dual problem this way: "There are reasons which . militate in favor of Latin, inasmuch as its adoption has not only traditional values but it also has Il true unifying effect. Furthermore because of its logical precision, because of its conerete phraseology of legqil terms, :it is particularly suited for theology and dogma. "It also has considerable psychological and ascetical values raince it tends to make one speak in a logical BUd rational manner and prevents abandonment to sentimentall.ties and romamtic evasions. It tends to give its eser discipline of expression and of life. "On the other hand *here are Important 'J!eaSODS which reel)ffimend the use of 'the vernacular in liturgical functi&Ds. First and foremost of these is tile vernacular's capacity to make liturgical rites aeoessible to the community of the faitbtul and favor, therefore, their sctive participation in the Jlturgy. "The use oftbe vern,acular reYe81s, moreover, the universality of Christendom, capable even in its unchangeability, of asBuming the values and traditions of the individual peoples, of all lati-tudes and all times, of the present and of the future." The bulletmsaid "~ central argument of the debate besides that of the language to be used in the liturgy, has to do with the problem of making it easier for the faithful to participate actively in the liturgy. The problem applies especially to missionary territories, where it is felt with greater ~gency and presents greater problems.

BROOKLYN {NC) - An change between :the Broo~ Museum and the Vatican l' seum has resulted in the reuniting of the head and body [ a sixth century RC. Egyptian statue. 'TheBrooklyn Museum presented the head to 1h.eV:atican Museum, ~hich had the body. In exchange, the Vatican institution gave the Brooklyn Museum a first century B:C. Etruscan terra cotta heaa. The Egyptian work is now on exhibit in the Vatican, wbile the Etruscan sculpture is being exhibited here. A spokesman for the Brooklyn Museum said the head and body of the Egyptian statue were identified as parts ·of ithssame sculpture by Belgian Egyptologist Dr. Herman De Meulenaere.

THANK YOU, FATHER GORMAN: Brother Normand Beaudoin, M.S. of La Salette Seminary Attleboro checks a few of the several thousand volumes d()natedl to the .'seminary by Edwa~d J. Gorman, former superintendent of Diooesan schools and f,()l"l~er pastor' of St. Patrick's, Somerset. The La Salette Fathers weloome Father Gorman s gift as a nlmportant addi~ion to the seminary library.

Rev.

Cloth,ing Drive to Aid Macao [Refugees It's a small ia1and, only . .sUe square miles. 1t'e ju.st a dot in the vast expanse of the South China It's name is Macao, a refuge on the fringe of the Bamboo Curtain. Tiny as it is, Macao (pronounced ma-cow) packs a 1lremendous story. And the latest chapter of that story may be written in this country during the 1962 Bishops' Thanksgiving Clothing Collection from Sunday, Nov. 18 .tbrougbSunday, Nov. 25. The collection will be conducted under the auspices of Catholic Relief Services - National Catholic Welfare Conference, the agency ma~ntained by U.S. Catholics which dispenses relief to the needy· on a worldwide scale. Said Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom, CRSNCWC executive director:

Commission Vote VATICAN CITY (NC)-There

was no "stralght ticket" in the election of the 160 prelates on

Sea.

No

Easy Task

Other lists had. meanwhile been prepared by Asian and African bishops as well as by the heads of religious orders. T h u s when the Council Fathers assembled. in St. Peter's to vote they were given lists of candidates wh i c h indicated which ()f the national episcopal conferences had dra:wn them up. That was the only guidance. The individual bishop had -to fill out his own ballot. Each council Father was requested to print in block letters each of the 160 candidates he selected, and to indicate the full name of the diocese of origin of the candidate along with his title.

the working commissions of the Ecumenical Council. and voting was no e~ task. When the fathers of the ooun_ eil met to vote on the 160 posts for the 10 commission», they were presented with several printed lists showing the choices of a number of national or regional aroups of bishops. But that was about as much help as they got. The Bishops of Bellug, Luxembourg and. the Netherlands supported, with only a few minor changes, a list of candidates prepared by a group com_ posed of German, Austrian and Swiss members of the ca1Jncil. It was also understood that La~ds Rel&:<epteGn bishops from Poland and Yugoslavia indicated they would supLONDON (NC)-Bi-shop John 1P0rt these .candidates. The list Moorman of Ripon, official Anwas later sent to the Italian glican <Ibserver at the Ecumeniepiscopal conference for scru- cal Council, praised the warmth tiny, and if possible, support. and kindness of his hosts in a The Italian bishops for their special interview printed here part are Said to have rejected a in the Catholic Herald. list proposed by one group "Members of the Secretariat which suggested. that five Italian for Promoting Christian- Unity bishops be nominated to each . could not have been better eommission. This group then hosts" the' Bishop ti:lld Father agreed on another list which Gabriel Slater, A.A., a Catholic gives wider representation to tile Herald correspondent in Rome.. different nationalities, it was "What has impressed me most is understood. the warmth on all occasions, the The' bishops from the United kindness, the desire that we States met at the North Amer- should understand and enjoy the ican College in Rome and drew ceremonies." up their own list of candidates "I have never shared in any after consulting with various Catholic service so closely benational hierarchies. fore," he said. Bishop Moorman said the nonCatholie observers hold 'special prayers for the council in ·the WASHINGTON (NC) - Pres- Methodist church in Rome every Ident Kennedy has aIgned into Monday and Friday. The Anglilaw a measure .addiDg the cans are ahloll'eceiving lthe phase "80 help me God" 110 the Bucbarist 'lor -the eou.nclI twdce oath takea'by armeiI 4I8lViees a week in JUt Stainta' ebun:h enlisted ·personneL -tbe1le, he reported.

Ang!Bcan Observer .

Armed forces 'Oath

"The theme of the 1962 clobh\.in,g c·o 11 e ct ien is 'Give thanks by g i v i n g.'. During Thanksgiving week American Cathol.ios Will bavean l)))portunity to do just that, by gathering up still serviceable articles of clothing, shoes, blankets, bedding and passing them. on to those who so sorely need them. "Those in need include the brave in the east shadow of the Berlin wall who plot escape, those who would dare to climb over-- Red China's barbed wire for the safety of Hong Kong, those who would brave the Red minefields between the AustroHungarian border and those who would swim the treacherous waters from the shore of Red China to the freedom of Macao." !!OO ,Refugees a Month .contrasts are oommon in Macao. In a sing:le glance there may be seen ~e residence -of th~ Portuguese colonial governor; the flag of Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalist China Hying over a nearby s c -h.o 0 1 ;commWlism's banner, the haliilmer and sickle .5uperimposed an a blood red field, Happing lin the breeze over the local Chamlierof Commerce, and towering above all, the ero~ of Christ atop the islend's ancient cathedral. This shoddy replica of old Europe in an Oriental setting is the world center of the firecracker industry. Refugees from Red China pour into the tiny island at the rate ·of 900 a month. During last May's greatexQ(j!us from the famine-stricken mainland 1,600 came to Macao. Tying in the Macao story to the clothing collection, Bishop Swanstrom said: For Shive:riD:ng O:llild '''When the average American Catholic donates a bundle of used clothing to his parish church during Thanksgiving week, he is doing more good .than he ·can possibly realize. ''The blanket he may ;give may be the one wrapped around 11 frightened,shiveringchild who has just passed safely beyond the range ·of the watchful eye of ;Q Red 'Chinese sentry and reaf'ched the freedom <>f Macao. Perhaps that. blanket maybe the

,,"''-''''''-''4'

~DfEBRO-$.S·~ .OIIL~ ~ CO. ~

~HeatjngOils , ~ and B'urners ~ ~ 365

,

,

NORTH IiRON1Sr.REET ~ NEWSED.f.GRD

.

__

WYman. M S M '

"''',"I''''~

P,o.nt:iff Receives

U. S. A.rchbishops VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope JJohn received in audience the arehbi&!1ops and .auxilimy ,bishops of .three major Ameri~ di-

oceses the same day he broadeast 1m 'l1rgent appeal for peace. tmt,. :Ilbing protecting the child Ke weloomed Francis Cardinal from pneumonia. Spellman, Arch:bishopoi New "The pair of still wearable shoes he may donate may fit the York; Janres F:r.ancis -Cardinal Mcintyre, Archbishop of Lao feet of a newlyamved refugee, Angeles, and Archbishop John ~ has nothing but a few J. l{rol·of Philadelphia, water-soaked rags. Those rags 'I'he Spellman party includecl will, in turn, be replaced by a suit, or a jacket and trousers six of th~ Iilineauxiliary bishops donated to the Bishops' Thanks- of New York and William H. Fanning, editor of the 'Catholic giving C!l.othing ·Collection by News, weekly newspaper of the some g.enel"olls American." New Y<lrk See. Cardinal Spellman, who is one u of the 10 .presirling carCianals of the Ecumenical Council, presented the Pope with a photoWASHINGTON (NC) - There graph of a model of the prois now less sex, crime and viojected pavilion. of the Holy See lence in television programs at the !I.91)4 world's fair in New than tw.o y.earsago, the manager York. The Cardinal was alone of TV's code of standards with ,the !Pontiff for 25 minutes asserted here. before the six ;Quxiliary bishops 'The Fall convention of the and Fanning were ushered into Natiamal Association ·of Br<lad- the Pope's library to join them. casters here was told that ,the Cardina~ Spellman introduced "great hue and cry during the' the auxiliaries to the Pope in two-year period ending last the following {)rder: Bishop Spring" over crime, violence and James H. Griffiths, Fulton J. sex lin TV bas died down. Sheen, Edward E. Swanstrom, Edwa:rIdH. Bronson, mamager Joseph F. Flannelly, Joseph M. Of the NBA's TV code office, Pernioone and Philip J. Fursaid "-one reason you do not hear long. He described briefiy the the shriil screams of the past work done by eaCh. about these subjects on television is because rar~y nowadays are there oocaSlions war.r.an'bing such complaints.". Be said that next to a control room engineer, the TV code staff FAIRM members watch more television than any·oneand "no onewatcbes FRESH it as ·.analy,iticallyas we do." Credits Producers "That the television code had something to do with this," 'FOR THE Bronson said, "I think isa fair WHOtE FAMILY statement, but it is even' more. to the credit of those ma~or pro_ '0 ducers of television fare, that QuagityConfrolied they are more carefully following the spirit and intent as well TAUNTON as the language of the code. VA 4-6984

Says Less Sex Crime ·on TV

MILK

DURY ·BROSIP. A1TlEBORO CA 2-0292

MEN J7·2S

JOIN THE NEW Society of Brother.s of. Ourladv ofP,l"oViidence . For information write to:

FATHER MASTER St. Joseph the Worker Novitiate Warwick Neck, R. 'Ii.

............................ ANDE'RSO'N &O'LS,E·N 'INDUSTRIAL and 'DOMESTIC

lcffA rING - P'PING and AIR. ,OONDITIONING CONTRACTORS lilt "',"man St.

.............................. ,W'(

7-9t62

New Bedford


;, 6

TH'E

AN~HPR-Qi()cese

of fall 'River..,.., rhurs.• Nov. I, ...1 67 .

...::.._----....;....-------------:"~.

Lest"We 'Forget

,

As Before~Business as 'Usual

MONTH

. ,.; .\.

-

Pieta :iculptuJre N~wly.Exhibited

OF

In St_ 'Pe.ter's

'Speculation about tqi~gs ~'thaIt might have been" is usually a profitless. experience. .' VATICAN CITY' (NC) _ All the same, in the light of the events of the past SOULS The famed Pieta' sculpture.. ten days, some profit could be derived from the thoughtschedu1ed to be on exhibil what wouid' have happened if a· nuclear deviCe had been at the New York World" dropped on the United States. ". ' Fair in' 1964, will have a new It is true that many persons were fearful 'of this look here when it Is remounte4 happening and many others resorted to . prayer - , in , in st. Peter's basilica. MicheIangelo's masterpiece, more' than a few. cases-as never before. . which depicts a sorrowful MaJ17 But what if a single atom bomb had dropped on this, holding the dead Christ in her country? ' . . · lap, has been removed from the Imagine the rush to the ch\!,rches, t-o go to confession, pedestal where it had beea to attend Mass. Imagine the numbers who' would be. p1acExl 'in 1749 for cleaning and examination in the Vaticaa brought face to face with the reality' of death and would Museum restoration 1abories. immediately take steps to amend their lives. Imagi~e the Redig de Campos, inspectol' way true values would be seen in their proper light, and for medieval and modern • things like money and success and power seen for the , . and director of the la'boratoriee, poor props that they are. . . '. said examination showed thai Yes, there :would, undoubtedly be some sort of a spirithe statue had been mounte4 contrary to the concept of Mioo tual revolution in the lives of many~with.the survivors · che1angelo. The base had beeD. of such a horrible catastrophe making all sorts of resolu'tipped so that the figure of tions to serve God better and to keep a more attentive eye · Mary was alSO vertical while the on the things of eternity than before. , figure of Christ was horizonta:1. But no bomb dropped, thank God. And the, fear of , Original Angle such a calamity is rapidly draining away. And the changed When it is remounted, saM lives are falling back into the old patterns. And the moral De Campos, the b'ase will st'and resolutions are fading away. And the order of the day is on its original angle, a diff~ ence of about three and a haJf - business as usual. inches itn inclination, so tmd! And yet-death is still only a heartbeat away. For in Mary will appear as slightlF the midst of life men are still in death. Accidents still lifting the figure of her Son iDth~ happen. And diseases do not always announc.e their pre· stead of merely holding In. sence until ready to fulfill their final fatal role.. . . body in~rtly. . By REV. ROBERT W. HOVDA, Catholie Universit,y When the sculpture is ll8, ' ! t is sad that great crises do not ~lways make people m,ounted in. t~ chapel it ,wiB . great.· !tis unfortunate that· a scare does not substitute again be fixed above the altar .. for an act of the wilL TODAY~Feast ~ AH Saints. God gave the Law, a Law which on the' rear ~alL However, Ii For when' the crisis passes and -the scare subsides,' '''A 'great.. multitude . which DO' as St. Paul so often said stands': wiil· he . about four' feet low. man eOuldiium'ber/' teaches the . above mim as man's. condemna- than before and it will' be i-'.. then there is-as before--business as usual.' .. odisciples . ... first reading. The' o.f tion. But in Jesus Christ 'Godbas cli~d slightly forward so thai S' Jesus Christ are saints, are holy fulfilled the'Law and has left· viewers may ..have a. better view IS, because He is holy and his holi-' mercy for us' who cleave'w the of the,i.ace of Chr.ist. Previou-1o.: 't" II y th' I " .an.d Word, made flesh. . November is tra d IlOna e month 0 f th 'e HIS 0 y . 00.8 ness has penetr'ated ' them· the .inounting.'of the statue ~' _ · p' ' t . , ' . ' " shone through them., Saints; , . . th II d it· 'bl I th -- e sou s m ur,ga ory. ,.' ." , ' . , : ' . " .. thim'in the ChriStian view, do TUESDAY-Mass· as on ,S1m,,;·. e .w.a rna e . lmpOSS! e .10 .it is ·an·.exercise of the ptirestcha:rity ',to pray for, the. n'o't stand l'n a kI'nd o'f' co"m" pet1:~:: u:rTheprep'aratioi'l'of the' g'iftli see. th~ features ~.thef~ce . . " , " .• . . . . which are among the mOSt dead-not only those to whom one is bound by some tie tion with the Godhead' Quite· at the holy ·table begms m this b" til 'I ts f th • t ' of.relationship or friendship or·obligation, but those who the contrary. 'They stand as ie..; Mass with the ,recounting of ' ea~ u. .a~pe~ ~ . e ~~a ~~ "'~e 'without anyon,e'on this e.arth to remember t,h. em~ . minder of God's power to make' " Job's sufferings,. for' the justice. . ~lche,lang~l~ .~arved the ~le~ . h 1 d hi' of this world of time 'of nature ~rom 1496 to 1501. It was hill . One,··of the 'm'ost' touching' of . Catholic practices is ,us woe an. 0 y-even us. is not .the j~stic~ of' God. It first major work ,and was ex&that of teaching little children, f~~m .tbe very' first" time' TOMORROW _ 'Cominemora':" within His providence but itCute~ for the tomb of ~he Frenell they begin to 'lisp their prayers" to pray. for the souls in ' . . . . .. does not share in His eternity as . Cardmal Jean de Bdheres.. 18 'h es th em carl h ' ty an d th oughtf uIness tion N' iof All ' Faithful . b Departed.. k ·th man l'S dest1'n'ed to share '. in ,.the,..following. 400. yea,rs it _ P urgatory. It t eac or s commUnIon ro en WI eternal life. in, ourfragmentiZ.ed " 1;>e.en move'd six times. th ' Lord " existence here and now,justice from' th'eir e'arliest day's. 'And it helps those who can no th ose d"1SC1P1es 0f ,e longer :pray for thems'elves. , . , '. whose sanctity' may not be' and mercy often seem to be at.' '. Our Lord has said all should "become as little chn-, dramatically evident. Subject to. o·dds. In God they are one: '. th the correction of' our ,ultimate . b · dren.". A child's prayers and sincerity in rememermg e vision of God's purpose, we pray S-~es : . dead can teach all much during this month. ' ., . today as a community for their WEDNESDAY-Mass as on Suit. WASHINGTON (NC) - Thil\. speedy attainment of the happi- day. The Christian who, formed by the liturgy's awe and re- teen Sees will be involved in • ness He ~as ·proinised. straint' . and symbol ,language, nationwide study of Catholic&. ' The news.'coverage of'the Vatican Council is truly ~ ST MARY ON SATURDAY-' preserves il lively sense of the' emimtary' and secondary stho. ~arkabl~. Copy is. flowing from Rome in a ·veritable ~erbal First'among the saints but like myst,;ry. of ~o~, o~ .Hi s "oth~- r .t~at.i~ alr~ady' in progress: ~ tidal waye. And it is ---: sadly - almost inevitable that the them all in 'her total d~pehderice ness, o~ our mabIhty to, com-· dnec.tor .o~ th~·. stuqy disclosed . t· f th h . b . t· t' th . pletely "capture" or "p'ossess'" here. ' .' . :news s ory 0 e our can e maccura e It:t repor mg e. ,.0!l God s, grace, Mary h.as a~w~ys .. l.iim in' hlim~n categox:ies,- is' a, '. William' Conle'). Said that • facts. been the'Christian., only" ...., . "progress ' -... rd f t hfree o man . " . He ,is' free not ,. . Pi'10 t' St U dY JS now m . " I regarded . .' b by This week the Council 'has ,been discussing the' peop e~s"syJn 0 ·.an'slgn <;> ,e., .. ,b~~·ause·G.Od's Word, evenWh.ile c.' sclioois of. the Fort'Wayne-$outll L~turgy-the Church's'public worship of God. One of. the. Church. Blessed. a.re they who: mysterious,gives him direction,: Bend 'd!oce'se, mcr ,that studies items under 'discussion, by, the Council Fathers is the Holy . h~ar the word of God and. keep pl,lrpose; 'hope:: But "he is free' will De started by' Christmas JD Eucharist. It .is unfortunate' that some news stories have· ~~m~J~f~)~fT~:eC~~~~~::e~~: ·atoISO . beca.ljsde·ne: is'nHot.e~slthave~:' ·tpe.: ~onow~ng ~~es: Chica.~ t 1me an. space. ,e IS ,ell" Dubu.que, Cleveland and Pr,ovi-o .-, t' t d th C· thO I' dO' t" f th E h . t . : th'· f th W d f G d mIS-S a e e a OIC oc rme 0 ' e uc arIS . ' ' .. e prJm~cy.o e .or 0 0 master. The breath"of .eternity· dence. . ' .'. \ And so the world has been told· that the Eucharist m her pubhc worshIp, the fact· is in him.' . .' . ",' Th" thr ~.. 't d . b' ; . , that she never celebrates h e r ' . e... .ee ye~r s u y IS eUJIl "represents" the 'Body and' Blood -'of- Christ;" al)d slmi1~ liturgy wiihout public reading . . . . . , . financed by a" $.350,000 .gran6 other heresies are being presented as Catholic teaching in and frequent use of BibliCal Women"S.COnvention'.· ~~~~~;~~~e~~~~:i~~~;~~; the ·matter. .. " . " .".. texts. . ',' . ,.' , .0; ; Notre Dame, The survey is cea. Th~fa<;t~ are ,simple: 'the Eucharist is the Body and To ·Hear Lecturer·" ;.: teredo at-,the university, wheN -Blood of Christ. 'The appearances of bread and wine re. 21ST SUNDAY AFTER PENWASHINGToN (NC)'::':"Pbiiip" a new computing ~nter'will be main, but the substance of the bread and wine have beeI:J, TECOST. The' theme' of Judg- Scharper, an editor and ~requent - used .to pr~cess data... . . changed into the Body and Blood of. Christ. And so Catho-· merit, ,of the: co~summation of lecturer ')n religious" subjects,' Coley sa~d that studu:s WJll be lics,.· when' they'. receive the Eucharist,' re,ceive the B.ody things at the end of time, is the will speak at the, first ~ajor,,' co~.ucted~n, t!l.e fol~owmgf?th. 'and Blood of Christ. if they 'receive ,the Body' and Blood .of thought focus of .our wo'rship session of the National Council" Sees Buffalo , '.PIttsburgh . '. Saa ... . ,. " ., ,these latter Sundays afterPen"-' 'of Cath~lic Women's convention" Fra!1cisco, T,ucsC?l1' .Wil'!lingtoD, 'Christ under the appearance or species of bread,~hey:,still, 'tecost .and during', Advent. -So next m(;nlh.'· . . . ' pel.; Grand Island, Ntfu.; Mobilereceive the whole . Christ Who cannot be divided or.' sepa:' .. tl;1e refrain verse of the entrance S'h'" · . ..·t·· .. f ShoO . d Birmingham, Ala.; . . ' carper, eUll or 0 . eed' an. .'. '. and . in Cath., rated.··1f they rec'eive-as' our brother. Catholics of some'· hYi:nA;~raises th.epower .~f the Ward' ublishers in New York ol.~c .Bc,hools outsu:~e New.YodI . Lord 'smgs of God the Almighty . . ! P. • .., . , . CIty proper. of .the Oriental" rites ..do-'-the ·BodY .and . Blo~d Of. Chris~ wlio;~ power doe~ not' corrupt . Will ~eak on 'C~lStian ~~~~I'- ; , " . . j . . under the app'ear~nce, or specIes of bothbrel;ld and w~n~ .(as power iIi the hands .i:ij, m,en ship 10 the, AmerlcanScene~ a.t a :' . . .' . " .', .. gen~r~t; ~frk~:.meetiQg.~njhe::,;Worcester. Diocese ,'as does the Roman Rite priest-these:still.receivethe so often does). same whole 9hdst . . ,.' In the GospeIJesustells.·~ a c9.':1ve~t~01l sofi~~t ..d~y, ~aturd,ay,. 'T A'··d H 'I" C " story of. the Father's power_!fQv,;~. . .,.' ~. I :.~ Y ross answering prayer .with __ mercy ;NCCW headquarters· here. said .. WORCEST~R. (NC) ~ ''!1Ie . and forgiveness, eyen against the " ,~at a'bput,,10,000 person!,!' are . Diocese· of .W'orc est e r bel stem demands of 1ustice. The· expec1ed .atthe . 31~ national···.pledged$lOO,OOO to . the' Ho!F liturgy saves,us both from se~ti-·' cQnvention which:·.will t)nd; on Cross Colle g.e .DevelopmeDt Dlentalizing' God out of·, His·' .W:edn~sday; Nov. 7.. Meetmgs" FUJid. The" amount win be usecl -transcendence and' from :. the ;;. ,.'will :be held in Detroit's.inunici.. 'fOr scholarship aid F:ather RB!'"" .' ,hopelessness to· which a rigid, ,:pal convention center, .Cobo'·:·, mond', J .. SwordS; '.S;J.; co.ne.. " . . . ; .: (and 'also .too human) .view' of· Hall. I ::" president, said.' ".:' .. . . O~FlqA~NEWSPAPER ,OF,.lHE. DIOCESE.O~ FA~t RlyER ·transcendent·jusiice ~ight'give . .:' -,' ' ' ,. . :Ip.a statement aceomp~riyiJIC Published weekfy by The Catholic Press·.ofthe DioCeleofFall,Riv... ~ille'" ' '..GrantS for -Study. a1j~~iincenien~.. 9£ :~e, »ledge, , 10 H " " ... - " " . Bishop Bernard··J.. F1anagail, of 4 ,Ighla~d Avenue.' . '. . _,. ,. ·MONDAY......Mass as on Sun. WASHiNGTON' .(Nc)~SCliol:' Worcester, who is att~mdi~g the Fall River, Mass! . 'OSborne ' 5~7151° .' .day. It. is the same God y.'ho . arships totaling 'more (han:$~3,_' VatiCan Comicil, said: :"The' de" PUBLISHER makes apparently impossible de-' 000 have been awarded 20 .~~d- velopment· program at· H~ . 'Most Rev.. James L~: Connolly•.D.D.• PhD. . mands who gives freely to' men· uate students for· studies in' psy- . Cross' is of utmost importance GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER the knowledge of truth and jus- . chiatric social work and· voca"- .; ~' maintaining' and furtheriDl . . . .,' tice, the gospel of peace,' the' tional rehabilitation of, the men-' the e~traordinary work, of ODe Rev. Daniel. F. Shalloo. M.A. Rev. John P.Driscoll' , sword of the spirit, which the .tally ill atCatliolic Universiiy's of th.e country"s truly great ioA,\ANAGING ED.ITOR first reading recommends as our- School of Social Service for the' sotitutions of higher learning III . Hugh J. Golden armour in the final struggie.·. academic year 1962-63.: . !lbe c1assica.! tradi~ion." '

THe HOLY

0'

erhnOlA.9h th& Wuk With

Chu.nck

Ch-Id' .. Pray'er

u: .

Stud·y· 'of ·Sch~oll Involves 13

Mistakes'

0

0

"

0

=

0

0

0

..


Orges Laymefi 'Seek Maturity In Religion

St. P atrick~" Wareham, Has Long History .Of Service to Catholics of Upper Cape

VHi: ANCHORThurs., Nov. 1, 1962

Praises Pontiff's :Deep Concern' For Protestants

NEW YORK (NC) - The By Marion Unsworth eatholic layman today fac~s Although the history of St. Patrick's parish, Wareham, is a long one, dating back a special challenge to achieve .approximately a century ago when it was first a mission, the majority of its congregation religious maturity, the Na.1 h f th 50 percent 0 f t he C,ath 0 l'ICS In . Wareh am are tional Catholic Adult Education do not have engt y histories, or JP.ore an eommission was told here. school-age youngsters. Rev. John. Chippendale, present pastor, accounts for this rather Father Daniel E. Lupton, a surprising statistic by the ;;'" ." -".'~-' ..-.,,,,," ,., priest of the Pittsburgh Oratory, f.act that many.young coupsaid that "at DO other time has lea with large families choose It been so necessary for the ind" h dividual Christian to formulate to live an vacatIOn In t at

PHILADELPHIA (NC)~ The bishop who heads the World Methodist Council said here that Pope John

"has a true imd deep concern for Protestants. Bishop Fred P. Corson, coun~ cil president, made the statement • personal synthesis of his Faith town, rather than traveling farto newsmen on his return from " ther down on Cape Cod. Rome, where he had a private and the world aroun d h im. It has been a source of conten_ audience with the Pope and also Catholic adult education pro- tion for many years whether was an observer at a meeting of grams can plaY an important Wareham should be considered the Second Vatican Council. part in the process of develop- as actually part of the Cape or The bishop said his hour-long ling religious maturity .in lay- whether the official beginning audience wit\! the Pope was both men, Father Lupton told the is at the two bridges over the "social and serious." He stated Adult Education Commission's Cape Cod Canal, but as far as that Pope John is "motivated .econd annual conference, held the establishment of the Cathonly by deep love and concern at Fordham University. olic Church in the area is conin his heart" in his attempts to He said the modern attitude cerned, Wareham is definitely reach non-Catholics. blunder" the attitude of looking part of its history, for many 'Humble Simplicity' ing relativism" while at the people moved into the Buzzards \ '1 same time "the pressures of this Bay-Wareham section at the "His humble simplicity is such &arne society to conformity are time when the Canal was being that it hides his great scholar· :? most difficult to withstand." buill ship," Bishop Corson also said. He described as a "tragic Previously, the sole Catholic and "he is as practical as he is blunder" the attitUde of looking parish was. in Sandwinch, and , sincere--fully aware of the to priests to plan and initiate when employment at the glass mank and .great obstacles to Christhian unity." prograJ;llS of lay action. factories there slackened, resi"The layman must himself see dents moved· to surrounding The Bishop said that when he the problems, exercise the pru- areas and found it dUficult to outlined the scope and problems dential .judgements, and plan h~ . attend Mass and other religious of the World Methodist Council.. programs in these areas which ,functions.: ., the Pope exclaimed: "Then your job is like mine!" . are his own," he declared. Parish Grows Father Lupton said Catholic Originally St. Patrick's was a Bishop Corson stated that he ,." adult education programs which .~ission of tl,le Sandwich parish was "very favorably impressed" "provide ·the opportunity for ,under Rev..William Moran who py the reception the Protestant eonfrontation with a maturity 0(, .,w:as apP9iqted pll.stor tht;re i~ tbservers got in Rome. "There - ,. faith" ,. can "go a long way., ,1850, its congregation attended was little or nothing ·that any towards the creation of a vigoi~1 ~ass in hi.r,ed halls uiltil nego';' Protestant could criticize." h.e STo P ~TRICK'S, WAREHAM . ous and effective laity in our:, tiatioDS were completed .in 1865' added. ~ciety.'~ . . for purcha,Se, of an, abandoned' .Marion;.·, Tremont, and· Onset; ",' The . SlsteMf duties' include - . He said Catholic adult· educa. Baptist church. The first Mass Inter-Faith Talks aon programs should stress the...... celebrated in this second Church' and a'systematic program of catechetical instruction, home MEDRAs NC) _ Ch"'istians liturgical . movement, Sacred,:, .on_.Cap~ C!,.~,. nam~d St.: Pa~ Christian Doctrine was initiated,. visits to p~rishioners, aQd the, of the census. In 1949 the' Scripturf;, ecumenism and the 'rick's', was Said by Father Ber-. for the children of the entire ' taking " ,. of many religious communities parish,using a hall in Tremont,' Sisters opened a kindergarten theology of the laity. 'boldi in that year. private homes -in Onset and in an addition which was built : came together at a public meetFollowing its founding as a Mm:ion, and the church in Ware- to the Cenacle and now teach - ing at Town Hall here to hear 'lectures on the prospects for Red Ruled Nationsrnission, St. Patrick's. continued approximately 40 youngsters Christian unity in light of both .f,ogrow 'in population while ham. Such a .schedule was impossi- . the.re. the Second Vatican Council and Are Represented Sandwich decreased with the. ble for the pastor to' carry out' Durl'ng the Summer the usual the work 0 f th . e Wor Id CouncU V A TIC A N CITY (NC) _ closing of the glassworks. alone, but in 1928 the first cur-·· 4,000 population of the Wareham of Churches. Co-chairmen of the Forty-nine bishops from Red.. By 1911, ..the Wareham parish was larger than its mot~r ~te, ,Rev. Raymond T. Considine,: area is swelled to an estimated meeting were Catholic Aux. suled countries secured permis- church and, accordingly, St. 1'1;\1;., was appointed to the Wareham 12,000, and to assist Father Chip- iliary Bishop Francis A. Carslon to attend the Second Vati.· rick's was created a parish in ;ts parish to assist Father C·allahan. pendale, who was named pastor valho of Madras and Mylapore can Council, a survey has shown•. own right, with Rev. William New St. Patrick's at Wareham" in '1948; there are' and Protestant Bishop D. Chel. Most numerous are bisho?s F: Sullivan, who had been pasIn 'the 'meantime, Masses il) two curates; .Rev" JohnJ. Smith, . lappa of Madras. from Poland and yugoslavia.... tor at Corpus Christi, Sandwich, Tremont were celebrated in the who has ibeen. at, St. Patrick's But there are bishops here fro.m for five years, named to head Grange Hall where a temporary since 1959 arid Rev'. Leonard M.. '1iJ:llIUIm~ .' euba, .!Iungary, Czechoslovakia" "the new parish. Included in the'. portable' altar 'was erected, but Mullaney, who arrived last , ,Bu.lgapa and East Germany. .' parish were' th~ towns of l'4arion in 1935, land was donated to the Winter. '---. .--"-............... - ~ , Only o~e. of the three cardi:-.' . and the villages' of Tremont and mission by Mrs. Assunta Borsari All three are kept very busy "DaIs w~<?se nations have been: Onset. . - TO ,'-cM' MiS' OW"~ .~,.. and St. ·Anthony's· Church was .. in parish work:, which .includes ~ke". oyer by communism. is.·.:. At first the' people living in ,Ita: CMU IS IUCOGNIUO erected on that site. Work on the' . such active organizations as St.. , present\, He is Stefan Cardmal,·" Marion attended Mass during the . chapel. was· done by parishionerS '. Patrick's Circle, Rosary and AI__ . 'oR. IU5 CULIN AR."t ART••• Wyszynski, Primate of PC?land. , Summer months'at the Sippican in their spare .time who worked Socie t y, \,,;. .... YO'S . t PR.Ii6CA.IPTION tar . ., t. Vmcen " ,end ~rc~bj.!!hop of Warsaw. .': Yacht Club.''In '1916 St. Rita's. under plans conceived by Father de Paul Society, Holy Name DltPAR.TMllMT AT '. COI)~p~cuously a b IS e n t ,are:;, 'Chu'rch'was dedicated and served Callahaon: , .. Society' and Confraternity of' i" "is~ops ...f~m mainland Chi~,. 'llhe' mission; Temporary accom-. At St. Rita s C~urch m Marlon, .. Chr~tian Doctrine.. . Wihere brutal physical persecu.- "'!hodiltionsalsa were necessary Father Callahan mstalled a heat-. tion of th~ Church and its offi- in Onset, where the' Pastime ing and lighting system, and new' cial.s contmues and where the Theatre was rented for Sunday pews, and in 1941 a carved oak a RECOG"I&IiD FOR. ITi 1l'e~lrqe has ~t up a fake ·'Cath. - Masses during the Summer. altar donated by Miss Amy A~C.Ul\,AC.Y I" PII.~It4ll1 olic .Church. Because Onset grew so rapid•. Brew(lr was dedicated. Nmeteen of the 21 Yugoslav ly, a wood,en church, St: Mary'S, PIU5CR.I"IOM' ! The old St. Patrick's ,Church bisJ:!,ops are here. The two who was erected on a site opposite also had become inadequate for' li'I"e not stayed home because of the present church and it was the needs of the parish and in ROUTE 6, HUnLESON AVE. illness. , " dedicated in March, 1913. Mean.:. 1939 the architects Maginnis and Near Fairhaven Drive-In . Of ;Poland s 64 biShops, .3!i re- while the faithful in Tremont Walsh were commissioned to deportedly, applied to the regime continued to go to Wareham for. sign a new church of colonial Italian Dinners Our Specialty for tra.v~l permits and 17 suc- I ,several years.. . . . archite'cture suited to Cape Cod: ' Service 00 Patio eeeded in, getting t h e m . " ; . ~ '. . This church was - completed' Al th <> ugh Jozsef Cardinal" . . . . Destruction by Fire' " and dedicated Dec.' 8, 1940. The' 'J,\iIindszenty, Primate of, Hun'" ' . 'Fatl!er Sullivan left Wareham old church was moved back ~ry, sti1).remains in refugge iilitJ. 1918 but.two ~earsp~eviously some' hundred yards' after the , ,:~e U.S. Budapest legati~, the ;'he'had built the present rectory steeple was removed, and then '~ ~ , i Electrical . , Gcting chairman of the· Huo'-" to . replace . ~he . rented.. home was' 'completely renovated and' Contractors ,: .' garian' ~ierarChy is present. whi~h h~d served the clergy up 'equipt>edas'a parish han: ' He is Bishop Endre Hamvas Of ·to that time. _ During the same period, Father esanad who is accoTpanied by Rev. Joseph P. Lyons succeed.,. Callahan purchased the Silas T. Bishop Sandor Kovacs of Szom-· 'ed' Father Sullivan, at 'St; Pat· S. Hathaway estate adjoining bathely and Msgr. Pal Breza- rick's and he soon realized that church property and renovated it . nocsy, Apostolic Administrator" the church being used at Onset for use of the' Missionary Serv-' at: the Eger archdiocese. was inadequate for the many. ants 'of the Most BleSSed" Trinity Catholics of that section. In 1923 Father Lyons bought land across 'who arrived in Wareham in November of' 1940 and named 944 County St. .. Raise College Fees the street from the church. their new' home St. Patrick's New Bedford Od T h Just. before the. new Onset Cenacle, . the' first convent on , .. ' o· I ,eac efS , church- -was completed, it was Cape ,'COd.. ' . PH~LADELP.HIA (NY) - La ,entirely destroyed by :fire, to:.:,: ,~al,l:,p~l~ege ~e!e has anri0l,lIlced,. ,gether . with the older. churc1;l . , lit wIll raise tUItion and fees ne~t '.' across the street. As a tribute to . . . ' ~ '. year in' order ~ increase faculty . the efforts of Father Lyons Im4 , ,, .. , salaries. .. his parishioners, a second new. .""" 'Brother .Daniel Bernian, pre· church was completed and ded.. '. .." . . . ' . "" indent-of the Ohristian Brothers' '.icat~ within two years, and .' ". ~sti~4~ion, said tuition and fee. from. that, t.me, services were AND c LOAN. ASSOCIATION. OF· ATTLEBORO .,' Will go, up $125. Science students held year round at Onset. . . , will be''assessed $975 an aeade-; 'Father Lyons remained 'at Sl 273' CENTRAL AVE~ 'moic year and arts and' business Patrick's unt.IJanuary of 1927, 4% on aU' Savings Accounts !Jtudehts $925. Residence fees when Rev. Francis D. Callahan, WY 2-6216 will increase by $50 to $850. who was 'to remain for over 20 Brother Daniel also announced "y~a.rs, became the third pastor 1% Extra on Systematic Bonus Savings plan's.. fo~·\,a new $1.5 niillio"o . ~l Wareham. For the'first time~, NEW BEDFORD Classroom bunding and erection Mass was ,celebrl,lted, Winter and of a ne;,lV' siuden~ abape1 ' Sununer in the three missions, .

i

I

, 'WI!

. TOUHEY'S . PHARMACY

BARBERO'S PIZZA·PATIO

I

~~.

~~Ia

'lit•

T A I';:'"

BLUE RIBBON, . LAUNDRY'

,

I

,

First "Federal Savings ,

o


8,

.:Seek Vocations . , To Sisterhood

THE ANCHOR....:.Diocese 'of Fall River Thurs.;-Nov.· tt962 ,.' . . , ;--' '.: ,,:......- ~ : '. . ..... -'.' . ""~. ,.... '. -. .',

"

'

Prayer for Dead, i,t:lNoven:t~e'r Holy,Who'lesome Practice ,

The Sisters of' Social Servj~ Buffalo, N. Y., are among reUgious communities which fled religious persecution and imprisonment in Hungary. They have started a new life in the' United States and are seeking relIgious vocations. The work of the communit~ modern in dress and objectives. lies "in fields where other religIous are not active. They strive to follow up the labors of cloistered and semi-cloisetered communIties and' are active in 01'ganIzations for women and youth. .' I; "Their constitution permits them to enter legIslative field~ where they strive to promote the common welfare on a large. scale. They are modern and have' considerable: freedom in thea mode pf Hfe." , . Ancient Tradition Although the·.community dateu . Ol)ly from 01923, its rule is based . on the 14'00 year old BenedIctine tradItion: a balance of the contemplative .and active life. The Sisters of' Social 'Service 'are dedicated to the Holy Spirit. . ·Fur.ther information is available from the Sisters at 884 Tiut . Su:eet; Buf~lo 20, Ne. Y.

By' Mary Tinley Daly

The rhythm of nature, during November, fits the eadence of the cycle of the liturgical year. These are. the days of which. the poet Robert Burns wrote: When chill November's surly blast made fields and forests bare. True, the bright colors of October's leaves have· faded, of Benedict xv; has extendeq those drifting down now to all priests the privilege of saying three Masses on All Souls; are a dried-out brown Day. This should get all .of us

there is a decided bite to the onto the beam of closely allying wind. At your house and ours, . ourselves with the Church SufSummer clothes . fering. are s t ash e d . This month of November, away, p or'c h probably better than any other,' furniture relecan bring a continuity of family gated to garage "togethernels" behyeep our or basement, children and grandphildren and Winter' he Ii t those "gone before," some of whom they have never known. t u i' ned 0 n , Winter lessons One does not want to dwell going in .high unduly in the past, nor engage geat every eve- . in an "I Remember Mama" nosning. talgia ad nauseam. Ho'wever, At morning, . this is a time, \ when asking' for . Mass, we see prayers for "ancestors," during the priest clothed In robes de- which we may forge family ties noting mourning. that· will be invaluable in the Festival' Day years to come. And yet,' notice the 'introit, With the current kick for that "theme song" of November antiques, great-great~grandma's CHRISTMAS SALE: Marga~et Ca~p~gna, Judith De-~ Fall River Open Meeting' on the feast of All Saints: "Let sofa, her unde.r-the-bed cradle, Bernardo, and Maureen Coleman, student nu~ses, ~t ..St.' .' - , ' , .. . . .. us' all rejoice in the Lord, cele- her candle snuffer are prized. So Anne's Hospital, Fall River,' admir~ some :of the' articles Set: a·t, St. Jean .Baptlste brating a festival day in honor too are grandfather's rocker, his: .. '11 b.e on sa1e tod · ..' th '1 'b'b f' '. . FIrst· open meehl)g of Fait . a t WI . ay a~ld ..to~~r~ow.m. ~, e. 0, .y O .. River District One, Diocesan of all' the ilaints: at whose sol- mustache cup. These give' an air • th '. Council of Catholic Women, win," emnity ,the angels rejoice, and·. of "inherited antiques," many.' th~ new wmg. , . . . ·take. place at 7:45 Thursday .. give praise to the Son of God." , . shades snobbier. than antiques night, Nov.. 8 at St. Jean,Baptistfi ,I Again on 'All Souls' Day, this bought at auction. Church. Benediction will open " year as an extra reminder,' on . But what of' the people who' ,the, evening and a ,meeting will ' First Fr.iday, comes the comfort-' owned, prized and, used' ,these' lng Introit: "Eternal rest give ' treasures?· Are. they' forgotten" ~n u~~t1on:... 'follow in the· parish aUd~torIum. . • ," • "' 1..."_ +.h· . b" ct' .. .' d . Rev. Joseph·L. Powers WIll modCl " to them, 0 Lord; and let perpet-, coinpletely?And their souls? . OKLAHOMA. CITY (NC). tu..n~s •• e 0 Je . of'me~cy an.;; erate.8 panel on act~vities of tho, " uallight'shine upon them." Those of us' who' are inter-" ideals of. nursing are ,charity. ~'. Confraternity of Christian Doco We can thank ·St. Odilo, the links. between the Model T's and' Christian lost, almoSt totally ob-· ' . '.. ,. the modern converti'bles;. be- "almost . Benedictine, known as "the tween the crystal'sets and Tel.,.' scured in the awful' darkness of· .. The· . current:. a't t j t d·e. of- trine. . ~ducatIon she. 'said: is' C.onfra~rni.ty moderators and Archangel of Monks" for insti- star; ·b.etween the Charleston of, secu.larism,'". a nurse' educator n~ll;sIng " • '. " . -'. parIsh executIve board members, tuting in 1031 the annualc'omi925 and the twist' of 196~we told the Diocesan Council Of - whether ~~ J?at~ent either. is, or both. men and women,· are inmeinoration of the faithful deis not a good. learn~ng exp~ri- ,vited to attend. . have'a definite duty to maintain CathoHc Nurses here. parted. thIs continuity. ' Sister Rose. Paul, head of the' ence. "He is 'regarded as' ..the A coffee hour will be m For CathplIcs,' these cannot be We can make a Hving link department of N,ursing Educa- " college. student regards e~peri- charge of women of St. Jean "'the melan'choly days" of which· with hIstor.y by passing on the tion at ,St.. Mary's' College, .mental animals' in. the. biology. . Baptiste council, assisted by sevanother poet, WIllIam Cullen, charity of prayer for ,those' we . Xavier, Kan., said nursing edu- laboratory, with complete ·emo-·· eral' area affiliates. 'Rev. Maurice Bryant, wrote:' They are days of know and tnose unknown to all cation is beginning to . look:. at' t!onal " ~:leta'chment. if not With. Jeffrey is .moderator of the host remembrance, certainly, but. but God. the patient' as. a .learningex-· . sQme. repugnancy 01'. distaste,"· unit, and' Mrs. Matthew B.. ','May perpetual lIght minGo perience, ,for students. rather' she sai~. . with 'the confidence that those. ' Labecki' is', president. we knew among the Church upon them." I - -MilItant· are now' "alumni," .let: :,'. us say-memb'ers of ,the Chl.irch. Suffering or of the Church Tri- Report Execut'iovl . .l, ,.' umphant. . ' Of Cuban Wom'all1l' Happily~or . all; ot .us comes MEXICO CITY (NC) .... A ' this tImeof year. It is' 9 ur pleas- woman teacher has' been. exe- -.' and privIlege to pile up 'cutedin the patio of' her own " enormous indulgence~ for th9se home in . Cuba ~r refusing' to ~ '. we have known and for the bor'des of unknowns, the' "souis' ,teach" communism to her stuof th f ithful departed" whom " dents,. it.was repot:.ted here. . e a b er, some~ . : h a t cas u· ExcelSIOr; MexIco's·· we remem' ;. ..: . .largest. . ally, I'm afraid, at' other times . dally,. identifIed ~er.as Carmellta.,. f th .., IzagUIrre .of. Clenfugos. Many 0, e year. women have reportedly died asSomehow, November an d a result of. mistreatment in Remember-the;'Holy SOUls, :be- Cuban jails,but Miss Izagwrre's' come an integral pl,lrt of the death is believed to be the first OPEN FRIDAY 9 A.M. to8 P.M. conscio\,isness of Catholics - a execution of 1lI woman. ' tradition whIch families want In Yucatan· meanwhile Inforto instill from the ,earliest recol- maCion Cat~licaCubaha' said lection of children. : that 75 Cuban women' have been The season need no - indeed transferred' by the eastro regime should not.----'be lugu~rious. The" ,from the' prison of' Guanajay:. funereal aspect shoul<:I never 'be near Havana 'to a concentration stressed. If children· have a: ".' camp in Bar~coa on the eastern' , 'If. Y~U're. ,:plaiming· buya,':new used. car 'recent, . memory of: a'famil~ tip Of the' island. The buiIetiri, ..: Interest, 011I : Savings De.;. . plan . to .•finance it with =a' LOw Cost Fall River dea~h, thIs is the till1ei to empha_ . which' was· formerly published size the eternal life ~spect, the· in Miami, .said .. there' are' noW": Auto Loan~' .~ -'.: :-:' :.:. ..', '. ~itsAt 'The' F~I'Ri~e~ . • Trust' :.~ .':- '•.-:";,:'~ ; : " ' . t' ~' ... ~ '~"perpetual light" as npted,-in the 60,000' pOiitical', prisone'Iis in' ~ TrUst . k": ~empt~ ~ We "will, tailor· your payments-over a period·' best Scriptures, and what 'we .can' do. Cuban jails and concentration" , .. for, the departed.• '~ "camps. . ' your 'inc~me'arid YQu can even include ,Maia:State Income Tax~ · snited Forging TieS "your'~ aut;/)' insurance pArt of Jhe loan-simply The Church, s~c'e :thC;! decree · hay~' your favorite' insurance. agent tell us" tht

". S"'" I'anSm' -:.. ,'. T"-ren d'"'.'-.:' :. ecu .' Scores N. un .' " .- N; '.: .: E'd": ... . . . Modern

.urslng-'

.

u

me

Wiih a LOW COST' 'FALL 'RIVER- :TItUSj~~~'AUTO .lOAN ,

~.

.,'

#

-

or·

fu .

.l':t

:to

"

Cpmplefe.

Carmelite, Nun ;Gets Government Award' . CALICUT (NC)~A Carmelite nun: has been chosen t!o receive a national award for teachers. Sister M. Priscilla;A.C., ." member of the Apostolic Carmel of Mangalore, will rec!'live a cer~ tificate' of merit and ~OO roupees (about $100) with 84: other pri. mary and secondary school' teachers. Indian President $arvepalli Radhakrishnartwlll present the awards, which the cen- . tral government has given year_ ly' since 1958; Oct. 25 in New Delhi. , . '. ,' , Sister Priscilla, botn in Mangalore in !902,eI:lt~red,. the, Apostolic Carmel in:';1923~' Slie' " has been headmistress ~ of' .St. Anthony's high schooi herem India' csince'·1949;f.· '"' /.""·."...·,,",,.3.~.'·.i':·'

BANKING SERVICE' :".

, ::.,.;

f

.'

-.

".

as

amotin~

.

·Fan Ri~er Trust' Lo\1T Cost,· A~to LO~ns a~e' avan. ·able at our'Main Bank or at any ()f our oonvenient neighborhood ··br~ches.·... :

for Idstol· Cou"ty.

Total .AsSet~. Ov.er" $35,000,000.00 ... . .

Bristiol. ,C'oun,'.t.·y T" rust, Comparny

,'-: "

, ,.

TAUNT()N,

MASS~

THE' BANK ON

'

ME'MBER ·.FetieralDe~t lRsu'tJII(J~ (J!W'~,tIIid.

. . Federal Reserue SI/otena. :. _ . ' !~U.N~O~ G R E E N , . " . , I. Flint Branch Some~ Branch '.,' E"d,.'· B~an""Map:.lewood i Branch," Member or Federal. DepOIIIt . . " . , ,.... . ~~. ...~ 'buranoe' CCrPorntloD 1219 Pleasant '51; '891 ~County 5\. ' 1649~. Main ~. HI ~S~~o~d ,Road ..,,,", 'C.;.," c,:;:.'~ ..>,;,':.,;.;,.,...._ .'c" ,,:", .' '~·.d·c:"" 'J. e=aaa==~====55:5:iii===============5=ii==5=====s=E5=i

'.50.


Su'ggeslts, "Co'Up:le "Ask'::" Adylc~e:­ Of •Marria'ge )Coun,sel,or

, 1l:IE, ANC~OR­ Thurs., Nov. 1, 1962

9

Scholarship Goes: To Miss Teixeira.

, By Father John L. Thomas, S.J. , Asst. SociologJ' Prof.-8$. Louis UnlversltJ'

Miss Evelyn Teixeira, daugh_ ter of Mr. and Mrs, Frank Teix_ eira, Fall River, has been named winner of the annual alumnae organization scholarship award to a graduate nurse of St. Anne's Hospital School of Nursing. She is attending. Boston College School of Nursing. The alumnae group a Iso awards annual scholarships to three students of St. Anne's School of Nursing. The annual Fall Dance benefiting the scholarship fund will be held this year from 9 to 1 Friday, Nov. 9 .:It New Bedford Country Club. It will be semiformal and a buffet will be served, according to announcement made by Mrs, Helen Ozug, program chairman. Next regular alumnae meeting , will be Tuesday, Nov, 6 and will. be held in the hospital conference room.

"Alterll years of marriage my wife has suddenly become ,obsessed with the need to assert her sense of "liberation" (primarily from me!), and to demonstrate what she calls her "maturity." Although we can't afford it, and she doesn't need it, on her rejection of your eritishe sees her psychiatrist cism concerning her choice of once a week and claims we friends. Here again I must be all need one. Lately, she's careful to make my position

started going around with a clear. young divorcee. When I protest I have high esteem for comthat this is 'a petent psychiatists -none of bad e:il:ample whom pretend to have the an:!lor our three swers to all man's woes - but growing chilI have little patience wUh the dren, she says shallow belief that everyone she had 'a per- ' needs psychiatric care - even fect l' i g h f to if they could afford it! choose her oWn Your wife's attitude reflects f r i end sand , a :liad, unfortunately rather she's sick and widespread among those who t ire d of my are looking for moral braintell i n g her' washing rather than. therapy. what to do., Her' Stable Families mother is Also, I wish to make it clear gusted with' her, and I've just that I do not feel that a husband about had it - what would you has the right to choose his wife's INSTALLED: Newly-elected officers of the Attleboro Study Shows Catholics do?" friends· - anymore than she has Your description sounds like the right to choose his. But both Area Catholic Young Adult Organization are, seated, Pres- On Move to Suburbs CHICAGO (NC) - Catholie sonle of the caricatures of the husband and wife have the right ident Raymond' Salois and Secretary Annette Villemaira, "new woman" which appeare'd and the obligation to object to and, standing, Vice-President Pauline St. George and population in the Chicago archdiocese will go up by 1,000,000 in this country around the turn friendships that may reasonably Treasurer Ernes~ Dargis,. persons by 1985, and will shift of. the century, Steve. ,be judged ' either' harmful or markedly from the city to the As you may recall, one radi- ,scandalous. . .' suburbs. The Catholic population cal branch of' the European :YOUr wife has no right tore-, now stands at 2,163,380. feminist'movement had been je~t) he.rresponsibilities as yO,ur .- . ' . .,.., This. is the summary of retalking' about the liberation of, spouse and the mother of your search done by the Chicago Arch. women' ,for' over a century,' children; -and you are well diocesan Conservation Council. Marxist 'thlnlters later POPU- within your rights in objecting LOS ANGELES (NC)-Jam~s, BiShops do say that if. there la. characterized by the director', , Jarized their own version of It, to her present association. Francis Cardinal McIntyre urged; to ~ a progr,am of general Fed- Msgr. John J. Egan, as the first, and in one form or another it' Research findings show clear- Catholic women to make ,their er;d"llid, it shollid' be ~it:bout of its kind done in any U. So gradually received fairly wide-"; '1,. that one of the major ways voices heard .on ,national ques-: discrimination. diocese. ' , spread .diffusiori among .the 'that stable' familieS p r o·t est tions of education. . , ,I ."In the whole controversy on . upper classes I through the ef-" th~mselves,.~.to confine .their Assumption 0 of f The, ArchbiShop CJf Los Angelell th4·subject, and as recenUy reforts of aVlarit-grade writers. . associations to other stable fam_ 'told 1,100 members of the Arch-' : vealed by the National EducaAssumption Circle, Fill River It 'never' caught' on very wet! : ilies. . diocesan . Council 'CJf Catholie' tion, Association in the college Daughters of Isabella, will hold In America, primarily because: "Moral BralD-Wasbwl' Women at their annual confer- aid debate bill In Washington, it installation ceremonies Sunday, American women havetradiYour wife's definition ofli- ence' here: "The question as. to is clear that discrimination is Nov. 11 at White's restaurant. tionally enjoyed greater free- 'beration is evidently based on whether there should be ·Fed- the. issue, not education," the Mrs. Charlotte Charron, state dom and legal protection than the fulse assumption that if l'e- eral aid· to' education is an open Cardinal said. vice-regent, will instail. ThoSe most of their European sistel:8. sponsibilities stemming from question." to be seated include Mrs. Mary Public MonopolJ' lrraUouaI Conceptioua ,past commitments cramp one's "T:heBishops of the country WUUam R. 'Burke, immediate Lou Silvia, regent; Mrs. Ann style, one is free to reject them. 'take ,no stand on this, judging past National Commander of the Hoar, vice-regent; Mrs. Marr' I feel it was necessary to pre- This is what I mean by the term that it shoUld be decided by deAmerican Legion, speaking on Gregory and Mrs. Cecile Meno, tlace my remarlas with this bIs- 'moral brain-washing. termination' of need and social ''Church, State and Education," secretaries; Mrs. Sally Trainor, torieal note because when disT.here is a ~ool of thought implications;" he continued. "The treasurer. told the convention: cussing the ehanging status ~ which maintains that most men~A, Federal aid to education women in ·the modern' wor1d~ we tal health problems are caUsed bill which restricts funds exclu;. must always carefully distin- by irrational restraints imposed ~t Snowflake Ba,za'~~ sivel,- to publicly supported guisb between, their legitimate by religious or social ,norms and Mar.ian ,Me,nor schools 'can only be justified if espirations 1lor equality as per- values, so that therapy consists.' 110M and some of the irrational 1 _Friends ofihe Novitiate of the it is the intent of the United Plumbing - Heating Ideas. or ideologies historicall7 in thoroughly c eaningthe mind Presentation .()f Mary willspon- States to" establish a publie aSsociated with the feminist of these moral obstructions to sor a Snowflake'Bazaar from 10 monopoly in the field ofeducaOver 3S Years personal freedom. to 8.SaturdaY arid Sunday; Nov. tio~, '1)Y making it d~fficult or movement. . ' is 1_ of Satisfied Service No mature Christian can !an Your WIfe appal'ent...,.re- 3 and 4' iii tbelobby of Marian ~sible ,for other educational . 806 NO. MAIN STREET to: regard with favor the in- ceiving "tlterapy" from a memManor, Taunton. The public is inStiiut~ons to compete.", creased educational opportuni- ber of this school of thought. Burke quoted ,the. i925. Oregon , ~n Rive'OS $.7497 . invited and items will include ties and juridical status women Lost Contao$ hand knit articles, smocked pil- deClsion of the U. S. Supreme What can you do? Well, Steve, low's, " a~robs, cakes,' ~andy, C9.U!t, lyhicli denied to a state CQrrenUy enJoy in our country. .On the other hand, concep- it is one thing to define your Christrilas goods, flowers and' the ,.right to establisb.such a." etons of feminine "maturity" or right and obligations, and quite plants. A snack bar will also be I mOnopOly and reaffi~~ paren. DupliCating MethOds "'liberation" "that ignore man's another to get your wife, to featured; Theorgariizatio~ sup- tal'rights in education. lIOCial 11ature and ChrIstian re- agree. At some point in your' p()rts the novitiate of the Sisters "Everything in Duplicating" I'POnslbilities are justly rejected I1\llrriage70u have lost .contact of the Present3t.lon· who staff .• Gestetfol8r • Papers with each other, and each seems 'St. Anne~s Hospital and Marian , • irrational. • Keyer • Masters Unbeoomlng Conduct to have developed along separ- ,Manor. ate ways. Your problem did not • Photocopy • Stencils Judging from your account of start yesterday. , Pre-Cana Ser:ies "Everything for the ,Office" Complete Factory Service Che situation, I would concludeaence you both need a cound._ A series of Pre-Cana confer-...t your w·ife' is e ith er sa dlY selor who will help you see the TYPEWRITERS, FURNITURE ~fused or is using terms like nature of marital companjonences will begin Sunday night, " ADDING ,MACHINES maturity ~d liberation. to ship, as well as the meaning.of Nov. 4 at Sacred Heart school 927 COUNTY STREET .. 32 Weir- St. Taunton,Moss. jUstify her desire to escape her maturity and liberation in mar- 'hall, Fall Ri'{er. Engaged couples responsibilities ,ll~d : to. ~o,~t :., riage:, Your wife'is obviously ,;may make arrangements· to atSOMI;RSEJ OS 2·1838 , r~1. VA 4-4076 ~e. l i k e s " " . : ':' ' , . J ,.C91,lfu~d"bl;lot rememb.er,,' befor.e,...tendat their parish rectori.es·i Smc~ eJq»erlence has taught she reached t1li$. stage S()me- ' . ; ,.. , .'. " ' .. ' " ": . ~ that I am certain to be llC- thing must have' 'goniI' :'wrOng' cnised of formi~ ,a biased judg-. .loYJth, YQur ~tal, relallonsbi"-". i-, i .. ment, Steve, leCme poinf'outat ,. . '.' I , ' , ;, . ,.. .,. . ....once that I am not assuming that you or other American busband:s are without fault. ' I am well aware that men can be irresponsible and domifOR YOUNG WOMEN Deering, treating their wives as 196 Whipple St., ,faD River' If they were children and reConduded by Franciscan garding lUlY shOw of intelligence PRINTED AND MAIlED Missionaries of Mary OIl their Part as a personal 2666 NORTH MAIN ST. 'FALL RIVER ROOMS MEALS dia!lenge ,to their sUPEjfiority. OSborne 2·1322 OVERNIGHT HOSPITAUTY I have frequently criticized such nLEPHONE OS 5-7992 WYman 3·1431 ,I Inq~,e()S: ~2892 eQnduct 'as utterly .unbecoming • !christian. l Widespread Fad My judging in the present in.nce is based on your wife's ~aUow end~rsement of psy_ ~iatry as a newfound cure-au _ the ills ~ mankind and also COMPANY'

dis..

'Prelate Asks Women Take Stand On National SChObl'Aid Question )

' , '

r

GEORGEM. MONTLE

At

SULLIVAN'S Office Supply, Inc.

Duplicating Methods

:;' :

',\

',1

'.

.,

st. Catherine's Fund Raising Committee, Fall River, will hold· aiDomlnlrola Tuesday, Nov. 13. Prizes and returns, should be bde at the group's re(lUlar' meeUng WeclAesda7. New_ 'Z.

" :'GE:RALD .. E.

GENERAL' CONTRACTOR'

St. Francis R'esideilce

Fund Raisers

"

MONTHLY CHURCH BUDGET ENVELOPES

McNALLY

FAIRHAVEN LU.MB'ER

HUTCHINSON/S

WEBB OIL CO.

Complete Line Building Materials

135 FRANKLIN STREET FALL ,RIVER OS 2-0211

• SPRING ST., '~IRHAVIN WYmCllt 3·2611 I

ART .SHOPPE

• Picture Froming . • Art'Supp'ies

TEXACO FUEL' OILS

1)()MEsTIC & HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS

So'es - Service -Instollation MAIN OFFICE - 10 DURFEE ST., FALL RIVER

Phone OS 5;'7484


·10 ,".'

, BUSES FOR BISHOPS: Transportation is a problem even at the .Second Vatican Council, especially for the large contingent of more than 200 U. S. prelates attending. Scattered about Rome, at hotels, colleges, motherhouses and private residences, the American Council Fathers have several buses at their disposal. At left, a group of Bishops, includipg Arch-

~

bishop Gerald T. Eergan of Omaha, facing camera, stop to discuss Councll topics. In center photo, a rain-spattered bus, filled with U. S. prelates, moves through St. Peter's Square. At right, two unidentified bishops exchange pleasantries with one of the bus drivers before boarding their coach outside St. Peter's Basilica. NC Photo.·

American ~ishops at. Council Ve ry Practical in .Pas.foral Outlook Continued from Page One area to secure certain objec- desirable. We hope that those a bishop from a Western state bishops that the Church finds Decessary . to consider· sev-eral ' tives and then .to pu.t them ~I\1;(>.. laYJne~ who are :.educated. t4.? o b s e r v e d : . :.; ways in which to fulfill her factors related, to natiorial' prilctice.. TheY will concentr~~e; leadership will ta~e a greaterpratical Objedive.s. iw~(mse task of san~tifying all .. iegionalchara'cteristic~ .anq. pSy-' gtlnerally, .upon.. t~os~ .practl~~ part·, in the Church in the, "Ita 0 t . t t' g (to PC9ple in.allnations. Their cornell. ology', " .', ',' ", '.. which can' . be· discarded and. . flit~.re>::.. . - . .. . . ' ."... note)· .... wthe s "stress m s meres In ;. " m...ents. an..d the. a,tti,tu.d.e th.ey and. . '. . "',' placed· upon' . First, the Europeans, t()' a .verY·' th~se,:whil::h ,c~n 'be retaine~"a~d". ., .Use of Verpa.cular·., Holy-. Scripture and: the Mass ~ otp~rs ~ave shown bear out th~_ ,reat extent, .represent the theo.,:' streslled:",.. '~ ,; 'i i ! .." Many 'bishops.iriter'viewed:cite said facing the people. at ·the, C?nclu,sI~n .. Vtat .. the .,~meric~, logIcal and' ,pllilosoPhi6ar·ele~ ' .. ",- Sbo~. Concern ...., "'! "." the"need for';alargei' 'arid: more' first': se s sl 0 n (the,' solemn: ~I.~rarc.hY ,~!l~ be ;s~~kmg pra~ . ment, iiI th~, Cliurch. 'rhere. ~re: . ''Ehey,will not strive to justify , ' deeply: involved' '<role 'fol,,'the opening) of the 'councWin the, . tI~aJ, w~ys If y.'b~ch to :accom-" '.'.,. IOrneexcepti<iils natura.ny.· hut· aiw' explaiIi 'theOlogically;' as the' laYnlan in the Chutch.:Btitniost: very·heatof,the.Chur:ch.'~.; ..,:.... ' P.VSh,~l!l .. ~~J.~,tiv.e. ' " " ~e. 'thuFch ~eriei-a}hr'~elles u~o( .Europeans, 'ate" expeCted: to do.'1'ofi,them, expreSsed greater. inter...,::- "The bishop .also' observed ;that: .. f r "'; "Ba's1(i Prlnclplett . E~r.6pea!1·tliinJdng·and· metll?d~: Nor. ori":mahy::~intswiU ,th~y;: e~ ,.:iil·.finding";ways· to ',more-- ' he' hoped' to '''encouraged''both' '.', .. "~.' ',.; ,:",C.": : , of thought. . , ' ... ' :":', ",' "'see the' 'virtual ·necessity7,of·-deeply involve·the lalman than, practices in his'diocese: He'was' .In.tlte, UniversaL Church, ali . 'Occasionally, ·thisinclination., change" lWJ' the .inissio,Ii ,»ielatee,.. " indefiriing.or the.ologiCally con-' jointed' iri'this sentiment" b"y" a' n.l\tions,.. 1"ac.es, and· cJasses Oi.. 6 _ ' spe'culatI'on 'results in. ex'c'es' '.~ ... .. , . 'd'IV iIV do~· ' ..., . ' ' ; ...,!. :.:',,, sidering,the"principle, itself, It Mid-Western ·prelate. . ' . people . '. m u st,rna k e ..th' elr. In sive quibbling. and' even, . in a: In 'keeping' With' this" general " Is mostly likely' that-the bishOps' Tliese few 'points ilhistrate the'. dual contri.buiions. so th~t the \ ·few cases, attitudesand·systeml'l: teJilperament; . the' American will··continue to'apply tbis concern of Diostof the American common labor may be perwhich are quite different. , ,Bishops are -reluctduit-·to expressstandard'ihthe council. ' ' . formed and performed well, Ia .The missiori bish<?ps tend t9. themselves,' except • on- certain;' . On the use of the vernacular" ' . , tbhr blending of· peoples an,d be catechists by nature, ~s their' p'ractical steps"whichthey be':''' languages in the liturgy, many. '. cultures - so well.demonstrated . , 'bsk··is·-the conversion of huge lieV'e will tiel.·p' ·the Church, But American bishops also have·ex';'. at·.the,Second·Vatican council - . 'r . tel' . ",VATICAN C,ITY·.(NC)'-.··Ther'e'· th ' " ;blshops· may ' impresl9 , masses 0 f peop Ies,. theI, m ,-'. many" of" them: ,have' expressed. presSed ;·their wishes;' .' ' . . e '..mlSSIQn · ts·a nd de SI'1' e s ce n ter essen are 2,908 hurchmen throughout' th f th ell .' - sy"mpath''y /ano·'s·nown'.··consider.·.: '..... "AU' over,' the . world , there, ,,"'. , ..... . ' upon, e·" a.ersthe .:peed for. 'w.orld elig'I"ble" ·to'ser·ve' as'" c,h ange, th,e Eur9pean; prelates:' .t"'a'll" I Y upon thOe , "c h" , ur" c b" : a'b'le urilier-staiiding for'missiM" have, been calls, 'for;'revisions in,; .tne ,. .'. ,,'s t' h·· . '.. " co ..'u,n,ci.l" ' . F,.at.hers, a' ·,·.d'I'recto·"r'·y'.,' ·:,...:'h.. t "caC mg, orne Imes, owever, preiates;, ':,: -''''j. . ;,' .",.;,,,. the.: liturgy, especialiy:: Africa' publiS,lll'!d ' by',' the- E~um-erlical' m;1y provide',the ,basic :principles eX'cessive zeal results in the sUb";" .. :;,", ". 'Ro'le' "o"f"La''I'ty' ','.. ",".'.". whe.reo 'th.er,e· ·ar.e· a.bout 20 new' ,.....,.". , . .... " .•, W h'ICh Sh ou Id gUI'de t h e ",Churcb . limation' of important and'''even:':, Couil~il's'general secreta'ria'f has ~ ' . k' th . a"pp'"ro'x'I'm,a'tely' , 1"5' A'"'me"'r'1'-';',.' . re"P,tib.l.ics.",." .obser..v.e,.d." an ··arch,·-.·.,', rev.ea. '" led"" M' . , .' ,," . ,. ,. . A Ill, ~a mg ose. cha,nges,J>Ut the h ' ti' 1 ""of ,:.." t he·'. •. Of" . b')S h ops es's'"n . a do'c't'rI"n' es " . B' h .. :..... to' . ""'ed' 1'. bishop from the ·Mlddle AtlantIc,,··· , .. ,....., sgr... , Faust,o·"VallaI'n·c··,".' , . " J.1ler"Ican· undoubtedly_ Church. :' . " . can. I~ ops. In ervlew .' on y - t t ., j'N edl . , to·, . th ' h~lld"o;f .the councii's press o#icti,: ~jll.1~a.v~ .a,n .imp,ortant, 'part i ... .',' ..' Pastor"li-Work. :,' . . . ,:.' ." j .on·e·-. used ':.the·: ter.m, '''p'riesthoo,''ld IS'ta es' '·f ,e · E;ss'... d : . yit .' !.. .' ba:sannouilced that of this hUm"::":": ' t' ... I urgy 0 E uro' no . . a~".s, mg. the ,.Cbur. cb, . ,in '. d~ .., As for the American Bishops;" f·:th ";i'tY;'>'h"h h"''lIY''' .,.. pe oes, ·ap-· be~,.l!;'~~prelatesaciu:anY'came':· ...it' ·'!tlllst beadrilitied> 'tMt" a1- ~e61:gi:~;~.~~~~~i611:~' m~: .. c' ;:' p~\ t,o .t,heri.-;. ::::.,,1 ,:",;.~~ .'. :':,; h~~ far. ~he c'ouncil, Some "'ha'y~ ! :~i-:t:.g~ ~:c':~m~~fs~e~thangee , though'. they"areiiltere~tJt ih'" .ur 'feel·vety'stronglj., their" .'., ,Sees Gr~t ~eneflt ' . ,~a:a:~returri.h~m~f~' y.~rt~~,~,':. '.', tlieblogicalarid' catEichMical'!the . laity's}' . r~ie ,shOuld"'t;e:'. 'iriusf~a~ ~ 'n{indthe-:: reasons. ' '. ...., '. ' .. .. Jrliltters, their principa~ '~o~cew' furthei<extended'" as' :.~a'ii'tg:e'/ . c;liffer~n~s,.b¢~w~,peoplesll~~( ",:.Th~~eb:~i~h·.di~e~~~rY::lis~,': ilhhe care' of the :f1ock,:"TheIi" ~ase' In· .the.' ' e'iirly ,'.I\p<?st'0l'i'cP: .c~lt~e,sf . espcici~Hy.:~, Qtl.l:' ,~,n.~';i: .;1U.' pJ;(llate/l'w~o hiui. a,r,~ght'to': .:. ' '.. outlook. e'ssEmtially i~ pastor~t" times;": this. bIShop )from 'a: New', 'slderatIon. of the liturgy'" . .'. set'v,e. l!>S council tathe'rs ,.a~;:of,:' i ,Because" of'the:probiemsiOiErigIlmd state'observed.~ "i 'cet:.... ~A bishap'fiomNfrW EngianCi Sept.:'30,~ not those who' have::'.R":·· ",... ",A'" ': ',"_G',' the Church in a .pluralistic so;... tainly believe that St.. Paul's also noted: .' " '.. '. '. . ." takel,l. paM, in'. the council sO far.. ciety, they 00 not have ..: the conception of the PrieSthood of'. . "Everyone who lias discussed . Italy, with 430 eligible council , leisure to engage to any great the Laity should be given much' the liturgy (has) asked for' a Fathers,has the mosechurchmen A.• ID.. AUT, extent in. theological specula- wider expr.ession." , . . greater use of the Vernacular,' on the list, It is followed by the aURAl'" tion. Because of 'the necessity. A bishop in the Middle West· especially in the forepart of the' U,S.. with 241, Brazil with 204 of providing Catholic' schools also commented on the roie of . Mass. Participation in the Mass and Fvance with 159. Famous for our Prime and' education in such a society, the laity. in our diocese has been very . Other countries with more they find it difficult to 'devote "Even in regard to this Coun- well developed. But there is no than 50 eligible prelates are Aged Char~oal Broiled more time to 'thecatechetical" cil," he remarked, "many Of the' .doUbt that this work would gain Ca nad a, 97; Spain, 95; India" field, although this is changing. laity consider It an entirely ec-: considerable strength if.' the 84; Germany, ~8; Argentina, 66; Steaks - also Roast . The Am~rican Bishops gener- clesiastical affair, In a sense, of, vernacular were to be used more Mexico, 65; Poland, '64, and ally are quite practical- they course, it it. But this' attitude widely." Colombia, 52. . ' Beef .. Sea Food , want to determine what actions' leads to a detachment from' the On another aspect· of the they can undertake in a certain, life of .the Church that is Wl-' liturgy and the Holy Scriptu~es, .

or'

.

Eligible Churc'hmeri . c.

sa.

"'We

!B":" ',. k" .0" ,. ., .. k "

ue,

'D'·" REST

.. .

Pope Pleads for 'Gif·t of .·Pea,ee' VATICAN CITY (NC)"-Pope lasted only two and a half min- to all mankind, citing the need went on the a'ir virtually utes, . for work for peace as one of the unheralded to 'warn of the horHe delivered his peace. plea urgent problems of today, ,And rors of war and to beg the P9li- on Vatican Radio. His voice was only the ,day before his broadtical leaders of the world to firm and' sounded ·over the' air.-,· cast,· Pope John had praised keep . negotiatingto~ard;s peace., waves. as if it could have be-' statesmen who meet each other ; "We beseech all rulers not to longed·!9· a man of :halfhis. in the Interes~ of peace. He Said . " ," nearly '81 years. '.' ..:. . however,' that ""where there' is.' reJ11airi deaf .to. the cry of man.T"'e· 'p'op'e' .'.d~·cl~.ed t·h·at ....."tu-a'.I l'~ , 11 ..... .., no splrl be,.b'e t ter. . th'IDgfl kind," ~9pe John said in ,his promot~, favQr and acceptnego.;: cannot be obtained." er,traordm~ry broadcast, tiatio!is, at· all ievels and at aUk ' ~'Let .them. do. everytping in ,"times is a: rule· of wisdom. 'and ~. ~ir ~ower to.. ~.ve ·peace... By ":i>r~d~nce ",h~cll calls' dO'Wnth~'­ :: domg -they Will. spare the, ble.SsI:ngs of, ~eaven and .earth.", : world the horrors of a war that . .. Th' 1"" 't 'ld ' ' , th ) ' would have disastrous' conse-. e c~ ren wor crlsls,·~.; c:iuences 'such as nobOdy could , P~P~ ~Id, ha<J· ~~ought, f~ar toj. foresee. . ". .millIons ,~f famIlles-: ~e !-Irged;· ~ i' . . • I ,. all CatholIcs, aU .ChrlstIal,l~, and;;. ! jLetthem, c~ntmue' nego- 'aU"who', believe in GOd ~o: joi~; Dartmouth t~a~e bec~~se thIS loyal and op~n .him in praying for "the gifts of! ,and Hyannis' a~~Itude IS of great ya~ue as·a peace,"" . '. witness for' t,he conSCIenCe ,of The Pop'e~s appeal was 1h4i . WY 7-9384. ' each"one and In the face,of"hls- second front a top voice of th~ So. Dartmouth· t~rY. :' .:' . Church in less than a week. The" Hyannis 2921' ! ·The .Pope spoke in :French. .fathers .·of. the. Second Vatican'.· ~is str_ongl~ worded . appeal C;:o~cil, had issued a messageJ.

APAMILY TREAT

J,B

LUMB'ER·CO.

t?

So.

s

N' US

Dan'cing Every Saturday Nite to the Music of Henry Cottrell and his Orchestra

BARMB-QCHICKENS

ROSELA'WN

~ohn

~

.

',SSle

FARMS

WY.7-9336

PJan'ning A ·Wedding, Showe,. Banquet or Meoting-Call au' Bonquet Department fo~ detail.. AM Pa,tle. ·.Iven our Expert AHeiltlo.n-Call

Watch' for SlgDl While out, for a Drive'· ~top . at.t~ll: D~l1ghtful'Spot

.91. Crandall Rd~ Tiverton,'R.I. . .'

L46 Washington St., Fairhaven Jult oft, R()ute, &

••••••••• ·.·.l

'

.,

MA~F~IR ~~881-4~9979'

1 I o o O . ~

"".'

"" "

."

,': FOUR. CONVENI-=NT QFI=ICE5 .·ITO··. SERVE YOU,!

,.:'

,'

".'ONE:i~'SJTOP BANKING ',,-," ,.'

··F:lRST~M~C'H1N1STS.'

N·AT 1'0:NAl.':;:· 'BAN:K:" . '.:;'

.. OF. TAUNTON:·

.

North Dighton ,North Easton . ,Norton"," 'Taunt9n Spring ,Str~et Main Street W. 'M~'i~ 'Street, MciinStree' Member' Fe~.ral Deposit· I~~~~nce .C~rp~ration' . ~

:

'


THE' ANCHOR-.:.t)loeese of Fan 'River'::"Thurs., No~. 1, 1962

11

l'j;l~·.7 ,

. .- -

• ,'If

'BL..:..._ _-,--,=

YOUTH AWARDS: Christ the King Sunday saw the annual presentation of diocesan youth awards taking pla,ce this year in St. Mary's Church, Taunton. Left picture, Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, D.D., V.G. blesses Marian Medals and Ad Altare Dei Crosses assisted by Rev. John m.. FoIster, center, and Rev. James F .. Lyons, right. Center picture, Medals are conferred on Mary Lowney, Theresa Maguire and Mary Ann

Camillo, all of Troop 18, St. James Church, New Bedford. Right 'picture, Rev. Francis L. Mahoney, Cape Cod Area Scout Chaplain, who gave sermon, is shown with James Sheerin, Troop 52, St. Mary's Church, 'raunton, Michael McGrath, Troop 47, St. Mary's Ohurch, Attleboro, and Petei' St. Laurent, Troop 54, St. Mary's Church, Taunton. Receiving awards werE) """ 194 Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts, Daughters of Isabella imd Camp Fire Girls.

Number Favoring H'oly Office'

In

Vernacular Is Surprising

· iBontlnued from Page One that far too many Catholics are' the schema, or official proposals,' authority observed. on the reform of the Divine gtavity of the crisis caused him' desperately' distant from the of 'the Preparatory Commissions. In his press conference Father Office. It is felt that the bre:' to apeak "with trembling lips," i Mass and sacramental life. The Ali. . official communique 'of the' S~hmidt tried to dispel any false viary is too monastic at present, PoPe John begged the leaders of facts speak 'for: ·themselves. ·Ia, Vatican this week summarlzE!ci' notions' that have been read"into and therefore not i(ieally suitecll the world "i6 promote, to favor,: many nominally· Catholic' coun-' the wide range of liturgical the work of' tiIeCouncil, espe-' to the spiritual needs of tha(l toeccept negotiations at· 'every: tr-ies, sometimes no . more' than" topics offered ,'.in the schema. cially the too-exclusive preoc- V'8st. majority of priests in. paro-' revel and at ~y'time" in their: 10% of the· faithful attend MaSSi Besides giving a clear- definition' cupation of the Journalists with chial work. Experts in the fielcll seai'ch for: peace, . ' .' "'. and' the . sacraments .regularly.' of ,the liturgy. and its importance· the problem of _the vernacular, have l~ng sugge~ted the p 0 1>Si:" Aa the crisis 'deepened over! And even in- ·the United States'," in· the life :,of. ,the Churcb,.the. Whi~h .in· itself is an ,important, 'bility of combining spiritu;'ll\ file wee k.e n d, the Council 'wbere our packed· churches each diocese ·and the' .·parish,... the '. one. -+ .but it ·.is, not ,the funda- readinl;, . Sacred Sc.ripture, and] Fathm-s, followed ·the. news ever, _Sunday. give.-evidence.of • schema deals-with the participa-, ~ental.problem.The·basic 'prob-' prayer ·into a varied and leso more closely throug·h their thriving Catholic life, the qUe&- tion of the faithful, The Mass lem is the realization that. the repetitious form. There is even lilewspapers, with many Ameri;,,' t!<)ft' could well· be asked "how,' and sacramental.con-celebration,. church is catholic, and therefore hope for the breviary in English,' mlIl bishops auditing. the nightly -. many of· those' faithful ,Sunday the :sacraments and:' sacramen-' includes various groups, and that with support for this proposal' Voice of America broadcasts . Catholics really 'know .what the ·tals, the Dibine Office.. the each of these groups has to re- coming from surprising quarters. from Washington. Like millions Masil is all about; how many are, liturgical year and calendar, flect .its own personality. . Reform in Air ~ others around the world; they instructed - through it,.· and' how sacred vessels and vestments,. An interesting application of Final dec i s Ion s on these waited and hoped and prayed. many would be the.re each'we~"88cred music, .and sacred art. tpis principle. of ad?,pting the problems, however, 'may still be Meaningful Worship if the Church did not· bind them . Universal Viewpoint . litur~y to varymg nabonal needs weeks or even months away, fOl? 'ftle Cuban crisis however, did under pain of mortal' /lin~" , This all-inclusive treatment of was 1llustrate~ yestc:rday by a the bishops must first of all be Elot d'ampen the P~OgreSS of the '. The awarding· of the litQl'~' the liturgy by the Council W36· grQup of :Uncan bIshops who given a chance to express theili' Council. In three' -and four-hoUr' top 'priority in' the. Counc.i1 'is a" the subject of a press conference told of theIr use of tribal dances opinions on the iSsues, if they moyuing sessions in St. Peter'S; clear' in.dica'tion. o~ the mind ~. by: one of the Council e~perts". and. d~ms to. enhance the lit- wish to. The first voting coulcll. the bishops discussed the prob,;,· .. the 'Church in eonsi!fering. the Father Herman ,Schmidt, S.J. u,rgy, smce these appealed to· come next week. The desires oil !cii/W concerned with the liturgy,: worship of God'asfir~t a~d fore.;., Stressing the ·particul8J."·needs of the culture.,of the African peo-· the' Fathers would then be' Jl)roposing means of·making:the' in the lives .ofCatholics, different .countries, Father. Seh'"', pIe.. d~a'o/D' up. into decr~s by tho' w;tirship of·' God ever' more'" - Nothing' else' can'. e<iual it in midt said, "The Council Fathers: LOcal Freedom' Liturgical Commission, and re meaningfutThe Vatican d~ily'" po~tanc!l; fox:th~:worship of G<l:d' ~a:ve to ·keep in: mind a solu-:,Bu~ drums and. tribaJ. dances: turned to the bishops for a final! newspaper,.' "L'OsServatore R~-; as' a member. of .the family o!., tio~ for every part of· the w.orld,·' while very meaningful to. the vo,te. . . . . :mariO, .commMted that althoUgh" G9d' Is CatltoUc's firSt' dU~y" cOnsidering it from a universal· people of Africa in, their worThe wind of reform. is in th€l the Council' Fathers were by 11("" ancr" high~t. 'privilege," ,Thf.'l. aJld cath,olic point of view, They .ship ~f'Go4, would ·be.a little out' air, brisk and invigorating. ~(l ~eans agreed on the methodS. building of schoolS, 'the; apq!!tO~_' D).~t co!,,-sider weigh thc;iP~- 'of place;! iri Taunton or Martha~s:. is not hi n g less than the' that should be adopted to. fos-', lat.e. «!f the laity" ~~ conyeQt f~r'ms _brought. a,t>out i? }h~.: Vineyard! W~tllthis probiel1l in breathing of the Holy Spiri~ t~r '3 better worshiping people,', movement -'0' in short,. al~ ·otheI:. l8l!t. rears" .and Judge. If. ~t .16 _ . m!nd, . ~any bish.ops, hay~, been: WhO, in these wonderful apdl, they were certainly of one mi.rid· expressions o( 'Catl~olic'activi,ty':: timely 'to conti!,,-ue on r tJ:1e ~o.~d ..~ s~ggesting.8 certain" a~ountof_ perilous times we live in, ill Ceil the proposition that the ! are merely the preparation ,for '.' a~r:ea,d! taken, or ~ather.. d~r~. f~dom. hi each cou.ntry, rather again setting out to "renew the liturgy m4st have a greater in- worship "inspirit and in trUth." ~selves .along anot!Ier 'path.' than forming a, universal mould Iece of the earth." :IIluence on the lives of Catholics: The worship'of· God is the lifeLIturgical RItes into which all Catholics can be This 'deep concern of the 'bish- blood of our Catholic faith. "In this century particularly," fitted. Such a riational liturgical ops for the liturgy springs from. Wide Range Father Schmidt continued, "with program, however, would be I.) double awareness: first, that In their efforts to give this the end of colon~alism and west- strictly controlled by the bishAt is the Eucharistic Sacrifice Hfe-blood a 20th centuJ;'y trans- ern predominance, there has ops of that country, under the ~hat principally binds us to God fusion, the bishopS are using as come about vast problems of ac_ supervision of Rome. ond to each other" and second, 'the basis of their discussions cepting various liturgical rites." Of especial interest to priests . , He expressed the opinion that will be the Council's directives ! bishop . should have a certain autonomy in liturgical matters .R. A. WILCOX CO. and that the laity must play a new, active role in the public OFFICE FURNITURE · VATICAN CITY (NC) - The manent means of contact with worship of God. "The Mass' at IB Sto.k for Immedlato Denve.., council role of the members of non-Catho}ics, Father Stransky present is very hierarchical and . • DESKS • CHAIRS the Secretariat for Promoting. said that this is entirely up to clerical, and there does not exist Christian Unity is still being - ecclesiastical authorities.. at present a true liturgical form FILING CABINETS lJutdied, a secretariat official has Father Stransky pointe~ out of the people's Mass," the Jesuit • FIRE FILES • SAFES oaid. that· before the secretariat was FOLDING TABLES Father Thomas F. Stransky, given full status a.t the council, IDEAL LAUNDRY AND CHAIRS SERVING. C.S.P., recording secretary of no one knew who would present the secretariat, spoke to re- its . proposals. Now, Augustin R. A. WILCOX CO. FINE ITALIAN FOOD 373 New Boston Road porters at a regular meeting of . Cardinal Bea;' S.J., secretariat 22 BEDFORD ST. tile American Bishops' press president, can appoint a relator Fall River OS 8-5677 FALL RIVER 5-7838 panel. . to bring th~. secretariat's four RESTAURANT and LOUNGE Questions on the secretariat schemata before the co~ncil. .$¥SSiiS%%$%SSiii%%%%%iiiiiSSSSS%%%SSjjiS%SSiSS' on Lake Sabbatia fJUltus came up when Archbishop F,ather St~ans~y. ,saId ~ Pericle FeUci, secretary. general before the secretarIat -got its 1094 Bay Street of the council, announced that: new status, .its .role was apparTAUNTON. VA 4-8754., .,' ~ secretariat. was made .equal ~tly cOP!ined. by_council rules INC." iOstatus to the 10 'council com- . >110 ll~ly. taking care. of non}. ~issions. . '~athoUc observers at the count When he was asked whether' Cl;L . . ~e secretariat's' promopon _to ~---~--------i '.' fU!'X status In the council means I .. ~at At will be cC?ntj~.u,~ after" . 11>e council has ended as' a per-:ONE stop SERVICE~

most

un,,::

Q

a.

8rw.

Function of Christian' Unity Secretariat Still Not Clear

GONDOLA

D '& D SALES AND

CORREIA & SONS

Prelate Loses R;ing ·VATICAN CITY (NC)~Arch­ b~shop Maurice Roy of Quebec offered a reward for the: retu1'll cd his episcopal ring .which be Jost in St. Peter's ~uare.

'SHOPPING CENTER

., TelevitlloD • ParDltuN • ApplilUlcea • Groeer7 1M AileD 8t.,New· Bedford WYmlUl.7-9IH

DONNELLY PAINTING '..

-' Commereial •. Industrial Institutional Painting and Decorating

135 Franklin Street Fall River

6Sbor~e 2-191 (.

SERVI~E,

FRIGIDAIRE <

REF~IGERATION

APPLIANCES AIR CONDITIONING

FRA.NCIS J, DEVINE .'

ARTHUR J. DOUCET

.·'3~3· SECQND .ST... FALL RIVER, MASS..

SS*S!SSS%%%%%%S·SS "iSSSiS:S: SSiS%S%%SiSSi%i'


, ,,

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Nov. 1, 1962' . =.:..f:.:' . ,." ; '."

.-.,' ,4,,'

".:

R~I,igi@~ Flourishes in ~ta!y D~spitf® ·ABlti~Clerica~ism By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D. D. Bishop ot ~eno .

By Most

Rev. Fulton J.

Shee~

D.D. manf The

I

How different are the works of God and works of God. are done onlJ with much :difficolty and suffering; the· work of man are wrougbt .easUJ and mechanically. This is brought out in the waJ Sacred Seripture described two golden . objects: .the golden candlestick,' which illumined the sanctuary of tbe tabernacle in the Old Testament, and the golden· ealf, made by Aaron and the people while God SPOke to Mores atop the moUntain.

.

By'actual and painstaking. count. there are at this . moment 374 cars parked in the Piazza Montecitorio, in front of the imposing old palace which ·now .houses the Italian Chamber of Deputies. Our hotel also fronts on the Pia z z a, a circumstance . The golden candlestick, which was the symbol of Christ the , were?), but it could well be which makes up in interest that its novelty and uniqueness Light of the World, was to be of "beaten gold." The fact that and variety what it inevita- have both been much exaggerthe pure gold had flo be hammered foreshadowed the suHerings of Our Lord who bly loses in the way of ated. peace and quiet, Hanging in the We today are vastly exercised was "beaten with many' stripes" on our bebalf. This is in striking contrast with the lobby downstairs there is an over statistics bearing up eft the golden calf, which was cast o.ut of a mold ancient print of numbers of those who attend SPEAKER: Rev. ·Francis and required no beating, .no crucifixion, no the P a I ace., Mass, . receive the Sacraments, which was built and otherwise qualify as "prac- J. FitzGerald, pastor of St. , suffering, but only thepouririginto !l mold.' \ . tical Catholics." ., . Theresa's Church, Tiverton, toward the end . . Those who serve Chri$t, the Light of of the ·17th cenIt is an obsession -which has· and former African Mission-· the World, aDd those who' serve idol, turY ,at the be-' not yet. captured the Italian whatever it be, . seem, to be the same on hest " of pope imagination. One feels that a ary will address the First Innocent XII as great many of the figures pub- Friday Club in Fall River the outside, asooth the cancilestick. and a' hospice : for, . lished 'reflect the researchers'· tomorrow night. ulecalf were' goldell: . But they differ' on the inside,' in the manner in' which 'they the .sick poor", optimism. or pessimism, more were DilUte. One paSses through, suffering, : surely one, of than their objectivity or accuwbieh transforms the Inner self; Ut.e. otliei' the noblest ediracy. ,.' fices ever dedi-. I-asqoino Tradition Is simp I}' molded trom the o.utside by pubUe opinion or the • So,. some say that 30 ..... cent Contiriued from Page One spirit of: the. times. cated to thiS ..-'purpose. Lorenzo Bernoini ~d of the Roman women attend deliberations, altars fixed to the· Carlo Fontana were the arcbi- Mass, and 10 per cent only of the rear wall of the church. may beteets-as .they were for so many ,men, Others report more cheer':' come outmoded, Instead, Father There is not a church or a school, a leprosarium or a hosptof; the churches and palaces .of ful figures, almost equaling the Longley said, the altar and the tal a catechist or a nursery in any mission land which is not baroque. Rom~.. .' . <' alleged percentages' of the pulpit may be given equal' m~de of beaten gold. Someori~ liad to suHer' to bring Christ the The print shows wee~s .grow~ United States. You can take prominep.ce in the sanctuary. .' Light of the World to a pe~son or to a place. Sunday after Sund~y ing around the Psammetieus your pick?' First Food .. in this "God Love. You" column, we invite our fellow, catholIcs lisk in 'the' center of the Previous generations, ,be .. it . .. 1, h . iA' to help prepare the candlestiCk' 'of Christ the I,oight of th~ World Oba . This arrangemen e sa.....' d ,m.or,. tif"lca.ti oa.\l.... B t it i s.. so ea"v ""uare . and,.grasscrow.,dID.g., up noted, were not bothered at all 'old de" th fact that tbrO.ugh acts, ,0.f.. se.lf-.deru'a1 .. an..... .., . D.... ' cen the "",v.ing blocks. wl'th suc'h data. It ; m·plete'wo un rscore e," .u_ , n ~, an.,d so ha r d to ~et it, f or a ClUl"""', "'v ·1 • food that· t o ' to. get money for. a 'golde betw ....., h unknown' and unknowable "the first . comes us . ,, ' , f' the stick. of. be.stengol,d! . . . .. '.,'."'" O.Illy a ... br.ace .' ofcpac es, whether there was more or less i n' the M ass"i's·the f":'-~ uvu _ or al . hor"ses. ~aw, ,n .by,.· philoso.phic "net in th S ri t d' 0#4 .... d g "pra'cticaliho-"·. hi the' A-s ,.0"f mJ e . c pure rea in_ condescen m, . '3 .. ~ h' E'sU "d Go I ' a n .d·ear.rymg: ROman nobles and prlillates, dll;-: Faith, the truth might.·wen ~ - t e. pi e an. spe turb, the pastoral serel,lity of Ule· astonish us. " 'As for the EuchariSt, Father . Would Jou'not: set .sIde' at l~~~ a PeJlDy.~t i. ~. lICeJle.. Ciearly, .we arrIved bere . But it is not true in the least Longley expressed the hope that .. Hol~'FaUu~rand th~ ~lssiO.nS.~ tm;' world? '~eu:. at ,Chrisl300 years too ,late. ,,,. . . ' that religion in Rome or Italy,is "what we receive as food in mas. send us the pennies tha& JOU have saved. This would 11M ,,',. ,.C~aDg~.iJlRom~ ' . . dead or dying. It is very 'much, Communion" may take on the be be:l.tengold, but at least 'It, would' be' beaten . braSs, . and 'the: But the PIazza is exemplary alive, .ev~n in its manifestations. aSpect· of "a meal to a greater MissioaS will be grea&lul for .It. Thank you! of what.has .1uippened to the of anti-clericalism. . e~ent, as in former time9- GOD. LOVE YOU to M~. E,P. for- $1 "I made this selling Eternal City in the 9O-od!l years This may be due in part to the' _"We hope that the council beans, but I wish I had thousands and thousands- to send to help between the two Coun~ils of tbe .spread of Communist agitation--' will provide that once more god's ... the homeless and hUngry." • • . to Mrs. E.A,S. for $9 "Please Vatican, In 1869 Rome was a not doctrine-but' it is by' no people may be nourishea 'under . accept this as an iIlIsurance policy for protection of' the men w.ho somewhat provincial city of per- means. confined. to the disciples' the sign ,of both Body and are building a house on our" property," . . . to M. and B,D. haps 200,000 souls, True, it was of Karl 'Marx.' Blood," he said. for $50 "Last year on our anni""ersary we sent you a gift for the the capital of Christendom then One of the most venerable, Hopeful Signs llIIissi<nis. We couldn't think of a better way to celebrate ag~in as now, but SO far as.economy .traditwns of Rome is Pasquino . . . , ' . . ·.this year." • . . to·L,M,Y. for $1 "When I read about the poor wen t it was unimportant, bardly and his license to mock at ihe Among t~e hopeful SIgns of of . ' lands, I know I have been blessed although I am not . . clergy, from the Pope down to new rec.ogmtlon of the layman's icbU:~9SJon . self-sustalDlDg. . . . . l ' h Ch h' th . r . . .. 'Milanand 'Naples .ha~ . f~ the curate, Pasquino is especially ra e In t e urc 19 e nanung . : outstripped Uinpoi>ula~ion, busy'during; these days hfthe of lay merriberstO tbeboar:ds' of ." '.' ' '" , . th~own ~poni~ oWn~li~ca.l, Council. There isapofntofview ,i consultors' of several dioceses, " . Pind oat bow aD ~Dti1t,.: Wltb·'j'he.·SoClet,.)or:thci'hoPa-' its meagre·iln~im-. which would' regard, hiinils'a Father Longley said. He cited; ratiOn 01 tile Faitb"heiPS both 70.~ aDd ~e millions'. of poor, poverished counti-yside; and de:" safety":valve or ·an apt catliartie/ there - Montreal, B05ton,and' aged andsJckthrouglu)1It ~ \wcn:t~. Sen~ ~oor' requeilt8 , . void of any heaVY industry,' 'EnjoyiJllrlmpOi'tailce: ' Baton Rouge- where thishlis.' our ,pamphld ou annuities. .lnelu~~ th~. da:teof ,7.our,~1I1II. Rome had' rio' prospeCts for At the' moment; of 'course' " ocCurred, ·and·' eXpressed' the' to MoSt Rev. Fulton J. SheeD: 366 Fifth Avenue, New York v pious,. or, ....p:;;. Rom..e is .especiall" hope that'it might occur in many" .' &0 I 'New Y o r k . " " ., gr.{),\Vt,~ qther. "than,. the: ,papacy, . rtourism,. and the attraction .,of haps enjoying"'again',itsimpor:~,,:more. ', , . : , itB.'histOrie'riionuments.' "." .. "', taJ;tc~,~.theseat.oftheEcumen." Financial problems ought w ' : ' " . 1 , l : : ; - . , Italian unification' demanded" ieal CO\JJ?cfI, ~ gathering-place, . be turned over to laymen lor .. . \.:: . . . , ' ,~ , Rotne' the capital of the' na- of the unive~1hierarchy. "".': solution, he said, leaving prielltB . Cut out this columD;.pm your sacrifice to it and mall, it to the tio.n., '.a t.·r.·ibUte,. 'cert.'ainlY,. to.' tho It might be doubted, of free for thefrSliiritual ministry. Mosl Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, Natio~ ~irector ~f. the Sqclety for CIOUrse; whether the f1mciaineritltI . rs the Propagation of the Faith, S66 Fif~ Avenue, New York 1, N. Y., vigor 'and durability ofa s:YII1bOl~ •. I'dea '.:..z ""'e' "Coun·cll .. ...-~',' OUFg~thetor 'seekLongleoyut saitbed. mpastoenia Thereafter tbe 'growth of the' w. ... ...... _._.... or YOUl' Diocesan Director, RT. REV.. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, city was rapid': thOugh it is only ~~ the Roman mind to any. their parishes with professional 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass. . Since the last war that it has SIgnificant degree. Its pageantry, talents that' could be enlisted ill qualified, almost literally, as a quite properly, is loved ~r its the work of the physical operapopulation explosion. own sake. tion of the parish. ...... :Now there are more than two' The young man In the lobby,' million souls congregated in the this .morning. was espedallJ" Process area of greater Rome, from the communicative, Was His Excel-· . heart of the city out to the ele- 1eney enjoying the Council; as '. ; B'rochures . ".' Booklets'"; ',J gan'~, subur~s, to the. ,north~ast: though: it were chiefly 8s01't.' ·Of·;' Con'linued 1irom Page One ' ' .... :.;' . aM the' dreary, f1Y;..blown eon- :. clerical recreation. Did His Ex,.. MasS" Sunday. '~. Bernard":, ,; " .. i -",' cslet~ ':slums to the' sou'lh ~d : cellenc.y. think some good would Keairis,chanceU<ii- pf the Dettolf , . ' : , ' , I . cOme of it? On being assured archtUocese, w~u'off~r the Mass,,' 'J est".:: . ; . INative Romans have acquired: Ujat ~ Excellency ~. he acting .for "ArChbishop' John F: r; We rarity of native Californians smiled· 'hom 'ear. to ear: TIlen let Dearden of. D~tr~itwbofS' iii the'munorso! the.'20's;·They uS have tlik Ccmltcfi'fmin:' DOw tbe,:~ndV~tfcal1'go~ciL; ':" ~me from, everY imaginabl~ o~!Esta PetPetual . , .. :. Other conyention highpointiJ,· •• :~ J pilrt of,Italy, though principally , wtJI·· intflUde a ~el discUss~D::, '1,,' .COfffN" AVENUE .: 'i' ftom the .South, where 'poverty for all registrants andgiJests on' New Bedford, Mass. is still the blight on the land, . . "Fostering the. E c U In. en i c a I Rome has encountered, thus, Continued £:rom Page One Spirit.". . . as grave a challenge as has been day of prayer to beseech God's Speakers from England, Oanthrown down to 11n y ci'ly' in blessing on our President and ada and the. United States 'will m9dern times. government. be featured. . Be Thrifty ..: Be Wti. ·More than enough bas been. "We urge our Catholic people Ask your Meatman for a written by' the experts concern. I D" .. DAVIDSON'S' , the ·religious . to unp that ~ peace Ivme with Providen4:e to. ilig question in, grant freedom , .., (MacGregor Brand) cOntemporary Italy, More casud' ti 'b " ally, though oot necessarily an JUS ce e preserved. JIlprc superficially, Mr. Bernard, The message was signed by ,. five' Americal.l Cardinals and,' NEW YORK (NC) - T¥ ';.,f.;' .. ,:, Ba~,i~ the ~~~No B~~ting W'.a'll dlS'cusses I't l'n hI'S n'ew' . .the the chairman of the NCWC Greek Orthodox Archdiocese or ' ,:.,.' MMtiC' says..... ,;.. ." bQok, A City. and a World,'from:' 'administrative bOard' in N~rtb and Sopfh ".__ .. ,_.~.",~~ '-, ," , , '''WINNtNG FAVOR ~~ point of. view 'of an English. na&he of the' US. Hierarchy. .~ released the-text of astatemeDI qtholic of the old vintage, Signers are: Francis Cardinal:. sept to the Holy b-:-e "'/ .- __ .~,.' Reaf Scotch Htim"flciVorD' 'Jt is not a comforting situa- Spellman~ Archbishop of New':" dox Patriarcll Athenagoras· of WITH ITS RAVOR" U;~p (what would we M'if it ...York; James Francis CardinaL' Cc?nstantiDople declin1Dg an In. , -R.o"'h&s·· McIntyre, . ArchbishQp of Los: vitation to send observers to the ". ~ a Angeles; Richard Car din a 1:' Second Vatican Coundl. ,!NEW . YORK (NC)-Tbe St.. Cushipg,. ;Arc.hbishop. of Boston; :,'The ·statement; released here Moc Gregor' ~omas More Society haa an- 'Albert Cardinal Meyer, Arch-.· by 'the ardidiocese's infol'ma' J aOunced its third annual Mass bisbop of Chicago; 'Joseph Car- tion office, expresses the interest ~·o,~·..sf) , lOr the advancement of civil lib- dinal Ritter, Archbishop of St.' of the'Patdarch ill the work. CJI. . \... - . (!f,ties will be celebrated .this ..,Louis;. a~ .Archbishop Patrick, the c~nincil ,and the hope that it :.JUST .' I at A1t.~dine wear on the feast day of St.. A. O'BoyIe' of Washington" wUl open "bI'Qiuter horizona CJI. .. ', , . . FOR ' . Fooc"~, : Martin de Porres,. Saturday, New. chairman of the NCWC admiDis- . C hr i s t i all spkit ilnd. underSWRTN,CS in Mauachll..itt ",",-~,._,., I;:,:~ 81. Francis Xavier Chur~ kative board. . lltanding"~""

an

Liturg' y'

Ch

. anges

and

fO:r-;

resotlrces'

as

\

,

e:

f t . . ••

Yeor BookS

Color

Catholic Women

~

:

w:

at ".

p.ray:er A1ppea" I

:

··'4",eri~a~L:P:r~_Si'll/lc~',.', ." ,:.:,·,'O,.·'5Ii ,,2':'PRINXERS':..:: ·..mONESS'.. •

I

' \. .

'Greek .Archd.·oce·se Declines Invitation

• SWEETNIC •

the:'

',I,',I.

,

· ;y=1 C

Mass

DAVIDSON'S·

,j, .' " ~.

I

.•

"

':;"',

',"

',:

,_.

'..

.....-


Paris Label· on French Courses Of Denise· Corey. at Dominican Academy

Direct·

fr()m

PrO$~~ufror

13

Says

Crume $Ylndic~ie

By Patricia McGowalllI

6'Direct from Paris" is the label on French courses at Dominican Academy, Fall River. They're taught by Mrs. Denise L. Corey, a vivacious Frenchwom'an who's made Fall River her home since her marriage in 1946 to Fouad M. Corey. "When I came here I was happy to meet many French-speaking people among my husband's Lebanese relatives and . friends, as well as the numerous Franco-Americans in this city," said Mrs. Corey. She pays, tribute to Mrs.. Charles E. Brady of the Fall River adult education department. Known for her course, "Let's Talk About Books," conducted at the F,all River Public Library, Mrs. Brady, a member of Holy Name parish, held « special course in the 1940's for G.I. brides: "We learned English, Civic Education, and the American way of life," said Mrs. Corey, who became a citizen in 1949 and started teaching French and mathematics at Dominican~Aca": demy the following year. Underprivileged Tots Her educational background Ie impressive. She attended. elementary and secondary schools in Paris and received teacher's degree in 1940 after passing examinations given by the Ministry of Public Education.· , From 1941 to, 1945 she taught elementary classes in suburbs of' P,aris known as "the red belt'" due to their predominantly' Communist population,.: and . from 1945 to 1946 was "nlOni-' tor" of a group of underprivi·leged and physically deficient children sent to health resorts in' the French occupation zone iii Germany. "My knowledge of Geiman,' whi.ch I had studied fOr six.years, was very helpful in my . relations with the devoted Sis-' , ters running this children's home in the Black Forest," she ' noted. . Mrs. Corey last year attended ' classes at Bradford Durfee C 0 11 eg e· and this year is studying at Bridgewater 'State' Teachers' College preparatory to' MR. AND FOUAD M. COREY completing work for a master's .'. • . - , . " degree in French at B'rown Uni-' paration!l fOr a French operetta Mrs. Corey revisitJt France versity. , ' .'00 be .produced at' ihe FaIt' in 1952 and 1959. She has· 11' . Her outside Interests are wide ,- '~iver' sch~l. iJ!. the Spr~ng :and' brother in Paris. Her mother incl~ding m u s i e, .. dramaties:· .. she has.-shared her. colleCtion' lives. with her in: Fall. River,. readmg. cooking, sewing· and: . ~f..French :recordS ~ith g~rls, .. but also· makes frequent trips knitting. Her students at'Domi-' especially "songs of .the French . to see the family. in France. Dican Academy benefit by' sev-: spiritual revival of the ·last 10 I f th . ;yea'rs," whi··nh· pro·ved· v'ery' Membership in Cerde· Litera 0 ese' avocations. She is .., .. teraire of F;all River and AlIi-' currently making advance pre-" populallo ance Francaise of Newport also strengthen ties with lfi belle' . France for Mrs. Corey. '

a

MRS.

tpe

,Urges Voters Defe(l't Propose'. To Relax Sunday Sa les ~ Lciw.· ,

THE ANCHORThurs., Nov. 1, 1962

"We have no children of our own," she. reports, "but nieces and nephews on 'both sides of the Atlantic and 'my girls' a¢ D.A." Appropriately, the transplanted Parisienne lives on Lafayette Street, and she is bound to yet another nation by membership in the Lebanese parish . ~ St. Anthony of the Dessert. .

Pedd~~$

SmWJt

WASHINGTON (NC)' A county prosecutor asserted the current wave of porne.. graphy and smut peddling definitely is tied in with operations of a nationwide crim@ syndicate. Len Karty, State's Attorney for suburban Montgomery Coun_ ty, Md., said: "1 know thiB sounds like the plot for a bloodand-thunder television show.. but prosecutors all over the country know that a crime SYJ1eo dicate exists. It virtually defies destruction since it is so care<>· fully organized. Our efforts teo day are concentrated on containing it because breaking it up w out of the question at this time." In a talk before the Men of Si, John's an organization of fathern of students and benefactors of St. 'John's College High School conducted by the Christialil Brothers here, Karty detailed his efforts to halt the distribution and sale of the controversial! "Tropic of Cancer" book, whiclil· he characterized as "dirt f~ dirt's sake." 'Plain Flltb" The prosecutor said he WlUl accused in daily newspaper editorials, on television and radio shows of operating as a "one man censor" and because of "my' Catholic Faith" in defiance ex! ' "Freedom of speech." He declared: "There is no freedom of speech involved ·in this book. It . is plain and simple downrig~ filth." " Responding to his critics, Kar_ ty said he volunteered to .read ty said he volunteered to read "Tropic of Cancer" on a radio and on a TV program. His offer was declined, Karty said and. "when pressed for the r'easoD why, I was told frankly that the book, was too dirty to read over the air." He said the same result came when he suggested that a newspaper run "Tropic of Caneer".in ~erial'form; as is custom.. " ary with other books. . '

Early

Mas~

CLEVELAND (NC)-Resideni students at Notre Dame College for women here' rose at 3 A.M. on the opening day of the· ceu~enical council to assist· at s Mass for the council's succesa. The Mass coincided with the convening of the council at 3:00 A.M. Clevehind time (EDT).

CLEVELAND eN-C) - The in the present l'aws W:hich WQuld" director of' the Family Life be conducive· to. the seculariza-' I Bureau of the Cleveland diocese tion of Sunday by making.it a' has urged Ohio voters to defeat day of business-'3's-usual." . . . Can~idates III proposed c,o n s ti t uti 0 na I amendment to ,relax state SunPromotes Materialism day-closing laws. , Ohio· residents; 'vote' m ~. WATERBUR'Y' (NC)-...::... The Msgr. ~ancis ,W. Carney_ .. the Nov. 6· gen~ral ·elections on New .England~s Playground Connecticut State Federation of charged that the proposal ~'pro- . an amendment, to·· permit :the. ... Citizens for Educational Free- motes in its own way a materi-· 'Sunday sale of.-milk,· milk pro- ....._ - - dom is questioning :candidates· alistic philosophy, repudiating ,qucts, and any ~od.1tem· or,(ood ' ' for Goyernor anp' for Congres- the traditional American reli-' - product ,for human· cr· animal ' ; , sional . posts about· gl;>vernment gious obserVance of Sunday and.' COl).Surnption. . .'.' '. aid to children in parochial and the . dignity of the American' ," The ·amen<iment, whicb"op-._ other priv,ate schools.! " worker wh9 needs Sunday II .. ponents claim .wiII·legalize. Sun,day o~rationof larg~ 'food ~.and The candidates ~ve been day of rest and relaxation." .. The pro II 0 sed, amendment . dairy. stores, was propoi;ed, by .. ' asked: "If legislation ~ proposed to more fully meet the 'education- ·earlier, was denounced by the ,~hicago-owned firm which r.uns· al needs of our sch061 children Ohio Catholic Welfare Confer- 11 chahiof food stores in . the LEO B. BERUBE•. Ma'r. , SKArU~-I(i would yo'u approach Such .aid to ence, rep~ting the state's six state. It has more than 100' out911 Slade lei: OS 1-'7816 education bills from i the view:" dioceses. The conference· ex- .. lets in the Cleveland ·area. . , Msgr. Carney saki that -.the point· of one who beiieves that pressed confidence that Ameri-, all school children ·should· be .cans "woul~ deplore any change . "increasing concern with comtreated· on -the sa~e 'ana/or . munism as a threat to ·the equal, basis, 'whether l attending American way of·.life" ought to . prompt voters to rejeCt' ~ the private or public schools,?" amendment because, he '-sald, it State C.E.F. president Anthony MONTREAL (NC) ~ Through· prO~9tes a. materialistic way of J. Coviello said the ,purpose of INCORPORATED 1937 ....,. the program is to foster full dis- •the cooperation of· the Grand .life. cussion of the sUbj~ct by· the · ~eminaries· of Quebec' and of candidates qU,ring,·Uk current Montreal, f.otir African' semi. The KEYSTONE political campaign. ':': narians have come to' Canada to prepare for the' priesthood. ·.1 .\ OHice Equipment Three of the semina'rians are . . ,.Salesroo~ AII~rgy from the Diocese, of Nyundo m NEW YORK' (NC) ~ St. Vin- Ruanda and 'one: from the 'DioNEW.. AND .lISED· . JAMES H. COLLINS, C.E., Pres. cent's Hospital here .has received cese C?( UsumbUra . in: Ur~ndl. Wood· and Steel·' Desko anci· chairs'· steel filing - cabinets. lockers•• helv.. . Registered' Civil and Structural Engineer . a half million dollar grant from Two will be attending each at '~:~dr~:~":"e:,~rage cabinets. eafee. l'tember National Society p!"of~sionaI Engineers the John A. Hartford Founda- the two Grand Seminaries. tion for a comprehensive StUdy There. already are. :five other :ea.~rt~U:.,mntloesn .: . ". 'FRAN(:IS L COLLINS. JR., freas. of .allergic disease. The stUdy African seminarians studying THOMAS K.' COLLlNS,Sec'y. will begin next Ja~uarY and in the Grand Seminaries of Niwill be headed by Dr. Vincent colet, Sherbrookeandst. Hya.. .:: NewBeMOrd BUILDI.'NG ' . f,ALL RIVER, MASS•. J. "Fontana', director Of ~ ; ...e inthe. ~~~ fiWI .&i'e:£rom WY 8·2788, tries ai the hospitaL . · ..·l:Jganda" '-

Qi\Bestion On AII-Schoo( Aid

will

11II ...

.OPEN'ALL WINTER

as

BOWLING BA"'QUETS:

at. . .

,F•. ,L•..COLLINS .&.SONS

African Seminarians· . ·Study in Can.ada ..

For

·GENEU[ (ONTRAOORS and ENGINEERS

Study

q, r r .: , . .

-

u

:ACAbEMY


-,

14

..

~,

.. ;.' ~ .....~ --

'- - .. ~. -" . .

._~.

..:

..

SAN' FRANCISco (NC) - . Archbishop Joseph T. McGucken of San Francisco has announced an archdiocesan fund drive, with a minimum goal of $15 million, to build a new cathedral, three new high schools, a new college seminary and a home' for the aged. . The campaign will be called'

By Rev. An~rew ·M.· ,Gr~ley. ., . Msgr. George G. Biggins 'has:'~D' ~~Poin~cl·tO·,a~·the

work of the Second Vatican Coune1l and'has asked Fr~ Alidrew this coium~ w~i1e ;ae' ~ inR~me;Fr~~ G:reeley is well qualified. Be has. doc~rate in sociology from the University· of Chicago and is the author of three bookS: "The Church aDd the Suburbs": "Strangers in tlb.e Bouse"; and "Bell'gion and the CollegilGraduate." Be has also written well ~ver . 50 magazine articles. At. the present time, among many other duties•. Fr. Greeley is .editor of Apostolate (Cathollo' Action ·Iournal). ' . .. M. GreeleY. to write

: I'

a

Bonnie th. Plaid Lassie Says:

."Save· Now.During A&P's . BIG BEEF SALE!"

,It is quite clear at. this stage. of the history of the. tt ',American Church that self-criticism is "in and optimism about anything that is American and Catholic is "out. H In tact, . anyone demOlistra~ing'SQme degree of ~heerfulneS8 JUDGE CONSIDINE about the state of the AmerIcan Ohurch is in' danger of to have been encouraging to - l1aving 'his "Catholic liberal" Catholic educators. union card revoked•. Ind~ed Gloomy View If evidence is adduced suggestHowever, our findings were Continued from Page O~e .._'g that • ere is great growth bitterly attacked from the floor. h d d 1 ,.... . It was pointed out how horrible More than thI:ee t ousan e. going on in .the things were"in Catholic colleges, egates representing over Ii hun-Church in the how difficult it was to maintain dred thousand Tertiaries . hof United States, North America attended t e ."e freedom, how many Convention. The congress th eme' ... best reac-' acaQi!mic . I II anti-mtellectua s were co ege ''The Third Order m . the Life 0 f tl'on is to pretend that it presidents, and how uninterested the Church Today" was based really isn't and. uninteresting the students on the encyclical of Pope John were. " MM ' " .Th e te ach there and hope i d 'ater et aglstra. it goes away. 1..} ~~s not bespeci abllyt surpr sel iogs of the Holy. Father which' r.q ",d8 out .urst, u my co . h . ._ For e xample, . h at taken . ,received special emp aSlswere' ..... '.~ · 'e l' _ .' .1eagues :were' somew a n e X e thos(! on the liturgy, the lay. ., remarked to lent new ' Cath~' aback. One· Uof them and the BQciological' . ter,' W h at mak es. " ...ose apostolate . oll'c mag'aZI'ne"'·,· me 'lathi k th ha problems of the present century. receritly . 'conguys. n ey ve a monop- The Convention clos.ed Oil Oct. ~'cted a 'survey of ll'turgl'ca"l par-" oIy. QIlanti-inteUectualism?" .... l' 24 with the Consecration of the . " . ticipation in a Middle Western . So essential is· the g oomy , world to Christ· our King.. - ;·:Archdiocese. The SUTVey' re~ new· of· the state of the Amer- . The Frimciscan Third Order .....aled that· somewhat m'ore' than'" iean Church that one is required. . ..... . was founded by. St. Francis of. · ,: ..... per. cen"t of the parl·shes·.·· 'ha'd to complain abo.ut. little .th.m. gs . ..., Assisi over seven centuries"ago~ '. . · . 'tIOIYIe kind of: participation. ,that are bad and Ignore ,maJor .. , Its ,purpoSe :,is .19 provide the.', . .~ " ..." ,...·Vends that are good•., . . ~ .. Not to be overcomel?y.~uch , . .ThusonewriterfeltcompeUed laity:with a religious ,rule of ... · .. ,«.ata, t~e 'editors. hea~e~ the. to"bemoan .the Sad' state of' Holy' life \\;hic,it : will help. theJn to'" .' story With the. information that Name Communion breakfasts sanctify themselves and to be-". "almost one, half of the ~adshe8~' . and. .ignore the' remarkable come more zealous apostlesbi' ill 't~e, ar~J.1diocese.did not, have growth of first rate lecture the woi-Id.· Religious vows are partlclpat~?n, and titled th~.story forums in many parishes. not taken but each Tertiary is -Stillness 10' the Metropo}!s." expected . to live according to , Now. by . what' standards an lDdisJtellS8ble CUche the spirit of the vows of PovertYt 8rchdio~ese that bas participa:" Another felt cheated because Chastity imd Obedience accOrd_' tion in more than one half Of its he had no say as to whether his ing to his state in life. parishes be said to be "still"' daughter was to wear a school Probate Court Judge Consi~-' .escapes, i n , e . · uniform . or . not, though one is dine is a' brother of Rt. Rev: Fantastic Progress unaware· of any private school. Raymond ~T.. Considine,pastot: .in.. the. country that .concedes,. -of .St. William's ,Church, Fall' I suppose the editorial jud,ge_,' such:a right to the parents ,of its.. River., and ,Djocesan Dir,e,cti9n ot '-' ,ment that· decides t~, saY~'al-' .. pupils. . . the Society for. the Propagation:. ... ' . most ,one half do not" and not ~'. 'i .. ~other repeated ,the .abs~~.-, of th~ .F.a~th;, ~e~. ,Arth~r G.'~ .~: i' . more than.one half do is large- .• 1utely indispensable cliche' about ..C~msidine, .pastor ..of.::it. Mary's' · "., W a matte; of hormo~e bal~nces parish .size ~nterferinng witq the' Church, South Dartmouth;, and resolutIons of OedIpean. 'con- . pastor knowing the names, of all.. " Rev..John M, Considine· M.M ,';"" ." " 'fhcts. '. .-' .. . .., . , . . " .' ... ,., .. ., .. "It may well be my own incli-': h~s people, desp~te thefaet :tha~•.. noted. ,llllssion .,expert, , author, . .'. , :' !lations to become a dIsCiple of' . ~ap.y ~all parIshes ~,t~blil.. and Dlre~tor of, the ~a~al. Vo~-: . Pollyanna:"but I cannot- tinder- : ll!I ,fI!.!' as ,tp.e a~ostolate goes~n~,> ;unteers.,f0f La~m America, HIS etand :why' the remarkably' able' '. sOllle. I~ge :pa:l~es are b\lsthng:: daughter, IS.. Sister ~ary Pereditors of.thfs superb journal did-"; ee;l1;ter~ Of)':C~';lt!.. . . ',- pe~ua,.R~~M. .--" ". .:" ,DOt think that participation by' ". ,'Re&I"Weaknesses Plentiful ~', " ;: half of: an· archdiocese in: four·· •. :'50 -have 'the self":e:ritical . Hughes" Signs years wa~ ,f~tastic prog~ess. co~s bec~me, th~t oile'su.spects.. A Ob B II . . Self.,.crltIcls~ is so fashionable' that they have become"part of nti~. stenity ' . is' that ~e q~estIoning of some, of the person~lit¥ ~ructure of a' TRENTON (NC) ~ Two bills its cliches IS taken by a co.nsld- .. fair nuni6et of people, that .they" designed: to surb sale of obscene. ': . erable number of people to be are essential to handliiIg trau- literature were signed here by i a personal affront. mas inflicted by various' reli- Gov. Richard'J. Hughes, A 'third: ,. As Good as Others gioUs who have been' s.tibstitute was. conditionally veto.ed... Last Spring I journeyed;with father'figures in their lives'. One of the new:laws author- . ; !: -l11Wo non-Catholic sociological Self-criticism may thus be.' i t t 't eolleagues to a Catholic educa': '. good therapy for disturbed so..uls'_ . zes coun y prosecu ors or CI y., . ,.~" d h Id b d "police chiefs to,go Into court for tional meeting to report what we an .. po " one ~ ou egru ge' ., _ . . .. , i L.-d learn e d ' abo ut Ca th 0 li'c:coI'- - them such therapy. However it·· an·U' mJunctIon ·agamst persons uti . , d' t 'b t'· !. . '. . I . . I' , is to be hoped that the .inore" Be 109 or . IS n u 109 obscene . . " leges 10 a arge natIona survey... '. . . literature 'The secondincorporAsa matter of· fact we' had IOsightful and more balanced . . . . -, · ed th t.... ' ,. of the self-critics will have done' ates· the U. S. Supreme Court s d Iscover r: a ...ere was n o · . . .. def' 't' of b ' t ' to N . f th't C th l' h I ' : with the windmills and turn' 101 Ion 0 scem y·:m ew ,. ~~~oless ~ike~y t~ I~e~~ ~il~~e:. their weapons on th~ real'weak--: 'J~ey'a.nti-~~scenit:,.laws., . graduate school or 'into the, aca- nesses. of the ~merlcan _Ch~ch, The COoQltlonally vetoed bIn demic life than the rest of Amer- of w~lch·there IS still a pl~tiful would make it an offense to send' Jean colleges. . supply. / t;o de~lers books.. or magazines" "~Y fellow socIologists, not .' '. .' tha:t. th~y ~ad not orde;ed. I" 1lIllderstahding. that the theor.y .. ·Rep.re. sent.s. U.·$~ w~Itlllg· .Thls. effort to pmpomt of anti-intellectualism is. unresponsibility was regarded as' Questioned dogma among Cath'VATICAN CITY '(NC) ...;.. The' uiIconstihit~onal by 'the governor. I '. elic liberal intellectuals ass\:unect' ·...United: States' was . represented' . H;e urged an amendment making that our findings "';ould be at the Openin? ceremony of .the It ; u~l,awf~~ f?r" di~tril:iiitors to ,. quite ·pleasing to the audience: . S~on~ Vat.I<mn EcumeDlcal' send_p~bhcabons :t~at.deale~s . After aU we were saying' that· Council by Its ambassador to had IndIcated in wrIting they did .there was evidence that Catho.,., .~~y, G, Frederick Reinhardt. not want. ; : 'lIc:' schools were everY bit 'as ,:': C ,

.

Jud.g··e ,Considine

.

; SVPl;R-RIGHT. QUAliTY

Chuck Roast c -~-= RO~:T -

"'BON£l£SS POT

' ..' I

l869

.' ,HEA,," S~E,ER BE .

~ORT CUT R18 3RD 10 61H

J

'Chucle Roas'

." en:

I

'''UcIeStealf . .

JUICY AND

,FlAVORfUL.. ,_'SONEIN' 80NelN

:.;1

:i

::~h~~~:y:~~:tO:~i~;"

,

.:.. .

Members of the Q'u~n's'~'~" Daughters of Taunton will h:old" r 'a meeting Moriday, Nov..5;at· .CYO' Hall 'on High St. 8:1'5 P,M, A, cosmetic demonstrationwill be given by Powers m~el and art instructer Mrs, Robert Calvey, who'~so has.a TV pro,-' gram, "Draw Podner." .

at

:1[1

SOMERSET;~:MASS.··

,.'.. ,

' -

.~;

"

'.

".'

.'

.~ ' .

"

':.

laar: . la83¢ c ta' 89

: JA.N~ PARKER' . REG.5.9c EA

01'

!"

',.

I

' -

.

j •

'$~~~.oo.o 'fo $2,000,000' -in-.2 'Years Treat Yourself To Convenient Banking , in Sorrierset Shoppin" Area _at the Bridge. .. "Member Federal Deposit' Insurcmce .Corp. .. ,t, 'All Depositslnsured'Up':To '$1 O~(jOO ': - .:, : , ' ..

39C

.' ,Cherry P-.e. . . JANE1.PARKER LARGE S-IN. CH . 39Ci: Le BOl, REG, 49c , IlA Whiie.Bread JA~I! PARKER-SLICED 2 ~.;: 3fC .C·ampbell's Vogotable Chlcken-Nooello Save 6 10Th Ol 99C Boef Soup 12c CANS aked Bea'ns' Ho~emak~r's. All. 4lL~ 6 ~l 9S;c B Varieties, Save 210 .. JARS .Premium Saltines N~~~ . ~~~ 29C ,'Cut :Aspclrcig'. us , .:'. GOO,? Q.EW!'ROP 141/2 9~ '19C ...',", . . VAl~, ...CAN .. Cream Pies> J!ANQUer. 3 140Z l •00 . II,"',

"

.A~..

'

:'.I' .. iJ

i.'

PK~,

.,:

~i-"

..... !,.

'

•• :\

un

.

..

• Prj.... s/IoWD ..; 1lI1. Iit·'........teild Sat.,;IIia..'~' '.'- " ~In.at· All ~&P SUIIer Martetl .... tIll. COIIIlIIullll,.& ·wlela",• foil.... prodllCls " IltIIIJ prohlbltod lIempt ,.... Plaid. Stamp off&

, '. '.

'1:"

69~.

;. . a \.. 'la 69 "

':'.: , I~a:,_agS~5C 'q;FF'~,LAB~l48·:.~~~'~_,e~ ...

g~o~.as ..s?~e. sureIYthis.~O~~ht ..:, ",,':'SLADE~S·.FERRY·:TRiJST,'COMPANy

:·i.Queen's Daughters· ...,',

., t9

·59C ,

·.Angel .Food·Ring

,"'::"ouli OWN~'

.:",~. o;uYOtiR: GROWING,BA~,K~"'" .', .:

.:/

~~ ..

LARGe 8rNCH 1· t-B 1 OZ

in:

.

:

Ill..

·.',,· ...

R'''S'eale.· ."anlf: SteGlc

I

'"J

I.

. , ,

. .I~a,s;ni 8e~f' '"

.

= -

2. Ribs \b 89c)

'=='...~' Ca'·"· .. ~~or~~a·~oast.

C>-

-=~

c

Delinonlco S'e.,alc: BONIlESS· ta 1.79. · Pot Roas, 'RI:SH BRISK&T FRONr ., '. (Stralslt, cu, Ib 99~ cvr 69C ShouIIIer BON&~s R t8 G" d. .".&F OV~N oas' .' 18 89C .' ... roUII. . leef ,. c

.... !

Gov.

~ :=

69

l8

{SlRlOlN 1iP .1 at

==

-

:""RibRoast

can

sacred

==

-

'

. ;

.•;.

e. '

;

',.

- -

• ,,'

A',

,

'

~ •.'

.

..

J

00,

Eljil'iFtil


Cuban Situation Discussed Funy By High-S,choolers in History, English, Economics Classes

~. ~~O~-Pioc~~. of ,Fe?" River-!hurs., Nov•. l, 1962

. 'fJ'if'-.' .~-~. ',' J,.•" : ',~ i'.

~~f:{ik"~(,,:,' " .,

By Clement J. Dowling

7'<S~~' '~,~~~;~~~~~~t -~tV

History and economics classes have suddenly come to life. The Cuban situation is being discussed, argued and researched in a manner not usual with high school students. History is being made and diocesan students find themselves looking at developments that TV lookers have presented an soon will be a part of future history books. The' parting insight (0 American thinking. UPl?erclass :lcholars found the greeting "I hope to see you TV coverage of the Stevenson-

tomorrow" exchanged by students is spoken in a half-joking, half-serious manner. ,The importance of the international problem has brought deep thought and some fear to the minds of diocesan scholars. Teachers find all students much more attentive in class, though not favoring the cause of such attention. Most high schools already have plans to move the student body to civil defense quarters, makeshift though they be. The remainder have suddenly decided it is time to plan some sort of shelter. At Fall River's JesusMary Academy the girls go under their desks and cover their faces when the signal means immediate attack. When the signal denotes there is time to move to more adequate quarters, the school basement is utilized.

Zorin de-bat most interesting, vital and sobering. Though com_ plaints from some viewers that the elimination of a favorite program for the U.N. debate have not been attributed to adults, the inference is there. The threat of Communism brought so close to U. S. shores has not only absorbed history classes. English, Religion and Social Science classes 'are discussing the impact 'on literature and the ever-active struggle be_ tween Communism and Democracy. Taunton's Coyle High students in tt!e special "Problems in Democracy" course are finding discussion invigorating and mature. .

,15

"j~tf\ ,::frA~.~~~:' :.:~ti-;J.:f~ .· j

I

~'l:" , " ,

,).

I

CLASS OFFICERS: Leading their class at Holy Family High School, New Bedford, "are, from left, Peter Sullivan, president; Elaine Mathews, secretary; Mary Tynan, treasurer; Richard Perras, vice-president.

Literature is often molded by the times and the girls of Mt. St. Mary's English classes pOnder First Friday Masses are held following the school day of their the effect of present unrest on hers. The entire student body novelists, essayists, editorialists, . of Fall River's DOlTlinican Acad_ in the auditoriums of many of children through 15 minute emy are cooperating with' Pope our diocesan high schools. An periods, meeting and discussing and historians. . John's wishes for the observance example is that sponsored by with the respective teachers. St. Religion classes everywhere of Catholic Youth Week. Pledge the Knights and Handmaids of Mary's in Taunton saw its express conjecture on the world- leaflets written and issued by the Sacred Heart at Stang High. French Club "Parlons Francais" wide struggle between religious Sodality prefect Pauline Lepage This group sponsors dev;otion to hold its first meeting with imd atheistic forceS. and secretary Cecile Levesque the Sacred Heart of Jesus by. Christine Haggerty, Lou i s e Questioning the opinion of promise reception of Holy Com- urging the students to make a . Blain, Estelle I,.ague and Madehigh-schoolers in the Fall River munion for the intention of, triduum eyf Holy Communions line Cayer being elected officers. diocese on the whole Cuban sit- alerting' the world to the tre- on First Friday, Saturday and The special St. Mary's Higb WASHINGTON (NC) -- uation found unaniinity and mendous potential of today's Sunday, as .weU as a Holy Hour choir furnished, singing for the Superintendents of the 144 divergence. All students were reverent youth' a'nd tomorrOw's Thursday evening in each stu- annual Ad Altare Dei ceremoD¥ dent's home. in St, Mary's church. . U. S. Catholic sC'hool systems behind President Kennedy and loyal leaders. Outstanding eve n t s t hat The future schedule has a have pledged the ,"support his quarantine action: Some The ann u air e ,t rea t was and earnest 'prayers" of them- thought it should have - taken students are looking. forward· to s..odaUty trnion m,eeti,ng, at Stang preached last week by Rev. Jude selves, their pupils' and their place six' months ago. Others . include a model debate at Tufts High 011 Nov. 18 at which most Meade, C.P. and' Rev. Joyce Spencer, C.P, teachers for President Kennedy. were in favor of immediate in- University' on Saturday. St. dinocesan schools will engage in vasion but represented· a small Mary's of Taunton, Bishop Fee- - a' Day .of Recollection; the Parents of the students folThe pledge was made in a res- minority. han' of Attleboro, Jesus-Mary Seventeeners Dance scheduled' lowed their children's class olution adopted at the concludThe many debating teams en- and Sacred Hearts AcadelTlY of for all clasSes of Fall River's schedule on Monday night and ing session of the aJ;lnual meetFaU River are all sending dele- Sacred Hearts Academy in the thus were able to meet the ing here of the Department of tered in the Narragansett Debat- gations. College students wiu de- l1ewgym which will be transteachers in the atmoshere'of the ing League are to discuss.·a Scl:lool Superintendents of the bate with following criticism by . formed into a glamorous- ball- classroom. Common Market plan, for the National OathoUc Educational The Emmanuel College DraWestern Hemisphere and now . economics authorities. The after..; room for Nov' l 23; and a . cake Association. will include the Cuban situa- noon session will offer' work sale on Saturday sponsored by matic Society will present aa The superintendents, without tion in their arguments. Eeo- shops for' the high schoolers the Holy Family StUdent Counoriginal play by Sister Franspecifically mentioning the )lomics classes also must include. where theY may, get advice and, ,eil with proceeds planned to de- , cesca, S,N,D., dean at Emmanuel. American blockade. of CUba, the present tension in their dis- debating help from the college fray State and National dues on Nov. 11. This drama on Joan plus' the 1963 convention. noted that the "crisis of these cussions of a Western Common students.' of Arc has been widely prodays has brought the entire na- Market. Congratulations are due eight . Since our last issue, much has . claimed, especially for the chora'i prevost High boys for, achieving happened. The students of St. tion and the world face-to-face speaking of the trial scenes. War is not the only subject the highly esteemed "Ad Altare Anthony High joined' with other . , Prevost's student paper con.with the gravest peril." arousing sentiment and feeling. Dei" award. Auxiliary Bishop' schools in honoring Christ the h'ibution this week! "We pledge," they said, ''to Bishop Stang at. No. Dartmouth the President of the United will meet North Attleboro on the James J. Gerrard bestowed the King last Sunday by receiving "I eat my peas with honey States and 'to the nation at this gridiron Saturday in a· game honor on Paul Macri, Robert Holy Communion. A harvest. I've done it all my life. It makes the peas taste funny time of crisis our support and that most likely will decide the Messier, Norman Brogan, Paul dance decorated with Fall color But it keeps them on my knife!' earnest prayers together with BristOl County champ. The Gendreau, Maurice Migneault, took place in Feehan's cafeteria. those of the millions of students whole school is full, of a spirit 'of George Camp'bell, Raymond' Parents of Dominican Academy Campbell, and Ronald Thiboutot. students were briefed by Mr. and teachers in the schools we conquest and football fever. Barbara Furze, S.H.A. sopho- Robert Hoye of Science Research represent in every state of the Meanwhile "Reverent Youth-- more is being 'called "Lucky" Associates on the respective NO JOB TOO BIG union." ; Loyal Leaders", theme of Cath- by classmates. She was picked capability \lnd development of The resolution was telegraphed olic Youth Week, spotlights va- . to be president· of the Holy each student. NONE TOO SMALL to President Kennedy. ' rious pertinent activities in Union Boosters Club, a choice . Additio~allY, Stang High had Re-elect Officers which the twelve high schools which is accompanled bY a its Parent Night with parents In other actions at the meeting, are taking part. Most diocesan $500.00 prize. Honored. at S.H.A. the superintendents re-elected to students are also C.Y.O. mem- Debrabant Debating Society elections are president Anne a second one-year term the presPRI'NTERS Louise Gibbons, vice-pres. Conideint of their group. He is me Adamse, and secretary-·. Father Richard Klei'ber, superMain Office and Plant treasurer Margaret Donnelly. intendent of the Green Bay, Wis., Continued ft'om Page One You LOWELL, MASS. diocesan school system. Pacific Baldyga, O.F.M.Conv. to . ,Freshmen debaters at S.H.A. ~ to participate. in a Novices Telephone Lowell Also re-elec~ed' we~e Msgr. succeed .Father Joachim 86 88-' Tournament at St. Catherine's Bennett Applegate of ~olumbus, sistant at Holy Cross Church. OL8·6333 and GL 7·7500 . Father Pacific, a native of Academy, N~wport, on Nov. 1'1• Ohio, vice president, and Msgr., Buffalo, was born in 1905' and Insurance Agency :R: C. Ulrich' of Omaha, Neb., as Auxiliary Plants was. ordained a priest in 19Z7. secretarlf. . Attlebor~ Vincentian TEL Myrtle 9-8231 BOSTON Almost all of his priestly . life , Attleboro Particular CoUncil has been spent at St, F'r8ncis OCEANPORT, N. J. i 88 NORTH MAIN STREET of the Society of st. Vincent de High SChool, Athol springS; Pe~nyDonations Aid .N.Y., PAWTUCKET, R.1. NORTH AlTLEBORO Paul will meet at 8 Monday where be serVed as • . Q,ight, Nov. 5 at t~ former :Rose teacher and later as, principal . Student's Educa.tion and superior of the local Friary. Garden, Mansfield. St. Mary'. OTTAWA (NC)-Dai'1y penny Father Joachim lias served as Conference, Mansfield, will be. An Attractive Community of Modern donations of the' 600 st'Qdents at assistant at Ho17 ,CrosS CbUrch host. Re"tal Apartments St. PatHck's Coli e g e High since September, 1960.·' ". ,'" 'School here are helping to pay Both .. appointments for the education of' Hilary effective on TueSday; ~~t. 30. AU 'advantages of city living in the· Ziniel,' 23, a freshman 'from countryside northern Ghena. Shawomet Cardens .15. conveniently located near bus lines and four e churches, With a delightful wlew oyer· His $300 yearly residence fee loe~ing the distant Taunton Rlwer. hi being paid through the stu~ The Rentals at Shawomet Gardens (with Dew 12 Ctl. ft. refrigerator and new 24" automatlo gas range dents' mission, fund. He has.' a included) are only four _ year tuition .scholarship • 4lh & 3lh rooms $80.00 monthly-3V:l rm. apt. '. ·BUSINESS AND from the college. • Heat"": Hot Water $88.00 monthly-4V:z rm. apt. DUPLICATING MACHINES Southeastern Ma..ach~••tts· Applications shOUld be made at Shawomet Gardens The students ooised $1:,100 last • Janitor service Offices, or blan~s may be obtained by mall. Second and Morgan '$b. Largest ,Independe"t Chain year through the dail,. penny • Individual 102 SHAWOMIET AVENUE Thermostat mission donations. '.r.he money ill FALL RIVER (off County Stroet)-Routo 138 excess of the part being used for WY 2-0682 OS 9-6711 • Master 1V antennas SOMERSET CENTRE, MASS. the Gbena student this year wi:U E.• J. MeG.INN, Prop. We Give Gold Bond Stam'ps' For Appolntment"':'Phone OS 4-48.1 • Free ample par~lng be sent to aD overseas mission.

Pledge Catholic Schools Support For President

SULLIVAN BROS.

Protect

Two Transfers

What

Have

McGOWAN

_

~

I

,Shawomet Gardens,

becani_

TII.CITY OFFICE EQUIP.

10 BIG STORES

--


16

THe' ANCHOR-Dioces.e of Fall River-Thurs., Nov. " 1962

Gold Medal· Bakery's GOLDEN·.JUBILEE Celebrating a Half ·Cen.t~ry of service to our friends an({{i. neighborrs thJr®ughout greater Fall River -:--

.

.

In 191~ Auguste B. Lecomte instaned a large bakery in a basement at the corner of Lindsey and George Streets in FaR River. This was the start of the Gold Medal Baking Company. . From this modest beginning Gold Medal has constantly expanded its facilities ... initiated scientific· and hygienic techniques and pioneered progressive measures to degree that Gold Medal is proud to celebrate its 50th AnniversarT as' one of the finestbake1'7 establishments in

a

New England. During these Fifty Golden Years, Gold Medal has grown and prospered because of the founder's belief that "if you use the best ingredients that money can buy-the publie . will buy your product." Your lOf~lty to Gold Medal Bakery Products this past 'ha1f~ntury has 'justified our strict adherence to this policy. We are deeply grateful fOl'your patronage and Will strive always to merit yOIU' continued confidence.


'.

lliE ANCHOR-Dioeese ot" Fan Rivel'-Thurs., Nov. 1, 1962'

17

'@"'d

LAMB LEGS --

._---

LABORS IN BOLIVIA: Father Andrew Sehierhoff, one of more than 50 U. S. priests who have volunteered for the Latin American miS'Sions, makes an early morning Com-. munion call on a shut-in parishioner in La Paz. He is a priest from the St. Louis Archdiocese. NC Plwto.

LB69c

.

33c u·35c L,63c

LalllbFores Bone In COllibinalion

LB

Forequarter lamb Chops and Pieces for Stewing

PREMIUM - Mildly Smoked, Sugar Cured

BERLIN (NC) - Pravda, the The Pravda editorial said that during the 45 years of commuSoviet Communist party's main nism, the minds, morals, way of newspaper, has issued a call for life and the entire spiritual im• new militant struggle to stamp . age of the Soviet working people out religion. have undergone radical changes. But :t lamented that "old things Moscow Radio immediately are tenacious" and do not disaptook up the refrain. It cited Pravda's complaint that "athe- pear without struggle. Then it said: istic edueation is often carried "There are still more than a out W1systematicaUy .. • .. and without having an impact on the few Soviet people in the thralls of religion. Prejudices of the basic mass of believers." But, past and superstition prevent Moscow Radio chose to do its bit them from developing fully their for atheistic edUcation at 4 A,M. creative forces in work, public -hardly the peak time for impact on believers or anybody life and in the construction of communism." else.

5wvift'5 Bacon

Same low Sell·Service Prices in All Stores uI This Vicinity - (We Reserve the Right to limit Quantities)

U.S. No.1, Washed-Size A-Serve Potatoe.s for Good Health

POTATOES . ~~~B 99c Mild Variety - Add Zest to Your Meals

.Onions

Nun Plans Lecfure$ on AmefT~ccn Indians to Audienc®s B~ Jap~;nfl

All Purpose -

u.

YELLOW

S. No.: 1 - 2 1/4\\ end up

App~es.

CORILAND

ST. JOSEPH (NC)-Benedietine Sister M. Inez Hilger of St.

Benedict's Convent here in Min_ nesota is going. to Japan to deliver it series of lectures in October on cultural anthropology and the American Indians. She has been booked to speak at the universities of Sophia, J~suit Tokyo, Keio and Japan Women's WASHINGTON (NC) - One and at the Toky<> Amercan Culof America's future spacemen is tural Centers in Tokyo. Enroute remembered as an outstanding to Japan, she will also let:ture athlete and a hard-working stuin Honolulu, She will be accom_ dent at the Catholic high school panied on the trip by her sister he attended in the nation's capi_ who is Benedictine Sister Marie tal. Hilger. Air Force Capt. Francis G. Sister Inez knows the backNeubeclI, recently chosen as one ground of American Indians. Her of 10 officers to train as space anthropological expeditions have pilots and space engineers, Is taken her to 19 American Indian a 1950 graduate of the Jesuits' tribes and she also has researchGonzaga High Scbool here. ed Indian background in Chile and Argentina. Neubeck starred as a halfback ood linebacker on the 1949 She is the author of eight GonZaga '. championship footbaII books dealing with Indian 'anteam. thropology, is a research associate of the Smithsonian Institution His former coach, Gonzaga in Washngton, D. C., and a memathletic director Joe Kozik, says ber of a number of learned soci,. of the future spaceman: "U I had 11 prayers'like Frank Neu- . eties. She has been honored by beck. I could beat any team." universities and societies for her work. ., ." Kozik described' Neub'eck as "strong, tough, intelijgent and i"eligious." of ,..... Neubeck was a member of Our Lady of Victory parish here. He At CtJth@~~c C@O~eg@ will enter the third class at the FAIRFIELD (NC)-A son of Air Force Aerospace Pilot's the retired chief of the Acholi School at Edward Air Force tribe in Uganda, East Africa, is Base, Calif. one of the 370 members of the freshman class at Fairfield Unifire l@>$$es . versity here in Connecticut. Charles Obol is attending the BOSTON (NC)-Losses from Jesuit school on a Uganda go vehurch fires increased by $2.2 er~ment scholarship. He had his llJ1illion to $16.9 million in 1961 choice of attending any college over the previous year but the or university in the U. S. or number of church fires declined England and said he preferred by 100 to about 3,000, aecording to n report of the National! Fire all American Catholic school. He ~ one of a family of 16 children. Protection AssOciation heJ'Q,

Regular

Dress~

A Delkious Economical Roasl

Atheistic Communists Renew. Effort . To Wipe Out, Religion in Russia

59C

Oven Ready

Flavor's the Thing About First National's DetJcious Fine Quality lamb

3

5

1:8 BAG

18 BAG

-19c 3.9c

Future Spaceman High Star

Son

me~c~ are ius' a few of the many money-sa"ing sIJDedcdls -lois MOll'e available at your First National

Corn Sl~ing

IFIMAST

Beans

Toma!(1)es

Cream Style

RICHMOND Cut Wax or Green

RICHMOND

Sweet Peas lFiNAST lreels FINAST Carrols

RICHMOND

ibal C!hleef

SLICED

m

SLICED

6~85c I

61~~N~z 8ge

4 ~A~~ ige JI q i9c: HS 10z CANS

'4 ~~~~ ~9c

4 ~A;:s.59c


' ....i

The Parish Parade. HOLY NAME. SACRED IIlEART, FALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO The Women's Guild and Holy . Holy Name' Society members invite all men of the parish to .Name Society will co-sponsor attend a panel' discussion 'by' a bazaar from noon to 8 Saturday, Nov. 17 in the school hall. Serra Club members at 8 Wednesday night, Nov. 7 in the Refreshments and various booths· church hall. The Holy Name wUl will be' featured. hold corporate Communion at SACRED HEART, 7 o'clock Mass ;:.iunday morning, SS. PETER AND PAUlL, Nov. 11. Daughters of members !FALL RIVER !FALL RIVI):R A Mass for deceased members will receive Communion with The Women's Club will hold of the Women's Guild is 'set for its regular mont,hly meeting at their fathers. New members will 8 Saturday morning, Nov. 3. All be installed immediately after 8 Monday night, Nov. 5 in the present members are asked to church hall. A jewelry demon- Mass, and fathers and daughters attend.· At the unit's regular will proceed to breakfast in the stration by Mrs. James Lynch meeting,to be held at 8 Monday hall at 8 o'clock. Sister Mary will feature the social hour, night, Nov. 5 in the school hall, Urban, R.S.M., principal of which will be in ~harge of Mrs. the Caecilians wili' entertain. James E. Glynn and Mrs. Bishop Feehan High School, will .Mrs. John Burns and Miss Mary speak. ' Thomas, H. Callahan. Daley will be chairmen, aided Mothers of' parochial school ST. !FRANCIS XAVllER, by . members o~ the sewing children announce a turkey HYANNIS group.' . whist for 8 Wednesday night, The Women's Guild will sponST. PAUlL, Nov. 7, also in the hall. Mrs. sor an auction at 7 Tuesday TAUNTON Stanley M. Janick is chairman, night, .Nov. 13 in the church The Women's Guild will hold aided by Mrs. John S. Ozug. hall. Members will participate a Guest Night on Thursday eve_ in a Diocesan retreat the weekning, Nov. '8; at 7:45 in the IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, end of Nov. 9. PUBLICITY ~ALS: Two pretty good reasons why church hall. Rev. Joseph Delaney FALL RIVER . attendance at "Culture and Chaos," sponsored by Attleboro will speak on the Ecumenical ST. JOSEPH, The Women's Guild meeting Council. . area CYO, should be high are Phyllis Rich, left and Joyce' NORTH DIGHTON for Monday, Nov. 5 will take the Mrs. Matthew McCarthy is Rich. Revue starring Bob Blasser and Joanne Montesant4 Officers of the newly formed form of a question and answer chairman of the evening. parish CYOar.e Frank Avilla, period, to be coqducted by a both of Norton, will be produced Saturday, Nov. 10 and 11 lYlontfort Father. The meeting president; Linda Johnson, viceST. STANISLAUS, at Bishop Feehan High School auditorium. Tickets are president; Robert Dutra, treas· will immediately follow the eveFALL RIVER available from ,Joseph R. Daley, Box 1349, Norton. ning retreat service in the urer; 'Geraldine Lenny and Following the Holy Hour on church, and will be held in the Pamela Menard, secretarieS. Sunday night; the Holy Rosary Members represent Coyle, st. parish hall. . Mary's, Taunton and Rehoboth- Society will hold a coffee hour Dighton Regional high schools. in the school auditorium. , NOTRE DAME, Hostesses will be: Mrs. BlanSome ,700 parishioners were FALL RIVER dine Chrupcala, Mrs: Jean Toupresent at a testimonial honor-. The Holy Name Society has .lan, Mrs. Jean Polok, and Mrs. WHERE'S ERITREA? A thorny splinter of mountain-and~ 'scheduled its annual turkey ing Rev; Francis A. McCarthy, Jean Virtullo. desert running along the Red Sea in northeastern Africa. "Mare former pastor. Junior and senior ';. wh'ist for 7:30 Saturday night,,, Erythraeum:'-so the ancient Romans '" L:,No'v. 17 in Notre Dame school choirs sang and church groups . ST. 'JOSEPH, called the Red Sea and so Eritrea" . (hail. The planning committee made' presentations, in addition TAUNTON found its name ... After World War to a gift f.rom the whole parish. The Holy Name Society will • \\I'ill meet at 8 Monday night, II, tbis former Italian colony with T.Noy-. 5 in St. Vincent de Paul Arthur T. Bourgault was master conduct a ham and bean supper its gentle people was federated with of ceremonies and Joseph W. Saturday eve~ing at 6 o'clock in . < :Hall, Pleasant Street. General Ethiopia under' Emperor Haile SelasBleau was general chairman'. the school hall. chairman is Edouard Lacroix. sie. Sometimes called the "lost prov· . The Women's Guild will hold Tickets are available from ince," Eritrea's inhabitants 'are vel'3' A regular Holy Name'meeting a potlock supper Thursday night, poor and have few educational oppor. Is 'announced for Wednesday Nov. 15 in the parish hall, under society members. Plans are developing for the tunities • '.' From. Teronqua Eisberet, · night, Nov. 7, also at 8 in St. direction of Miss Mildred Harrigiant two-dayp'arish Fair which 'FATHER CURRON UORE sends his Vincent de Paul Hall. gan, president. will be conducted in the school ,11t Holy FaIhtrt MisDon Aid poignant plea: "it hwts one to cele. brate Mass in such a ralDSlhackle ST. ANNE,. hall on Nov. 19 and 20. General ST. JOSEPH, for tht Orimtal Chmrh stnicture." Constructed of fragile naFALL RIVER chairmen of the sale are james FALL RIVER .tlve materials, this'lIttle Church has been repeatedly shattered The Social Group has set Sat- Tonry and Mrs. Timothy Neville. junior and senior CYO memby the seasonal heavy rains . . . After each big windstorm the urday, Dec. 1 as date for a turST. ROCH, < bers.will attend a holy hour at people of Teronqua Elsberet must get to work putting, back the 7 Sunday night, Nov. 4, to close key whist and .holiday sale. Mrs. FALL RIVER lIart of the crude building' that has blown away • . . Will you The Council of Catholic Women '. National Catholic Youth Week. Delia Desrosiers and Mr·s. Flormake the sacrifice-any amount-to help FATHER UORE make ence 'Dore are in charge of arwill be entertained, following " The Women's Guild will his Church a JPore worthy place for the Holy Sacrifice of the an open business meeting, at 7:30 sponsor a rummage sale from '9 rangements. Mass? Walls and roof to hold back unfriendly winds wiD cost Monday night, Nov. 5 in the' ST. ELIZABETH'S GUILD, till 2 tomorrow at the Brightman $2,500 ••. But the parishioners of Teronqua Elsberet have never . '. parish hall, by Herve Lemaire seen so much money. Just 500' persons sending $5 for Father " Street parish halL Mrs. 'John EDGARTOWN The Women's Guild will meet· who will show slides of a tri~ Uore will make his wish come true ... What a wonderful me'.,' Ward and Mrs.. Charles Murphy morial fer a loved one! :,; are in charge and announce that Monday, Nov. 26. Guests will' to France. Mrs. Lemaire will :', donations may be left at the hall inc;lude members of, Sacred head the hospitality. committee. ,:",between . 7 and 9 tonight;. or Heart' Guild, Oak Bluffs and St.. . Mrs.. Leonel' Lavoie is" in charge of the. ham and bean. IN MEMORY OF GRANDMOTHER ,,'. p.ickups may be arranged, by Augustine G u i 1d, . VfQ.eyard · Haven, . supper to be served on Saturday'" Chrtstopher'S. and Iiis brother, Danny, write: "We would like ,calling them. to send you all the coins in our bank so you may forward the OUR LADY OF. MT. CARMEL, evening, Nov. 17, from 5 to 7' . Volunteers are requested ·for a o'clock in the parish hall. money to the Arch1;lil?hop of Dmeine, Syria, for his new church. · proposed parish Girl Scout· NEW BEDFORD Proceeds from the supper that I am seven ... and my brother is five. Our. grandmother went A!bout 500 boys and girls will troop. " attend 9:30 Mass this Sunday isbeipg held in conjunction with to God in March. She belonged to the Melkite Rite and we offer morning,followed by breakfast a Christmas bazaar will benefit t~is in. her name, .. OUR REPLY: "This is a ver.v precious gift ST. MATHmU, in the school 'auditorium. The the rectory building fund. glven '.0 ~emory of your grandmother. It will reap many spiritFALL RIVER Reservations may be made by ual bleSSings because of your thoughtfulness. , . Uet name and The annual parishioner-spon- event will culminate observance your own will be remembered in the Masses' and prayers of sored penny sale will be held at of National Catholic Youth contacting Mrs. Claire Carbonour missionaries." . . . The coins in their bank amounted to 7:30 three Saturday nights; Nov. Week. Breakfast speaker will be neau or. any member of her com_ Atty. Francis J. Carreiro, 'Som- mittee. $11:70, a real ,sacrifice. Yet their offering wiD bring Christ to 3, Nov. 10 and Nov. 17, at the the ,natives of Syria, their grandmother's former home. That ,parish hall, St. Mary's Street. · erset; an~ youth cha~rmen are,' ST. THJi:RESA, Souza ,and Gloria DeMel_' SOUTH ATTLEBORO _ t1:lought should make Christopher, and Danny very happy.; . Bertrand Desmarais and Gerard 1David Ad 1 Maybe '. you have' someone you, would like to remember bf a .j Desmarais are co-chairmen, arid, o. u t or~anizations of the;. .The Confraternity of Christian,. mem.orlal gift. We liave so mapy .requests for schools (cost: announce that speciaL features ~arish spons<i~ the bre~kfast ·at . '~others is planning 'a mystery . . $2;500l, clinics and chapels.. Why not send a STRINGLESS GIFT" will include awrading $75 in no, .c,?st, to . th~ ,youth. ~ev. rlde for their next monthly i, " to be designated by. us for a most needed p.r,ojectl· ,cash each' night of the sale. : Lucian.o . Pereira is spiritual meeting, Nov. 5. On Nov. 14 and " Seventy-five turkeys will ,also c o - o r d m a t o r . ' · 15.from 2 to 9 P.M. a Christmas \WEMO FORN(:)VEMRER be prizes. . ·ST. AUGUSTiNE, Sale will be held featuring,hand' , T~ ,SOULS IN PURGATORY are remembered especially hi made articles, hand knits, home Climaxing observance of the VINEYARD HAVEN' your prayers during this month of November. W~y not send parish's ·75th anniversary,. the Dr. Joseph Kerrips, Attleboro made candies and cakes relisale will benefit church and obstetrician, will address Vine- gious articles, Grandma's' Attic your Mass offerings for this intention to our mlssionariesll F~ rectory improvement funds. yare:J. boys .and girls in separate Dolls and doll clothes stuffed some our priests, these offeriDgs are the sole Income•. meetings Friday, Nov. i6 in the animals,. jewelry. A 'Country ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, parish hall. All area youngsters Store will be handled by the DEAR MONSIGNOR RYAH: FALL RIVER ' are invited. men of the Holy Name Society. Games f9r youngsters, toyS' and Enclosed is l1li donaUoa of A turkey supper is set for f _ ••_ ' Sunday, Nov. 4 at the parish hall OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION, men's wear and gifts. on Seventeenth' Street. Servings OSTERVILLE Name _ _ .._ . A mission will start Sunday, HOLY ROSARY7 will start at 6:30, according ·to Nov. 11. TAUNTON announcement made by Manuel 'The Women's Guild announces Children of Mary will sponsor street Domingos, chairman. a food sale for Friday, Nov. 9 the annual Thanksgiving dance with Mrs. William T. Kelly as. featuring AI Soyka and his or~ CI' " ,... ST~ MARY'S CATHEDRAL, . &,. •••• ..· -0.:.. Zoae S~ ••• e'•• e. • ••• . c~airman. Annual 'Christmas" chestra from 8 to 12 Thursday FALL RIVER bazaa!:,,' will be held Saturday, night,.Nov. 22 at Roseland Ball_ . Annt!al Christmas' sale spon:'" · Dec. 8 in the parish'hall. .. MA~ING A ~Lf REMEMBER TIrE lWIsSlONS! ":OUl' . room. sored by the Women's Guild will legal title: TfIB CATHOLIC DAB EAST WBLFABB A series: of bri"dge patties and be held from 2 to 9 Friday afterCIATRON. noon 'and evening, Nov. 9 in the coffee hours is in the planning stage: They will be held' in mem\ parish school. Miss Virginia A. bers' homes. . " Marti,n, guild presidel").t,' l).eads a ST. WILLIAM, large committee. I Mrs. Charles Richards has an-' FALL RIVER Joseph A. Charpentier ~;), , : nounced that the "BarbershopReg. Pharm. The Women's Guild has set a TEL WY 6·0"2 pers" of Fall River will feature square dance :for Wednesday " the monthly meeting of the · night, Nov. 7. a"nd a tur.key whist PRESCRIPTIONS t. Women's Guild Monday night, . for Tuesday night, Nov. 13.. Both .' 1902 ACUSIillNET, AVE•. 'l Nov. 5, at 8 o'clock in the Cath- ,events will hE! held at 8 in the NEW 1B~DIFOlRIQl. i' oilc Community Center. church hall." . ' \ . HOLY NAME, NEW BEDFORD Mrs.' Russell Nelson is. in charge of a Christmas parlor sale, to be held Saturday, Nov. 17 in the church hall under sponsorship of. the Women's Guild.

ERITREA: AN UNFRIENDLY WIND

c

of.

...............................................

4:S8o.,

BROOKLAWN

::..

'f

".-

""

PHARMACY


County Leag'ue Tit'e"o'nLin'e In Rocketeer-Spar'tan' 'Clash

THE, ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall .."' River-Thurs., Nov. 1, 1962 ,'" .", " ' . ....

Mansfield's Greatest Athlete

By Jag Kineavy

The Jong~awaited game of the season in Southeastem Mass, grid competition is scheduled for Saturday at Memorial Stadium, Dartmouth, where in a battle of the unbeaten-untied, the Spartans of Bishop Stang will host the Red Rocketeers of North Attleboro. The teams boast at guards and Bill Constant at identical 6-0-0 records but eenter. Quarterback Ray Leblanc who the visitors who are de- does a most effective job run-

19

Gentili Is

Be

Frosh Fullback

• Owns High School Letters m Four Sports By Lynn Kennedy Cruise doWn Mansfield's, main drag and ask danyone who rates as the town's greatest all-time athlete, and

'-Ai

j.:~

fending co-champions of the ning the intricate belly offense BCL currently enjoy a one game will call the shots for halfbacks edge over the Bill Kelly and Perry and fullDarbnouth Paback Charley Franco. This is the more often than not, you'll hear rochials whose nucleus of the Spartans strong the name Ron Gentili. Even oldslate includes II ground offense which has yet to timers agree on that one. For I two non-league be contained. Correia, who with the personable 18-year-old Boswins. Collins, Sherman, Perry, Bois- ton College freshman earned Basically, the vert and Kelly, goes both ways 14 letters as a four sports pertwo teams are will be the biggest man on the former at Man s fie 1 d High, v e r y similar. field. Hank stands 6-2 and winning his "M" in the three Both have demweighs in at 230! major sports from his freshman onstrated Two Platoon year on, and two track letters to marked ability Rounding out the Spartan de- boot. to move the fensive deployment are Roger 'As a football player Ron 'was ball, Stang. on the ground, North via the air Prefontaine, middle lineman, sensational _ like the afternoon lanes. By the same token each Paul Bisbee, right tackle, Char- he bolted for five touchdowns has been niggardly on defense ley O'Connell, left end, Peter against Franklin, or like the permitting less than a touchdown Lopes, left linebacker and Brian great individual performances McMahon, right halfback. And he turned in against Attleboro per game io their six outings to date. Statistics indicate that there you have the starting High his junior and senior years, teams of both schools. It figures racing 83 and 85 yards for scores North bas racked up a total of to be a hard fought, closely con- that upset the Jewelers both 204 points to the oppositions' 24; tested game between two well- games. Stang has logged 189 while alhigh· school teams. The On the basketball court, he lowing 34. Averagewise, North matched nickel stands on end. has performed at a 36-4 pace, In other action around the was a one man gang both in Stang 31.3-5.7. area, Coyle travels to Fairhaven scoring and rebounding, making , Comparison acores generally in the only other BCL fray of excellent use of his agile 6' 3" have little or no predictive value the day. The Warriors broke into frame. For three seasons he was but for what they're worth, here the win column with a bang Mansfield's top point-getter, althey are. Stang opened the seaIast Saturday downing New ways in double digits and three son with a decisive 26-0 victory Bedford Vocational by 'a 42-0 times topping the 30-point mark. over Coyle whom the Rocketee1'8 score. Tri-County has a couple . 36-6 Record took into camp two weeks ago of games on tap. Case, 6-0 victor As a pitcher-first baseman, by a 42-6 margin. Against Dur- over Mansfield last week, has a Gentili drove Mansfield's diafee It was Stang 26-8, while date on the Cape with, Bourne mond opposition daffy. His four North had a 12-0 bulge. Taunton which held defending champion year record on the hill was a met these clU'bs on successive Barnstable to a 6-6 draw. Ware_ glittering 36 wins and six setweekends, losing to North 42-6, ham which was forced to let out backs. Batting average-wise, then Stang, 39-6. North launched all stops to down Old Rochester, Ron consistently hit over ,aOO, its title defense with a one-sided 23-18, is scheduled to meet win- winding up his high school 28-0 win over Fairhaven which less Dighton-Rehoboth in the career with a loud .435 bang. last week held Stang to a 20-8 other league encounter. Highlight of that baseball career tally. A number of inte-resting con- was a 4-2 win over Randolph, We mentioned earlier that tests shape up on the non-league as Ron, bested the sensational each club has an explosive type level. Portsmouth, N. H.moves Barry Needham, t1ie big rightie's offense. North has enjoyed 'into Sargent Field to test the only setback. marked success with its paSsing . Crimson of New 'Bedford in the Now Gentili is destined to begame but the Rocketeers are only interstate clash'of the day. come a BC star, maybe to outalso a powerful running team as In a traditional' rivalry, Mans'- '. shine another Mansfield great hitherto undefeated Milford field hosts Attleboro which con_ : who made' his mark as an RON GENTILI learned last Saturday. Stang. tinues' to move along in high 'Eagle Don Currivan. On a conversely, while primarily a gear after, a slow start. The 'full four year academic scholarrunning team has an effective to Gentili's ' athletic Class D football honors, an~ Falmouth _ Denni~- Yarmouth ship, Gentili currently holds mony passing attack which it has anclash on the Cape also falls into down the first string fullback prowess is- the number 'of' col- won both the Hoc k a moe l::t played to loosen up the defense. the same category. Old'Roches- ,berth on the Eagles' Frosh. 'But .' leges that made' overtureil" his League basketball and basebaJn Both teams are well-coached, ter goes against Somerset in the interesting thing here is that way. Although there is rio; of- . c ham p ion s hip s. In typi,cl!Il well-disciplined units that crack what could be ,one of the better Gentili, because df his size and ·fielal count, schools 'like' Syra- modest fashion, Ron said, ,IW<a hard all the way. games of the day and Barnstable great talent, is being cast as a cuse,Peno State, Notre· Dame, had a good group of seniors that Roeketeers' LlDeup is at Taunton in"another old ri- blocking' back,' certainly an un- HQly Cross, Dartmouth, 'Har- year." But the four year r«lAt the throttle for Coach Ed valry that trariscendS league familiar role. vard,Bro'wn, Columbia, Indiana, cord is there, particularly footMarx' combine will be veteran aff'lliation. .' .' Ron, 0 b v i 0 u s l,y unseMiSh, B.U., UMass, . Rhode Islanc~ ball. With Gentili leading·'too signalcaller Bill Richards, the College Front' , doesn't seem to mind. wanted Gentili's talents. He wins against only seven seiCounty's leading passer whose Must be an acute shortage of "We have great halfbacks," he chose B.C. because' he felt that back,. going 9-0 in '59, the challlllfavorite targets are ends Kevin tranquilizers down Princeton, pointed out, "and the coaches it offered him the greatest op- pionship year. Phipps and fellow co-captain way after the Tigers' frustrating think I can be of greater help portunity. Besides, he wanted to A communicant of St. Mary'o Tom Schmidt. The hard-running experiences of the past two to the attack running out of the stay close to home. Church, Ron has also done a loi':::::> Rocketeer backfield features weeks. The loss to Colgate a fullback slot." Good Student of baSeball playing for MansDave Robertson at £uIbaek, Bob ·16-15 affair was an endurable Blocking Role He has no idea what he'll do field's American Legion team. !va Candolet at right half 'and surprise but then to come back So far, Ron hasn't done any after college, but he is majoring fact, in 1960 he received 'u~ Craig Cerrone and Jeff Grant the following week' and drop scoring, but that isn't Nle least who operate from the left half another one point decision, 35-34, disconcerting to Gentili, who, by in bus i n e s s adminis~ation, Legion's top diamond award. · taking economie:s, accounting, spot. Big Dan Adinolfi anchors Asked about the three sp'orto to underdog Cornell, this must the way, is used to, registering · math, English, and theology. A the line up front at left tackle. have been extremely hard to touchdowqs. In -his four year ''B'' Student in high school, Ron and the one he preferred the Bill Dunn will start at right most, Rontold us basebalIwao take. Check the date of the cavorting in a, Mansfield unitackle; Bob Bourbeau and Walt 'Princeton-Dartmouth clash; it form,. he tallied 272 points, a finds the going a' bit more' dif- his favorite. Ironically enough, St. Lawrence are expected to should be a gem. school record that may nevet be ficult at the Heig~ts, but feels no major league scouts have he's holding his own. To keep tapped him on the shoulder. But man the guard positions and Once again the sun is shining equalled. in shape during the Summer Tom Whidden will open at cenat the Heights after the Eagles So far" the Eaglets have months, Ron has been working the answer is they are waiting ter. Whidden, St. Lawrence and until he finishes his education 14-0 victory over Houston. Pur- copped both outings, and Gentili with a Mansfield construction Robertson are juniors; the rest pIe shadows still prevail at has had a very important part company. He has no particular Mansfield fans ITave a wait, too. of the starting array are seniors. The only thing that bothero Worcester where the Cross made in his role blocking for the Coach Carlin Lynch's Spartans a spirited attempt to pull it out talented and speedy halfbacks 'hobbies, other than. bowling. "I them now is how to repla~ really' haven't had much time Gentili. He's still theirs and who in their first season of but the 24-6 first half bulge he operates with. for anything else," he admits. official Bristol County compethey'll be talking of his exploitlJ proved too much to overcome. "I have· a few plays," he adtition have electrified the cirReflecting on his high school for a long time to come. But, in Bob Hargraves of Fall River mitted, "and perhaps they'll run cunit by their spirited play will playing days, hiS soph "year the meantime, Mansfield High turned in another terrific per- me more .later on." , also be at full strength for the formance at end for Holy Cross. The Eaglets hold 25-0, and 6-0 stands out, mainly because teams won't be quite the samGl big test. The starting offensive wins over Brown -and Holy Mansfield High copped State without him. platoon, with the exception of Cross. Two games 'remain, one tackle Tom Boisvert, is an all ~ive MO,terial Labor with Harvard and . the other senior unit. Co-captains' Tom a returrigo with 'Holy' Cross. Oa~s For Hospital Perry and Roy Sherman, right Ron' hils his':personalrooting halfback and right guard, re-' , JACALTENANG6 (NC)-The 'Section, too, besides the 'whole F~m~". ,Re~ding HA~P: COAl spectively ~ead up. the offensiv~ people of, this small Guatemalan , tOwn of' Mansfield. They are his . . NEW ENGLAND COKE , array which inclUdes Dick Chl- " tOwn of' about 3,500 'donated parents, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony lins and· Carter Hunt 'on flanks, OADSON Oil 'BURNERS I)ui'lding materials and ,ia,600' Gentili and his sister Nancy, 22, .' Hank Correia and Boisvert at hours of labor to' tiuild 'a new ' and 'brother Eddie, 13, ~r. Gen24-Hour OU 'B"rn~~.$ervic. tackle, Roy Toulan and Sherman Catholic hospital. till is most vocal of the family. r ' The people received financial He can' recite aH of the modest Charcoai ari~""tS' ReceDves Leader aid' from the Maryknoll Fathers Ron's accomplishments. Bag Coal - Charcoal As a ninth grader, he was an VATICAN CITY (NC) - Roy who provided' sanitary equipWilkins, executive secretary of ment. Before the hospital was end. As a sophomore, aon was erected, townspeople had to switched to halfback. His junior the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peotravel 12 hours by foot and auto- year he operated as the team's ple, was in a group of 110 permobile to receive medical care 'quarterback, finally moving to fullback as a senior. sons received in audience here at the national hospital in Huerei. WY 6-8271 640 Pleasant Street Ferhaps the strongest tesUby Pope John. huetaenango.

r-''-.'-:'""'-:'"

I

f,;

I

W .· :

Ii'

New

,'SHELL' "Premium" ~-

GLEN COAL & OIL' CO..;?lric.


:.J.

20

HOLY

THE' ANCHOR...;",Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Nov. 1, 1962

FATHER TAKES

TIME OUT FROM COUNCIL ACTIVIrIES

TO

MAKE

URG~NT ·PLEA

FOR ,WORLDWIDE

PEACmJ

Freedom of Expression 'and Thoroughness" of Study Are Evident liturgy have revealed a unani- were . unanimous in agreeing mous and harmonious concept of that there is a need to increase the Fathers on the nature and . the active participation ot the ends of the liturgy. All have faithful in the Church's worship. stressed that the liturgy con"In this respect," it said, "cer_ tinues in. time the work of Re- tain proposals were presented: demption, preann'oupced .by God for example, forzp.ation of truly in the Old Testament and fulqualified teachers to instruct on . 'filled by Christ in .the New the historiciil, t~eolo~ical, spir,: Testamen~. . '.' . . . . " itual, pastoral and juridic ele~ - ... ThE7 bUI~et'fn said the Fattiers' . ments of the liturgy in semi-:

Continued from Page One The council bulletin said later that the' "discussions of the first chapter of the project ~n the

N~ws Depart~ent

Is: ,Functioning·

:'$m~o,t,hlyNow .

.-

VATICAN CITY (NC)

W .. ',0.. U . . ,· . I.d Le.. ·t. Na.. t.iona. I G..roups Act· on .L'• . I'turgy". R '..

naries and in theological faculdifficult to understand, and t@ ties; the introduction' of the sci- accept variations and· adaptuence of the liturgy among basic tions more in accord with difstudies;. the creation of national ferent categories of faithful, a.nd diocesan liturgical commis- . :different regions, different peo_ sirins and of institutes of pastoral, pIes, especially in the territorieo liturgy which may eventually which .have recently been evan avail themselves of competent gelized." l,ay . experts, especially J~ the ,.,. The bulletin said that the lllp.. fields ~f sacred music and art.· ..pare~t·slowness of the' council'O' Differing Opinions ." discuSsions.i.> a "most evideni "Differences of opinion we're ' ind!cation of two characteristico expressed, however, regarding Whl~h have m~rked the Sec?n<lJ language, methods and means to Va~~can ~ou!1cl1 !rom the bm~ .be "used in adapting liturgical :of Its ante-:-prep~ratory and pre rites, to present times and men- paratory phas~s. namely, freeco talities, to the customs and tra~ dom of expreSSIOn and thorough.. ditions 'of different nations." ness of study." The bulletin "stated that some of the council Fathers stress the ARE YOU'PLANNING A need: to conserve liturgical 'prac_ . TOY PARTY \ ti~es . as the 'Church now has . them. Other 'Fathers argue instead that while .substantial unity in·the .liturgy should be preserved,' .. .it would be suit.: able to pass over certain ele~ 111 'H~frison. Street ments which are now too distant in ~ime and which have become Fall River; Mass. q

The 'official center of press. -. _ info.rmatioll for the Ecumen· ical·CouncH opened amid'un· believable con-£usion. But now, ' ~vlslons · as. its time of real importance . 'arrives, it has settleddown~' VATICAN· CITY' '(NC) - A proposal has been adbecolne a workin.g .o;ganizatiqn, - vanced.·at e Ecumenical 'Council to permit national epis., Ther~ was 'an InItial pr~blem. \ 'copal"'cohferences t() dealwit.h the detailed application of ~. of eqUIpment. Somehow, som~-· . . . . . . ... E 'H CSC d,":ard ,eston, . . ., : where, above and beyond the' changeSI~ -the lIturgy, Father of the council' press " of- .pr.ocu.rator ·· control . , ,general, , . of, ' . the t'Ions 'In thel'turg l Y 'has been : ticeaut.horities, the ?a~ic eqUqp-: HolyCross' Fath~rs,:'sald, a made; but that it 'is not at prem~nt dId not matenahze. - " ,pr'oposal'; ~to' allow:.national . sent· clear how these' conferences A requi~itio~ for desks prq-·:confeiences' of pishops. to might act. . duced tables WIthout ~raw~rs. ,A de'a! with changes andaltera-. If the proposal is adopted; it · requisition for typewrIters 'Yent : " '. ../ " , ' , would be up to the council 'unfilled until three days after, " fathers to lay down general .Whole$CIle Prices Oniy · the council's.opening. A requi;;- . Cub~n BiShOp$ i ent . norms and principles governing .. " Now showing. complete line of loyG · ition for three· mimeogr.ap~ VATICAN CITY (NC)-Three liturgical renewal within the _. ._ and Novelties for Holidays. Cataring · machines ,produced onl)' one, . universal Church, 'Yhile letting to 'stores,buying groups and orga,,· and that ~me broke down after . Cuban Bishops here to attend the working out of details rethe Ecumenical Council have main with regional or national izations. Buy early for best select;"". two days. A 'deposit will hold a'ny order fer Two tel ev i s ion sets were . denied that . . they made or intend . bishops' con fer e n c es, which 'Nur~ing later pickup or delivery. mounted in· the council press . to make any statements to the would be able to make decisions. NORA D. DONOVAN, R:N. · center for the benefit of news- press on the Cuban crisis: . more accurateiy and sensitivel)' for evening appointment CCllCJ men who came too late for .any In a note published here by ,meeting the needs of their vari24 HOUR NURSING CARE OSborne 8-0701' consideration. And they probab- .the Vatican City daily,' L'Osserv- ous areas or i17 County St., New Bedford ly saw more of the" ceremony : atore ,Romano, Bishops· Manuel Father Frederick R McManus OSborne 2-6129 \. 4-0496 than anyone. . . ' . ,.} R?driguez R?zas of Pinar .del canon law professor· at th~ As was anticipated; the pres- " RIO, Carlos :RIU Angles .of Cama- Catholic Universit)' of America, sure of corr~spondents pas sub- .. guey. and Jose Dommguez y . Washington, D.C., and past pressided. "Week~nd correspondents" RodrIguez of. Matanzas declared ident of the U.S. Liturgical Conhave 'gone nome. . .that ~ince their departur~ from ference, pointed out at the time Assistan~ and stenograph~s. Cuba ther have not made, .an~ that hi several instances na-· assigned to the seven langu.age do .not: ~!\tend . to J!1ake,. an~, tional conferences have been desks have found their way in'to' st~~ement~z:,: ~~mm~nt to' the . 'authorized to handle liturgical a working ·routine. With. the p~e~s~. ·';l'her~Jo~e;·they said,any changes for their' areas. pre~sure off,. there is tim.e .to· st~t:me~t ~hICl! ,has ~een or As an example he cited the. work on the. documeI!tatiO!l wIll be. ~~t!;'.lb.1;1~,ed ~ the!Jl. must . recent decree on....adult Baptism, needed by the correspondents.. ,; be regara~d as ..bemg WIthout . which authorized national conThe t~me o'f' real importan'ce . aI!Y. fo~nda,tion ,an~' absolutely . fer~ncesto' draw up the ap,• ,BAN.QUETS . ~ .WEDDINGS.' PARTIES . for the· council press. office' has .fal~e. .... .'. . .~'. " . propriative vernacular for the • COMMUNION BREA.KFASTS .£" arrived as .the council fathers ,:.T!Ie ,pre~ates'spoke after' the rite and to supervise its usage. -begin discussion of the a'genda" Roine le~t~st, .dailY. Paese. Sera This, he said, serves as a pre1343 PLEASAl<.r ST. I:ALL RIVER And the press office, now thiI't 'said the Bishop of Matanzas had cedent which couid be used as a the rush an4 e1'~itement of the declaied' that he ..and . other more' general Solution, to the OSborne 3-7780' "op~ning sho~'; ."i:S pye.r, ,if'pre~ Cub~n Bis.ho~s were 'followi~g prot>lems o~applying' universal pared to sUllp,lyadequate inforevents with great interest and principles to specific problems illation to the world press. were pra;yin~ for peace. " in specific areas. .. r

'tlr

I

,.

'SAMPSON'S ·SALES· CO.

SI

.

B'E LMAR·:· Home Inc.

wi

'WH·ITE ·SPA· C A'fERERS

q


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.