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NATION PAUSES TO THANK GOD: Typical Americans are the of St. Peter the Apostlj:! parish in Provincetown-where the Pilgrims first landed-who pause on Thanksgiving Day to offer gratitude to God for the blessings He has bestowed upon them. Mr. and Mrs. John F. Cook ~oks

The ANCHOR

of 16 Prince Street, Provincetown, say grace before the holiday meal. Left to right: Christopher 6. Cynthia .11, Cathleen 8, Mrs. Ellen Cook, Susan 3 months, Mr. Cook and MaryEllen 3. This national Act of Thanks has continued without interruption since the Landing Fathers' first harvest.

Council Debates Document On Sou rces o'f Revelation ROME.- Debate. continues amo.ng Council Fathers on the draft submitted to them concerning the sources of Divirte Revelation. Catholic doctrine has always maintained that there. are two sources, Sacred' Scripture and Tradition, while non-Catholic accept only Scripture. The draft proposed for the Bishops' consideration has been criticized , as being textbook in language and not pastoral enough in tone. Many of the Bishops are hoping for a presentation t}1at would be clearer and more simple in ,language, one that would take into account the thinking of non-Catho-

Law of God Offers No

lics in the matter and one that would try to put more emphasis handed down from the Apostles oJi points of agreement rather that were committed to writing than on a'reas where there is under the inspiration of the fall River, Mas~., T~ur~d'a'y~ 22, 1962 .dIfference of belief. The.re is Holy Spirit are Scripture. The . By' J~'J~ Gilbert n:.o question ,~f"watering down" revealed truths handed down PRICE lOe ,through the living authority of Catholic. doctrine but of trying ,tjle Church are given the' name (NC) WASHINGTON © 1962 The Anchor $4,00 ,per Year , . . to 'present it inmoi-e 'modern The Decalogue' is totally terms iakingiritO'account the Tradition. Christ founded ,a visistr'aightforward about' it: mentality and philosophy be- ble society, a living teaching "Thou shall not kill." It hind. non - Catholic under- authority, and gave the Apostles doesn't leave any loopholes. standing:-- Some' of' ~the Bishops the charge to teach all nations. ' . But in Liege, 'Belgium.. a 'believe that if this .were done, Not all of His teachings were committed to writing, and the. , yo~rig .mother ,and four' other' there would be revealed a·closedefendimts have been found not ness bet'ween:G::iithQIicand non- . early apostolic ministry spread gUilty'in the murder of a week~ Catholk<belie£ ,on the" matter 'the·Faith, through preaching, through oral instruction rather . PITTSBURGH (NC) -:- Th~ indifference. of .Catho-, old baby who' was .born with.'th'ilt wo~lif:Qesurprising.. · . t!l:ln throligh wri~ing.. Indeed, St., deformations caused by' .' )p,the J~.a:tholi.c~~~irin'lofthe Paul presupposes as a necessary lies and non-Catholics to the dynamic principles of Catho..; , cruel. the d'rug known as thalidomide'SOl.1r~~~:, 9f,pivi,ne, Reve~~t.i~n, ~eism is one reason why the' task of the' pre~ent Ecuinim;;' Ther~ . was no d~nial by.' ,the ' 'tradItion. has' avery speCIal' prereciui~ite'for faith tt:te hearei~l COl1Jlcil is .tougher than that of any previous .Council, ;. _: ~ ~ :Turn ~ pag~ Flye' " : .'. "~eaI1ing.·' r.rh~'. r~vealed .' truths .' : .' Turn ,to Page Eighteen ~ editor :sai,d here. Ro~ert duty. is .not for e~ch' of "us", to, 8. Hoyt, editor. the Cath- set himself. up 'as' a supiemeDiSP~n.sation'" . otic Reporter,· newspaper of ~ribunal judging the acts of the Catholics 'in the Diooese of the KailSas City;.St. Joseph . Council." 'Pall Ri~er may eat meat on diocese, asserted tha-t as the "Rather it is our dUty,"·" he' Friday, Nov. 2~. A dispensa- ' E:atholicChureh meets in the stated, "to join in the work of &ion from the law of absti.. .. . Second Vatican Council it mees the Church. This is the' great: nence has been graitted the' : . ROME '(NC) -:-' Bishops of the United States have or· not so much the open enmity of n~cessity. of .the time, that we faithful by Auxiliary Bishop ~ world as its illCk of ·concern. become. engaged in the work of' James' J. Gerrard, V.G." by. ganized 'a~ con:mlittee' calculated to facilitate and expedi~e He told the, annual conven- tpe ,Church, aijd not merely as virtu!; of special faculties from . "the "homework" each prelate must. do 'for Ecumenical Coun• • on of the Pittsburgh Diocesan objects of the -Church's ministry ·,the· Sacred Congregation of , ,~il:' se~siqn~., Known as the general c.ommittee, it is an' Union of Holy Name Societies but as agents' of- her Jilissiilli." , " - Ute' 'Coundl. ;.....' . . . informational organization, that today "the Faith is not at-.,'. entirely' separate from. the'.~ tacked as false," but "dismissed • irrelevanl" Nati~nal Catholic Welfare . "And we who claim to"'share . Conference. It is to exist for" the Faith also tend to share this the duration of the Council. ' ultimate heresy," he continued. Structurally, .the committee OfFor us, too, the Faith 'is' per,iresembles ,the organizational pheral to our central concerns; framework of the Ecumenical . . ' it is a burden to be borne, Council itself. It consists of a , Rev. Edward J. 'Mitche~1 ~ther than a dynamic source of By Mollie McGee presidency, a secretariat and .... :•• . " energy. group of committees. Some of the. d~ilyne:w:spapers are "It is intensely important that people. Archbishop Thomas A'. Boland Hoyt urged that the laity adopt a mature outlook toward singing hymns should und'~rstandwhat' printing .their Co'undl ~t'ories :'under head- of Newark is chairman of the presidency. ' the Ecumenical Council: they are sayj,ng" l}ishop Connolly .com~ ' '. ",' " '. lines like', Associated with him are Bishop "I suggest," he stated, "that BISHOPS CLASH IN.c6u:l'WI;L .... mented, when telling a reporter in Rome' William A. Scully of Albany, If we do not have the under, ' VATICAN II SPLIT ON, THEOLOGY ••• "Bishop William A. O'Connor of how impressed he had been at the Armenistanding, maturity and concern LIBERALS PROPOSE NEW SCHEMA. Springfield, Ill.; Bishop Floyd an rite Mass, s'aid and sung in Armenian, to be disappointed by the CounA. Begin of Oakland, Calif, and While 'the' headlines' :are' in' ~il, then we are not taking the in St. Peter.'s that morhing,"beBishop Ernest J. Primeau of Council very, seriously. And I deed catchy, the ,stories which fore the thousands of assembled· Manchester, N.H. bishops;" .. 8\1ggest also that we have an follow often'leave the reader,' Auxilhiry Bishop Jeremiah F. inadequate view of .the Church. Catholic or otherwise, bewilMentioning the important Minihan of Boston heads the "We've got Providence mixed dered at the meaning of all this part' that might be played by secretariat. Other members are 1IP with a benevolent sort of alleged "crosier-rattling." use of languages that· are Bishop John J. Carberry of La· pagan fate. We've got the Church . To understand .what is hapel~arly understood, in the fayette, Ind., and Auxiliary mixed up with an automatic pening in the Council these bringing of the church up-toBishop Francis J. Furey of vending machine which goes days, a background briefing on date - specified by the Hqly Philadelphia. through history dispensing the the preparations for Vatican II Father as a reason for the Each seven-bishop committee I1ight answer for every crisis is required. Council - and in "the fitting is charged with making a when the right but ton is You will recall that soon of the discipline of the church thorough study of the subject ~uched." a£ter the Holy Father aninto modern life" Bishop Conassigned it, to coordinate all Hoyt added that the laity has nounced plans for the Council nolly said the liturgical moveavailable information and pre· 11m "obligation" to be expectant cil in January of 1959, the . ment was only too. frequently ond "in some sense" critical of connected with vestments, while what is really request went out to the bishops and Catholic pare programs for meetings of the bishops. the Council. Turn to Page Ten Turn to Page Twelve Turn to Page EJeven He warned, however, that "thea

'E](cu$es

Nov:

y01.

6, ,N,o. 48

Editor Charges - Catholi~s

on ::Life~~: Edge,:' '

Keep"Faith

,(;e,~~t.Q" ·..'·Co."mi~te~· 'Help:s U~:;S.' Bisho'ps At Council

of

Bishops .Seek"

More Understanding

.In Defining and Living' "Faith (

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2

THE ANCHOR-Diocese·ofFoI\'River-Thurs. Nov. 22, 19~"2, .

P~burgh Pla~~

"

Ungraded System

English Prelate Urges Increased, Assistance for Catholic Schools, LONDON (NC) - The British government has been urged to provide 75 .per cent grants toward the building of all new Catho 1 ic schools in England and Wales. ../Otherwise the schools will face "agitation, bitterness, recrimination and discontent which may well bedevil our education system for years ahead." The call and the warning came from Bishop George ~eck, A.A., of Salford, the English Hierarchy's s p 0 k e sma non schools, in the new annual handbook of the Catholic Education Council of which he is chairman. The government, under a supplementary Education Act in 1959, increased its grant toward_ building, enlarging or improving Catholic schools inside, the free state system from 50 to 75· per cent. But it refused to make such 'g'rants for future CathC?Iic primary schools for children up to the age of 11 or for the secondary schools needed to match them. Catholics have to provide millkms of dollars annually toward such school developments. Strangling Efforts "There is a growing feeling. that the millstone of school' building costs is dragging us down and strangling our efforts in many other directions," Bishop Beck 'stated. "Catholics do not expect to receive 100 per cent grant .assistance to enable them to build new voluntary schools-though they think 'such a' claim can be made in full justice. They are prepared to contribute 25 per cent of the cost

of these scho.ols from their ,own resources, thus offering a 'substantial saving to the ·government. <'They think a flat grant 'of 15 per cent on the 'cost of ,all ·new voluntary schools would be 8 'statesmanlike concession which would in the long run' mean ·8 saving in public funds 'and would avoid many tensions and difficulties in educational administration for the future." Despite the concessions in 1959 ":.n this field we still seem to be running a losing race," 'he added.

, .CLOTHING DRIVE: This scene is repeated in every ,one ,of the 1,10 parishes of the Diocese this week as the Annual Thanksgiving Clothing Drive to aiq the world's Catho~ fleedy takes place. Shown at St. Ann's Church, Raynham, PlI'og~cm .are, left to !right, Joseph Scanlon, Joseph Varao, ReV-. Thomas F. ,Neilan and M.J. Connors. NEW YORK (NC)-The pres-

8CSiPraO$e" NA.ACP

ident of the New' York state corrference of the NAACP said here th~t the orgimization;s work is in' accord with Ca.tholic teaching. . Dr. Eugene T: Reed told the Catholic Interracial Council 'of New York that the "program, policy and principles" of the National Association for the -Ad_ vaneem'eht of Colored People "have always been in line with Catholic doctrine." 'Dr. Reed, an Amityville, Long Island, dentist, spoke as he and Benjamin Muse of .ManaSl?as, Va:, received the Interracial Council!s 21st :mnual James ~. Hoey Awards for Interracial

Joi:n~

Hymnal Idea'

Kansas ~rBeSt's. Proposal Draws Applause. At- EpiscopC!1~oan liturgical Meeting I

PITTSBURGH (Ke. - Elementary schools of the Diocese of PittsbUrgh Vl'iU pioneer a .program' of ungraded education beginning next year. Magr. John B. :McDowf1~ 'sChool superintendent,' said un- . del' the plan pupils will be classified according to' departmental status. The old grade designations will be abandoned. The departments and their corresponding grade levels under the present system are: pri- , mary, grades one, two and three; intermediate, grades four. five and six; and upper elemental'3t, grades seven and eight. The ungraded education system will enable I~ach student to advance at his own rate of speed, according to Msgr. McDowell. 'A principal benefit, he said, is that bright pupils wiill be able to finish grammar sehool education in seven years 'instead of the 'traditional eight. 'The ungraded program has been in effect on an expeH.. 'mental basis in 40 schools' of the diocese and has proved"tcemendously suecessful," Msgr. McDowell said. , A total of '230 grade schools are included in the new scheme.

"But this means more than the WICHITA (NC)-Delegates to fact that the Bible is used in the ,an EpiscopaliatJ. liturgical conCatholic Church and the altar ference here a~plau'ded a Cathin the Protestant one," he'ex- Commurtilofy 'Service, ,olic priest's prdposal for a joint plained. hymnal to be' Jsed by Christian Increases Facilities "For our part, we have been ·churches. WASHINGTON (NC) :-- The Father Joseph T. Nolan, pastor placing' a stress on doctrines· • • ·NatiOflal Catholic Community such as the mediatorship of o.f' St. Patri~k'sl Churc~, Ga:le~a, Service, a USO member agency. Christ, our share in His priestKan., was one' of SlX malor has expanded its program ia -speakers at Ithe conference, pood, the importance of Baptism ·.southern Florida as a result of and professing the faith in later the buildup of U. S. troops there which drew 900 Episcopalian years, the necesSity of beariQg' occasioned by th,e Cuban crisis. leaders from 4e states. Other ~ustice. witness-particularly after. Con'speakers' 'inclUded Episcopal Edward B. Hanify, NCCS e.xDr. Reed; a Negro, is a veteran Bishop James J..\.. Pike ·of Cali- firmation. · ecutive commitaee chairman, civil rights leader who ·has fornia, and Rkv. William G. Spirit of Truth "said Isabel PoweXl of the Wash...' 'guided campaigns of Negroes .Pollard, Episc~pal clergyman ington staff has been assigned "But most of all, the liturgical -entering :suburbia .toobtain .ac-· and executive [director, of the movement is an ecumenical 'temporarily to assist the Mia'ml ·cess to housing and recreation Oak Ridge Institute of Nuclear force because it is manifestly operation 6f NCCS in organizing facilities. Studies. additional programs and servicei the work of the Holy Spirit, the Reunion Prospects Muse, a former Virginia state. Catholics in attendance at the in that area. spirit· of truth, and as it deepens sena-tor, ,is· the author of "Vir- 'conference, in ~ddition to Father the life of the Christian; this Cited by Scholar ginia's Massive Resistance," -8. 'Nolan, included Bishop Mark life, which is God's own, is inROME (NC) A Jesuii study of a segregation tactics m K .. 'Carroll of Wichita; Msgr. creasingly manifest. in charity. authority on Eastern Churches his home state. He has also ,de- .Joseph Fischer, head of the 'S~LLI"AN'S'. And love unites." sees some hope for their reunion velopedoutlines for the' ,deseg,.. Wichita Dioc~san Liturgical Speaking of the revival of con_ with Rome. ,r-egationof Catholic schools in -Commission; arid Father Gerald Office Sup,ply, Inc. . Rev. William de Vries, S.J. ·the South. Ellard, S.J., of St. Mary's, Kan.. grega.tional singing and' the re':' ."Everything for the Office" believes this can be accomauthor and le~der in the Na- form of music in the Catholic . .. , Church, Father Nolan de'clili:ed: J)lished if. oriental traditions TYPEWRiTERS, FURNITURE.; -tional Liturgic:il Conference. Moss Ordo, "I look for and propose a joitlt .are respected and the Eastern ADDING MACHINES ./ ' Addressing Uie conference on hymnal with yourselvesapd Churches affirm their Catho':The Liturgidl MOVement of other Christians. I think that ,a FRIDAY-St. Clement I, 'Pope 32 Weir St. TClul'lton, Moss. licity. Primary obstacles are the .and .Martyr.. III Class, Red. ,the Roman Catholic Church," joint hymnal, as well asa 'joint, Tel. VA ~1-4076 Roman concept 'of unity based Mass Proper; Gloria; Second F.ather ~olan lemphasized the 'Bibletranslation, would be very "ecumenical fOl1 ce/' of· the move:on a urlified ritual 'and . single Collect St. Felicitas', Martyr; much to have in common.'" ',.:. ment. " . . no Creed; . :~ominon Preface., liturgical language,and fear of 'Phenomenal 'lnterest" St, .Frclncis Roman centralism. SATURDAY - St. John of the Father de Vries' is"8 faculty "The new H~urgiCaI interest • OJ. Residf~n,Ce .'; Cross, Confessor and Doctor of among'both Catholics and Prot.. member of the Pontificai Gre":' FOR YOUNG, WOMEN the Church. III qass. White. ;estants,"he sai\:{, is 'a phenomgorian University. '196 Whipple St., 'hll River Mass Proper; Gloria; Second 'eI\on," and he Iwent oil to add 'Conducted by Franciscan Collect St. Chrysogonus, Mar- . 'that "as Cath,olics' get, more. Legion Decen.cY . tyr; no Creed; Common Pref- scriptural arid Protestants more Missionar.ies of Mcuy The following films are to be ace. -liturgical, they! are bound to ROOMS - MEALS added· to the lis'ts in their remeet each other!" , OVERNIGHT HOSPITALITY spective classifications: S'uNDAY-XXIV and Last'SunInquire OS 3-2892 Unobjectionable for general day After' Pentecost. II Class. Jlatr~nage:Jumbo',(recommendOhio. Kills PrOpOsal GreeiJ.~ .MasS Proper; 'Gioria; ed as superior); Young Guns of Cre~; Preface of.,Trinity. For Sunday Sales Texas.' " .. .' . Unobjectionable for adults and MONDAY-St: SYlvester"Abbot. .'Michael Austin COLUMBUS (NC)-Dhio votadolescents: Mutiny' 9D . the in Class. White..Mass Proper; ers' killed a prbposal to amend Bounty., " , Gloria; Second. Collect' St; Inc. the state' Constitution and allow Obj~etionabfe in'part for all: . Peter of Alexandria, Bishop all food' stores ito conduct busi- , Diamond H~d (highlights, im~, FUNERAL ~SIIlVlCE . and Mar'tyr;no Creed; Com- ness on Sundays. I . moral behavior; presenting' il. mon .Preface. The only statewide referenlicit sex as riorin for human bedum on the baUbt in the election hav~or; this classification applic-. TUESDAY-Mass. ·of, previous was buried by rrtore than400,000 549 cOUlm ST. able only to prints shown in Sunday. IV qass. ·Green·. 'Mass votes. The last total reported U.S.). NEW BEDFOllD,. MASS~ Proper; No Gloria or Cl'eed; was 1,677,847 'I'no" votes and. Common Preflwe, . '1,257,795 "yes." The amendment WEDNESDAY-Mass of previ- would have Plfr!p.itted several other businesses to open on Sun_ ous Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria or days. Creed; Common Prefa.ce. I . Nov. 21-St. Caiherine's ConPlumbing - Heating' P• DUFFY . 'vent, ,~all River. . I . THURSDAY---:Mass of previous Over 35 Yean Nov. 25-St. Anthony, 'MattaSunday. IV. Class. Green. Mass Funeral' Home ~ Satisfied Service poisett. Proper; No Gloria; Second· Co rn for1ably ~ir.conditione.d. st. Anne, 'New Bedford. Collect St. Saturninus, Matyr; 806 NO., MAIN STREET NEW illllPOlD Dec. 2-St. John the EvanAnLEBORO . no Cree,d; Comm~>n Pre~ace. gelist, Attleboro. ' FaU River OS 5.7497 20 Peck St. . CA. 2-0193 Our Lady of the ImmacINDUSTRlj~L OILS ulate Conception; New PATRICK J. DUFFY Necrology Bedford. ,F-uneral Dir'l~ Bmbalmer' HEATING OILS Noir.n. '\ i A 'AMILY fllEAT Dec. 9--8t. Margaret, Buzltev: Philias . Jalbert, 1946, .:i:ariis' Bay.,' '.' " , • I BAR·B·Q ·CHICKENS·' , TIMKI!N Pastor, Notre Dllffie, Fall 'River. Our Lady' of the ImmacNOV. 26 " ul.ate COQception, East W;";am~1 Funeral OIL BUINERS Rev. James R. Burns, .P.R., Brewster. ' Pastor, Sacred Heart, Fall 1945, Dec. I&-S 1. . Ant h on y 0 f . FARMS &. ~ielY;c. River., EST. 11870 Padua, Fall ~iver; , l4G Wubiniltcm St•• ralrb.Yen 1 Washington Squure St. Mary, Fairhaven. NOV. 27 Ju. ·off Route • NEW BEDFORD . 50l COU,nY ST. Rt. Rev. Patrick E. McGee, WY 7-13lII 1948, Pastor, si. Mary, ·No. Reg~'Funerall Director and \ THE ANCHOR NEW BEI)FORD Wateh for Sip. Attleboro. Second Class Postage Paid at FaM River. Embalmer I • Mass. Published every Thursday at 410 While out tel" a Drive NOV. 28 PR~VATE PARKING· AREA Highland Avenue, Fall River Mass, by the WY '.11711 Stop at this Delightful Spot· Catholic Press 01 the Dioeese of' Fall River. Rev. Adrien A. Gauthier; 1959, ' TEl:. wY 6-8098 Subscriptioo lIl'ice b:t mail, pustpakl$4;90 I Pastor, 5t.Roch, Fall River; ocr year.

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India's Cardinal Urges Support For Goverrnment

Happy New Liturgical" Year Wished to All As First Sunday of ~4dvent Approaches

BOMBAY· (NC)-India's Cardinal has warned Catholics here to help now with money, clothes and gold in

. Liturgically speaking, the old year is ~lmost gone. The proper greeting to our fellow Catholics on Sunday, Dec. 2 should be "Happy New Year;" for the first Sunday of Advent ushers in the liturgical cycle. Although most Catholic calendars bow to the January 1st system, the really liturgical ones don't. One such is the Christi-an Life Calenrad, issued ' WASHINGTON (NC) ___ annually by Bruce. Publish. _: .._ The president of the Association of State Universities ing Co. It lists the feast or saint of each day, the Mass and Land Grant Colleges to be said, gives instructions urged here that a Federal aid

the fight against Chinese communist aggression so that they will not have "to give up their fives" la1ier. Valerian Cardinal Gracias, Archbishop of Bombay, told a eongregation at the procathedral \here that he did not want to "sound alarmist" but that he' was being a - "realist" in the present threat to India. He pledged the support of Catholics in the government's stand against Chinese attacks. The Cardinal told the congregation that he had a mid-' lIlight audience with Pope John shortly after reports of Chinese aggression had appeared in the press. The Cardinal said that he told the Pope of the attracks 31ld explained the background of the clashes. The two decided that the Cardinal should be in India during the crisis, and he flew here from Rome "to boost ate morale of the people." . Cardinal Gracias said he delivered a personal message from Ifhe Pope to Prime Minister kwaharlal Nehru during a 45minute interview with the In4ian leader. The message was I$Elnt in answer to Nehru's ap.peal for peace. The A'l'chdiocese of Bombay !bas given 25,000 rupees ($5,250) Illor the defense fund, the Car.,Unal said. Cardinal Gracias said that a ormiracll:! of unity" had come about overnight in the country. "'here has not been such a sense of unity among the different segments of the community in the 15 years since Indian independence, he said. Rivalries gave way to a closing of ranks against 1IIe common foe, he added. Nearly 90 per cent of the world's Christian' countries are fb sympathy with India, he said, and added that the Fathers at the Vatican Council had expressed sympathy for the country

Seat KC Officers In Cap'e Towns New officers of Knights of eolumbus Councils on Cape, Cod are, for Walter Welsh Council, Provincetown, James Cordeiro, grand knight; John Grace, deputy grand knight; Milton Morgan, financial secretary; Kenneth Enos, recorder; Bernard A. Days, treasurer; Rev. Leo /. Duart, chaplain. St. Joan of Arc Council, Orleans, elected John O'Hara as grand knight, supported by J. Connors, deputy grand knight; James White, financial secretary.; Ronald Carron, 'recorder; Hernaldo Kelley, treasurer; Rev. James Lynch, chaplain.

Non-CatholicsAttend Parish Open House'CLIFTON (NC) - Protestant Gnd Orthodox laymen trooped through the new St. Brendan's Church here in response to invitations from a parish organization. All 20 Eastern Orthodox and Protestant churches in this New Jersey City received invitations to the open house from the Catholic parish Apostoliate of Good Will, a part of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine program. Apostolate members were stationed at key points in the ehurch to explain the functions and significance of its various parts. The invitation to the Churches quoted the words of Methodist Bishop Frederick Corson, an observer at the Vatican Council. In speaking of greater interfaith understanding generated at the Council, he said "the test will come on whether or not this spirit of fraternization, cordiality and cooperaton can be repeated on the diocesan and ,.I!)llrish levds."

for recitation of the Divine Office, and ends with a snappy sermonette. Sample, for the first day of the liturgical year: "We might start this year as our annual retreat ended with a consecration: 'Gladly do I give my life to Thee. Not solemnly, not grudgingly. But I would tak'e my life and fling it at Thy feet and sing and sing: Happy to bring Thee this small thing.''' Another: "Maybe we ought to install, some sort of safety belt in the church pews to prevent peop)e from three point land. ings. Kneel up straight; it really isn't hard." This calendar, hung in the kitchen or other often-passed spot, reminds one of the day's saint and helps lift "the mind and heart to God" for at least the few seconds daily it takes to read its message. , Chariot Calendar

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THE ANCHORThurs., Nov. 22, 1962

3

Suggests Aid Bill With ProVGsion For Court T~st

to higher education bill be enacted which contains provision for a court test of aid to churchrelated schools. John T. Caldwell, president of the association who is also chancellor of North Carolina State College, said: "Let us avoid the Church-State issue, or resolve it, or forget Federal aid. In any case, let us help get it off dead center." Caldwell said the controversy over Church-State relations has blocked Federal aid to higher education so far. The only way to guarantee that such legislation is enacted, he said, is for church school supporters ''to retire magnanimously" from ef,;. forts to secure Federal assistance for their insitutions. Help Is Imperative However he said, barring this, the question of the constitutionality of aid to church schools could be settled in the courts. In urging that Federal aid ·to higher education legislation make provision for such a court test, he said the measure should at the same time make it clear that, whatever the courts decided about church schools, 1t would not J' eopardize the aid given public institutions. . Caldwell contended that "new, massive increments" of Federal money are "imperative" at aU levels of U. S. education.

Beginning Jan. 1, but otherwise liturgical in every particular is the "chariot calendar" is'sued by St. Leo Shop in Newport. Created by Ade Bethune, well-known Catholic artist, the eircular design gives feasts, color of vestments and days of obliANOTHER BEGINNING: Colette Lord, left, and gation, abstinence and f ast f or the year. . Rosemary Duss'ault, staff members of the Diocesan CathOrbiting about this "inner cir- olic Press, ,view the Liturgical Calendar announcing the cle" is a second cycle which coming of Advent, beginning of a new Church Year. pictorially centers the family year as well as the church year on Christ." Space is provided to list family birthdays and special occasions or, in the case of classCIDADE DA PRAIA' (NC) _ l'OOm use, a teacher can list Father Pauline Evora has beschool events "to give a corporcome the first native of the Cape and liturgical sense to her Contro~ . Verde Islands off the African group.:' . . coast to be ordained a priest in . The te~ "chariot calendar~ SALT LAKE CITY (NC) would have ex-tended certain refers to the fact that Miss The former U.S. Commissioner types of grants to church-re- 70 years. He studied in Lisbon Bethune's design has revived an of Education has reaffirmed his lated colleges. Sponsors of the and is a meplber of the Missionary Congregation of the Holy 'ancient tradition of Christ as a description of the National Edu- bill vigorously denied this. Spirit. charioteer. A central' image of cation Association as blindly Christ depicts Him as the Lord opposed to private education. Of Time, charioteer of the Sun, Sterling 'M. McMurrin was ~~~ and the symbolism is further asked for comment on the IN G.REA1.'ER NEW BEDFORD carried out by four charging NEA's action in leading opposihorses, one at each corner of the tion to the Kennedy administracalendar. tion's proposal for Federal aid "Christ, Lord of Eternity and to U.S. colleges. The bill was Sun of Justice, rides the chariot .killed in the House. ' :of time," explains Miss Bethune. . In an interview, McMurrin, "His four horses are the seasons· itho is now a philosophy proAround Him orbit our days." fessor at the University of Utah, Long History recalled an earlier description Even the regular calendar be- he made of the NEA as "not inginning in January has been terested in higher educa-tion, much influenced by the Church. cool to the private schools and Until 1582 the calendar as devel- pathologically opposed to the oped by the Greeks and Romans parochial schools." McMurrin said he would not was used, but at that time Pope Gregory XIII abolished the so- go beyond this statement given .called Julian calendar in all a New York Times reporter 'in . Catholic countries and caused October. All Kinds the one now in use, known as In his 19 months in Washingthe Gregorian calendar, to be ton, McMurrin said he was . adQpted. . Related tQ calendar usage is guided by the belief that "there .the changing date of Easter, de- are all kinds of schools and we CHOOSE ONE termined by the date of the first want them all to be good." OF THESE CLASSES "I felt that as Commissioner full moon after the vernal equiD.poslt W..k., m, w..... It's easy to put a bigger pack on nox·. In our times, however, we of Education, I was responsible to help all schools." may see Easter made a fixed Santa's back-and still have a ~:: McMurrin, who quit his Fed1.00 50.00 festival like Christmas, since carefree, bill-free Christmas. 2.00 100.00 this is one of the topics on the eral post about three months 3.00 150.00 5.00 250.00 Join Santa's favorite Christmas discussion agenda for the Ecu- ago, also said that the NEA "is 10.00 500.00 in danger of moving toward menical Council. Club for '63 at In any case, a Happy New national control of American edFIRST SAFE now! ucation." Liturgical Year to all! The NEA, the major educationallobby in Was h i n g ton, "HOME·TOWN SAVINGS HEADQUARTERS FOR CHRISTMAS SHOPPERS" helped kill equal Federal aid to all colleges by bombarding F~)rmosa Member F.e.I.e. House members with telegrams TOLEDO (NC) - Formosa, alleging that. the bill violated a country that has produced constitutional s epa l' a t ion of only three priests since the first Church and State because it Catholic missioners 'planted the Faith there in the 16th century, ~~~""'~~"'i"'~;::;r"'i"'''l now has 15 seminarians in the new Taichung diocese. Father James A. Bodenstedt, featuring M.M., of Toledo, who returned ''The Gaslight Room" home on a visit after six years Ideal for Communion Breakon the island, noted that Cathofasts. Organization Banquets lics, though still less than two UNION & PLEASANT • ACUSHNET AVE. & SAWYER per cent of Formosa's popula3i6 Acushnet Ave. tion, have increased from 20,Ncaw Bedford NIlEW BIEDfORD, MASS. 000 to about 200,000 in the past Call WYman 2·1703 .... 10 years. ~$lD~Il::IDl~CllAl~~l3DJ£iI£lJ:;l£l£1~~~~~tJiI •

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PARIS (NC)--Protestant Pastor Marc Boegner haS' said his election to the' FrenclL Academz' with tho,

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backing. of some on its' leading Catholic members· was; a recognition of his: long, efforts foil' greater Christian unity. Pastor BoegneD; 8lryear-old president. of. the: Pl!otestant Fed.,. eration of FnanCE!;' w;as· nomi-· nated for membership: in the "immortal 40" b~r. the former' . French ambassador to> the Holy See, Court Wladimir d'Ormesmawkishness takes over. Matter to have depth upon depth, and son. and form are often ill-matched. to the exploration of these are brought excerpts from the Scrip., Eugene Cardinal Tisserant, What is good ' tures (especially the Epistles of elected to the AcadeJ.llY last year about the book St. Paul) and from theologians and one of the 10 presiding caroutweighs what and spiritual writers of vadous dinals of the Ecumenical Coun-· is bad. But how epochs. I cil; flew here from the Vatican m u c h better Essentially as impressive are . CAIR.][JlliNl~JL GJI!3RDNS AWARJD: Supreme Knight to cast a decisive vote in the the result and the personal histories which il 7 Luke E. Hart receives the Cardinal Gibbons Medal, highest Protestant leader's _ election. the effect, if lustrate the various aspects of honor of the Alumni Association of the Catholic Univel'sity Without the Cardinal's vote, only the poor the· theine. The first, for exfeatures were behalf of his brother Knights of Columbus. Pastor Boegner could not have ample, is that of Father Carl of America, been elected. An absolute maeliminated or Miller, a zealous and versatile Msgr. Williaml J. McDonald, university, rector, made ·the jority of members present is at least seJesuit who, at the maturity ·of presentation during "homecoming weeKend" ceremonies' necessany for elect.lon. Includintl v ere 1 y chashis powers and the peak of his the vote of the Cardinal, Pastor~ tened. usefulness, was struck'down oy Boegnen receiYed, :L 7· votes from Once again, NC the 32. mem,bers attending. Father M. Raymond is writing an ailment which proyed fatal. Something of scientific, or a~' Eleven votes were' cast. for the about suffering, its significance noted Cathol.ic· hil3torian, Mal'and its value. A man. who has least technologieal, genius, he q!Jis Albert. de Lu:gpe, and four experienced illness h,imself, he turned from what would surely, blank, ballots werl!] turned in. evidently has spent quite a have been a dilltinguish'ed and ru¥rner®:o${? lL<WylTil' i l&lI' i F .while in a hospital not far from· profitable career in the world , After the, eletltion\ Pastol!" ' .. ij)ll:!I$U'©If~' ili'1l~.@mU'(OJSJeM,ento .. 1L~~d1®!l'$~n[P,1 Gethsemani Abbey in Kentucky. to the priesthood. After ordinaBoegner, the firHt Protestant' There he has had discussions tion he volunteered for the clengyman elected.' to' the AcaST. LOUIS (NC) - Catholic menli of' his' pastQr. When the demy since it was. astablished ira' with the chaplain; there he had Patna missions in India, wher0 lay people are re!ady now to parpB:stor' d'oes nothing, the layman he would live in the most prIml1635. by,. Cardinal' Riahelieu told visited other patients. ticipate in the M~sS, Father Clifcan' do' no1Jhing. Most of the book comprises tive conditions and minister to Cardinal. 'llisserant' that', his' vote' . ford Howell, S.J~, said here. But • "That's why foday' in America could not; faiL to p:romote closeI' . accounts of how some of these most primitive people. many are afraid to do, so because the laymen are' pushing' the interfaith relations. For 22 years he dwelt in a . patients' met the challenge of prrestsj when· it comes to' partil. mud hut, practised almost ab- they do not feJli their pastors (;;andinat Tissenant:"';as elected pain and mortal illness; acreally want then1 to,. cipation," he added'. counts of how people never in solute poverty, strove for· the to, the academy; last y,eal' on the' The celebrated English liturAuthor of the paperback, "0f initiatiNe of its' onl~ Protestant that hospital rose to like ordeals conversion of the aborigines, and finally could numl>er a flock gist, here to givd a series of lecSacraments and Sacrifices,'" are included; and extended conmember. at. the time, Andre' tures at semin~ries: and conwhich has' been' used. for Mass Chamson. versations with the' chaplain Oli, of 2,000. But just when it appeared that vents, told reporiters he thought study gr?u~s during' thE; past to' the subject of the Christian rethat the "American laity" are' yeal's" Father' H'owell looks :fur sponse t~' suffering round out he could dQ the most good there, "a grand lot." some impl'ovementf in· partlicipaSlb~ne; he had to leave India. He was the volume. not well, and medical examina-"The people wiJ.[ participate tron. at ~ass' foll0v.:i?g' the' Sec~ ISLE. LA. M<i1TTE, (NC)-Rec.~ Truth Given in Gospels ords disclosed some 75 j (lOO pen--, Through the whole there runs tions in the United States were· in anything if they're led," he. ond' Vallican €'ouncr1'. said. "They've been participat"T feel quite certhain that the sons' visited the St. Anne's a theological theme. The author prescribed. They revealed that ing in the Mass ih some parishes pressure' or tlie progr.essive Shrine" conducted! by; the Edstates on page 1, "That is the he had. cancer of the pancreas. Frustration and failure - that -like Holy Crbss here in St. bishops is great' enough' to force l!lundite Filthens' h6llfl' in· Verpurpose of this book - to make Louis-for 25 ye~rs. But remem- sometliing," he said'· "PossiblY, mont" during, 1962., Fathen Mau.you happy. Its plim is to have is how most would interpret this ber the'layman dm't do, anything hearing the Holy Scriptures in' riCe U, Boucher" S,S;E." director, you base that happiness on God'lI turn of events, But Father Miller said. the: numbEll!: of organized, own truth as given you in the came to see "that now his hour at Mass WithO,ut,l the encourage- our own,,' tongue, as:a' minimum. • '.. 0'f course, it' will' be. left fo tlie: pilgrimages increased had really come and that he wit h, Gospels." discretion of' the. i'ndivialial' nearly three-fourths 'bf these He insists that God has set would do his best work for Ingroups coming from Cana-da. bishopS'." each of us a task to accomplish dia by priestly acceptance of the C o~siderS."orter I. Father' How;ell is not hn. in this world. Our place may be' passion and death opening be- r ~I!.llmmer VacClll'eoll'll§ pressed'" however" ,with the exinsignificant, our talents paltry, fore him. Equally remarkable 'are the MONTREAL qNC) _ A comtent of' active liturgical' partici:. our impact on others negligimittee of the Montreal Catholic patron by' the laity· in Ehglishble; we may think that we mat- stories of two laywomen,' one a young nurse,' the other a veteran School . Commis~ion is toying. spea>lHng countries. . ter not at all.' with the idea of duttrng, Summer' "You're' 30' years behind' Ger. The fact remains that we teacher, Joan Gasser, the\nurse, vacations for sch'ool children to many now, and you.'ll sfa;v, 30' . matter uniquely, each of us, and learned even 'before her graduone month: . ~~ars b~,~ind un~e~s ,~ometliing. that no one else can do the ation from nursing school that Southern New !:hgland'. particular work God has llll- she had Hodgkin's disease and The, vacation now runs about . pp~ns, ',he saId. ,.German y , largl'st 'Millinery. FClShion Store. woula not live long. poInted 'for us. two-and-a-half n\.onths. The tarA.usma, E1rance, Holland',. BeI:134. SOUTH MAIN. STREET Instead of despairing, she' conQuotes N ewma.n get for the younisters~ ill will is gIUID'- European: Catholics are ~' FALL, RIYI:R, fessed that she was coming alive That work may be to make Father Maurice Lafond one' of 30 years' ahead of you.'" I ' Christian use, of suffering, to for the first time. She meant that Q uebec Provinces' top .educators make it, like ·Christ's suffering, she had discovered the reality who claimed thd longer schoof of the living relationship be~~~~~n~, $O~$\ sacrificial. year would permit better distriA striking passage frQm New- tween herself and God. . ~ @!7ilG (;J~~,te' bution of study ~eriods and enON!:: S101? lHlappiness IF'rQm Adversity man's writings is quoted: I will able students tei pursue more Kitty Conroy, on the other I S!HQI?PIIN.G C~NYIE~' trust Him (God). Whatever, cultural developkents. bM,(G hand, had decades of ser~ice and I · wherever I am, I can never be . I .." 'Jl'! T here are three members rep-, ~ eVlSion' ~ l!?UIl'tlitur0, thrown away. If I am in sick- satisfaction in teaching, which ' : I) Appliances, • Grocery, ness, my sickness may, serve she did' surpassingly well.' She r~senting the teachers and' parent - teachers organization! ll.C>a\ ADen; S~,. New· Ilfedftilrd\ Him; in perplexity, my per- was brilliant, attractive, recogI WYman. 7-9354 . plexity may serve Him; if I am nized as an expert in her field: none representing the 180,000 youngsters in the schools. for Bristol ICounty in sorrow, my sorrow may servi Then she was injured in an Him. He does nothing in vain. automobile accident. She became bitter. She would He knows what He is about." Developing the idea, Father not cooper·ate in efforts to help her regain use of hurt limbs. M. Raymond examines the exC~Dunty Paint arnd' YvC!l~;papelT She withdrew into black isolapression "my hour" or "his Dupont IPain~ tion. Only little by little and hour" as spoken by or about ~T)rrM$t Real' at Store Christ, most notably in' the (;{)s- after many' months was the darkness penetrated. Eventually _-,' , .. corr Middle St. pel according to St. John. i AUNTON, IV\ASS. . After having considered seven it was entirely routed. PARKlNG Other people who showed , ~t:.t 1littJ passages from si. John, the . . ~ 4221 Acusb. Ave. . author concludes that in them fQrth Christ in their' attitude to THE BANK' ON New Bedford, "Christ reveals the meaning of reverses and agony are cited in I TAUNTON, (.REEN 'His hour' in all its· profundity. these pages, some in brief re,944 County St. It is not only the hour of His ferences, others in more ambi( Member. of. Federal Deposit Passion, Death, and Resurrec- tious sketches. New' BedfOrct: Drawbacks are the book's blsuranee: COrJ!oratlon tion, but the very purpose for which He came into this world. ex,asperating prolixity occasYou can see why some have said sional extravagant st~tements that every event of His' life con- and supposed verbatim reporting of pro t r act e d c<>nversations verges on 'His hour.'" ON' CAPlE· COD which ·took place years ago. Yield to Christ But it is not just the Saviour Such jaults, easily remediable, who has "His hour." Each of us distract and detract from the has his' own. "If it is true that splendid point which the author sets out to make. ' we all have 'our hour' just as SPring $",070.0: Jesus had His, then tell eVf~ry­ .Sp«:Bce Consultant one that it is the most glorious RD~ WASHJNGTON (NC)-Flither hour of their lives. All they have to do is go along with God, Francis J. Heyden, S.J., director yield themselves to Christ,' offer Of the Georgetown University every breath and heartbeat." . . Observatory, pas. been named as AMPLE PAR~DNG a consultant' to the Nation~i '" The. meaning and the proper emDloyment of one's hour are ,. Aviation and Space 'Agency.. ' ~~

In Your Hour (Bruce. $4.50), Father M. Raymond, O.e.s.o., has produced yet another of those books of his wh'ich curiously combine' the excellent and the mediocre. Reading it is a· strange experience. At one moment, one is impressed and- moved by spelled out in the successiVe fresh insight. into the mys- chapters. The idea itself the autery of the human condition; thor unfolds gradually. Simple in at the next, one. squirms as its first presentation, it is shOwn

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THE ANCHOR5 Hearts,. Fall River, Learn Students at Sacred Thurs., Noy. 22, 1962 . Asserts Brazil's English Grammar· in 5800 Tiny Steps '

Policy Agrees With Pope's

By Patricia McGowan NEW \YORK :(NC)~The Creek Orthodox Primate of , New frontiers of learning are opening -on every side, but English, the lovely language North and South America of Shakespeare and Milton, has been slow to feel the winds of change. Now, however, the blamed theVa:tican handling "business side" of English has been investigated with the tools of science. The results Clif invitations for the absence oJ: observers from his church at of this reasearch are in the Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, first school in the Diocese to embrace a method of the Second Vatican Council. . In a statement issued here teaching grammar and us~TchlJishop lakovos, a !lPokesage. Under the direction of rr;l:m for the Ecumenical PatriSr. Mary Hortense, S.U.S.C,. 8'ch Athenagoras I of Constanprincipal and head of the English department, students are ·becoming familiar with fat textbooks bearing the forbidding names "English 2600" and "English 3200." They break grammar =-~atrial'ehate." EX'l!aining his objection to down into 2(j00 and 3200 steps De Vatican handling of invita- respectively for a total of 5800 G~lIl~ for Council observers, tiny particles of learning. Sister Hortense describes L1rch 1lishop Iakovos said that G the Pan·Orthodox Conference "2600" in an article published in the Catholic School Journal: c~;t Yl'or et Rhodes, it was "This was a strange-looking C::;i'l'c.i that the Ecumenical paper-bound book with zebral?utl'ii~)'ch would negotiatie with like pages displaying alterc.~(' Vatican concerning Orthonating bands of gray and white; Cu" ob,;;)t'vers. the pages were not designed to be ~erm~ llteiJ'li"m:eJlll~atfives read from top to bottom. The He related that Patriarch answers were printed in marL'<.-::hcna'(oras then informed Pope ginal strips where they were very easy to see. <':~hn that he, as Ecumenical );,.J>atriarch, would receive and !Exciting Book ~ansmit any invitations to the "As I paged idly through to !Orthodox churches in according the end, I began to realize that 'Q'ith the decision at ilie Rhodes English 2600 consisted of a ceonfcrence. series of :very -small steps through which ;thestudent must The Vatican instead began reason his way-one. step ata !Sanding representativies to the time; that the method taught V'striarchs of the East (Alexthe user to think, to concentrate andria, Jerusalem, Antioch and in a way that would b~ very Moscow- and to other Orthodox ~seful ito my college prepara. ~urches, asking their leaders tory students. Really, it was hl send observers, ·the Archbishquite exciting!" (lp continued. The"zebra~like" books are "This taatic disclosed the scientific programs in grammar purpose of the Vatican, which and 'usage, designed for high was apparently aimed at disschool students. They break IlUptin~ Orthodox unity and unstandard grammar lessons into ~rmining the authority of the a series of very small steps !Ecumenical Patriarch," Archbishop lalrovos said. He added :through which the reader rea· sons his way. (hat "only with the ohurch of "The advantages of reasoning ll\tloscow did the Vatican succeed your way instead of being told iin this tactic"and attributed have been known to good teachthe sudden change in position ers ever since the day of Socra. by the Russian Orthodox church to reasons which "are without tes," says the author, Joseph C. Blumenthal, in a preface to doubt clearly of a political students. "There .is no separamture." tion betw:een ,explanation and exercise, as -in other textbooks; the two 'are woyen tightly to.gather. Every step. or frame, calls for a written response, which' .requir.es .both thinking NEW YORK (NC)---lFour and attention. You will learn .to think and to concentrate in .& priests have been named to Wl\Y that will be useful to you staff anew mission territory in all your studies." in northern Peru which ~tbe No 1D1istakes Vatican has assigned to the DoAim ,of the .books is to ,permit ·minicans' '8t.Jo!ieph :Rrovince ~errorless Jearnirlg," which, psy. ,which has .headquarters Ihere. .chol~gists SllY, 18 ,a moreefJiicient Dominioan missionheadquar- .way.of mastering.a subject than ters here said Fathers James L. ~ the trial .and cel'll'or method Donlarr, O~P.,-of Provilience,·R. l., of "learning .and unleal'Oing." John D.Logan, O.P., of New "Most important -of .all," the Haven, .Clonn., and 'WiHiam J. preface continues, -"ds what the ,O'Donnell, O.P., .of Syracuse, psychologists call reinforcement N. Y., leJit here for Lima, Peru, -with English 2600 you find out where th~y .will jake a fouras soon as you 'turn a page month course in Spanish at the Whether your answer 'is right. At Cardinal .Cushing Language this point something veT'Y interSchool. esting and mystel'ious happens They will join Father James C. in your brain. The Instant you Burke, O.P., of Wilkes-Barre, find out that 'you 'are right, the idea 'takes root,' so to speak, in Pa., who has 'been serving in the Dominican mission at Concep- your brain. This -is called reinforcement and the quicker and tion, Chile. The new mission ter_ more often this happens, the 'ritOl'y stretches 100 miles along better you learn and the better the northern Peruvian coast and your learning sticks." 30 miles inland. Ohief advantage of the gram. Isolated Villages mar books, says Sister Hortense, Mission headquarters will be is that they give students a established in ChimboU, which "private tutor who allows each has a population of 1201000 and to proceed at her own pace." the only steel mill in' Peru. Ten Grammar stucl,y can be ,aocom. years ago it ,was a fishing villl:\ge plished at home, with only tests' of 6,000 persons. Most of the scheduled for class time. territory consists of isolated In the time saved, says Sister, Indian villages. girls concentrate on the creative and expository aspects of EngThe mission is the third mission venture by the Dominicans' lish. "By using programmed in. St. Joseph Province in the last struction," she notes, "my classsix years. They took over a misroom efficiency has increased by sion in Bahawalpur, Pakistan, in at least 30 per cent. No time is 1956 and another in Concepcion, now wasted --on routine checks Peru, in 1959. and drills." What about the ,girls at SHA? Some ,conservatives don't Hk~ Rivier Alumnae 1:I1e new 'system but a majority Fall River and New Bedford' of _students :are p1easedwith it. alumnae of -Rivier College will !J;Iypica1comments: "Now Eng·meet at B'Tuesday night, Jan. 8 Jish isn\t.a bore! We don't spend at the home olMrs. Leonard <Class :after ,class ·expla~ Bilodeaq, :lOll .GUfoI'd [Avenue, .Ji:ammar Ito ithelfew who don't Somerset. understand.If

BRASILIA (NCr - President Joao Goulart has declared that Brazil's foreign policy accords with the ideas of Pope John. President Goulart presided at a commencement ceremony at the Foreign Ministry here for 17 students of the Rio Branco Institute, a training center for the country's diplomats. "Brazil is a nation conscious of its responsibility to participate in matters which are of interest to humanity as a whole," the President said. . He noted that Brazil's "international policy is in line with international realities, based on fidelity to Christian and democratic principles and on respect for international commitments, security, and the right of selfdetermination of peoples.

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EASY ENGLISlHl: Joyce Campos, left, Constance O'Brien discuss with Sister Mary Hortense, S.U.S.C. the new method of learning English grammar in use at the Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River.

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. "The fundamental commitment of our foreign policy," he:; said, "is to defend the interests of Brazilian people so that they may have economic development and social justice while enjoying the exercise of democratic principles. "The fundamental line of our foreign policy is that a peaceful solution should be found to international problems," he said. "In this, we reflect the sentiments of Pope John XXIII."

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WILMINGTON (N C) - A a lecture sponsored by the CathCatholic legal expert said here olic Educational Guild of the that 1963 may be a "year of Wilmington diocese. crisis" in the dispute over Fed- . Question of Policy eral aid to education. The issue of aid to church William B. Ball, executive di- schools "is nota question of rector and counsel of the Penn- legality but a question of sylvania Ca1holic Welfare Com- policy," he declared. He added m!ttee, said that in the coming that opponents of such aid had y-ear "all the, opposing forces made "a mountain of argument" could oome together to work out of "a mole-hill of constitu-out some type of bilL" tionality." Ball argued that opposition to Noting instances of public aid FeBeral aid to church schools to church schools which have is based on a "distortion" of the involved no challenges on conprinciple of Church-State separ- stitutional grounds, he said ation by "extremists." there has been "no 'Catholic "We now have a powerful push'" for Federal aid. body of opinion which' seeks to Rather, he said, the Catholic secularize all phases ~f public position has been that if a maslife in this country,'" he said in sive Federal aid program is enacted, church schools should be included in it. "This scientific program adds Ball said Catholic schools en:a novelty to the ordinary drudg. roll one-seventh of the nation's ery. The book teaches just as if students and represent a savings a teacher were explaining, only of between two and three billion more interestingly, more thor- dollars to taxpayers. ,oughly, and more clearly." "It makes no sense to say Last Word we're going to exclude oneLast word on the subject is seventh of our educational prohad by Sista' Hortense, who de- cess in any program of aid to elares, "While programming education," he said. may reduce teacher shortage, it a'lso raises the need· for the teacher who brings to his practice a high degree of inspiration, ~ who can communicate his own ~ joy in learning, who can teach ~ rather than merely impart in~ formation. "I, as well as the long line of English teachers of the future, will always be in demand as the master with the unique, mind, 365 NORTH FRONT STREET heart, .body, . and soul-the masNEW BEDFORD ~ ter who can' never be replaced ~ by a push buttoned, machine ~ WYman 2·5534 , controlled, ready-made world of programmed learning."

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6

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The Human Side

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Nov. 22, 1962

Upturned Face Father' Gerald Page, the former Holy Cross Father.who is the founder of the Servants of the Holy Paraclete, a group of priests devoted to the service of priests, has called gratitude the "upturned face of humility-looking up to God." Humility is truth-the true recognition of what one is and his relationship to God. A humble person is one who knows precisely what he is worth measured against the only standard that counts, the standard set by God. Thanksgiving is a day of gratitude, a day when the person of integrity looks at himself, his worth, and looks to God who created and redeemed and loves him. If he is loved by God, then he is worth much indeed, as are his thoughts and words and actions. Thanksgiving is a day of gratitude, a day when people look at their relationships with one another, see how many people love them when, i'l0 often, they are so unworthy of love. \ It is rather unfortunate that there must be a special day set aside by official proclamation to recognize the duty 'of gratitude. But this is better than no day at all. And it may serve to. remind that the spirit 'of 'Thanksgiving is meant to carryover into every day,

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. .By

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!Ii. Anthony's Church, NGw Bedford

Baptism

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Quiet, Cool, Calm Monsignor Patrick V. Ahearn secI'eta:ry to Cardinal Spellman of New York, spoke well when he urged Catholics to avoid an "attitude of belligerence" toward .opponents of Federal aid to parochial schools. The prelate called for "quiet, cool, calm and intelligent persuasion" of those who disagree with the position that Federal aid to parochial schools is justified. Monsignor Ahearn urged that the central concept be always kept in mind-that the question is' one of aid to education, not to religion. And the question isa constitutional one--and the, constitutionality of the. matter was not solved when the President of the United States gave it as his opinion that Federal aid to non-public schools was . unconstitutionai. Points that must be presented a;re the national need 'in education and the public good done by private schools. Another factor is that public schools do not exclude other school systems that are just as "public" in the good that they do and just as much in keeping with the United States Constitution and the processes of democracy as the school system called "public." .

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Wortllwhile Recipes

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By REV. ROBERT W. HOVDA, Catholic Universifly ,

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tened earth with a shiny silver shovel ... All these are expressions of an intention. The ae. tion itself is not enough, it must be determ in'e d, expia i ned, defined beyond a doubt. So too is the priest's action: "X, I ~ baptise you, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit." This solemn invocation of Blessed Trinity, expressly taugbt by Christ HimseI,f (Mt. 28:1!lt· is what we call the Fonn of tmr Sacrament of. Baptism. TlW' Eastern Churches use a similal' formula: "The servant of Goa. X, is baptised in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost." · , As in the entire ceremony anti especially the preparation,' the Blessed Trinity -- and the can.didate's faith in this fundamental Christian Mystery_ is absolutely essential if one must effect the r,esults intended by Christ. These words explaiJl the action of wa9lling wifta water. Together they - througll the intention and power of Christ - give birth· to a neW' life, that of. a truly adopted SOIl Off God, and thus loosen forever (if the candidate wil-Is it) • power of Satan.

the

TODAY - st. Cecilia, Virgin, theme of the last few Sundays Martyr. The lithrgy and a life of and anticipates the Advent mes_ deeds congruou~ with the liturgy sage: Jesus as victor, transcend(acts which flow from it and . ing time with its inevitable pain lead to it and which incarnate its and death, and carrying us with ' spirit) are the rtorm~lmeans'-'of Him. vigilance for lb. The man who MONDAY-St. Sylvester, Abneglects them not only impover_ bot. Sunday's Gospel assures"us ishes his life an'd dwarfs his soul of the sufficiency of Jesus as but also merits Jesus' word!r. Saviour, warns us against look"I do not kno~ you" (Gospel). ing for messiahs and miracle I / . TOMORROW--St. Clement I, workers. The Christian religious Pope, Martyr. The action of leader is one who, like the abJesus Christ ip. the mysteries bot in whose memory we celewe .celebrate around the altar, brate the liturgy today, attracts in the liturgy is an action which men and women and teaches touches first the men and women them to be disciples not of him.' who are membbrs of His body. self or herself but to be disciples He touches us there with His of Jesus Christ. This is the wissaving and life-giving Word and .dom which "the mouth of the Other Forms? , The hearts of all Catholics-the Pope chief among with Hi's sacramental signs. He just miln utters" ~Introit).. Some have said that the Tri~ them-have been touched in recent months by the assur- refashions <'the body of our low_ TUESDAY-Mass as on SBIl- tarian formula was not neces,ances received from various non-Catholics, in groups and as liness. conformihg it to the body day. The Christian does not re- sary and, th~t baptising "in the individuals, that these are praying for the Fathers of the · of His glory" (First Reading). But He is "able also to subject joice that time and the world in- name of Jesus Christ," "in the name' of the Lord Jesus," "ia. Vatican Council. " all things to Hilnself". So in re- volve pain, mourning (Gospel) Such an action of charity is surely responsible for .fashioning us He touches also captivity (Introit). He simply Christ Jesus," "in Chi-ist" was They bolster' their much of the good will that surrounds the Council and per- all the things lover which we recognizes the fact. Nor does his sufficient. argument with references to the vades the dialogues going on not only on the highest level have Dominion, Ithe whole world experience of these grim real- Bible. True, such E,xpressions alJe ,ities weaken his faith. They are, of leadership between Catholic and non-Catholic Christian, of work and thought and play. as a ma tter of fact, one of the found in the Bible. But what SATURDAY-+St. .John of the is their context; what do thev leaders but on a neighborhood plane. There is a different conditions of his faith. Confessor, Doctor. Every mean? spirit in the air-a sympathy and a respect and a charity · .Cross, If it were not for the limitaChristian is dJputized by his tions of our finite existence for There is no minor schism of that is almost physical in its impact. Baptism and Cbnfirmation and some group that decided to the face of evil, for the ap~ar­ Catholics can learn many lessons from the prayerful by his weekly I sharing in the insurm<iuntable obstacle of . "adapt" a new cerem()ny. There good wishes of ·their non-Catholic brothers, and one of the Eucharistic meal to' be professor ently death, the Gospel would lack is no evidence that just any pe~ outstanding lessons is the value of prayer. . of the faith and. teacher in the the questions to which it is the sonal or sentimental reference Church, The saibtly eminence' of This is not a presumptuous statement. answer. To the Offertory song's on the part of the minister was a John in this regard is only ,all right. There is no creation oI! ,Catholics of course believe in prayer and are .urged another invitation to all of us cry, "Out of the depths I cry to some ot~er form .indepel'ldent~ you," the entrance hymn an'00 live and work and play always in the spirit of prayer, to the faithfuln~ss (orthodoxy) swers, "I will hear you ...1 will of that gl:ven by Christ and ever as well as to ·devote a significant portion of the day to taught by the First Reading and come anq. set you free.." pr~served by His Church. , to the courage tecommended in formal prayer. ' Very probably, :it only means Gospel. WEDNESDAY -Mass as OlD that these Christia,ns wanted· to , But many Catholics have such a trust in the power of the , It does take c,ourage to teach Sunday:. That answer will not be show that they administered tbfil the Sacraments to give grace that they, unmeaningly, per- tl)e gospel of love and peace and finally and fully effective until all-important Sacr,ament by the haps, give th~ Sacraments great honor and position in their reconciliation ir\. the midst of , the. end of time, until the con- mandate or throulrh the power spiritual lives and tend to regard prayer as, somehow, seC- prejudice and hbtred, of blood- summation of things in Jesus' ()f Christ. Which of eourse they thirstiness and ~violence, espe- ~cond coming (Gospel). So we ,did as we do today .' .. but. a8 ond-rate.'. ' cially when the latter vices wear need now sacraments and signs HE! wants it done., They coulc1 Nothing is farther from the truth, the intention Of ·the mask of Christianity and and acts of faith, both to effect .well have been referlng to the Christ, the mind of the Church. : righteousness. our communion in Jesus (that fact that, their Baptism - iDSt. Paul says that in God "we live and move and ha~e · 24TH AND UAST SUNDAY communion' by which His vic- ,stituted by Christ ...,..-' was faw Dur being." God is everywhere. And prayer is the intelligent AFTER PENTECOST. The holy tory, His Resurrection-Ascension ,different from aD3' other maDbeing's awareness of God, the conscious mind's response to and common meal which is our ,.become our own) and' to teach made ceremony. us that our destiny transcends This we can show, because 4 God, the human heart's communication with its Creator 'Sunday Mass,' lour Christian .the decay· which surrOl,lDds Eucharist, contaibs in' itself ref_ !hough 'the person does not sa, and Father. In prayer the little human soul ~rives itseif to We }ray over the. offerings to- It word-for-word, true Christiall erences both tJI .time and to . God so that God might work through and in' and with the eternity. Whene\(ler we celebrate day~ ~'Turn the hearts' of us all Baptism" always elllphasized be~. . . 'it as a memorial' of Jesus' pass- to you" (Secret). ',li~ ir:t, the. ~inity :in its lengt~ ·over, His saving Death-ResUr·preparatwy instruc:tions and iIa :rection.;Ascension. It refers' to the . various references to the . School Pupils Bring ·Trinity in the ,lonl' ceremoniee. ·time past: : We also celebrate it' as the .Sh<! 1~~rSu pplies , .Other' Bapl;ism! sacrament which! actually builds , WASHINGTON (NC)-Pupib Yes, of' courSe there WeN as well as symbolizes our present unity in Christ, our tinity as 'to ,Washington archdiocesan ,others., Greek believers of the the Church, out love for one s~hools hav:e been asked to bring ,Mystery Cults baptized in tbe . ' another and our !solidarity. It' is a two-day. supply of ca'nned blood of. sacrificed, bulls. Othen OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIvER· ., . alSo . a' time-sacrament of the ,goods to stock.. school shelter .used .. water: the Jews, the areas. '. Essenes, John the Baptist. ' present moment. Published weekly by The Catholic Pr~ss of the Diocese of Fall River The . food should include " Jewish Baptism was more • But all this does not by any 410 Highland Avenue " " means exhaust Ithe Sacrificial liquid, such as canned milk 01' legal washing bec.ause of phy&o Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 Supper. 'For the events of which fruit juices that can be used in ical or spiritual contaminatiolL PUBLISHER it is memorial and the grace- . the place; of water, the Archdioc_ The Essenes, something of • Most Rev. James L. Connolly, 0.0., PhD. life which makes Communion a esan Office of Education said in JeWish Religiousl:)rder, dedicated to perfection, often bap. reality and morel than merely a , a memorandum .to pastors. GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER tized. This also wall a prayed" moral aspiration are themselves Schools also were told to beRev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll '. effe~tive promise: of eternal life, gin 'shelter drills' immediately .'.washing that was OJ:ten repeated MANAGING EDITOR of Victory over sin and death. and to equip the shelter area .during ~he day: u.pon arising; Hugh J. Golden, . Today's Mass c:ontinues the . with a battery-powered radio. . .Turn .to' Page· Seven

The, Place of Prayer' ,

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THE A'NCHOR-

WorthWhile Recipes

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Thurs., Nov. 22; 1962

,Continued ftmn 'Page Six before, duril:\gDlld :after .meals; !before, during :nndafter work; after they hod 'touched.anything worldly or of ihe "outside";ete. Bere too there is no ;para11el of 'Christ's Baptism .inip,tention 'or effect. It is 'ODly .n :repeated use ·ofa ,simple 'but meanhJ.gful ,nct :in prayer. St. ,John the :Baptist :also 'hap8zed but:this was not 'aOhristian :&ernment. .iRe :revealed :his In. tention to 'IlS: ;penance, public 1mmiliation,sorrow :for ,past sins ad a new beginning. It was only a :foretaste 'of 'that ..true .and perfect Sacrament. :His was only .in wa ter, the rest of the eHects eame from the 'person's own dis• 1Iosioons and resolutions. There would be One 'Who would b~p-tize in water AND 'the Holy .spirit. Its ,effects'wotild 'come 'from ChriSt ;and the 'permissive wlllingness of the candidate.

Expect 'To So'ive ,Chu,rc:h Problem In iPuerto Rico SAN roAN (NC) - A papal mplDmat described :as

"satisfac.tory"

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hisB<!cond meeting mth ~erto ;R3eo's Gov. Luis Munoz Ma1±:l nncll added .there "is hope .of 8 solution" of the Church-State probo !lems in the island. ArehbishopEmanuele C1arizi~ Apostolic Nuncio to the Dominiean R~ublic whose jurisdiction includes P.uertoRico, called the visit with the Governor at La Fortaleza .a "confirmation of the COmm:on ,effort.·' "Puerto Rico could become an .example -of good relations be'tween ,Church ana State for the Catholic majority of Latin America," the Archbishop said.

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iBattimoM Vot.ers 'Reject iExipansion . Of. .eLlS Rides

Effeeb The effects were far from the same. Others affected a renewal of intention,.a .sorrow for sinSwhich in 'turn hroqght .forgiveBALTIMORE !(NC) ness· Ghrist's Baptism is -powerful because it is His. Through it Baltimore County voters there is born in man anew life have rejected a law to exwith its powers, habits and pand tax~paid school ,bus .' '%.ights. These powers, habits and, 'transportation of ,parochial and . rights, have a tint of ,the divine other -private scnoolpup'ils withfor after Baptism the baptized' in the county. I;; truly in every way aSoii of God, living from Him as ihe ... ", ·In a referendum on the Nov. , . branch does of the v:ine,able to 6,ballot;,the :voters ,turned down Dpeak to Christ ,as to .orie's ·,expansion·of the present system . !lJrother and to His .Motheras to . of .bus rides by ,an unofficial Our own. Truly, confidently, 'he " 'count of '61;962 :to '51.,624. can, cry: Abba (Father) and :be lIowever, because of.an .unus- .. _. ~ceived and treated as ,n I true . ual ~egal .situation, the .law is flon - thanks to Christ, eur' not dead. The ,Cour.t ,of ,Appeals _ Brother, and Lord. <, in 'Annapoiis, t1).e .state ·capital '. ha,s not .yet· r~ed on whether N ext article:' 'Now Stay. 'flie petitions seeking ,the refer,. 'Strong". ,'endum were yalid. The .law ;was . . ,adopted :bythe .l~gislature in.

Cato'hlic ~roups Get' ford Grants

S1J1Iii1; of\Enc17~cn:J

"Natur-ally this demands l!l .spirit of good will to take the necessary steps courageously for the greatest welfare of tile people. Puerto Rico is Catholic in its immense majority," he continued. "Respectirlg its sentiments, its culture, its traditions, it could be ,transformed - with absolute .respect for the Divine Law-intcP an .authentically progressive and modern COWl try, where human problems have their adequate solution in the spirit of Mater et Magistra (the encyclical of Pope .John. . "This is the spirit wilichchar. acterizesevery activilty of the Church throughout tile world and is the soul 01 the :Ecumenteal Council," Archbishop Clari_ zio ~ontil}ued.

. :1981.

(SHRINE, UNIVERSITY mUSTEES: Fiv.e ;p~ominent A1lked New Boutes 'Catholic !aymenhave been . named 'tlrustee\S <of Catholic ' I 'l1'he 'court wasndt :able 10 'Un- 'University and the :Shrine of the Immaculate Conception. tangle a complex legal cnallenge NEW YORK(NC)~atbolic'of the validity of the :petitions. They are,leR 'to .right, top, Andrew P. ·Maloney., New York,. universities in Chile and 'Vene-' before thedeadline'for.plac1ng former 'C:U; Mumni president: James KeeUy,active ~n zuela and' 'the Catholic Near· ,the -question on 'the tballot. It· ~alti.:mor~. 'Ca,tbolic ,charIties;· John McShain, Phila-d.elphia, .,East WeItare .Association, are ruled that 'the subject should be 'builder 'of the ,Shrine; bottom ;}lOW, ,Jo1mA. Ooleman, New·. 1 ., among recipIents of .newF.ordput before ;~dj;ers anyw~Y'York; merriberof'Cardinal SpellmaJ;1"s' Committee of the ",JI'oundationgrants. The law,' .sponsor,ed ,by .Rep. L·ty. J ' A'M G W h' rAf 'U S · The Pontifical CatholicUni- ,HerbertH.'Tyler, authorized the a I , ames . c ranery", as mo~on, ormer • • '. ·versity in San~o, Chile, was , I ~ounty to remove the ceiling of attorney :genera~~ NC Photo. '. granted $45tl,OOO 'to iinance' a .,:$15,000 on its :annual appropria- . CHARLIS ,. \F~~~ · development :program in :the: .tionto :paY :for transporting pri_ , mathematicn1and p4ysiealsci- .' vate school ,pupils w.ho ~ve;along 2S4 ROCKDAIlli A~~ ences. The University of Cali- ,public -school bus ll"outes. ,In :adNIW IEDFOIt!fV, ~ fornia will provide v.isitingpro- .·dition,the law :prov:ided for \the • .iessors and advisers. 'establishment of new .bus .routes . iDiocese of 'Pl'o~jdenceSc:hedulesWeekend TheAndl'e !Bello 'Catholie ;;for nonpublic .school pupils. ,.' University, 'Caracas, Venezuela, Spi~tutd i.-ent for Men of. All Faiths , was granted $240,000 :for ·its. ',fnculities ,Dfengineering ilnd,. NARRAGA:NSEll'T !(N;Ci) _ . The .re1:reat(\\dU·:be ,conducted' I social .sciences. The :funds will An overnight ;;retreat !for men by Father ,J:ohn J. McLaughlin, J be used to hire three professors ,of <a1llf-aiths .- tCatbolies, IProt- S.J., of F.ainfiield Univer.sity. . and to equip several laboratories. DETROIT (NC)-'Two attor- estants and Jews, :the :!first 'Of The Catholic Near East Wel- neys for the Board of Education· its kind in Rhode Island - will • ..,. ..A'NT'ftl~. fare Association was given in ,suburban Bloomfield Hills beheld at Our Laqy ¢ 'Provi'W' 'II V nl;'1 I $20,000 for comerences to be have stated that ·thepractice of. dence Retreat House over' the .iRESlf iHOME FOR THE AGED : held at Bouake in the Ivory permitting classroom ;prayers is. coming weekend. MEN AND WOMEN E::oast on the place of Islam and Msgr. ,Ednund ,J. Brock, xeBeautiful Surroundings African religions in .Afrieande- illegal. I Stratton S.. Brown of Detroit' treat' house director, 'said ;he .Clean, Comfartable JJving velopment and ·on Christianity .i and Jobn A. GUray of Birming;scheduled the interifaith :event WONDCRFUll'OOD and religiouBsyncretism in ham, Mich., gave their opinion' :because he felt lthat ·".good P.rotAntoinette Picard, I'Irop. - . ,! Africa. to board members .at :a closed, -estantsand ,Jew:s mi,ght 'enj:oy :ME~921 meeting. !time :out to consider the :spiriRussells' ,Mills .ReI.' & .5ladu CM. Rd. ' U.S. ,Priest Heads ,Last December the boardtual values, in society." "'._~~_~'D:A:R:TM::P:UT:H~. ~===========:: 'D J D· : ,banned aU spoken classroom ".No attempt whatsoever 'will .. ¥ razi Jlocese ,prayers by teachers. However, be made to 'covert' anyone," "he VATICAN CITY (NC) ,it dropped· its ban and adopted said. "The highest regard :for' '. Pope John has .n arne d an, 1tas present policy .last January. each man's ,conscience will be Omaha--born priest to 'head a' when hundreds of parents com-' .shown .at all times." new Brazilian diocese. plained' The retreat.house director. Earn the h~9hest rate.on Most .Rev. William Murphy, .·Await ;RUlliIig .noted thafthere has beenan:in-. : !regu.lur savings with· , e.ss.R., has been named, Bishop . ' b h tr t . T~.e . POll'"" .provl·des M..at.. .creasing. num er (of. .suc reea s .. , .each ,acoountinsured . of the newly erected Brazilian,. ~" m dioce~e of Juazeiro. "teachers may at appropriate.. ..in ,other areas of .the ·.country 'Safe by an Ggency of the ." ~ times, in the presence of their in the past year. . .' U.S. 'Govt. A Year _. Bishop Murphy was born Dec. :r7, 1917, and was ordained on students, 9rally thank God for: "They ·are on the .risej" he '~ June 29, 1943. He was sent to the blessings that :snr.rounds us .saId. '''There .is 'a ',generaIfeellng , ' - • • • • •- atl s.u"e.~Y·~ Amazonas, Brazil, where he re- 1:llld ask His belpand ·guidance." .. that we al:lought.to 'deepen ~ur • • • • - coupoo fo'" ",a,,\0.90o,. mainedfor 14 years, working Supt. Eugene L. Johnson said, . ~iritual liv.es." , • • •,• . • • \Sef'd..,1 ",,\I It .6.,0\.\1 0° . ''. os a· vicarcoo'perator, .pastor' I. ·that the· 'school ,board niay wait- " .Ir~ RE£'f~11 .ft\n\\ fo''''· o~ . , . " and vice provincial. ,In '1'958' 00" "·for 'later' rulings on .classroom. " . -......- - - - - - -...~ r:,f~. \Vas named rector oj! St. JosePh"·,,praYers by -'the S~e Court·. 'College in Edgerton, 'Wi:s~ a'" before'·ta!dhg any ;action. ' ;. l Redemptorist :minor .semi~;'·""·· " !. • ~IGldD ~ Maintemmce ::supplfn .. and procurator for Redemptori5t 'CLanges t.il ' ~ \. ;S,~·& _ . - •••• missions"in Amazonas. ......,' n T"'lI ame ., SWEEJIIERS-- 'SOAPS . '.i , • NEW, YORK (NC)-Informa_ '\& <CI11 . _'•• -.'-•. • • • ~. . Resovr.ces over , ,~I.S~NFEc;TA~. ;; ~_• •1l' ' & , , : j d" .' flon,magazilM!,published month. I\.osary'me Itahoil ly by the Paulist Fathers here, INRE fEXTlNGUISHERS $227000,000 WASHINGTON (NC)-A' ~ will change its name with the: cent booklet., ~editatlonson Janua1;y,.l968, issue to the' Cath-. the Rosary," by Pope John, has oUc Layman. Father John Carr,. . i8l6 'PURCHA'SE ;ST• .' . been .issued by the NCWC Pub- ,", e.S.p., executive ,PublisheT,. . [NEW .BEDFORD , '&cations .:omee, .1312 .Massacllu.. .' ¢d the chnnge .is;a.tribute to setts·Avenue. N.W.. Washington the vital importance of the laity. '1 !Nor.thMam St.;, 1Cior. lBeclfoid '•• Open fA. &e 8 . WY '34786 4,1>.C. 411 affairs ,of ·the ,Church ~toda:tr-

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,THE ANCH0R-Dio~eseoHaJl ~iver~ThurS. Nov. 22;1962

Read~rs-Show Lively Interest

In ,'She,' tQ JtRdge by letters By Mary Tinley Daly . "She;" 'the lady mentioned in this column some weeks ago has' champions•. She' has lots and lots of champions, if l~tters' to' this column are any indication. Writers of these letters, bless their: hearts~ on the whole show an admirable sense of ~harity. Most .letters were frank but didn't know if you should put - eourteous, though a few ~e- painted - up slacks in. You must have put some terriblecome so charitable that. they looking clothes in that box. You are a bit carried away· Let's'tl!-ke buy crayons for your granda sampling: "1 agree in reference· children and while you watch to the 'market, television they' mark up the beauty parlor, walls. Y9U start out) to make a CANONIZATIONS SET: Two priests and a Capuchin Brother who entered religious etc., but I do cake for the christening and,it life in the l~st century will be canonized on'Sunday, December 9 in St. Peter's Basilic,a. fend-seat' myturns out to be a flop. Why db self in· church' you call your husband, .the Blessed Petet Eymard, left; a Frenchman who founded the congregation of Priestso{ for this reason: head of the house? 1 called him the Blessed ISacrament; lived. from. ~~11 t? 186.8 and' was l;>eatif~ed in 1925. BlesSe~ I have 'eight, (mine) 'my husband," 'affec- Antonio Pucci, center, an ItalIan '.Servlte priest, lIved from 1819 untIl 1892 and was beat!ettildren', ' the' tionately' when I spoke of him. IB d F . M . C . ht . It r C h' B th r d youngest ,being Mrs. C. C. C." fied in 1952. .lesse rancesco. a~l~ ~oese, rIg , an a Ian apuc In 1'0 er, Ive . , - ' th . I' from 1804 until 1866 and wasbeatIf'led In 1929. NC Photo.· .,., . III1X 1I10n s. , "Both my wife, and I read make' 'up my I :mind to get to ' .., your column in each issue of the ' . ' . " ehurch early to, ~\ii\ffi, paper and find the subjects and let be sUre of a .,,~,., their treatment most interesting UI seat, no easy task with, four and helpfuL grammar schoolers, I feel 'it· is "I'd like a word here, though, Dot fair to be crammea in like because 1 like the.aisle seat and sardine with' squirming young-. if 1 get to Mass early enough, I BROOKLYN (NC)-Hellburn- . ident of the Young Burners (two But despite, the .odds, Arriba "'ers and men. who have .been feel privileged to keep it. If I I . fIt ' t g ) d "o·ut on the tow'n the night before, get out into the aisle to let ers-..:that's a typical name for a . once power u S ree angs, an Juntos has made its impression on the nel'ghborhood.· It has also ' 1 th a t boys with problems ranging . wh'en I have truly made the 'eof- others in, I do not see 'how they s t ree t gang. J ump . coo f.r9m ,alcoholism to broken famfort to be 'at Mass on tillie, I can complain, and 1 believe an ,means quitting a street' gang, ilies. ' widened the range of contacts I (Forward To- . /have seen teenagers gather o~t- eminent writer on 'etiquette "Arriba Juntos" Concrete Way within the parish and has given side church to talk until one would approve, (May I say that gether) _ that'~ the, name of a The approach of Arriba Jun- the already overburdened parisb -l'nute' before Mass begins. I I rarely exercise this privilege p'arish-centeredI program in the 1os; Father Foley stresses, is that priests additional resources' fow . _. think an article is in order about because two of us getting out, I . . . the' Id W' I'11'lams b urg h sec t'IOn 0f Brook - ' the entIre neighborhood must thel'r parl'shl'On~~'L ' -ese' offenders. Mrs. D. B." Into ',alS1e a ta · tIme wou . .~ ....liI' . '. I ' become involved in a vigorous "Both you arid your corre- look pretty silly.) I do' hope lyn whic~. has helped many a' program of social action if the "It is only 'through a 'fap. 8J)Ondents might well emulate that I haven't also filled an ad-, teenager to jump cool. residents are to· be helped' ill a reaching approach,;' says FatheJ' the 'she' you, so uncharitably ditionallPborltion .of the pevy- with . TheprograJ, geared' to ap- concrete way. Foley, ;'that we" can make sue;, flout and mind your own busi- persona e ongmgs. , 'proach every Jrea of life ill a' ,"It ~akes no sense," he statelj. cessful - inroads in ,the area. IfteSS and 'pay attention to the. "What does disturb me is the " I • "to help· a b,oy stop drinking for, Ther'e is, of course, a great nu~ Mass. Furthermore, some people person, and the usher who aid$ tough neighborhood, is the out'-: three weeks, and then have bIm ber of: decent people with 'no like to be alone, and abets (one) who comes late growth of ide~sand efforts ,of. wind' up using narcotics, We can problems living in the area, but "You are riglit, though, Mrs. to Mass and crowds into al- Father Matthew F. Foley, assist- help a boy jump cool, but that it is our job to make these p~ Daly. Every woman is another's ready filled, pewand~qo has' ant director in Ithe fa,mily divi- does little 'good if we cannot pl~ take an active part in help'she,' some are their own. M;M.e. no intention of receIving:, Holy give him something to fill the ing their friends and neighbors P.S. No, I don't own aR urn.- Communion. Frequently,. this sion of the B~ooldyn diocese's· vacuum left in his life." to attack' the problems th~t brell'<l!'~ same person will not step into Cath!)lic Charit~es. That something may be in the .. plague .the area lright down th:o ~'Miss E.E.R. seems t-o be the the .aisle to let others out to Father Fo~eYls program rad~ form of the program's social ac- line." '. . .. «Inly perSon of those whose let':' receive" Holy Communion, Un- ates from Epiphany parish, 10- tivities, athletics, organized Grallt ters were printed who has any christian, and u n c hal'" ita b 1 e cated' iii a lkrgely Spanish- study days, remedial reading The program :has been ham." <nTmpathy, or compassion,· for though it may .be, I don't move . ,I ' , sessions or a credit union for -J . gr' 1 . t .; speaking' neighborhood, where . .... ~Her" -I. should .. like to shake very aclOUS y In 0 secon.. he is in residen~e. " young men and women begin.. pered because of :l lack of finan,;; cial support and of full-time 'your hand, Miss E.E.R., and that ,place. '. Mr. O. C. S." . I' ning their \yorking' careers. . ' workers. But a :recent govern,;. Gf your sister and say, 'God low Well, I guess this is it as f8l' Results 'Volunteers' n ment grant of '$51,834 from the ""ou and reward you for your as "She" is concerned.' "She" Arrib J' t I 'b ''It • '. J '1 ' . . a un ~s, . UI . s.ow.y The p'rogram's volun'teers; National . ,Institute of Mental Christ-like charity to one of WI 1 straddle white lines m over a two-year period around most of whom come from ou't~ Health has enabled Arriba JUD"/' His lonely, frightened children-'parking places, usurp undue a core of volunteers, lias brought side the Williamsburgh neigh':: tos to hire a·full-time secretar~' Mrs. J. J. R." space in the bank, and the super the following' results: . "AS'I'n any sl'tuatl'on, the- market" take all the good maga-' , . I borhood, point out that it is not a group workel~,' caseworkel'; .... . . th Establishment of six boys' easy· for a 'youngster to become community organizer and reme'ere two sides. For those 'of us zmes In e beauty parlor, let clubs with a' total membership a decent 'human being in an'area dial reading supervisor. Also on' I . ' the staff now is a part-time sec:" who go to church 'a'lo'ne, and . bus. passengers stand while' she of 125 w her e delinquency is wide": and her belongings' take. up' .. ' , early, I fal'l to see why it" is' s ' Virtual elimination of a once- spread, narcotics usC!ge and retary of voluntE.-er services to: ISO reprehensible to step out and . pace. f' red st t g I g.' erime rates are high, and sexuai coordinate the activities of the let someone pass into the pew. But when "She" (though her ea ,ree. af promiscuity and alcoholism many 'voluilteersl~onnectedwitk: Perhaps it ·has never happened age was. neve~ mentioried) end- -, ~r~amzahon 10f .apx;ograrn. of everyday problems. the program. ' .; that you are ·in the aisle seat, . seats herself In church, she be.. ' indIVIdual counfehng.: . . and about 10 minutes after·Mass comes autonialically a' ,"poor' Establishnient 'of Ii far-reachhas started, tw<{ ~r three people little old lady.7., . . irig at~leticproFain." push in, shoving ,you to the end ,W~ are truly grateful fIla.t Father. FoleYI has had great· of the pew: ' chanty extends to "Her" no success in drawing' hardened "Now, I have no objection to _ matter what. her age,' when teenagerS to vat-ious parish-ceothat position,' BUT what I dG "She" is in church. .' tered activitieS 1 that fall under' Clbject to, ii;· that these same the'Arriba 'Juntos .program. For deadly enemies of your 'Her' S - W' , . - ,'example; the Ip~rish .. softball will let you crawl over them. to . team' inCluded a boy' who had go to CommuniQri, ~lnd', wOuld. J, • . . . . ' spent seven nit>n'ths ,in a city (, never:~ th~n~;~,?t;,i~Qying :~':. prison, a former leader' of the .. _ ;you wouldn t-)\ave' to, crawl over· .' '~',' Helibu,rners .and'. a form,e.r ,p.resall of them agai'n: when you re-, .S~ITIe.rset... Catholic Women's,' ' turn:' Sureiy t~is 'ty'pe; of' seJt~ .. ~~U~t 'IilI'~1~ ~ QO~~, unit tOF~lJ ' . .. . " , ' , hogger'is much"woi'$"e 'tllaiW'tl1e~.: ,'Rlyer Dlst~~ct;D,lOcesan Council: ~ New Jersey Graduaf~s Gther ·because 'he 'doem't 'even,> .-of ;€a~hohc; Women, at .7:,45 . ' - . . . . ' , .', ~ave the riispecf for the Bl~ssed"~' ':rhursda~ night; Nov. 29 in .014: C~oose ~e"910YS Llf~ . Sacrament which woq1a ~:-. r,rown ~all., . ' , '' . '.: . ;NEWA~~, . (NC).;..;..A :t~t8l of. Mown by this little cOur~esy'~:' . ,Miss, ·Helen C~ Gl;1ace, distrtct ,222 ..June gr!id~ates of Catp<5lie "!- would like to 'see as' mucH' ;p~e'sident, will conduct the)neeto.' "1igh sCl;1oo1~' ih:.· tl;1e, Jjorthern publicity given to this horribh~ 'ing; open to presidents and alter:. . ·Ni;lw ';fer-sey' :ar~a '~avebeiun "Her' or 'Them' as is,periodically' n~tes .of a~ ,~:r:oups a~~li~~ed: St~d!es·. ~?r, 'thel,lir~e~thoodand. given to the one. you: wrote. Wltl;1, the dlstrl<:,t organIzatIon.,., th~,' !ehgl~us'~if~f.<l, survey~ere about. .. Mrs. O.B.C,'" Als~ to sp~ak:'.are. R~v. Ra~mo,n4" ,shOw~d; , . I" ",' "Who are you to criticize McCarthy, dis!rlct moderator,: ·~he:total itf4:4'~~~ cent of the SOme poor old lady, who sits on. and Rev. Patr.ic~ J; ?' Nei l.4.; '~adurates~ii 'th:~' Newark, ar~h. the end of a .church pew. ' with an moderator of the host um~. . '. ,'diocese ,and' ."Pat'erson 'diOcese. ... ." " " I .. umbrella, purse .an<;l packages?;, Refreshments will be : iiI The :survey showed that more ,,' I've done this myself :when 'I . charge of the executive 'boardc,}boys'than glrlS-113 to 109was tired, Too .bad you hadt,,' . of the,:clu~~;:headed"'by Ml-s';;::' went'to" sel1linarles'aI:!d>convents.. .. ~lf step ove~. I usually get··,out of Cha~l~s.tH~gue;' . One~fourth of-'the' 24-member ;" the beQ<;h. . .. . ...i.._~.:,";" . .1 j;,i simior class at!Mount· St>a'ohn .. " "You'don~t sound so hot yourH ' III 0 {,Academy Gladstone entered the ,,:"; .. '-', .self. You souReJ ljke,_a.::..:.sloIlPY'c' ... ~ .... ~CI,CI,l'lt " . 0 . """1,;'~onvent 'to m~ke 'that school ,\', ' .. ' " " ~ousekeeper an,d careless moth~~ .. , ,Hyacinth Circle New Bedford ". ,tops' in percen~ges. 'i,' .. '~... J~.---" l ' er. I remembet:you 'wrotF,ab6u't;: "Daugliters of I~ab'eiia, wili 'hold"" [ .. ,.", ",'"-',~:-,,.-.' '.,:~,: ~' ..; _ _ I_~". ~~.' ~;~ ironing a dress .fO!, ~our~daugh- ,:,'.: its' annual baziiar Tuesday. after.. J;. • F' ,'·,'R·· :W' .; .... - ~.. .. -. - , tel" on' Sundaym~rm,ng and the~ .J1.~on an?,,~ven~n~... ;N(l\" ,2~_C!!its~ .. , a ....... v~r ~ .~m~~ ~. 'J~.:, f · , ' " :,' .'v"J':., ;..i ' . . . . '.;) sleeve landed In' the bacon .. ~clubhouse 11 Robeson' Street." Fall River Catholic Woman's.. : 0. :.'/1' ;.U· It.U. -- ~ ·J~l" ,,: '. '-,' -...... : ", grease. Also, one of your chilFor 'F)ec~mber'a" Christmas " Club will hold lits annual Bish.· J1.~, l~ 7' rw/fLj lK dren had two" different socks ,'party at St, Mary's Home .is· op's.Night Tuesday, Dec. 11 with . ,'J , • .". " ." " '. on. H~w co~e} ':q~n't you pair scheduled for- Wednesday, the!' 'Bi~,ho~;;€onri'ol~y as guest of· ::-- ','. 1 ~'I p'" ' u"IC' them In theIr -drawer? 19th; a business session Tuesday, 'honot':and: tiui Providence Col. ;:"" ,-~' ,ft.",.. -, . . . ' ," . "Also, gathertng· clothes for the 4th;' and' a sOcial at' Holy iege 61~·mub ~s featured pro."" . .. .. ,~ the Bishops' clothing drive, you Name Hall Tuesday. the 11th., gram a t t r a c t i o n l · · . · jo' .. ;. ; " .. , ~ 'U ' J'

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,'lHEANCHOR-Diocese of..fall River-Thurs. Nov. 22; '1962

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Desired Personal Ideals By Father John L. Thomas. S.J. A~st.

Sociology

Il'l!'of.~t.

Louis University

"How can parents instill a balanced sense of shame

or decency in their children? Both my husband and I are disturbed by the way some of the teenage girls in our neighborhood dress, sit around, loll on the grass (even when boys are around), and forth. We don't want our faculties of intellect and will ';irls to be prudes or geared to even fuller participae tion in the true and the good 'squares,' but aren't there that we build up before ourBorne basic feminine decencies' selves valued images transthat girls almost instinctively cending our present selves, and OUght to sense it is in the name of these images illS fitting, just !~.,.~'t..."'~;:' that shame warns, protects, and

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mere common that we ourselves are social sense s h 0 u I d that we ourselves are social phewarn them to ,nomena,Notonly arewe affected av0 id after ,by the values, standards, codes puberty? May'and customs of our group" but be we're wrong because we want to mean somein t h ink I n g tHing to :others and consequently there's such a desire their esteem, we try to thing as a fembuild up and maintain acceptfnine sense of shame. At any able images of ourselves for rate, we want our girls to· ac- them. quire the qualities people used Hence the social affects our to associate with the idea." sense of shame chiefly to the I think I know what you extent that we attach importance mean, UrSUla, though I would to what others think of us. define the terms somewhat dif- : The . sense of shame in its ferently. Yo\! and your husband functions of warning, protecting, have reason to be disturbed by and :conceallng, has been Closely' the conduct you mention. It is associated with sex, particularl'y erudciy' and 'transparently sug~ in the Welltern Worlp, for the gestiv'e and' ·unfortunately nOt fo.llowing reasons. eonfined. to· teen-agel's, for we i. Experience shows that sexual find it frequen~ly displayed.Wl desire is not easily subjected/to .. , PAP!-'IST DIS~USS.ION: Father ~orman O'C'onnor, C.S.P., left, joins ~llegc campuses. the or~er of 'right reason. In' the an~~llerJazz,e~ert. from, ,the clergy, Pastor Gensel, center, . of New York's Advent . BesideS" the I examples .you grow;th of. human· love, the- geni;;. Lutheran Chu~ch, and Nat. Hentoff,a leading jazz journalist, in the discusSion of a Iliention, hnight add the curi'en~ tal, aspects of sex tend to play popular aberration called··the a predominant role' un1less care- P9Pul~r. recordl,n~. Fath~f O'Connor, director of radio-TYfor' the Paulist Fathers, will ap.-' "twist .. ·' 'the' basic formS"Of .fully, controlled.' The nobility' of J)e~f With. the. tw:o men, on ,a weekly New York radio program exploring the secular and ' , ' , .: which' are 'patterned. on the:Syri\~ sex asa life;:'giving power re-- n~A-secular as~ts of jazz. ,NC 'Photo. bolic ferUllty-rite dances of ttK, "quires that· it be treated' with primitives. '. special reverence and privacy. Defines Terms- . . ·S&.ress Positive Aspects Because discussions relating . ,If you're still following' me (NC}-A hardworknine pastors in this new diocese leprosarium he started a couple eo shame~ decency and modemy after this somewhat heavy de- ing,INCHON . bicycle.,riding 69c.:year-old· were born. of miles out of town. either telld to take the mea~ velopment, UrsUla, we can now Maryknoll missioner from De"With Father Petipren around "In addition to his mission he Of these terms for granted or to draw some' conClusions useful -voit is an inspiration to younger 'we hesitate before complaining has. two· chapel outstations and be based on questionable .as- 'fOl' education.. missioners· here' in Korea. ~out being tired;'" Father Micares. for 3,000 .parishioners. He ....mptions concerning the origin First 'and foremost.. since A ,ve,teran: .of. 37 ·years fA- ·the chael R'. Bransfield, M.M.,. saieh is currently building. a small end nature' of the quaUties de- shame' stems from' the con- missions of KOO'ea, Father Roy '!He' works a& hard as any' mis- convent and an old :folks. home ttignated. by such terms as "sense sciousness of failure to achieve- D. 'Petipren; M.M:, limded'bere- sioner. here and cali often be ~but not for himse-l:f. be addS of, sham~'" "Sense of modesty..-:- ·a ;desrred obligatory fde81, .there before the bish6p and sht' 'of ..ttie ,seen' riding a bicycle olLt to the . <tUickly." ., will be helpful to start with . caD be nO" shame where there adefinitiQII. of tertn5. " a r e ,no ideals·-.a "shame1es8'-Briefly, ~ a sense of sha:IzIe I :P~ js .~ :who 'aekDowledges. aaean ,the abWty or power .., . ~. values. ,or .ideals. .won1) etq)erience" the painful·emotioa achieving. . BOnnall,. 'UlIOclated with a COD-, ; ,Il .YOu wish .your childr.eJito Beiousness, (1f guilt,deficlency.. ~op a useful sense of .shame or impropriety. Thus .Bbame jaiA .' the areas mentioned, ')'IOU J81atecl IlO a wide range of must . e mphasize-the positive as.. human phenomena. : :~ ,of sex,' for only if .tbe1r. We ma;y be ashamed ,of. oar- un~stand and esteem as per.,· telves.. of vIoJating the code. 01' ~ .ideals. the achievement of eustoms· oif our group,. or of ¢be positive. values inhflrent .m others and their actions. A!- ·thelr 8e'Xual po.wers. wiD: their Ulo~h we usually assOciate sense of ·sham.eser.ve 10 .proteet.. ib8mewitlh moral failures ancl w8nIl .and eoneeal• .ex, it is much mor~ e:JdeDsive.. Good 'FiunUT Example ... that we must carefuU,. cns.:. There can be nO' sense· of ~uish 'the feeling or experishame when there is: no' sense ,61 . • .1' eoce of .shame from'.its ~ reVerence. This goes..far, to ISUlat is, komthe thiItg;a- that.are p!ain the patetitedueational fail. eonsidered '~efu1;" ~. of "the"b::adittOnal ,~ti-'ge . . 01 8h.1ftaimeJi '01 '8eX ' What. tbelundamenW'1:talU I , Aieries. of ~ ~ .. soU~e o(~! It is t.od i' :Pf o,ll,i bit i ol1.a..~~don'ts,­ til om ~Cude "either· to fulfill 'I ,~ng !':011U.l'jI.. attentioil on, a our nature ~ using our~"Cl"eauve .. ~bUe;. powes:fUi: .dr,ive W'b:iea .powers to: "iUrpa. 'our ~pJ'eBeDt .the7 elUi~",hpi~e.'; \VitA_ves, or,·tod~d,'as.it ~.whiclt they~ust,p¢rsoluillJ' :below ovi ~tna seJ.ftS'bJ' usln# .~to terms; ~~IIO' basis our'powenHol' purposes ac.~ . ~ ·~itbei' shame' ',01' ',reverence. anee ,with.the ends ~,}a Finally, siDce,sha;De'is:aollOcial' by: mature. I .,phenomenon,. do Dot:. ign'Ore Ute

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Bicyc'le~R:iding Ma:ry'knoller Inspires Young Missioners

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eapable :et .lI6f _ eOnsdnIISDelIS and se1t-deterininatioD.· we.caR ....Udup Ideal images iii. .lJlIr Ie1vcs aDd work to rea11ae ,·or ,6ilfiU .tbeae images, Yet' ,a& finite erea±ures;. 008RiOtls of. our limitatJou an4. ·etdende.s.4Dmisuse. oW' ~ ~ ;are '-.be capable of HeOgD1zing the ~ that. '1D8I' edBt ''-etwee. . . ' ldeala. &lid O1fIWJ aetual~emeats. This itt lh, ..iu,m dt ow .seNIle of -.ne. II!' otile WOIlds we are.~ ., -exPert~ IbaDe ~ ....

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-New .Senator

OpPoses

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Argenth~g

Meets Prie5t $fi'B@rtage

THE ANCHORThurs., Nov. 22, 1962

ROME (NC) - Use of trained lay p e 0 pIe has rejuvenated Christian life in many priestless areas of Argentina. Bishop Jorge Kemerer, S.V.D.. of Posadas, told a press conference here the program has helped "renew his diocese." In many parts there is only one priest for. every -6,000 to 7,000 people. In some places ,there is only one· priest for every 10,000. The service is conducted by a trained lay delegate ,of the. bishop. It consists of a prepartory rite, spiritual readings, a prayer ritual, final admonition, a blessing and dismissal. A commentary on the scriptures, written by the bishop, is' also read.

C@MIJ'Il<!:~1 WeB~hs MarricnnD~gma VATICAN CITY (NC) - Ecumenical Council discussions on Marian doctrine are likely to center on something less than any significant new dogmatic pronouncements. That is the opinion expressed by some Catholic experts here. Rev. Yves CongaI', O.P., of ,France, and Rev. Hans Kueng of Germany, regard the mediation of Mary not mature enough in the conscience of the Church to favor further definitions of Marian dogma. They say that a broader commitment to Marian theology at this time might b.e a further obstacle to Christian unity. Collaboration between Catholic and Protestant scholars has enriched the world's understanding of the New Testament picture of Mary. But sharp interpretive divisions still exist. It is hoped here that the area ,of agreement can be expanded before further elaboration of Marian doctrine is considered.

:ReligiousFreedom 'In Korea' Charter " SEOUL (NC)-Korea's revised

:':~~:~~;::~~,:;rr:oo~e ~~~:r:;~~~et:' '17, contains articles on freedom

,Curia

R~©lJ'@lt!lnizato(l)n

Obstad~$ ~lByiew~d VATICAN CITY (NC)-There " are many obstacles to the proposed internationa1ization of the Roman Curia - ' the Vatican administrative .staff. Chief of these 'is tne fact that it is not within the province OIf, the Ecumenical Council to reorganize the agency, knowledgeA: MERICAN HIE'RARCHY' IN LO' RET"O.l. Bi,shop Jam,es L. Con.nolly' of Fal,l R,i,ver. and. able officials here point out. Bishop Edward Fitzgerald of Winona, Minh. chat outside Church in Loreto which they' Other,' barriers inclUde the visited du~ing a recent,Council pau~e. language problem, housing, and

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Sources of' Revelation Unde.. Di'scussion Si~~e ' I ,.

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I::i:;ts is being made internationlilize the, Curia OIl 'of religion and of conscienc'e " th~ level of its. consultors. for all c i t i z e n s . " .: :'Pis~ops·· .IVI o~, .,0.....··· Also 'being considere<t as aB , :The revised d<>Curltent., ~.as. ~', ," ., ' " , '.. alternative to internationaliza"pliblished by Korea's Supreme ".:' COl1tiIiuedfrom :EJage 'Qne 'proposed to .It Y the .prepara- . ,necessary to , tak~, stock, 'listeJ.l . ~tJon o.f· the Curia, .isestablish:' . ! '(::ouncii for ~a~iomil Reconstr~ciJni~e~'sitiesto,submit their;pro- ,tory ,commissions, and form~- 'carefully, meditate, and .. tl~l7n, m'ent of an interm~tional board ·tion-':'U~e."rulingp:~H.itarY junta. posals· 'lo~a:',C01,mcil ag~nda., lated new ones. I . add your own .opinions onim- o(bishops, to'givH ihe:Pope' a ThE; reVised con~ht~hon become!!' .Thousands 'of suggestions poured . Th offi~ial d~il . bulletin ~ P?rta~i·,q,~~stions,.and in~!te .ad~. more intimate apI,ralsal 'of tl."f h h lf f into the Vatican' from all parts the eCouncil,. . ' . y 'IS '. .... . ~.ff echve.1 more.t an a. 0 WhICh never J'ustments ; ... " ... ' m . ·such ,. ....a . way . . that, . thinking of Catha-lies .through.the . eligible voters 'vote, lind a ,of the:woi:ld; Even non-Catholic found wanting in the virtues fmally toward the. e~d, teaching out the world. . majority of th()se voting favo!, communities submttted .topics of prudence andl brevity, com- an~ enc~ura~eme~t and f' eX~I: the constitutio~, that they desired toseedis~, mented 'at ,sorrie 'l~ngth, and with tatlC;)D of C~nst ~ •. corp.es. orth. Mission Dioceses Article 16 of the constitution cussed by the Council. Ifather!!. surprising, frankness, on the The "good start". that Pope states:, "AILciti.zEms shalLenjoy All,these proposals were then reaction of. some of the·bishops, John spoke .of is probably the· Increase Fiv.efold freedom of religion.,No~st;lte re- carefully. sifted, tabulated, and to the schema on the Sources of" ringing vote of approval. that the· . 'ROME' (NC) __ ' There a~: ligionshall be recognized, and ·gathered into a miniature U- Revelation. draft, on the liturgy received over' five times as many arch.-: religion and politics shall. be b~ary, by the Ante-Preparatory. "The Fathers who proposed f~om the bishops that very m<.>r.-. dioceses and dioceses in missiOll separated." ....' Commission. This first st,age ,of substituting the project under D1~g., 2,162,.of the Council , territories as there were 21 years, the w.orl,t expertly·'bl pal1dled,. . t' . " sa id 'the b u 11 e t'In,, Fathers present voted yes to the ago, a study released 'by the ml·.a- , . d'.m.'.e. th was b' . "b examlna ,,' '1 ou tl'me 0 f th e, sc. h ,ema, . an r.lef'es t PO.S~l, e t'Ime., d tholOn, .' b' I t' .• th" genera .. "'id ;P'riesto" Clifftop , Now began the second stage of ,?se , ell' 0 J~~ Ions on . ~se with only 46 voting no. The 1..1- sl.on news agenc~'''.r' es, re-: . pomts: the excessive professorll~I' ' . .'" ;. . vealed. the countdown' to Vatican II. and scholastic character of the tur.gr- C;ommlsslOn, IS, presently. Fides said' that betWeen June 'Absolves Seamen Ten Preparatory .Commissions, ' . . . ' . I ' .. wntmg-m the amendments proLAND'S END (NC)-Ayoung composed of bishops 'from every pr?J.~c~, '~~~hlac~ of. ap~s~~~:l posed to this draft, and will soon 30;' 1941, and the o.pening of the priest, standing on a clifftop on. part Of ·the·'·worId, began to an- spIn m 1, e excessIVe ngI 1, y return it to -the' Counc'l 'for final ,Second ,Vatican Council the . ' r , I . . , :number of archdioceses and dio- . jliis southwestern tip of "Eng. alyze :,and.evaluate· the mass of of certain of its' affirmations; ceses dependent on the Sacred : .land, gave' absolution to 18 sea- propOSals b-ef'or'Edt. It was clear the lack of matlite development approva. Re.velatloD ,Congregation for. the propaga-, , me'n trapped' in a ..wrecked ''from'' the starf 'that· not" every . of theological 'stddies on certain French trawler below. . '. suggestion 'offered could be of its points; the danger' of -The Pope's' admonition not to tionof the Faith' ·had grow:a: . Six men' were saved aft~t. be- treated by the' COillicil.Tiin~ making the' trutl{inccllrtprehen- "think that all is completed withlrom 21 and 75 rE!spectively 10 . "ing trapped fol' seven hours,but, alone 'would prevent this. There- 'sible to the sepatated brothers, four words,!' could conceivably 107 and 418. fore' the' Preparatory'. Commis- the' oversight of the' problem Of be. a reference· to the slow pace :'. During this saml~' period, the· ~2 lost their liv,eg. .' Father Seamus Flynn, ordain- sions picked out only the most salvation prior to] revelation .and that the, current topic,- on the' number of vicariates: and pre-. fect~r~ apostolic has been more , ed only five months ago and important questions, a'nd these still now for th~ non-baptized; Soureeof Revelation, is taking. little encouragement given W·· i . . than halved. It said that the serving as a'ssistant priest at 'accordin.g t.o a fixed, scale of the to scientific res~arch in the:" hat . s this Revelation that . total number of' ecclesiastical Imma'culate Conception church values. . ology and exegesis of the scrip- is being so 'profoundly dis- jurisdictions in mission area•. ,in nearby :Penzance, rushed to . Exact Wording tures." cussed? It i~ simply that free in- has increased from 523 to 749. ..the scene as'shore rescuers tried rinally, the drafts of the ten vitation on the part of a Father to reach th~trapped men. Stand. Preparatory Commissions were Good Start in heaven to accept His word ing on a gale-swept cliff above handed over to the over-riding Many bishop~ of course, when He speaks of Himself and '·the ra~ng Atlantic, he gave gen- Central Commission, which, next favored acceptingl: the schema in His loving design 101' mankind. NO JOB TOO BlCi5 : eral absolution to the men to the Pope' himself, had 'the its present form, while other's God; Who of old spoke 'to us NONE TOO SMALL : trapped below. final say On what' would be proposed acceptiqg it, but with nature and prophets, has in 'the treated in the Council. 'This substantial amendments. ,fullness" of time spoken to us Central Commission, made u p ' ,,I through his only Son, who, took Pope John does :Catholic Birth Rate: entirely of cardinals, wrote' out notMeanwhile, seem too worried by this flesh in human nature as our the exact wording of the sche- new wave of actiVity down be- Brother, our Mediator,· and our ,Rises in Eng land PRINTEIItS , LONDON (NC) - The ratio mata, or drafts, that would be low in St. Peter'sl Informing his ~od. given to the' bi~hops, once the weekly audience I that he had Revelation is that glorious act , of Catholic births in this country Main Office and Plant Council opened, for .discussion just finished listening ~to the in which God stoops the lowest ! is now running at abou~ 16 per voting. . ' 0 f the. IF a th ers (as h e and man stretches the farthest LOWELL. MASS. cent of the national total and and Since these preparations for d"ISCUSSlons does each morning through a to the divine heights. shows an average annual rise l Telephone Lowell the Council were so detailed and special lou d s p e a k e r I'n hI'S of a fifth' of one per cent, a complete d ers w h y a study), the pontiff remarked It is to this Revelation that , one won GL 8-6333 and 7-7500 Catholic population _ study ex- number of bl' h t the Council has now addressed , sops now wan th,at "the Church liS wholly c o n - ' . pert has said. . to throw out the schema preitself. The 20th Century, rockAuxiliary Plants A.E.C.W. Spencer, director of sently un,der discussion (on the centrated on the Council. The eted intoforgetfullness by its the Newman Demographic Sur- Source of Revelation) and draw Council has gotten to a: good myriad material cares, must BOSTON . , 'realize with a new freshness that' veY,a group of Catholic experts up an entirely different' 'one. start! OCEANPORT, N. J. who study population statistics, The answer, seems to many ob-" Approva~ Vole God .has· entered history and PAWTUCKET,' R. I. added that t!le increase may servers to be this: the members "When you find yourself in a spok~ri to us. He still speaks , ,1~vel off in the next few ·years ,of the ,preparatory commissions g~eat, work," th~ Holy Fath,er "and the Council is Hill voice. ,because of the, World War II inc l·ud i n g the aU-importimtcautioned, "you must above all slump in births. CentraJ, Commission, reflected 'walk with a mea'sured pace":" As a result of that slump, he ,their own personal theological and don't think that all is comi said, there will, be fewer' mar- thinking - and' in ,this. case 'ap,leted 'Witli'fouri words.•. It,.is v~ry conservative one~-.into the . !riages ,for awhile. Savjf,gs 'Ba'ide Life Ir.surance . prOposals that"they accepted and ! R.ci' Estate Loans' , the 'drafts that they wrote. The I .Three result is a schema which is unH~. Christmas and Vaca'tion Clubs ,I .. MANCHESTER (NC)~A Sis_ ~f~~~;:~le to a la'rg~ ,nUmber of .. . SHEET METAL. ter of Mercy has ,been saluted. by . Savings Accounts • . Frankness .i. TESER,I Prop. the New Hampshire branch of • '5 Convenient Locations the National AssOciation of BiolAnyone who has. read the' RESIDENTIAL ogy Teachers as one of the three history of the Church's former INDUSTRIAL outstanding biology teachers in councils is not at all surprised: COMMERCIAL: NEW BEDFORD , the state. She is Sister Mary at such a development. The First 253 Cedar. St. rilew, Bedford Beatrice of St. Joseph Cathedral Vatican . Council, for instance, wy 3 3 2' High School for gkls. ' flisc~rded several 0,£ ·the d r a f t s ' • I 22 .

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Canadians Seek More Active Laity Ro~e

THE ANCHORThurs., Nov. 22, 1962

Act T@~);:q]')ed ofre COUmJ~O~ ~~~Inld@

VATICAN CITY (NC) Catholics in Canada are generally hopeful that the Second Ecumenical Council will give the laity a more active part in the life of the Church. Lay Catholics in Ottawa and several other areas of Canada ex_ pressed their opinions in replies to questionnaires, in stu d y groups, and in mass diocesan meetings of parish representatives. Some of the main suggestions were: Creation of an active parish liturgical committee. Greater use of the vernacular in certain parts of the liturgy. Diocesan architectural commissions, made up of experts, to advise on church building designs. Continuing dialogue between Catholics and non-Catholics. G l' eat e l' understanding of marriage problems by the clergy through training in psychology and sociology; and for the laity, more pre marriage courses and refresher courses after marriage.

Prelates Take Part, In Sainthood Vote';"

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VATICAN CITY (NC) -Ecumenical Council work will continue durings its five.:.month adjournment. National conferences of bishops will review proposals and submit joint recommendations to speed the Council's work. Ten Council commissions will work from Dec. 8 through May' 12, when sessions will resume at St. Peter's basilica. Archbishop Casimiro Morcillo Gonzalez of Zaragoza, Spain, said the special commissions will try to eliminate proposals which are' regarded by a majority as unacceptable for theological or juridical reasons or in conflict with Council norms. Those that are approved will be inserted in the Council agenda, and an amended text will go before the Council foi' final approval.

ITALIAN CHILDREN WELCOME BISHOP: The Most Rev. JamesL. Connolly, Bishop of Fall River" meets the first Communion Class at Viterbo. The Vitebro Cathe'dral rector is at the Bishop's left. d

: , VATICAN CITY (NC)-More ,than 2,000 prelates participated i'n the consistory voting approval of the canonization of' four new saints. ' The new saints are Blessed Peter Eymard of France; Blessed ,Antonio Maria Pucci, Blessed Francesco Maria Croese, and Blessed Vincimw Pallotti Of 'Italy~ , ,The 'first three will be cano"nized on Dec. 9. The Pallotine Father will be officially elevated to sainthood on Jan. 20: The consistory differed in several ways from' traditional Vatican practice. It was attended by the world's bishops who are here for the Ecumenical Council, and was held in St. Peter's basilica instead of the Vatican's C~msistorial Hall.

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Sees Op~o!!'hlnit;es For Cooperation

VATICAN CITY (NC) - A. Lutheran minister says the Ecumenical Council has opened up new opportunities, for inter-faitb cooperation. Rev. Max Lackman of Soest, Germany, is impressed with the freedom with which Council Fathers have expressed their ,opinions and the warm welcome given non-Catholic observers., No Sooner had-, the Liturgy He said the Protestants greatproject been sent on its way for ly regret the absence of Greek remodelling than the' subject of, 'Orthodox' Observers. He urged words and, language came up that continued efforts should be again, on the next program, the made to have them come. s~riQus theological project on the , . NevertheleSs', he continued, Source, of Revelatlon- Scrip- "Protestant' and Catholic Christl.,lre and'trad'ition. The prqject tians should sing a Te Deum was criticized by those among, daily that this Council tinder the Bishops who, considered it Pope John and these bishops shoul<i b~ ref,ramed. was made possible." . "It had" they said "too much of ' the, classroom approach., It was not written for the ,ordinary person but in arid terms, not in Hne with wording of, other: proWASHINGTON . (NC)-Legis_ grams of the great Councils of lation which will permit 16,000 the Cl,lurch. I~ 'should have. a pastoral approach, so as to speak . close relatives' of U. S. citizens and 7,000 other aliens who have to the whole ,world." " certain skills to enter this counIn reference to this, a Rome try has become law: authority on 'theology said that , President Kennedy signed thfl considering the- standpoint of the' measure which was passed in "separated brethren, "we are the closing hours of the 87th, closer to the Orthodox 'and ProCongress' second session. . testants than most 'people reaCatholic' Relief Services-Nalize; if we spoke a more understandable language there' might· tional Catholic Welfare Conferbe greater amity.'" , 'ence, and other Catholic and religious welfare agencies sup:'Division among the Bishops ported the legislation which will as to whether this theological allow entry without regard to projec,t should be discussed and immigrant quotas of up to 16,000 revised in the Council or rejected close relatives of U.S. citizens and placed in hands of a study to enter the country, provided group to be completely remade, they had applied for admission , depends on several most serious prior to March 31, 1954. considerations, but it was the words and language in which it was presented that drew the first s eve l' e disapprobation. Speech, words and communication, between man and man and man and God, pose problems that are some of the most serious the Bishops gathered in Council and endeavoring to bring mo_ dernity to an ancient Church, must; fl;lce.

Bishop Connolly Asks Liturgy Aid Laity ,

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Council Seeks Power for Bishops on Liturgy

Continued from Page One. . I minds if they were reworded. meant participation in whatever "Some of the prayers in the stimulates 'the 'voice and 'h~art Uturgy date' back, to the time"'of fot prayer. Gregory the Great' and the 12th He stressed' 'particiIl~rlY , the and 13th centuries" the Bishop , ' , . ' 'exp,lained. " , need for musk and for hymns' at church ser"ices, remarking' This matter of, appropriate how early in Chu,rchhistciry, St.' language ha~ been a serious isAmbrose, armed' his followers, sue in Council debates, a~d s~b­ to fighf the Arian heresy with' ject of most lively and heated hymns' in their own language, - ,discussi.ons outside the Council. hymns' that were 'even sung on Regardmg the use of local the docks in the 4th century. language in church ceremonies . "The whole pattern of litiJrgy the last word at the mo~ent, ap_ as it is recorded from early p~ars to have been saI.d by t~e times is in, local language" he Presi~ent of the CouncIl, <?ardI'said. Then, he told of how moved nal .Tlsserant,. when the LItur~ he had been at other masses in proJect receIved ".the . Cqunc~l Hunga~y St. Peter's with ceremonies that ,vote ~ a~proval m prmclpa~ • 'went back to the beginnings cif ~andmg It, over .to ~he C01l1 m1 t" t e e who WIll reVIse It to Incl~de ; . BERLIN (NC) .:.- The first Chris'tianity. , ' , ','. suggested amendments for fmal liturgical manual to be adopted ,~ated on the, left" only, two approval, the Cardinal told the for use in' all the dioceses of sectIons ~rom, the ~ltar pla~ed ,committee they should follow Hungary .will go into e£fect'-Sun.. on the. 1'lght,and 111 the tlilrd the general direction of the oriday, Dec. 2jaccording to reports row, BIShop .Connolly has .had .a ginal proje~t,' but, eSl?eciany reaching here. "i wonderful.v!ew of ,these' historI~ concerning ,'the vernacular, a , The Hungarian Bishops, in 'a cal solemmtIes.. ' ~rtain - 'a m 0 u n t of latittide joint letter to the clergy,ex- " The Maronite Mass WllS cele- ,should be left to the lQcal Episc,opressed thanks for the Holy brated . by the, Bishop of Tiro, pal Conferences. In other words, See's permission to use the Hun- Lebanon, in' a' ritethlit origi- if will be for bishops to decide garian language to a great ex,:, nated in the missionary' centre when and to what extent local tent in the liturgy. The letter of Paul and Barnabas, where languages will be used. also cautioned the clergy to ad- followers of Christ' were called here strictly to the approved "Christians" for the first time. Us~ of language or rather of ,texts. The Bishop explained that this C«?nclse speech was b~ought forEach diocese in Hungary had Mass was said in Syriac, a lanclbly .to the attentIon of the its own ritual up to the beginguage that is an evolution of CounCIl Fathers last week, when ning of the 19th century when the Aramaic spoken by Christ, the .~oIY F'at~er gave to the I most dioceses accepted the ritual His mother and the Apostles. p~esldmg.Presidentof the Couni of the Archdiocese of Esztergo~. . cil the rIght to put an end to , ,A Greek-Melchlte Mass was discussions on any chapter of celebrated by the Archbishop of the program. When, in the minds Beirut. The Mass according to of those presiding the subject the Bragan rite, by the Bishop has been sufficiently explained Auxiliary of Brago,' Portugal and illustrated, they can ask the RIO DE JANEIRO (NC) ..,.. It differed only slightly from the assembled bishops to signify by ; Because of his extraordinary de- .Roman rite, but began with the a standing vote whether the.dis''termination and 'courage, in th,e "Hail Mary" and an invocation cussions should continue. : face of adversity, Father Ansel- to the Holy Spirit. With 'this assistance the Thomas F. Monaghan Jr. ; mo Fracasse, O,F.M., was or• •• The solem.n Ambrosian rite liturgy project. discussion' came ~ dained here despite his blind- Mass, at WhICh the Pope pre- to an end and went to the comBEFORE YOU Treasurer ness. sided and which was celebrated mittee for final rev-ision. The BUY - TRY Father Fracasse, 32, lost the by Cardinal Montini, Archbish- debate had gone on from Octosight of one eye a,t the age of 21 op . of Milan, was according to bel' 22nd to November 13th. : I 142 SECOND STREET while he was studying at the a bt~rgy ':lsed in ~ergam.o, the 'I1here had been 625 pages - ~n, i I Sao Paulo seminary. He later Pope s native provmc~ and was ~atin _ submitted by bishops on I, OSborne 5-7856 lost the sight of the other eye, b~sed on the ~ass as. It was 01'1- the' project, 3?9 ~ad been deOLDSMOBILE which normally would have pre_ gmally in ,the very first days of livered orally in St. Peter's (on, FALL RIVER vented his becoming a priest. the Rome Church. Oldsmobile.Peugot.Renault ,some days there were 28' "Pope John, however, granted 87 Middle Street, Fairhaven After telling· of' the beauty of spe"akers between' 9 A. M. and him special dispensation for or'" . these ceremonies,that open eac,h 12:30 P.'M.) The summary of the' '!.l~"~·~·~·~·~·~"'~2~·~_~,+~·~·~·~~~~·~·1 dination. " " Council,. Bishop Connolly ~o.ke prOJect takes 33 pages of text " . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.... I He is the second blind, Brazi- of the Importance ?f the, dla- With 8 Iriain chapters an,d 3,0,5 l lian to be ordained. The fIrst logue Mass in WhICh "people 'articleS. ' ' I became a priest in 1958. , take part and do not just sit or ' stand silent." He told Of this ser- ~'"'~~'"'w~'"'w~~'"'~ ,, vice as' it 'Is now celebrated in the churChes of the Diocese. at , SANTO DOMINGO' (NC) "We are following Pius XII's Convalescent Home, Inc. , The ruling Council of ~tate of ideas and are working on them, 109 'GREEN STREET FAIRHAVEN , the Dominioan Republic has de- though we are not pel'lfci:t as , WY 4-7643 ' creed that this Caribbean nation yet," he said. announces additional accommodations for men and women Talking of various changes I will observe Thanksgiving Day 24 Hour Care,' Special Diets ; on Nov. 22 to give thanks that that may come gradually after Open for inspection alway. , "the great majority of the Do- the Council he mentioned that ~ NEW BEDFORD, MASS. Prop. Lena M. Pilling 1115 WILLIAM ST. ; minicans have remained faithful there were prayers in use that and· Joan Larrivee I to thei,r Catholic ~aitb..· would be dearer • modem

Law Permits Entry Of 23,000 Aliens

Gets First Nationwide Ritual" '

•Franciscan Ordained. Despite' Blindness

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MONAGHAN ACCEPTANCE CORP.

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THE.ANCI:lQR'C"~i,oc~~e ~f FC:t'IRive,.~Thurs., ~o'v.22, 1962

;Glor;~u$

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SyMost Rev. 'Robert

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God ·:Love·, Yo·u

·P~lestrina 'Music

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

E@1g~O®~.~@n«:il~a r father~ :~

; In .' Gratitude· for:

When Pharaoh refuse~ to obey the, Divine ComJO~ncll to let the Hebrews go out from Egypt, the land' oA: slaver)', God sent. plague after plague upon the country. Pharaoh made promises, but always broke' them. !Finally, God sent the plague of d:"u:k ness Pharaoh relented and said to Moses: "Go and sacrifice' to the lLord and, take yonr children with you; only leave YOUII'. flocks and herds behind."

.I.' Dwyer; D. D.

Bishop of lIteno

. Through the mighty vaults of' St. Peter's the ~oic~s swell and soar, rising in· mag.nificent crescen~o, fallmg m Notice the compromise which Pharaoh demanded, The flocks plaintive supplication, and fadmg at last as a sl~h br~athed and herds of this pastoral people constituted a prinCipal part forth. In what is surely one of the most amazmg dIsplays of what they owned; these were their of training and virtuosity the Cappella Giulia, the private earthly possessions. The issue raised by attainable today, the Sistine chapel of Pope Julius III, and' Pharaoh's demand was, therefore, whether Choir has sung for Mass at some time later was promoted or not God has title to aU' that we have. h G I to the post of a singer in the t .n'early all 0 f e enera Sistine Chapel,. which meant Moses refused to accept the com'Sessions of the Council, never that he had arrived at the high. promise on the grounds that ali of us are repeating a motet. These are est point a layman could occupy nothing but stewards of any wealth that . Low Masses, in the pontifical musical world. we have. !Furthermore, all of our ,posse!!'votives of the' ,With single-minded devotion sions are to be made available for Sl!.criHoly Spirit, of- . 'he 'concentrated on.his task of fice. Moses .said tolPharaoh: "N:}y, thou fered by prelcteating for the renaissance must let us take victims with us; if we 'ales from every .p~pacy a body of polyphonic are to offer. the lLord owr God burnt-. cor'ner ·ot the ~com'positions 'suitable "for all . -, .Sacrifice," ~ world, and anoccasions from the most hum.,. swered, .in diaLOAN'. Rev. Gene drum, d al!ly usages' t oth e .mo'st . .n.N 'l)I '.Recently. there came to ·our atten,tion a . 'lQg 'form by the' splendid of the Vatican fUDc- Wesley Marshall, a Method- letter' from father who has six children and teaches school. 'whole body of tl'ons, In' a sense, it may be said I f It acu Y His salary is ,~uch less than he once .earned working in a fact?ry, the F a t h e r s that he had it in mind to do the I'St minist'er and \ and yet recognizing the, stewardship of his wealtq, he gives present. Duririg whole corpus of the traditional member of the Ecumenical twenty-;even per ce·nt of it to the Lord. As he put it: "We may '.the intervals of Gregorian chant over again in Institute of the ~hurcl1.·Fed- do without many things which we think are necessities, but we quiet, the Ofthe. new style. .' eration of Greater ChIcago, enjoy it because many will hear of Our Lord in the Missions who fertory the Canon, and the ,'"'l'sml'ssed from' Service. '1 d th otherwise might not. Each moment we enjoy bountiful. and muh ' h' 'th the JlJ' e .Communion, the c ou:, WI , . There is no questioning the has temporan y Jome blessings of (Jur Lord and Savior. God blesses our steward,;, :benefit 'of the extraordinary lofty sincerity,' the solemnity, :staff of the Natipnal Cat~o­ tiplied ship." ... isound amplification of. which we the formal beauty of his work.lic Conference fOli InterracIal / !'have 'already spoken, "sings the It is of. a piece with the architec- Justice to help in prepara;compositions' of some of the. ture of'the early renaissance, tions 'for the N~tio~al.'Con. . In gratitude for any blessings "tha.t yoo have receilyed, may Isupreme masters, ancient and when the purl·ty of the classic . . R' 1· . d we ask you during this. Thanksgiving season to set· asid.e at least . t l ference on e IglOn an "'lno·dern; of. the con t r~pun a lines was freshly discovered and . a penny a day for the Missi'oiis with' the' prayer: ''I do this' ont of love for Thee, 0 Lord," Then at Christmas time, 'Hend your: ;·style.' . . the austerity of the Gothic not . R.ace. NC .P.hotO. ' . ' ..... I It;isquitepossiblEi tpat.befo~ yet. forgo too n.. sacrifice-offerings to the Holy Father' through his own Society: 'the Council is concI u ded. •th e , Yet he wrote in an age whell , for' thePr~pagation of ·theFa.ith. '. .,'. " : " ". '. : i'Fatilerswm have heard; ex.;. i~ the companion art the baroque " ; .~. ;P.~ j~.--'am'ple, the whole cYcle of Pal~s- 'w"as al'ready infull.bloom. Here' ... GOD LOVE y.ou to M~F; f~r $1: ·"t'prOmiS~ MBrytbat .-l·~0~!i One " . ftioina's motet s, ren d ered WI t"II is 'another' instance of the folly . .: . Continued 'from 'Page' I s~nd, an 'offering to the 'Missi~nB if sh({~o~uldli~~pm¢ 0!1 my.testa. :superbfinish and uiidersta~di?g~ of predicating the same .moods .,: The~e are 12 ,comm:itooes~ each .musthavebecause l .got-very·' go~i:f gra~" '.'.. t9. Mrs. S.D.. i: The .. ciirector: of ~e .. Slstm~ of the arts simultaneously. . of -which has been ~ssigned one 'Ior$5 "I had to have X';Rays'takeD: 'and' waS worried 'abo~t .the ;«: hoi r' . Monsignor BartolUCCI', Early in 1555 (the C~ncil af ()f the broad fields \that consti- results but my prayers were answered by good news." ••. to 1.F.. Ilimsetf "a composer of'diStincTrent was still in session) Pope ttite'the subjects of discussion on for$1GO I am, sending this Christmas gift early so.. that it 'lDay tion is one 6f the foremost conJulius III died, to be succeeded the Council agend~. a good start," '" to T.R. .for ·Jl "I ain 16 and wanted to help 1em~ora'ry authorities on the by Marcellus II, whose reign of .. The committees h~vebeen.as- get the MisSions, so I cleaned'my 'n~ighbor's living room and den. great 16th century genius whose 23 days is one of the briefest on signed these subjectS: Faith and Please use this as the Holy Father sees fit... Coame has' become synonymous record· Then ·came the redoubt- Morals, Govetnmertt of Dio;With. the' renaissance ()f Church able Caraffa Pope, Paul ry, arid ceses, Clergy and the, Faithful, Have 700 ever stopped' to thank God for 'the ·gift".»' Faith! mUSIC. , ' i n the first flush of his reforming Religious, the Saeratnents, SemWhai better time than in thIS ThaDksgiving season; what better : Now, ,mark you, there are 256 zeal poor Palestrina was dis- iIiaries, Oriental ChUrches, ~is­ way thaD b,. offeriDg the WORLDMISSION KOSAB.Y. EacJl 'motets published in the complete missed from service for no other sians, the Lay Apostolate, Com·deoade is a ~erent color~ representing theftve; 'oontinenls ~iti0n of ·Palestrina~s composi- reason th'an tliat he was .a' munications, Christian 'Un~ty. .where. missionaries ~e laboring &o"bring Christ to. the, ·pagans. #ons; we have heard, thus far: married man. . and the Liturgy.' The Lftuig,Send your request and aD. .offering·,of$z ~ The 'sOcietv ·fOl'. the, Some 19' or 20. The astute may 'For the next 16 Years hefol1n~ coimnittee was tll~ firstoiie Propagation of the .FaUIl•. S66Fifth· :Avenoe, . New. y~. 1,. New, ikaw a parallel of progress. . employment; if less ernolumen~; fOimed,' since thisvJ.as .the 'first and ,J'01l reeellre the:. .WOaLDMlSSION llOSAR-Y.. ,.York,. .. . wt1l . i ; Speaks Through Muic at St. John Lateran, and itwa's subjeettaken Up. foi-discUSsion blessed . ,~~op .~eeu.. . t Palestrina's full name, written only in 1571 that his reputation by, the Council. \ . ' ." :;--lirith the Launflourishes' GI. his Was recognized by his reappoint-,. lIay, was Joannes Petr,aloysiu$ ment to St. Peter's. There he €u.t.out this Column, p~ tour sacrifice to it and mail: It to ·the Molt Rev. FulteD 3. Sheen~ :Nanonill' Director oif !be St:.cietr fbt Praenestinus, and he was born spent the remainder ~ his life~ McGurn .... R.fceiye· ·the PropagatiODof ·theFaitt4366 Fifth. Avenue. New Yon: l~ tt'. yo ~ ,in 1529 in the little town hud~ dying on Feb. 2,'1,594; Jour.nalism .Award. ~led at the fOot .of the Sabine" BarmOD,J' Inspires Hope . . I. . . r»: iour DioceSan. DirectOr. ~. REV. RAYMOND :T, CONSIDDfB. 'lUlls, ·.which·tO the ancients was It is interesting to recall·that ··NEW YORK _-"The 368 North . MaiD Street, Fall. ~ver, .~• • GOWn' as Praenesteand itt· the Palestrina, while wholly absorb- 1962 Catholic InstUFe of :~ ~fter'Italian rcmdering' as ed in -the subtle intricacies of hu Press 'Award will .be presented ToURs to AND TO: GIVEI·· .Palestrina. pO!7Phony; waS Still aware~~ 'here on Fridsy.DeCJVto Bat:;' . . . .' DAUOIImII·O' It;lAUL.lMhd' ~. It a place of unique chann', the purpose of ChUlJ'ch music rett· McGurD. fOrd1er . - ' Wr# NUt. llIIowtR · ·Ioft. .. elominated by ··the· 16th ·century was not onl,. sound .but meaning. bureau. ehief of the \New York . . 1Jy M1 11_:'palace which is now a' museum not ooly counterpoint but prayer. ·Hearld Tribune. . -I'MII·fIIctw IV. l'lJ ...,.. ,for the relics of the mighty _ Even in OpposftiOD to his con'Father Hugh Morlei, O.F.M. _, '''WoM'''' - . . . . - INfo.. ~_. ;...... '14-21 ~ III ... llaiqw ~oman temple which once occu-, .temporaries he insisted that. the Cap.. president of ~institute. .~OI'.'" ·tHr ",",-·tIt, ' . , :4»iOO. tb~. ~pot, .and· w~ose ter~u.nc:;iati~ at the ~ords b)' the aaid the award will be presented U¥EIlERD MOIHlil.IUI'IIIOlt· races affon a prospect as ·de- VarlOUS\'01ces aing2ng together at a dinner'in the :WltoD g. htfUl.~.the. most .roman tic.. 'ShOuld.be"reasOn8:.bIY clear... . . ·Hotel. McGum is beirtg hoeore.d OAuo.n.s Of H .....AlA . ~., MAlt. . uld desire. . Sometimes, it dstrue-, thIS i& tor "contributing 'sU~nti3;U, ,;" 1T,'~lfl/IA¥I. ."~e boy': ,we'· ',uiink., c9uid nOt·altogeth6 8PPare.ntto- ·~~to the advaneement 'blcatboUc . ;,., J ardly avoid being afleetecl by untutored ear ·()/.the modern thought and' priDcipleaiD 09IIlfUch surroundings, but we' ar~ hearer, 'bUt the fiu~it, doubU~; mun.iCations," . ,. ' j1adl~ at a loss fr»: the Jeat~~ d,~ 'unfamiUarlti ofour1~;'.iIe is the alilthar'Ofa~eatl)-. jtf his.personality. He speaks'" -poverished"mwiical eXperience. publishOO"b~, "A ".~r.t~ ',lIs through his music, but while . So, ov« the beads of the ConLOoks at the Vaticim." '!':he y', .music is revelatory ·ofmood., .it ~iliar Fathers. greyin,'or alreadY, Oath()liC'Institute :0£' the-PresS 'iI I~ hardly bio~aphi~.. ·Not.~: ~te f~,;tbe: mo~ ,p~,floa~ cOmposed of Cath;,.}w empl~. ~altt.so long as Itremau,"S,Jft1l8ICI ~ach monungOf.thesessaons the ,in vadous phases":;'-~asa oom'~ . In Clerical. W_14 ' . glorious ,strains of '1m artist Who munkationS iil the· New Yen: He is said to have studie4in ',four centuries ~o 'concei¥ed .tile'. -wopolltan area. -,.wme . betvVilen 1540 :aacl ',1544, .glorr of. Goclm the gl.or.y ,:J:!f. tinder !.he 'guid8nee 111. a 'certain <,mUSlC. Out of s1!Ch harmQ1W ..". . I Gaudio Mello~·Then,.at 18 he ,it· too cmucll to -Mpe-a -stilt. ~ Housing For POOl' . ·MGcLeaIl~sSea ~arried LUerezia Goris. aBEl greater -harmony . for. ·aU,the. . CARACAS (Nc>--.J.ose·Car4J.. , • .' :wi>rJ.d? . UNION. WIfA,RF,' ~IRKAVEN 1Jy h_e~hadfour.sons! .~r:ee ,lJf . QUintero, 'Arehbilbolt .et wbom died young and ful1 -o~ Caraeas, haia doDa~ 'mODe,. .musical promise, while the ',iVeD' te him br, V ; ~ ,yt"or, Igino, has acqu~. 'bad m·:,.... · .:P.lan·ft."tIUII'.' . ·Catholics :here for a ·new :,reslorne for' traffickq' .iR 'his ••,. uU::IIJ deo.ee 'to '. :fuDdaetup·to, .~ t8ther's .manuscrlpts. ' . JrARACHI (NC) - The Ir-ord ~cOSt 'housiDg,for'I~'pGOlo. . Of his domestic life no hint.. .Foundation wiU.spegd ". Uttle 1o.. ''l'hefuiid, tG ""bidl:tlte'Ca'l'd~ jllint bas come down to WI; in moretbaneM .mUUOllld0itar:8~ ''Ute in.f-..nseq clerical"world·m.· ,in :the twG 'YeMa .19G3.;'8I··to :as': ' :Pft -.000. • 'aamed"-'~ 10ha..' . . .~ ,.",), ,.hidh ··Ite .llved it 'be .pre;. .... ' the :P.aidstan:(.jovenm.t~ • .. .. , .Mlln~d that·thU;. mew 'that ~'1amU7. »tanniOg"" (artificiial. ~ fairly happy. 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.R~qu~em 'Offered F~r Ca~danals VATICAN C'ITY (NC) - fA Mass' in St. Peter's was offered for six cardinals who died during the preeeding year. Pope John gave the absolutlOil 'at the end of the Mass, celebrated by Giuseppe Cardinal Ferretto of the Vatican admini~ trative staff. The cardinals for whom the Mass was offerec;l are Aloisiu15 Cardinal Muench, fQrmer Bishop of Fargo, N. D., who served as Apostolic Nuncio to' Germany before being transferred to the Vatican administrative staff; Elia Cardinal dalla Costa, Arch_ bishop of Florence; Gaetano Cardinal Cicognani, who waa Prefect of the Sacred Congregatjo~ of' Rit~s; Tedosio Cardinal d~ Gouveia, ,Archbishop of Lourenco, Marques, Mozambique; Giovanni Cardin~l Panico, member of the Vatican administrative staff and veteran papal. diplomat; and Gabriel Acacio Cardinal Coussa, Secretary of the Sacred Congregation fO!' Oriental Churches.

Thanksg,iving~a time fbr turkey and stuffing pumpkin pie and football games, victory dances', and ju~t .plain dances-but most of all a time for thanking God for all the blessings that have come to us in the past year. Here in the Fall River Diocese we' have much to be grateful for, Sacred Hearts in Fall River especially for the wonderful Sunday, Dec. 9. Seniors will readvances, ni a d e i:ri 0 u r dedicate themselves to Mary and

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schools. We have a number of offer here a white lily, symbol new buildings and better faci.l- of purity. ities in the long-established onesParents" alumnae and Holy Indeed we'have cause for grat- Union friends invited to the titude, and some of the ways ceremony will be entertained that our students have shown it after Benediction at a tea sponhave come to light recently. ' sored by the alumnae. Teenage Helpers Freshman Football Ai Coyle High School in Taun- . Sports assemblies, have held ton the Glee Club offers month- the spotlight at two of our Diocly song-fests 'to the residents' of esan high schools.' Feehan in Marian' Manor, also in Taunton.' Attleboro sponsored a special' In addition to 'these programs, assembly at which Mr. Harold " they plan Christmas and Spring Hanewich, a t hIe tic director,' ... concerts at the Manor and often spoke on the acceptance of Feegive chorales' for the blind of han in the Bristol County' the Diocese. League. ' . Students at Bishop Feehan High Mr. Joseph Hughes, basketball School in Attleboro engage in a coach, gave details of the hoop. variety of individual acts' of program at the same assembly. kindness. and thoughtfulness. A' Ana at Bishop Stang High' in, survey shows that a number of North Dartmouth a spec'ial 'as-. the hardier boys are alert to the sembly was .held for parents of, need of neighbors, especially the' football players. Mr. Carlin elderly, and assist them in many Lynch, athletic director, exways, particularly by lawn mow- plained techniques and a deming in Summer and snow shoy.. onstration of plays was given. eling in Winter. Coaoh Peter Blistek' explained Some Feehan girls babysit for the freshm,an, football' program. parents who wish to attend Mass Class Trips together, and also for convert ',Seniors at Sacred Hearts, Fall COLLEGE PREP: Officers of senior college preparaclass m~mbers so that they CaD River, enjoyed a tour of BOston's tory ~tudents at Dominican Academy, F'an River, are seatattend instructions. Gardner, Fine Arts and Harvard ed, Rita Chouinard" president; C. laire Lavoie',' seCr~tary' Many students 'h 'tal d visit the sick M,us,eums under the gUI'dance of standing, Monica Mercier,' student councillor,' Carol Zmud' !1,' i n OSPI s an nursing homes. Sister .Mary Adrienne. A high:. ... Together they 'spend hours in light was attendance at' a con-' vice-president; Paula Gagnon, treasurei'. . reading 'and en~ertaining these cert Spo'1sored by the New Eng.'·, , " . land Conserv:atoi'y, of, Musie at With report, car~s out" for· shut-ins" The Sodality calendar, is fun , At St. Mary's 'in Taunton there" the Gardner, Museum.' ,. "weal or for woe, top students at this week: Last Sunday the anare sever'al notable' works of 'Meanwhile, at '-Bishop Feehan 'SHA, FiliI River, are Diane n~al ,Fall Conference, Day of charity Deing performed. Sodal-' a. gr0l;lp of novice debaters at- Dube, seniors; ~argaret Don. Diocesan. Sodality Uniop., was ists recite a daily rosary for the' tend~ a tournament at St. ' nelly, juniors; Nancy Regan, held at Stang. The main spea~er Holy Souls and are a,lso collect-' Catherine's Academy, ~ewport.' sophomores; Christine Baldaia" was . Father .Francis Larkin, jng funds to offer Masses ~ be' At St M f hm SS.CC., the first American mem_ said for 'receased reiatives of' .. ary's,Taunton, seniors res en. 'ber of the Congregation of the students. " w e n t on a tour of what will be Top Students Members of: the DebrabaRt their new School home, the At Prevost congratulatioliStO Sacred Hea~ts .and Past National Chapter of the National Honor' Memorial High School. Sister Paul Dumais seniors' Reginald Director of the Enthronement Society have resumed their serv.:. John Elizabeth, principal, was Cardin Nor~and De;biens Ar- of the Sacred Heart. Father, the Enthronethe, st~dents'. guide. ' thOur De'srosl'ers Roland Lac'rol'x' s po k e on ice of tutoring underclassmen:' " ment and Nocturnal' adoration in various subjects: Numerous '. And More Assemblies Marc Mancini, Paul Plourde, wh,ich comprise the apostolie girls have volunteered' to in-' .At Dominican 'Academy, Fall ~erald St. Amand, juniors. ," project of the Queen of Peace struct cat e chi s m classes in RIver, seniors ptestmted' an' inAlso Ronald Banville, Nor- Sodality, Union for this year. their parishes, and many sacri. formal panel discussion on reg- mand Dube, Gerard Goulet, Both of these facets of the fice free time to sing at Bene- ulations concerning behavior in Robert Payet,te, Leon St. Lau- project are entriely fitting, In diction and help Cllre for patients public places. Panelists repre. rent, sophomores; Roger. Arse. the light of the ,Sodality motto at Marian Manor. sented the Student Council and nault, George Demarais, Paul which is, "To Jesus through Attend Retreat , the Sodality. , " Garant, Robert Lacourse,Roger At. Bishop' Feehan a science Lizotte, Paul Proulx, Leo Talbot, Mary." At Prevost High in Fall River assembi! featured film strips #eshmen. ' , '" :. FOster VGeatioDS . Bodalists supervise play activi- portraY1Og the work'of Madame Girls aren't the only. ones to A 'new .co-curricular activity ties of boys at St. Joseph's Home.. Curie. enter contests, note boys from for two hours ,every Sunday At Bishop Stang, members of St. Anthony's. Roland Bedard, bas been. added to the many thriving clubs and other organ, afternoon. Boston's Emmanuel College Dra-" Richard Methia and Richard izations at Stang. The group, The so"dality· has also been active in tile alumni drive for m~tic l;loclety presented' "One . Beaulieu have entered essays on patterned after the adult Serra With the Fl~e," a play about "Automation: A Challenge of funds to pelp. provide scholar- Joan ~ .Arc wr,itten by Sis'ter the Future" in the' annual na- Clubs has as its objectives the ships for deserving students. A Francesca of the college faculty. tional, high school essay contest fostering of vocations to the portion ~f ih.e, mon~y COllected Debaters Active sponsored by Omega 'Psi Phi priestly and religious life as well ' as to the sisterhood and the fos. by the students will also be used ' to purchase aUdio-~isual equip. St. ""n.t,h~ny High School ill: fraternity., A~ards, to be an- tering of strong friendships ment for the school. : N:ew Bedford' inaugurated its . ~ounced next m.Qnth, are two among Catholic laymen. The Girls at' Sacred' Hearts in first deba~ing society' thlif week ' ~l~eg~ s~hol!tr!lI'!1l?s., first of. these objective's is earFairhaven have completed a' with more than 30 stu'dents tak. Cuban, Refugees ried on both, within' the memthree day retreat preached by jng an active interest in' the skill.' Juniors at, Dominican Acado. bership of the, group and the' ' ~ev. Gabriei Healey, SS.CC"· ,:Atty. Maurice' Down'ey, cOach .. ~roy, held their imnualprom last whole,schooi .community. Three conferences 'were held fQr H?ly Family's debating team, night. Ttteme was "Rhapsody, ia ,Jaily anc:~ Mass was' celebrated also 111 New .Bedford, spoke tQ: Blue." Sev:enteenElJ:'S at SHA, at 11 :30 each morning. The re-' the stud.ents on the various . tan River,' will ltold a dance at treat closed ~ith ren~wal Of the ,leagues 10 which ~ club may their new auditorium tomorrow . . Enthronement· of 'the' Sacred parti~ipate.. '.. - \ " . night: . ., ". Heart in the school. I Paulette St. Gelais,' a senior,', seniors at Anthony!s enThe Fairhaven. girls, are also was e~ected president of St. An-: tertained the 25 Cuban refugee, active every day after school thony's new club. 'Among its. youngsters at'St· Mary's Home" ahd on weekends at Our Lady's ,first activities was, attendance at' New Bedford, at a movie party. Haven in the town. .'They. read, a debate at .:ijolY,Family. Four Sist~rs of'the Love of God and write letters for patients Reprel!entatives of Sacred who have been aiding the, and. care for :them in 'other ways Hearts, i~ Fall River will fill the:. Cubans iil adjusting ~ AmeriCan under direction of the' Sisters at post of vice-president in the life accompanied the group. 'South . • Sea St.; the residence.N~rragansett Debate' League. '-. .. ,. . sta'ng Clubs. ' Lily Ce~emonJ' S~st,er :(3arbara Mary is moderThe Glee Club and the Dra-· Hyannil 'Tel. HY, 8,1 Juniors at Mt. St. Mary Acad-,: atar of this team. matics Club of Bishop Stang emy in Fall River are as excited Collejre Boar-cis High SchOol are busy prepariQg· as childrerl 8't "Christmas' there': ~ Seniors at ~~ominicanAcad- for the Christmas Concert t() ~, days. They are eagerly looking .emy planning, on' ,entering col-- perfor~ed"in the early 'Part ot iorward to the presentation of lege next FaU-have" been partici_! Decem'ber. This 'year's Cor,u;e.Ii' ririgs ceremony to be held next,,, . pating in an accelerated English f centers ori the first Christmas weeki " , , ' ..,~,n, <', .:'~: ~;, composition courSe in "prepara-,' etib 'to 'be DuiIf by sf." Fr~iri'c'i!( • ,!h~ r.in~ it~elf "wIli' be Il~j,:', t~o~ for College ~oard examina-~ of Assisi' il'\ .a'c~v:e in. Ua-Iy;, 'prIse,- smce..they.. chose.it them-"" ti9l\.S. to ,be given Saturday,." 2,000 At,. Ord,inati~n '. selves last year. It is a nevil ,Dec. 1.' POONA (NC) ..... Some 2,000' design diffferefit iir'many W8)'1S : '" '"And 'OR Tuesday, Dec. 4 from the traditional ring. Wear- Sacred Hearts in Fall River will' people from all over India came' Southeastern Massachusetts' ing it, howeVer, will make all be ~ the' scene ',' of the Betty' to the,pontifical sem'inary here' largest" Independent Chain to witness by ordination of 27' the difference, to the' girls. Sen- . ~rocker Homemaking Test. Only: iors will entertain. th,eir jlJnior seniors will participate; anI top." priests by' Auxiliary Bishop ~ sisters after the ceremony. ranking girl in each competing' Longinus Perei£a of' Bombay. . Another ,ceremony, but of school will Qe .eligible to com.' The rites were explained in: 'We Give Gold !Bo"d:.Sta~p.~," English, Malayan· and Hind1lo different nat~ will behelej.,_ pete for a $1000 .scholarship. , ,

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THE ANCHOR-Dioceseoffdtl"River~Thu'rs.路~oV.2i路1962

Suggests Essentia,l 'Needs' Of Americo'n Catholicism By Rev. AndrewM. Greeley /

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Minister Rebukes Catholic Picture Of Protesta nts

15

THE ANCHORThurs., Nov. 22, 1962

De~~«D[?®~ CCMQ"t'S R~v[W~@~ U'(Q) ~M~e O~ U@ TIV[b)(Sl)(~D1kS)

CHICAGO (NC) - TIro average Catholic has a misconception about the Protestant doctrines of the laity,

PORTLAND (NC) -The

the associate editor of a ProtestPortland archdiocesan school ant magazine said here. sup0rintendent has described The Rev. Martin E. Marty, asas "a bitter disappointment" sociate editor of the Christian the U. S. Su'preme Court's reCentury, said Catholics think fusal to review an Oregon court these doctrines are based on ruling against lending tax-paid two principles: that Protesttextbooks to students in "standantism is a priesthood of all beard" parochial schools. lievers in which all distinction Father Martin Thielen said is erased between ministers and the Supreme Court's action dislaymen, and that the right of appoints the parents of parochial private interpretation mea n s school students. everyone should set his own in"After paying for their chilterpretation of the Bible. dren's textbooks in hard-earned False Picture tax money, these parents are The Rev. Marty, who spoke at now advised that the books will an ecumenical forum sponsored no longer be available to their by Loyola University, said that children," Father Thielen said these views could not be further in a guest editorial in the Cathfrom the truth. But the Catholic Sentinel, archdiocesan newscannot be blamed for them, ~ WAfT FOR BREAK IN CLOUDS: A group of prelates representing all areas of the olic paper. added, because his Protestant The Supreme Court turned neighbor often gives the im- world stand outside St. Peter's Basilica as the rain begins to fall. NC Photo. down an appeal from a ruling pression that this is an accurate of the Oregon Supreme Court picture. which held that providing texts Actually, he continued, "it is, to students in state-recognized-based on a fairly accurate de"standard" schools of a religious duction of the cultural misunorientation violates the state derstanding of the laity. One constitution. problem is that in our culture OKLAHOMA CITY (NC) Father Fichter noted that the the clergy in the U.S.," he emThe textbooks had been lent 'lay' is usually a negative term. to such students under a 20It defines what a man is not. A sociologist discounts any sig- labels "liberal" and "conserva- phasized and religious vocations year-old program. In Catholicism, the layman is· nificant anti-clericalism in the tive" are often misleading, but are in "higher esteem." Father Thielen said the U. S. At the same time, the Jesuit not a priest; in Protestantism, U.S. Church but contends that he said they must be used as high court had "failed to recog_ he is not a theologian. So 'lay' so-called "conservatives" tend terms for discussion. He also said, there "is a rise in the status nize a violation of the Federal often means 'outside the impor- to oppose clergy leadership cautioned that extreme ~iberals of the laity, too." The laity more often than "liberals." and conservatives account for status rise should not lead to rights of children in the OregOD tant circle' or 'uninformed'." court's decision." \ These are the conclusions of only a minority among laymen. the belief that there is a conBiblical Ideas Father Joseph Fichter, S.J., of Most people fall in a great sequent lowering of status, for He estimated the value Of tax_ The Rev. Marty said there is Loyola University, New Orleans, middle group, the sociologist the clergy. The sociologist noted paid texts provided by school occurring an "explosion of • based on a nationwide survey stressed. both are on the rise, because districts to students in parochial thought" abOut the Protestant of Catholic laymen and priests. schools of the archdiocese in the He explained that the liberal "both the quantity and the layman's role in the Church. Notes Failures and conservative labels are at- quality of religious practice ill last five 'years as between $500,"Almost every denomination is Father Fichter, said "liberal" tachejI to both political and going up." 000 and $600,000. working hard," he stated, "to Catholics "such as the editors of recover Bib I i c a I ideas con- the Commonweal mag a z i n e" religious ideas. He cited an cerning the laity as 'the whole seem to be the ones most con- example: "People in favQl' of foreign people of God' chartered to do cerned abOut anti-clericalism. aid, the rights of minority relihis work." "But the liberals are the best This view of the layman, he friends the priest ever had," he gious and racial groups, and labor unions also favor more said, sees baptism as the ordi- added. CHICAGO (NC)-Msgr. John nation to take a clear and hard active lay participation in the nation of man to a "priesthood" On the other hand, "conserva- Church, the use of more ver- J. Ega~, director of the Chicago look at their responsibilities for in which he intercedes for and tives" or "traditionalists" tend . Archd~ocesa? Con s e l' vat ion advancing the goals of a segregaserves his fellow man in the to be more anti-clergy, he re- nacular, and such ideas as 'the CounCIl, WIll be among the tion-less, prejudice-free society." dialogue' and 'ecumenicism'." name of Christ. speakers at !h; National ConferOther speakers include Dr. ported. The Jesuit said this has ence on RelIgIOn and Race to be Rabbi Abraham J. Heschel, proLaity Status Rise been seen in the refusal of many fessor of ethics and Jewish mysCatholics to accept the social Surveys show that Catholic held here Jan. ~4-17. Upsets Law Limiting lay Msgr. ~~~n Will speak on "The ticism at the Jewish Theological teachings of the Church: He people hold their priests in of Church and Seminary of America New York' Catholic School Size pointed spedfically to the fail- higher regard now than ever ResponSibilIty Synagog~e a,;; Institutions in the and the Rev. Will Campbeli NEWARK (NC) - Superior ure of some "conservatives" to before. He said the same trend Commu.mty. . associate director, Department follow the teachings of Pope was evident in Protestant and Court here upset a municipal Rabbi ~arc Tanenb~um, pro- of Racial and Cultural Relations, restriction which lim~ted the John's social encyclical Mater other non - Catholic studies. gra~ chalr:n~n and ~Irector of National Council of Churches, "There is· a rise in the status 01 the mterrehgIOus affans depart- Nashville Tenn size of St. Cassian's School· in et Magistra. Montclair. ment of the American Jewish ,. The limitation was set in 1951 Committee, said the conference by the Montclair Board of Adis the first national meeting to justment when the board granted IDe convened by agencies of all COME IN St. Cassian's a variance to build major U. S. faith groups. a school in a residential zone. He said its primary objective ROME (NC) - The InternaThe board set an enrollment tional Conference of Catholic New York delegation whiCh it is "to help religious leaders inlimit of 280 persons-one pupil Charities has assured the United maintains at the United Nations. stitutions and lay people of' this THE. for each 100 square feet· of play- Nations that it will support and I believe this study has produced in me a sufficient underMother Provincial ground space. cooperate ·in the UN's "Decade standing of the program to . • • Last year St. Cassian's asked of Development" proposal. NOTRE DAME (NC)-Sister maintain a practicable and StICthat the limitation be lifted but Backing of UN General Sec- cessful delegation in the future." • !!\II. Loretto, 'superior of St. Mary's the Board of Adjustment refused College here, has been appointed and the school took the case to retary U Thant's proposal that Mother provincial.of .the eastern Msgr. Karl Bayer of Germany, court. Judge Theodore J. La- the next 10 years be devoted to who was' reelected secretary province of the Holy Cross the economic and social imbrecque noted that the limitaSisters' congregation. general of the conference, retion placed on the parochial provement of less developed ported that the active role countries was voiced at the conschool did not apply to any BUICK ELEcr-RA played by the conference's deleother public or private school ference's sixth general conven- gations with UN organij!:ations ''The Family That in the community. He also tion here. ST in New York and Geneva asThe convention decided to sures, their continued good noted that a much larger public FOR QUAUTY, Prays Together school had been erected: directly continue the conference's work standing. STYLE AND across the street from ;'St. Cas-. with the UN throug'h its New Stays Together" sian's and that a 1961 $tate law York delegation. COMFORT specifically forbid discriminaMsgr. Raymond J. Gallagher, THE tion between public ancl private secretary of the U.S. National schools in zoning legis~ation. Conference of Catholic Charities FIRST NATIONAL r ! ! whose h e a d q.u a l' tel's are in Prescriptions. called for ·BANK Washington, and head of the Stresses Dispar~ty and delivereel New York delegation, reported Attleboro-Soutb Attleboro 594 PLEASANT S.JREET to the convention: HEADQUARTERS FOR Seekonk Of Mission Eff6rt FAll RIVR , I "During this year, I have been DIETETIC SUPPLIES MONTREAL (NC)-A dispr~ 600 Cottage St. WY 4-7439 portion of missionary effort by studying and conferring about New Bedford Canadian orders was n?ted in a the International Conference of panel discussion at th~ annual Catholic Charities and about the meeting of the Missionary Mutual Aid here. : famous .Reading HARD COAL ~~\'l ;r~ It was noted there 'are only NEW ENGLAND COKE 1,300 Canadian missiOl\aries in DADSON OIL BURNERS all of Latin America whereas m the island of Haiti alone there 24-Hour 011 Burner Service ~~ S~~U .-:-are 440. . WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE Charcoal Briquets This panel group, considering . \ AND ~,~~ education in missionary counBag Coal - Charcoal ~..........,~ ,:...,,~ tries, was one of five :studying INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES mutual problems and' experiences by the 350 deleg~tes. The • GENERAL TIRES • DELCO BAnERIES gathering represented, 60 mis• PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS r; sionary religious orders and 12 FALL RIVER - NEW BEDFORD - HYANNIS - NEWPORT New Beelf.reI secular institutes and lay misTel. WY 6-8271 640 Pleasant Street flionary movements.

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;THE ANCHOR+Diocese of6.QWRiv.er-flburs~'Nov :J.22,lliM2 , /

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.a JifelinB arounl/the ~world••• .

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THE ANCHORThurs., Nov. 22, 1962

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ROME (NC) - "T-he world is very remotely preparing for apocalyptic times or tha final struggle between good and evil," Auxiliary Bishop Fulton J. Sheen of New York said here. Bishop SHeen discussed the' Ecumenical Council's impact on the which 'persecutes the . saints 'has world and the Church .at a already grouped men under the luncheon of the American militant banner of atheism," .l}eW 0 men's Association of said. Rome. The Bishop· stid the day of heresies is over. "There will no longer be a splintering of Christian truth," h~ declared, but added: "We are living in a time when the world is beginning to divide into two societies." One of these soci~ies, he said, is <lntI-God, anti-personal and enti-moraI. "This society is lnrr;ely communist inspired," he continued, "but its members are not in Russia alone. There are even sympathizers in anticommunist lands." Pope John saw this division of the world, Bishop Sheen said, "and called a eouncil to rally all men who believe in the family, morality, decency, God, Christ and the Church into a more compact unity." "Though all may not subscribe to all the beliefs of Christianity," he went on., "nevertheless they are grouping or walking in that direction." "Thus," he dec 1 are d, "the world is very remotely preparing for apocalyptic times of the final struggle between good and evil." He continued' "The battle lines of the distant future are being drawn by this Council. The other society

Beatification Nears For Mother Seton EMMITSBURG (NC)-l'he remains of Venerable MMher Elizabeth Seton, foundress of the American Sisters of Charity, have been exhumed' and identified as a. necessary step toward her beatification. Mother Seton, whO' died in 1821, is eXpected to, be beatified next year. She will be the first U. S.-born person so:.l1onoredby the Church. Speculation has set March 17 as a possible date for the beatification ceremonies in Rome. . The exhumation and canonical identification of her remains was carried out under the direction of officials of the Baltimore archdiocese and persons connected with her canonization cause. Her remains have rested here in Maryland since her death on the grounds of the cen_ tral house of the Emmitsburg province of the Sisters of Charity.

~@'(\!]@]21 ~[P)@IfllOf)(h MIAMI (NC) - As a means of better serving the growing number of Sp.anish - speaking, especially Cuban refugees, in the Miami diocese, more- than- 50 of the diocesan clergy will enroll in Spanish classes· at· the new Biscayne:' College. here.

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liN STEP WITlH! :nnULIDUlP': With the sudden buildup of armed fOl1ces in south. Florida to back up the Cuban blockade, an accelerated program of social activities is pro~rided by usa Clubs under the auspices of the National Catholic ComlT1unity Services-NCWC. U.S. Army specialist J. D. Carr is one of hundreds of servicemen who now avail themselves of' the many facilities offered oy the Miami Club.. NC Photo.

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PITTSBURGH (NC)-A min·o ister who admitted he hed printed a false" Knights c:! Columbus oath was acquitted oX criminal libel in .Criminal Cour~ here but ordered to pay costs of prosecution. The Rev. Walter- L. King, paE~ tor of the Church of the Nazarene at FInleyville, Pa., said he had printed the oath in May, 1960, during the last presidential election, with the intent of il'.fluencing people on how ta vote. He said he printed the oat'l, which urged K. of C· membe:m to religious bigotry, in a church pamphlet entitled "Voice ex Nazarene" because he believE:Q. the oath to be authentic. Asked by defence attorney Morris lVi. Berger what his Opill_ ion is now, the Rev. KIng X'cplied: "Upon listening to tesf..· mony under oath I feel that . , is not the (K of C) oath."

New JJ~lfSi®Y C.@Ueg~ A~~~ tLl9JOG1f A~v.~s@8'S SOUTH - ORANGE (N C) Seton Hall University has organized a 14-member board of laymen advisors to assist with long-range physical development and possible curriculum ch:::nges. Msgr. John J. Dougherty, president of the New Jersey university, says the "future of private colleges and universities will in a large measure depend upon the support of the professional, business and industrial community. Seton Hall will enlist laymen in greater measure for advice and counsel."

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NEWARK (NC)-An organi~ zation for Catholic widows anci widowers is beiitg formed in tho Newark archdiocese under ttc auspices of the archdioceS2D Family Life Apostolate. The group will be known as One~ Parent Families and will have its first Conference Snturda7" Dec. 1. ;i

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HONG KONG (NC) - With the founding of a credit union here the Maryknoll Fathers have established. credit unions in six of the 13 countries in which they work. The latest one has been organ_ ized at the Bishop Ford Center here to provide low cost loans for thousands of refugees from Red China. Father Howard S. Trube, M.M., of New York is pastor of the centers which is named in honor of Bishop Francis X. Ford, M.M. of Brooklyn, who died in a Chinese commu~ nist prison in 1952. Other Maryknoll credit. unions are in oPeration in BOlivia, Chile, Guatemala, Mexico and Peru.

Tower Memorializes Ltlte Labor Leader, PITTSBURGH (NC) -A bell tower named in honor of Philip Murray, founder of the United Steelworkers of America, was blessed at St. Anne's church in the suburb of Castle Shannon. Father Eugene W. Harkins, the pastor, officiated at the blessing. Dignitaries present included Gov. David Lawrence of Pennsylvania and David J. McDonald, president of the Steelworkers. McDonald presented a check for $70,000 to Father Harkins to de. fray the costs of the bell tower.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese oHall River-:"Thurs. Nov. 22, 1962

The Parish Paradti

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S.· JEAN BAPTISTE, ST. JOHN BAPTIST, · FALL RIVER : .NEW lJEDFOlRD Venus de Milolrestaurant will Mrs. Hilda Pacheco is chairbe" the scene bf the' annual man for a Christmas party and supper planned lor 6:30'Monday . Christmas party: of the Council of Catholic Women,set for Mon. night,. Dec. 3, at the church by day, Dec. 10. Mrs! Paul Peloquin, the Ladies Guild. chairman, annouhces that reserThe unit will install new offivations will close Sunday, Dec. 2. cers at 7 Sunday night, Jan. 6 . at New Bedford Hotel. They are ST. GEORGE, S.T. MARY, Mrs. John Pateakos, president; WESTPORT F:AIRH.(\.VEN Mrs. Richard Gonsalves, viceThomas P. Barrett, active in . Ladies of the Sacred Hearts president; Mrs. John, Espinola, Boy Scout and Cub units in the Association has set its· anilUal secretary; Mrs. $tanley Franczyk, parish for six y~ars, will retire treasurer. Ohristmas, party for Sunday, from Scouting life FridaY"Nov. Dec. 2 at Harbor Beach Lodge, 30. He has led the Wlrish Cup Mattapoisett. Mrs·' Alice Pimen-. HOLY CROSS, pack and Scout ttoop and served FALL RIVER tal,' chairman, is aided by a comas an institutional representative The Parent-'I'eacher Associamittee of four. ' . ' for both groups, ~s well as worktiQn will entertain childrerf of ing with Massasoit Boy Scout :Mr. CARMEL, members at a Christmas party NEW BEDFORD. Saturday, Dec. 15' in the parish Council. hall. Next regular meeting will OUR LADY OF IVICTORY, . The Women's Club plans its CENTERVILLE; , Christmas party. for Wednesday,' be at 7 Tuesday night, Dec. 4., Annual Christmas bazaar of :E)ec. 5 at Holiday House. Next ST. JAMES, the Women's GuIld is slated to regular meeting is 'Wednesday" NEW BEDFORII be held from 10j to 3 Saturday, :Qec: 12. . Dec. 1 in the church hall. A Msgr. Noon Circle plans a 8T. HEDWIG, snack bar and I many special giant penny sale open to' the NEW BEDFORD tables will be !featured, with public on Tuesday, Dec. 4 in the -....v 'A 'two-day bazaar is planned parish hall. Members will hold ,each awarding a Iprize. The unit for Saturday and Sunday, Nov. a Christmas party Wednesday, will hold its annual Christmas party at 8 Monday night. Dec. 24 and 25. It will mark the first Dec· 12. and may lnyite guests', 10, also in the hhll. a'nniversary of the dedication ,of ST. MICHAEL, I the new church. Honorary chairSANTO CHRIST10, man is, Rev. Emil Tokarz, ' OCEAN GROVE FALL RIVER Q·.F .M.Conv.:. General chairmap. A potluck supper at 6:30 WedThe Council of <I::atholic Women . I is Honorato ,Arruda. nesday night, Nov. 28 will fea· will meet at Stevenson's restauture the monthly meeting of the OUR LADY OF ANGELS, rant at 7 Sunday ,night, Dec. 9 Catholic Women's Club. Mrs. for its annual Christmas party. FALL RIVER Matthew Quinlan will be in Officers will alsb be elected at The Council of Catholic Women charge of arrangements. Suppgr will sponsor a Christmas bazaar will be followed by a business this time. Next ~egular meeting Saturday, Dec. 1 in the parish meeting and social hour. Mem- is announced for 7:30 Tuesday hall. Concurrently, the Holy .bers are requested to bring IMMACULATE !CONCEPTION, Name Society will hold a ham prizes, Mrs. Robert J. Thibault, BREWSTER, DENNIS . and bean supper. Free door president, will conduct the busi, CYO membed will hold a prizes will be awarded. ness session. dance from 8 to 11 Friday night, . Our Lady's Crusade for Peace Nov. 23 at Our L~dy of the Cape BLESSED SACRAMENT, Novena is held at 6:30 every parish hall. Mti~ic will be by FALL RIVER' Sunday evening. the Corvettes.: . Mrs. Alice Corbin is chairman " A boys' basketball team is be8T. JOAN OF ARC, for a Christmas party scheduled ing organized by Jack Nevins ORLEANS fOt' Sunday, Dec. 9 by the Counand Neal Nevinsl ! New officers of the Women's cil of Catholic .Women. Ticket The Women's Guild will meet 'Guild are Mrs. Theodore Young, returns are requested by Friday, at 8 Tuesday nigilt, Nov. 27, also president; Mrs. Wilfred Ferrei- Dec. 7. in the parish haq. ra, vice-president; Mrs. Jane Keenan, secretary; Mrs. Irene ST. WILLIAM, I Bessom, treasurer; Mrs. Robert FALL RIVER The Women's Guild has schedPeno, chaplain. . ·The group plans a Christmas uled its Christmas party and Continued frob Page One party Wednesday, Dec. 5 and a gift exchange for Wednesday, 'ing of the. ~ord and the Christmas sale Saturday, Dec. 8. Dec. 12. ' preaching of the truths of Christ. Articles will be sold after each 'f.his Divine Tradition differs Mass and throughout the day, ,S8. PETER .(\.ND PAUL, from human tra'clition in that it FALL RIVER the Feast of the Immaculate . The Women's Club will spon- comes from Chri~t and is -guarConception. sor a whist part;v at 8 Monday anteed from cord.lption or alter_ ·ST. JOHN'S, night, Nov. 26 in the church hall. ation. -It remain~ the same as POCASSET Mrs. William F. O'Neil' is chair- when Christ g~ve it to the The Ladies Gui'ld has set its man, aided by Mrs. Wiliam J. Apostles, even thbugh.man's understanding of it Iand all its imSunderland, Jr. annual Christmas bazaar for plications can deepen with the Saturday, .Dec.' 1 at Pocasset passing of time. iThe Church Ot' ST. JOSEPH, Community Clubhouse. Cochurchmen do n.ot makeup or FALL RIVER chairmen are Mrs. Nestor RobiCYO members will hold a add to Divine I Tradition or dou and Mrs. Gordon Wixon. A Thanksgiving dance from 7:30 to change it; they sImply unfold it lI'nack bar and booths for aprons, 10:30 tomorrow night. Junior and draw from itl all its meaning Christmas decorations, food, officers will meet in the rectory and implications and conse...children's articles, gifts, plants, I a. wishing well and candy will be at 6:30 Sunday night; Nov. 25. to quences A Vatican press bulletin, dismake December plans. featured. The Women's Guild announces cussing the debat~ going on over ST. MARY, a chicken patty supper Monday the phrasing and :presentation of ·the Catholic doctrine on the NEW BEDFORD . and Tuesday, Dec. 3 and 4 sources of Divihe Revelation Husbands of Women's Guild NOTRE DAME, reported that mahy Bishops had members will be guests at a potFALL RIVER emphasized I that the Council luck supper to be part of a An hour of Adoration from 7 should "make a dlear exposition Christmas party s~t for Monday, to 8 Monday evening, Nov. 26 of doctrine in a balm; objective Dec. 10. will precede the regular meeting and clear manner, while taking SACRED HEART, of the Council of Catholic care to respect tre positions of OAK BLUFFS Women in Jesus-Mary Audito- others and to seek a manner of Mrs. James S. Rego Jr.. 'heads rium. Reservations will be' expression which does not divide new officers of the Women's taken for a December .pilgrim- but unites." Guild. She will be supported by age to the La Sa:lette Shrine. Mrs. Dennis Alley', vice-president; Mrs. John A DeBetten~t court Jr., secretary; and Mrs. Roger Surprenant, treasurer. BURY ST. EDMUNDS (NC)They will be seated at January Mass has been loffered at Ix:" ceremonies. A children's ChristOn Sunday, Nov. 25, the Cathworth Abbey' ne~r here for' the mass party and a program and olic Theater Guild of New Bed·first time in 325 years. party for members' are slated for ford, Inc., will present a special . Father Anti}ony Bull,' C.R.L., . December. radio program" over station prior of the Canons Regular of WNBH at 8:30 P.M. ST. ELIZABETH, the Lateran at D~tchet just west The script, entitled "Enthrone. .of London, celebt-ated' the Mass FALL RIVER Saturday, Dec. 8 will see the ment of the Sacred Heart - A in a small pillared cellar of· the annual Christmas party and in-, Story of Love", written by guild abbey. The abbey was a priory member Miss Ellen M. Gaugha~, ·of the Canons Regular until it, ~tallation of officers for the Women's Guild. A supper will tells the story of the origin of '. was seized under King Henry' the devotion. known as the Enbe served at 7:30 that evening VIII in 1537 and turned into a and gifts will be exchanged. thronement of the Sacred Heart private home. : Sen. Mary Fonseca will be in- whereby families are conse~ A Catholic fainily owned it crated to the Sacred Heart of .~~ ~talling officer. Other December 'until fines impo~ed because of .activities will be a Communion Jesus. loyalty to the Church of Rome 'preakfast to follow 8:15 Mass Christopher A. Best will direct drove the family to bankruptcy. Sunday morning, Dec. 9, with the production, Miss Gaughan After that, the abbey stayed in . J\tty. Anna Flynn McManus as will be narrator and Miss Flornon-Catholic han'ds until 'it was speaker; and a regular. meeting ence Mello will be at the studio recently purchase'd by a Catholic organ. _ '.' . Wednesday, Dec. 12 HOLY NAME, FALL IUVER New president of the Holy Name Society is John C. Kirkman, supported by William Renaud, vice-president; Timothy J: Murphy, treasurer; John'J.' Neilan, secretary; Raymond McGough, marshall.

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THEOLOGiANS TURN EXPLORERS: Jesuit "theologian-explorers" f~om West Baden College, Indiana, keep alive their scientific interest~ by exploring' LOl:lt River. In one of the mile-long, water-filled passages about 100 feet below the earth's surface are,-from left, James Fleck, Gerald Cavanagh; George Murray, John White and J~~mes Lotze, all graduate students. NC Photo.

RICH IN HISTORY is the countl·y of Iraq. There ow" "Id the traditional site of the Garden of Eden, the ancient cil'J . , . Nineveh, alld Ur of the C.11a1dees, first home of Abraham the Patriarch , .. Remember the story of the three children in the fiery furnace:? The scene of their trial was neal' a city called Kirkuk . • • Today in Kirkuk, in the Archdiocese of Mosul, 450 Syrian Catholics have been trying to make do with a cJiapel whicbt is two small rooms in the priest's' home .•• Only about 120 persons can cl'owd in, The Holy PaM MissimI Aid all of them standing. They have colthe CJr-'leoted some funds for the building mta U1UJ ot a new Church, but not enough ••• for They are very poor, but the Church they want to build will be '20 yards long and 12 yards wide. Their congregation is ilncreasIng '••. Will you make a sacrifice this Advent to help them get together $2,000 to complete their Church? ... • They I~romise remembrance in Masses for their 'generous benetacto:rs. You can send any amount . • • Do it now? Thanks.

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The great Indian leader·Ghandi once said: '''The' political and journalistic world can boast of few' heroes who compare with Father Damien of Molokai. It is worth while to look for the source of sucli heroism". . . We know the source of Damien's magnificant work for the lepers of Hawaii-love for all men . as sons of God~ Some day he 'may be canonized for his heroism' which caught the whole world's attention ... Can you Imagine yourself following in' his footsteps? In a very real and helpful way, you can ... Join our Damien Club and send a dollar each month.. The sisters and priests who work with these sick pe'ople are burdened with indescribable difficulties. Yet now we know that with proper care and medicine these sufferers can be helpe~ . . . Remember the story of St. Francis of Assisi. One day outside the city gates he bent down from his horse and kissed one of these sufferers ... Then he saw it 'was Christ he had honored!

CHRISTMAS IS COMING .

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New Bedfolrd Guild Sets Radio Play

First Mass Abbey In Over 300 Years

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On your shopping list make a note about oar bl~autlful CHRnSTMAS, CARD WITH PRESSED FLOWERS FR01W THE HOLY LAND. Every cent you send us will be used ror tlie' missions and we will send cards to your' friends teiilng them your offering was made' as a Christmas gift for them • • • May- . be you would like to e,nroll one or more friends as members or our Association. They will participate in the work ot tlile mise . sions and In the graces ot 15,000 Masses ot the priests we aid , ~ • Remember our mission priests! Your Mass stipends are their sole support very often. . '. .

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THis ADVENT, please remember the Arab RefugeE~s - ' million of them-who are in such need! Through no· fault of thei~, they find themselves liVing in tents, dependent on the eh!lrlty of people like yourself ... Displ~ed in the war between' Israel and the Arabs: their problem has never been soIved. A $10 FOOD PACKAGE will keep a family for a month ... We will send you a Rosary of Olive Wood from the Holy Land as a token of gratitude from them for .one of these food packages. DEAR MONSIGNOR: , ..... Enclosed is my donation of ••.•••••• for i

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dil'near fast missions flANetS CARDINAL SPQ!LLMAN, Prosldent Msgr. JODOp!:l T. aVGI", '!\'l~'8 Soc', Sltild all c\'l)i;'lil1l!l!l~flI~ll1tll.

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40-0 Victory Over Yoke Assures Stang Title Share By Jaek KiDeavy

The Spartans of. Bishop Stang closed out their first Bristol County League grid season in championship style last Saturday when they romped to a decisive 40-0 victory over New Bedford Vocational at Sargent Field. The triumph assured the Parochials of no tory, while Don's initial Durfee worse than a share of BCL eleven logged a 7-0 win over the laurels on the basis of their Crimson in 1960. This promises 8-0-1 record. Only defending to be another closely-contested

THE ANCHOR-:-DiCXlese of Fall River-lhurs. Nov. 22, 1962

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Story of Love and lobor:

'Stang Gridders Set Record Sparta~s Unbeaten in Eight-Gam'e Schedule

co-champion North Attleboro, affair. Durfee has a 5-2 season's which presently boasts a 7-0-1 mark, all B I' i s t 0 1 C 0 u n t y season's slate, matches and the Hilltoppers is in position to looked impressive in their last overtake Stang outing against Coyle. and then only New Bedford will come in by a victory with a 4-2 record which includes over traditional victories over Mt. Pleasant of rival Attleboro Providence, R.I., Portsmouth, at Hayward N.H., Rindge Tech of Cambridge, Field. For the Mass. and New Bedford Vocasecond succestional. The Crimson lost to sive year the Weymouth and Brockton, both Attleboro-North Class A powers. A crowd of tilt will have a some 12,000 is expected to be bearing on the on hand. Let's hope for good determination of the BCL title. weather; we're due. Last year North scored on a College Notes long bomb, Poirier to Schmidt, Look out for Harvard in an'!iI~(, .. converted successfully and ·nr ~ eon vert e d successfully and other year or two. The current ':1-:,,, waltzed off with an upset 7-6 Crimson Frosh have. put tovictory and a share of the BCL gether an undefeated season to ~i'" top spot. Co.defending champion date - Yale to go on Friday Attleboro is out of contention and the list of victims includes this year but the Jewelers have Princeton, Dartmouth, Boston gained momentum after an un· College and Holy Cross. The usually slow start and they are fourth quarter 7-6 viCtory over ALL-HAIL STANG: Finishing an unbeaten first season in Bristol County League expected to provide North with Holy Cross last week produced play, ~tang coac~ and ~layers are toasts of the Diocese. Pictured, top, left to right, Cosome 'unexpected excitement forn;'idable competition. Captam (end) DId Collms, Coach Carlin Lynch, Co~Captain (back) Tom Perry' bottom Tomorrow's games are those when Crimson coach Henry left te right, tackle Henry CQrreia and back Bill Kelly. " Lamar literally swallowed his which traditionally make a seacigar. son. For those clubs that fared By Lynn Kennedy the good attitude, the willing. Both teams had scoring oppor. A perusal of the 'Temple Staless than well, a victory over a What a high school foot- ness to sacrifice, and the pride tunities that neither could cash dium statistics the. other day long-standing rival cancels out that comes with accomplishment. ,in on. Asked about that one, earlier setbacks. Conversely, brou~ht to light the fact that the ba 1I success story the Stang Carlin readily credits Parsons Lynch suggested that the weathmost schools cannot count a sea- late ·Tom Gastall, whose young High Spartans have written. for a king-size portion of the er hampered both teams offenson a success, despite a winning brother is a real comer with the In three short years from a success he's enjoyed since being sively. "Had it been a dry day, record, unless the outcome of Stang Frosh, holds the Stadium jayvee schedule to the pinnacle out on his own. He calls. Parsons the field conditions good, I the Turkeyday classic is entered record for having thrown the of Bristol County League footone of the nation's best high don't know how it would have longest scoring pass in the Staon the black side of the ledger. ball and a lofty spot in the 'state school football coaches. And the turned out. North certainly had dium's history. Overall, the play TrI-County Pleture large school ratings. record is there. Pueblo Catholic a fine ball club." And he was covered 96 yards, Tom pitching When Head Coach Carlin was state champion in '57, rununstinting in his praise of the Over in the Tri-County Con- 31 to Ken Hagerstrom who then Lynch moved to the North nerup the year before. Ed Marx-coached club. ference the title picture is about went the remaining 65 yards for Challenge Plan As for his own squad, Lyncl) as nebulous as it can get. T-C a Boston University touchdown. Dartmouth campus in 1960, he had the unenviable task of takAt Stang, as at Somerset, was just as lavish. "A great uses a point system which Going relatively unnoticed in ing a. group of enthusiastic but Lynch has successfully instilled bunch of kids. A lot of pride and awards three for a victory, one one important cc.ncept. "The key a ·grea·t love for the game. AH of for a tie. As a result, the three Holy Cross' 48-20· defeat. by football unknowledgeables _ all powerful Penn State on Saturday freshmen and sophomores-and to our success has been pulling them en the team belong. We top teams, Wareham, Falmouth was an S6-yard touchdown kick. molding them into a football ,together. We have no jealousies had 115 out for practice. Those and Case have 9 points and iden. team .. To say that Lynch and his like those that plague some who couldn't pay the price tical 3-2 league records. In a CJff return by elusive Crusader halfback Jim Gravel.' The forSpartans I).ave succeeded is a teams. If a boy thinks he should aren't with us." second place deadlock follow mild way of summing it up. start, he has the opportunity," 'We're That Small' So mer s et, Barnstable and mer Attleboro High three sports The Spartans have been the Lynch confided. "We have' a ' While he loses nine of his lllourne. They, too, have similar standout has, seen reserve duty darlings of the county all season challenge drill. It works simply. starters, Lynch looks to next 2-1.2 slates, better, actually, in this year' behind seniors Tom long. Only a waterlogged 0-0 The boy behind a regular comes year optimistically. A fine group terms of percentage than the Hennessey and ·Al Snyder but the young man is highly retie· with North Attleboro mars to the coach and asks for the opof sophomores and undefeated leading clubs' marks. garded by the Crusader staff and what. otherwise might have been portunity to challenge: If he can frosh team-plus all that SparTo carry this a step further, he's only a .sophomore. 3' perfect slate. The Spartans outgun the first stringer three tan spirit-point to continued and we mig,ht inject our thanks· Bowl Prospects have rolled over' seven other times in the man-on-man blocksuccess. But the '62 team win al~ to Somerset coach Jim Sullivan opponents, tallying in the double ing drill, he starts in his place." ways hold a special place in Car. The victory enhanced Penn who unravelled this knotty digits on each of those winning He pointed out that the squad lin's heart. Not a big team phYs. problem, the second place teams State's Bowl chances consideroccasions. The und~feated Red members have their own set of ically, as teams go, this one rates are scheduled against the leading ably and Boston College's 41-25 Rocketeers have only a Thanks- rules. the grittiest. Co-captain Tommy squads tomorrow. All are top win over downtown rival Boston giving Day joust with Attleboro "This gives them an opportuPerry, for instance, is one of the drawer contests. Case is at University advanced its candileft. A loss to the underdog nity to do some thinking' for smallest. Bj.lt Lynch labels him Somerset, Bourne at Wareham dacy equally well. B.U. entered Jewelers, of course, would give themselves. It engenders strong the toughest football player he'Q!It, and Falmouth goes to Barn- the game with the best pass deStang sole possession of the squad feeling. Perhaps most im. ever coached. "If our opponents stable. A multiple champion is fense record in the nation. When Br~stol County League crown. portant of all is their recognlever got a look at us suiting up, almost a certainty. Barnstable the smoke of battle had cleared, Comical Beginning tion of the 'principle of the best why they'd laugh, we're that is defending champion, Somer- Eag:k! quarterback Jack ConBut the Stang story is more '11.' Lynch was quick to spell small," Lynch said matter of set the Cinderella team that re- ,cannon had riddled the Terrier this out. factly. bounded from a winless '61 secondary with four touchdown 'than a football record. It's a story of love and labor. Lynch, "Nothing is permanent. We The Spartans, however, have campaign to serious contention passes. Both Jesuit rivals will a veteran of four gridiron seaput the best eleven boys on the been no laugh ing matter on the enjoy a week oM before their this year. sons before coming to Stang- field, and the two criteria are field. They literally explode Dec. 1 meeting at Chestnut Hill. Durfee-New Bedford two years as. line coach at Pueb. blocking and tackling. We play with the football. With talented Talking about Bowl bids reT,he leading. independent game the best blockers and tacklers." Ray Leblanc working his qUIlFminds us that Boston English 10, Colorado Catholic H~gh and and also the oldest rivalry in two years as head coach at·8om. This, Lynch admitted, has led terbac~ magic, Stang has all but stands an excellent chance of rethe area brings together the erset High - harbored no illuto wholesale position switches blown seven foes out of the banceiving an invitation to play in Hilltoppers of Durfee and the sions. when he first greeted the over the past three years. park with their blitzkrieg strikes the Orange Bowl on Dec. 6. The Crimson of New Bedford in the 60 odd boys who answered the Unquestionably the formula off the belly series. Boston School· Committee ap68th renewal of the grid comcall to practice that September has worked well, ever since that Give kids like Perry, Charley proved the proposition last week petition that started 'way back day in 1960. Veterans' Day in 1960 when Franco, Billy Kelly, and Dick and now all that remains is for when. New Bedford holds a "If we only had movies of that Stang toppled Apponequet ReRebello the "ligskin and a litUe Bill Stewart's charges to get. by twelve game edge in the series; first session," Lynch reminisced. gional 12-6 in its first varsity running room and it's like trying their big rival Latin School seven contests have resulted in "Shoulder pads and hip pads football game. Last year, Stang to lasso Kelso or Carryback. ' tomorrow at B. U. Field. An Engdeadlocks. The Grimson will be went on backwards. Some had compiled an enviable 6.1-1 mark, They play defense, too. Flank. lish victory, it is felt, will assure out to' break the Alumni Field never even handled a football only second best to New Bedford ers Dick Collins and Carter Hunt the Blue of a firm commitment. jinx that last saw them win in before." But from that comical High's 7-0-1 record in the are hard nosed. Interior linemen The junket will be the first such Fall River in 1950. beginning, the Spartan image County. The only loss on the Henry Correia, Ray Sherman, one for a Boston school. This is the second meeting of was born. And it began'to grow. record was an 18-16 cliffhanger Roy Toulan, Roger ·Prefontaine, A tip of the hat to coach Ken With the painstaking care of with, Dartmouth, the Spa.rtans Paul Mont.fils and Tommy BoisMorris-Montle coached elevens. a bootcamp drill instructor, second outing of the season. The vert are rough and ready. All Nick's crew had a easy time of Pearson and his New Bedford Vocational soccer team that an. . Lynch ,systematically instilled it last 'year, posting' a 36-6 vicBishops more than atoned for except the last three wound up nexed the Eastern Massachu- 'the fundam,~ntals of foo~ball that blotch by burying' the their Spartan careers Saturday setts championship by defeating warfare. He came well-prepared. Indians under the lights, 45-0, against Voke, They'll be sorely Lincoln-Sudbury High, 3-0, at Four years, at Holy Cross under last Sept, 28. Stress Ecumenism "missed the next time around, but M.I.T.'s Briggs Field, Cambridge Dr. Eddie Anderson had equipCHICAGO (NC) ''Peace 'North Fine Club their names are already legepd on Saturday. The Yoke booters Through Ecumenism" is the ped him with/the knowledge of Probably, though, the one on Slocum Road. posted an 8-2 record en route to the game he had to bring to the game they'd like to do over They, their teammates, Coach tlheme of the cathedral peace the Bi-State title and a berth in rallies being sponsored by the boys. But, he had learned more again is the 0-0 deadlock with Lynch, his associates, Charley the EsMass playoffs. Center forThird Order Secular of St. Fran_ at Pueblo under Head Coach North Attleboro. It was billed Connel1, Peter Bartek, Joe Taward Frank Cunha scored two cis. Father Philip Marquard, Jack Parsons, a graduate of Den- as the top outing of the season vares, and Tommy Giasson, anlt· O.F.M., executive secretary of goals and coach Pearson's son vel' University. . with the County League thronea fervidly loyal student body Glenn added a third to cement the Third Order, said that last He had learned how to teach room going to the winner. In. have contributed mightily w the victory. year some 55 cathedrals took those skills, yet, more important, stead it was a frustrating after. that Spartan image. Indeed, it's part in the order's demonstration he had learned the secret of noon of football that settled abquite a football story, this 1962 Happy Thanksgiving, Everyof corporate prayer and action. bodyl eommunicating the intangibles- solutely nothing. :Bishop Stang High team.


,20: . THE ANCI;lOR-Diocese 'of Fall River-;-Thurs. NC,)v. ~2, 1~62

Pr06Q'@~e

Extreme Unction As ·~@~[f@m~nt of Sick VATICAN CITY.(NC) - A proposal that the name of P"Ctreme Unction be changed to the Annointing of the Sick and discussion of possible· changes in the breviary highlighted speed~d-up sessions of the ~cumenical Coun. cil. At the 14th general ses- suggested that it would seem sion it was urged that the useful to -insert the renewal of name of the Sacrament of the baptismal promises into the Extreme Unction be changed rite of Confirmation of those because, the Council press bul-' letin reported, ~'it is associated with the immenence of death by too many people'." It was recommended that its name be changed to the Annointing of the Sick. Coun~il Fathers declared, the bulletin said, that people be taught that Extreme Unction is not a sacrament 'of fear, but a comfort given not only for the . purification of the soul but also for the healing of the body. Other 'recommendations on the third chapter included a call f6r a. cleai"er distinction between sacraments and sacramentals, actions or objects which in their performance or use have some resemblance to a sacrament. A Vatican press office communique said that "one speaker Challenges T o ..

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who have reached the age of reason so that there' would be a greater awareness of the obli-. gations which the' sacrament imposes on those confirmed, "Reference was also made to godparents who often do not have sufficient knowledge of their responsibilities." Several bishops, it was reported, discussed the use of vernacular languages in administering the sacraments and all were concerned with making the sacraments more understimdable to the people. During the 15th general meeting the Council Fathers stl'essed the importance of' the Divine Office and breviary for the spiritual life of priests, both diocesan and. Religious. Of

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. L<?O~S TOI.YEARS ;\HEA.n:. P.?peJohn 'bring~ his ri?'~t 'hand to hi; eyes,striking a medItatIve attItude durmg ceremomes. at St. Peter's BaSIlIca. The. Holy Father, now conducting the IChurch's 21st Ecumenical· Council, will .be; 81 next ·Sunday.. At .left·is Alfredo Cardinal Ottaviani, secretary of' the' Sac.red Congregation of the Holy Office.

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.NEW YORK (NC- - A Cath- the court specified BUddhisin,·Nation.aIM .. e e t i n g olic educator suggested here Taoism, ~ecular humanism and I that if tax funds cannot be used eth~c~l culture. . . . .. Race,' Religion: to support c h u r c h schools, . '" "Secular 'humamsm IS a way . I . neither can they be used to sup-. of life _ 'and:now .the Supreme CHICAGO (NC) - Dr. . port public schools whiCh te~ch.Court calls ita religion ..,.,which .' Martin Luther King, Jr., secular humanism,. described as places great emphasis on human '. Baptist churchman who' -is a' a religion by the U.S. Suprenle dignitY,human worth and per- . leader in non~iolent· inte,.. . Court.' . . s<i~al rights;". the Monsignor: gration 'mo~ements;' will sp~ak , TJ:1is point was raised by Msgr,. saId. . , t o the National G:onference 'on .. _Edg~r p... McCarren, superinten- .' "Bu.t t.his. rathe.'r .accurately . R.. eligiori. . and R. abe. here nex.t :.' ... dent of· school~ in- the Rockville Ce'nt.·er, N.Y.,. dioce·se,. on . tt t.ele- . ~~sc,r!b~Spr7Cisely t~_e way' of' 'january. '. . ; . ' life' whIch IS, taught. ma value .' .... . . vision ·.program , sponsored' by, . t " b'''' .t'h":"" ·u·:"1'" . h ·01'" '. Kmg WIll speak on the final . . d p' b sys em· . y . e p u IC . sc 0 S., , . . . f' . ,.\ .. t . day" .. the Religious. Freedom an u -.. 'A' d"th . th . ue'tio . arises if . of the.cl?n erence. HIS OPIC WIll n lic Affairs' Project of the Na- th e~ e. qt' S .n '.. .' 'd' - be: "A Challenge to the Churches .. .. C' . Ch" e governmen canno t give al .. ':. . . . . 1;, .' '. bonal o~ference of l'lshans· · . . · · · 1····· t o· any· re Iglon, canno.t·· pre'f"er ... ~nd the Synagogues,., , d J . .,. · ,'!l~Mew.srd·C . .' "at thO t : '. orie re~igion',or aid .all t6get~~r, .. ~.The conference~. wi.l1 be . the' . ~gr'h' c. ~ren·}\dr. "b~ ···how can itgiv¢ .suPport·to. secu": :first.:na;tioIl almeeFng c9.nvened· : Sb~cuthar·S um.ams~C··':"f~,St·~· ~s~r.ll~·'·: larhu.manism?!':· , :. '., by agencies'of all ffil!j9r -U. S. '.. y e upreme' our as.a ·re 1- • '. . ' . .' . ,' ;....., '. ..,. . '. I' .. 'i' ' . · . f{iO.:n ih'·.~i~~i decisi?l1 lilY. O.lVi~g ,., ..... L~.ter:·· M~gf,:'.¥CCl1:~t~~:; "sai~: .' . reli~I~~s.groups;~ :fc~rdlng to' ts .~'" . ...Maryland-man who had:'been .,.' 'If It (secular humamsm) is a . spo s s. . . :.! .. -dehied a' notary public's U)cens"e . r"eligion 'and";' it is· ~e~rig "tau'gh~'" . :, !n~itations .'Yer~: :fnade .. i~ 'a ' - .. :.': ; ;:because··' he refuse.4. to'. prof~ss " iri the· publi.c· ;schools ',';"'" ,:and I: .Jo~nt..~s~tem~~t::· :I,~~t May.' .~~ , ' .. :; ''befief in . God. ' ..: ..";.. , .. ,.' :." .. th!~~.iI1ost,public Bdh6o~'e4.uc~- ,...ran~lllgC~thj:?~lc~\l~ot~stan,~..l,m~ .::~ ,,. . Way of Life . .... ,'.tors would.. beglad to affIrm', that· .J!'!'YIs.h church~en .... , .. . ... . ... ,:.~ To pro~ect 'his freedom;'the'; ju~li'v:aiues" taught::--""t~el:t.'ir.·'They;·are:Archbi~ii:~p :wiiii~in,; . ,- .. ..":: : ... ··~urt ruled, that.the.gove.t:n!»!lnt: ,~he 'P9iilt; still .~email1s•. ~o:W~aQ..:·E.~.Cousins;:episcopal·chiliiDlan;: '. ~o.\tId "n~t, .~aY~r rel~~~ol}s''rf~~ch., , .!.t:cbe. sUl.'p~rt~d by. public fU~ds,,·,. 't!f' the Social ,Actio~~ p~p'artl)i~.nt, , p.ro.fess beh~f.1ll God.:9Y~r: ,t~'bse .. ·.If .?~ .~md·,of sup~C?~t. f?r. any: ·N.ational· Cathol,ic ',!/elfar~ Con'-.' whIch d.o not,' Msgr.. ~~Carren.,rehglOn, can. ;b~ g~ven. III ·the, ference' Irwin Miller, president: . Ia.id. Alllong the;latter;'he added, .. pul>lk·scnools?". .'. :', -.': of the'.' Nat~(mal ·Col.p'l"il '~f,

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S OU;H... ·ST.· PAUL '-:7:' ... , ' .. ' 'Among the people of newly incharacterIzed. by a' h~gely '.' .. King, 33;"has a mitionaI.repu,;,·, "~'. C·'.'~.. , " .'. ' . .. : d~penden~ Uganda' .are '. many.. swpllen abpomell' after the! are.· tation· ·for his Ieadetship in inOO_· . "c ' .,". .' .'" .w~ose chIldren .are growlll,g up . we~neq, ~D~. Obe!hoffe~sald ..·\. . gration ·efforts. Hel is' presently ,.. ,: ". .... :.•... . h~althy ~oday because. a .gentle~, ..The mothers know their ·jli!!.t'- '-"cop'aSt'~r, with his 'father; of the. . :: mannered . Europ~an w 0 man. weaned' children cannot· digest ",: Ebenezer Baptist'. Church, At-. . .' . .' ., .' taught them to grmd nuts. . nuts, the. .East. ~fricans"main ~anta.·.. . t'.n' ..: ..' '...: . · . ·The·.missionary teaclIer is Dr. . source of·.protein;· 110 they feed.. .' .. ', .. " ,.·.·. ··:e·y'.; ... Magdalene Oberhoffer, Grail i1'!~ ·them soft, starchy foods: . t~e:": .. . '. . '1' .f·" :.. . termitiomil president; who was native unsweei banana or ka- ! L a u d a I ornla intervie~ed"h.ere on. her way to sava,.a starchy root .which Dr.. ' . ' -:. . Love~and, OhIo; to attend a na'-' Oberhof~ercompare~ to a. popr~:'Prlvate'Schools · tional convention of the Grail' quality potato in nutritive value. . '. I. . . · 'Movement. . Tgrem~dY.thissituati6'ri,·.she· . SAN' FRANCISCiO . (NC) .f. . '" D~. 'Obe~hoffer a medical dOC-' said, "we taught them· griild. California. gUberna~orial c~ndi1 '. t()~, .spent sevEm ;e~rs uganda .' nuts tg ·the ~()nsistency 0'£ thid~ . ;dates pr~lsed the .ro~e ,of pr.lvatel. . ~ ........... "asa'member of. the Grail a milk for baby food." Asa result schools m statemen:ts"publiShed ~ 'woman's' iay apostolate .gro'up. 'tnany illfan.ts. ar.e. now: .getting short~y, be.fo.~e Tuesday's bal_ . J\nd, whiie there was heavy de':', the protein they formerly Iack~d...Ioting III the State.'" . iI I. mand for her professional skill,: . Gov. Pat Brown and Richard · .~he was ~bI~ to be of service.in Fumes Over F()om" ~. Nixo1'! mad!,! thelr ~oinm~nts . . " . . . moreJbaslC ways as welL· . . ' .' ' . .. .... m response to' a ··questIon asked .9 ..;;' ~'W.e try to teach. them how to' '. CLEVEL~ND. (!iC) ~ ()ne. :by the Monii~r, n~wsp~per of.. :., W .,,' ,...._..' . 'I'· live," she' said in describi.ng one father. hert: IS ~omg to pay closer the San FranCISco archdIOcese. · aspect. of Grail work in East attentIon to hIS second grader's B . :d' t.h t r ·k' ·th . Africa . . homework. At the end of a re.ad_ f?Wn sal a , ~or mg WI . . . ing lesson' were several words public schools, prIvate schools The. nut episode is an example. ' which' were to be' used in sen-' "can 'contribute ~e~vily to the East African 'children frequently tences. One of the w'o~ds' was' giga~tic. task ·.of ~:ljfering. high' f-o-a-m. 'For the edification of ~uality ~ducatIon Iry the quanSister, Joh!!ny wrote: ,iWhen tI~y· whIch ~~r future growt!) Fall you pour the beer it makes lots WIll demand. The November meeting of Fall of foam," Johnny got an A from· Nixon said that prtvate schools River Catholic Guild for the, Sister-but dad, who, naturally, "not only provide ~choice to Blind will be held Sunday, Nov. prefers to be nameless, has es- parents, but I belie~e also pro25, in Sacred Heart School, fol-, tablished a censorship on all vide a healthy diverkity in edulowing Rosary at:\d Benediction . homework before it leaves the cation that contriblhes to the in the church at 2:1~ p.rn. house.' .. common· good.'! '---.:---- .

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