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,Turn to P;;tge Twenty Bishop Connolly At New England C,CD Session HARTFORD - Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of Fall River, pre- ,sided Saturday afternoon at one of the sessions of the 16th New England Regional Con- gress of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine held here. Bishop Connolly presided at the session on "Audio-Visual Training Tools," which took place in South Catholic High School. On the same afternoon, Most Rev. 0 James J. Gerrard, D.D." Turn to Page Eighteen , , MONSIGNOR DOLAN FATHER MENDONOA FA'mER F. A. Plans are nearing completion for a golden jubilee re- ception honoring Rt. Rev. Msgr. James Dolan, pastor' of St: Mary's Church in Taunton. The public reception will be held at 4 Sunday afternoon, Sept. 30 at Lincoln Park, Dart- mouth. Ordained in 1912, Msgr. Dolan was first as- sig ned to Sacred Heart Church, Fall River. During World War I Msgr. Dolan served with unusual distinction as a chaplain and, for many years afterwards, was chaplain of Taunton Post, American Legion. At the end of the war Father Dolan became chaplain of Bethlehem Home in Taunton, head of 'Diocesan charities in chaplain of Taunton State Hospital and, ori Sundays, assistant at St. Mary's Church" Taunton. In 1926 Father Dolan was made pastor of Holy Family Church, East Taunton, and in 1935 was appointed pastor of his native parish, St. Mary's. He was accorded the rank of ,Domestic Prelate in 1952, with the rank of Monsignor. Turn to Page Twenty Taunton Prelate to Observe Half-Century Labor for God Nine Priests FATHER SOUZA. JFATHER CURRY Appointment of a new administrator, the transfer' of three pastors and the re-as- signment of five curates in the Dio,cese is announced today by Most Rev. James L. Con- nolly, Bishop of Fall River. The, changes are effect.ive next Tuesday, Sept. 25. They are: , . ' - 'Rev. Maurice Souza, adminIs- trator: at, Our Lady of Health, Fall' River, 'to pastor- of St- , Anthony's Church, Taunton. Rev. Francis A. McCarthy, pas- tor at St. Joseph's Church, North Dighton, to pastor of St. Pat- rick's Church, Somerset. Rev. Leo M. Curry, adminis- trator at St. Church, Vineyard Haven, to pastor at St. Joseph's 'Church, North Dighton. ,Rev. Luiz G. Mendonca, assist- ant at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church, New Bedford to admin_ istrator at Our Lady of Health Church, Fall River. Rev. Raymond W. McCarthy, from St. Patrick's Church, Som- erset, to assistant at St. Patrick'a Church, Fall- River. Rev. Joseph Oliveira, a(lsistaM at St. Anthony's Church, Taun- ton, to assistant at, St. Michael'D Church, Fall River. Rev. Mantlel P. Ferreira, as- istant at St. Elizabeth's Church, Fall Rver, to assistant at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church. New Bedford. . Rev. Philip A. Davignon, as- sistant at St. Pius X Church, South Yarmouth, to assistant at Sa,cred Heart Church, Oak Bluffs. Rev. Ernesto R, Borges, from assistant ,at Our Lady of the Angels Church, Fall River, to as- sistant at St. Elizabeth's Church, Fall River. Orata@ Impera,ta 'The Chancery 'Office an- nounced on Sept. 17: that a special prayer, the collect from the 12th Sunday· after Pentecost, will be recited in every Mass in all Churches and Convents of , the Diocese. This "oratio imperata" is to be . recited on every ferial and ,feast day from day of notifica-' tion until the morning of Oct. 11,· the day the Council opens. The c'ongregation is asked 'to' join the celebrant of the Mass in the recitation of this . prayer. :. ,This to the Holy Spirit will continue to be recited at aU' pUblic services.- , PRICE lOe $4.00 per Year FATHER SORELLE Never Min'd Heavenly Mansion, ,These People A,re Heading Towards Celestial Igloo Some people are' pointing for heavenly mansions, but there's a group of Fall River area mission supporters who prefer celestial igloos. They're members ,of the Celestial Igloo Club and their purpose is to aid the Jesuit missions of Alaska. They're spurred on from time to time by a visit from Rev. Paul C. O'Connor, J., Director of Alaskan' , Missions for the Jesuits. One 'such occasion took place last week, when the Iglooites foregathered at Holy Name parish hall,' Fall River. They saw slides of "their mission" and heard an accompanying com- mentary from Father O'Connor., In Alaska for 29 years, Father O'Connor was' appoip.ted mis- sion director three years ago. In his' new post he has head- quarters in Portland, Ore., and goes to Alaska several times a year to on needs of the farflung Jesuit at the Turn to Page' Eighteen S,J., is stationed in the Far East. Father Ernest left the States in August, 1961, for the language school at Taiwan, Formosa. r- 7 ---"""":"" professor of Theology . and a director of young men' , studying for the. priesthood: . ,For almost 20 years, Father ,Galvin taught in' seminaries on the West and East coast 'as a ,Sulpician Father, a member of a' group of diocesan priests al- . lowed by their bishops to devote themselves to the exclusive work of training young men for . the diocesan priesthood. Father Galvin, son of the late 'Michael P. and Elizabeth Riley . Galvin, was born in Fall River , in ,1907. He graduated from the Cathedral School, Durfee High School, and attended St. Charles College, CatoI].sville, Md. He studied Philosophy at the Bas- selin Foundation of the Catho- lic University of A,merica 'in Washington from which he re- ceived his M,A. degree. Father studied theology at the Sulpi- cian Seminary of the Catholic' Turn to Page Eighteen FA'fHER GALYIN The , , ANCHOR Head of 'New York Seminary Is Acushnet White 'Father ' Vol. 6, No. 39 © 1962 The Anchor For the past two years, Father Sorelle has been at the White Fathers' NovitIate in Franklin, Fa. Ordained in 1953, he was pro- iessor in the White Fathers' seriiimiry two yearS before going' to Rome to continue his studies in philosophy at Gregorian Un- iversity. He received his licen- tiate in 1957 and left for the African missions, spending three years in Tanganyika and Ugan- da. The new superior of St. Jo- seph's Seminary has a brother teaching in the foreign Mission meld. Rev. Ernest A. Sorellep Changes Affect Ordinary Appoints Adrrtinistrator, Transfers Three Diocesan Pastors Rev. Paul Sorelle, W.F., son of Mrs. Clara Sorelle, of 24 Slocum Street, Acushnet, has been named superior of St. Joseph's Seminary, conducted by the White Fathers near Onchiota, N.Y. Father Sorelle, who assumes his duties with the opening of the new term this month, will also supervise the other activi- ties on the grounds, in- cluding the retreats for priests and the family camping at Cape Lavigerie during the Summer. Fr., John J ... Galvin Served . - . for' Y;ears .as 'Professor 'l'he Most Reverend' Bishop' celebrated a Pontifical lRequiemMass last Saturday' morning in SS. Peter and . Paul Church, Fall River, for R.ev. John J. Galvin, S.T.D., , IAssistant of the Church, who suffered a fatal heart the previous Wednes- illlay.The eulogis't, Re,v. AI- lfred 'J. Gendreau, pastor of Blessed Sacrament ChurCh, River, signalled out Father Galvin's work ali a seminary
20

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Orata@ Impera,ta HARTFORD- MostRev. James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of Fall River, pre- ,sidedSaturdayafternoonat Appointment of a new administrator, the transfer'ofthree pastors and the re-as- signmentoffivecuratesintheDio,ceseisannouncedtodaybyMostRev.JamesL.Con- nolly, Bishop of Fall River. The,changes areeffect.ivenextTuesday,Sept.25.Theyare: 'l'he Most Reverend'Bishop'celebrated a Pontifical lRequiemMass last Saturday'morning in SS. Peter and. MONSIGNORDOLAN FA'mER F. A. McCAR'lll~ da. .
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Page 1: 09.20.62

,Turn to P;;tge Twenty

Bishop ConnollyAt New EnglandC,CD Session

HARTFORD - Most Rev.James L. Connolly, D.D.,Bishop of Fall River, pre-

,sided Saturday afternoon atone of the sessions of the 16thNew England Regional Con­gress of the Confraternity ofChristian Doctrine held here.

Bishop Connolly presided atthe session on "Audio-VisualTraining Tools," which tookplace in South Catholic HighSchool.

On the same afternoon, MostRev. 0 James J. Gerrard, D.D."

Turn to Page Eighteen

, ,

MONSIGNOR DOLAN

FATHER MENDONOA

FA'mER F. A. McCAR'lll~

Plans are nearing completion for a golden jubilee re­ception honoring Rt. Rev. Msgr. James Dolan, pastor' ofSt: Mary's Church in Taunton. The public reception will beheld at 4 Sunday afternoon, Sept. 30 at Lincoln Park, Dart-

mouth. Ordained in 1912,Msgr. Dolan was first as­s i g ned to Sacred HeartChurch, Fall River. DuringWorld War I Msgr. Dolanserved with unusual distinctionas a chaplain and, for manyyears afterwards, was chaplainof Taunton Post, AmericanLegion.

At the end of the war FatherDolan became chaplain ofBethlehem Home in Taunton,head of 'Diocesan charities inTaun~on, chaplain of TauntonState Hospital and, ori Sundays,assistant at St. Mary's Church"Taunton.

In 1926 Father Dolan wasmade pastor of Holy FamilyChurch, East Taunton, and in1935 was appointed pastor of hisnative parish, St. Mary's.

He was accorded the rank of,Domestic Prelate in 1952, withthe rank of Monsignor.

Turn to Page Twenty

Taunton Prelate to ObserveHalf-Century Labor for God

Nine Priests

FATHER SOUZA.

JFATHER CURRY

Appointment of a new administrator, the transfer' of three pastors and the re-as­signment of five curates in the Dio,cese is announced today by Most Rev. James L. Con­nolly, Bishop of Fall River. The, changes are effect.ive next Tuesday, Sept. 25. They are:

, . ' - 'Rev. Maurice Souza, adminIs-trator: at, Our Lady of Health,Fall' River, 'to pastor- of St­

, Anthony's Church, Taunton.Rev. Francis A. McCarthy, pas­

tor at St. Joseph's Church, NorthDighton, to pastor of St. Pat­rick's Church, Somerset.

Rev. Leo M. Curry, adminis­trator at St. Augustine~s,Church,Vineyard Haven, to pastor at St.Joseph's 'Church, North Dighton.

,Rev. Luiz G. Mendonca, assist­ant at Our Lady of Mt. CarmelChurch, New Bedford to admin_istrator at Our Lady of HealthChurch, Fall River.

Rev. Raymond W. McCarthy,from St. Patrick's Church, Som­erset, to assistant at St. Patrick'aChurch, Fall- River.

Rev. Joseph Oliveira, a(lsistaMat St. Anthony's Church, Taun­ton, to assistant at, St. Michael'DChurch, Fall River.

Rev. Mantlel P. Ferreira, as­istant at St. Elizabeth's Church,Fall Rver, to assistant at OurLady of Mt. Carmel Church.New Bedford.. Rev. Philip A. Davignon, as­sistant at St. Pius X Church,South Yarmouth, to assistant atSa,cred Heart Church, OakBluffs.

Rev. Ernesto R, Borges, fromassistant ,at Our Lady of theAngels Church, Fall River, to as­sistant at St. Elizabeth's Church,Fall River.

Orata@ Impera,ta'The Chancery 'Office an­

nounced on Sept. 17: that aspecial prayer, the collect fromthe 12th Sunday· after Pentecost,will be recited in every Mass inall Churches and Convents of

, the Diocese.This "oratio imperata" is to

be . recited on every ferial and,feast day from day of notifica-'tion until the morning of Oct.11,· the day the Council opens.

The c'ongregation is asked 'to'join the celebrant of the Massin the recitation of this .prayer.

:. ,This Pray~r to the Holy Spiritwill continue to be recited at aU'pUblic services.- ,

PRICE lOe$4.00 per Year

FATHER SORELLE

Never Min'd Heavenly ~ Mansion, ,These PeopleA,re Heading Towards Celestial Igloo

Some people are' pointing for heavenly mansions, but there's a group of Fall Riverarea mission supporters who prefer celestial igloos. They're members ,of the CelestialIgloo Club and their purpose is to aid the Jesuit missions of Alaska. They're spurred onfrom time to time by a visit from Rev. Paul C. O'Connor, ~. J., Director of Alaskan'

, Missions for the Jesuits. One'such occasion took place lastweek, when the Iglooitesforegathered at Holy Nameparish hall,' Fall River. Theysaw slides of "their mission" andheard an accompanying com­mentary from Father O'Connor.,

In Alaska for 29 years, FatherO'Connor was' appoip.ted mis­sion director three years ago. Inhis' new post he has head­quarters in Portland, Ore., andgoes to Alaska several times ayear to chec~ on needs of thefarflung Jesuit ou~posts at the

Turn to Page' Eighteen

S,J., is stationed in the Far East.Father Ernest left the States inAugust, 1961, for the languageschool at Taiwan, Formosa.r-7 ---"""":""

professor of Dogm~tic Theology .and a director of young men'

, studying for the. priesthood: .,For almost 20 years, Father

,Galvin taught in' seminaries onthe West and East coast 'as a

,Sulpician Father, a member ofa' group of diocesan priests al- .lowed by their bishops to devotethemselves to the exclusivework of training young men for

. the diocesan priesthood.Father Galvin, son of the late

'Michael P. and Elizabeth Riley. Galvin, was born in Fall River, in ,1907. He graduated from the

Cathedral School, Durfee HighSchool, and attended St. CharlesCollege, CatoI].sville, Md. Hestudied Philosophy at the Bas­selin Foundation of the Catho­lic University of A,merica 'inWashington from which he re­ceived his M,A. degree. Fatherstudied theology at the Sulpi­cian Seminary of the Catholic'

Turn to Page Eighteen

FA'fHER GALYIN

The, ,

ANCHOR

Head of 'New York SeminaryIs Acushnet White 'Father '

Vol. 6, No. 39 © 1962 The Anchor

For the past two years, FatherSorelle has been at the WhiteFathers' NovitIate in Franklin,Fa.

Ordained in 1953, he was pro­iessor in the White Fathers'seriiimiry two yearS before going'to Rome to continue his studiesin philosophy at Gregorian Un­iversity. He received his licen­tiate in 1957 and left for theAfrican missions, spending threeyears in Tanganyika and Ugan­da.

The new superior of St. Jo­seph's Seminary has a brotherteaching in the foreign Missionmeld. Rev. Ernest A. Sorellep

Changes AffectOrdinary Appoints Adrrtinistrator,

Transfers Three Diocesan Pastors

Rev. Paul Sorelle, W.F., son of Mrs. Clara Sorelle, of24 Slocum Street, Acushnet, has been named superior ofSt. Joseph's Seminary, conducted by the White Fathersnear Onchiota, N.Y. Father Sorelle, who assumes his dutieswith the opening of the newterm this month, will alsosupervise the other activi­ties on the grounds, in­cluding the retreats for priestsand the family camping at CapeLavigerie during the Summer.

Fr., John J... Galvin Served. - .for' Y;ears .as 'Professor

'l'he Most Reverend' Bishop' celebrated a PontificallRequiemMass last Saturday' morning in SS. Peter and .Paul Church, Fall River, for R.ev. John J. Galvin, S.T.D., ,IAssistant ~pastor of the Church, who suffered a fatal heart~ttack the previous Wednes­illlay.The eulogis't, Re,v. AI­lfred 'J. Gendreau, pastor ofBlessed Sacrament ChurCh,lF~1l River, signalled out FatherGalvin's work ali a seminary

Page 2: 09.20.62

, : ~

COLLEGE

(Please .Make Checl<~.Payable to Stonehill College) .

STONEHILL

NAME .., _

ADDRESS __

COURSE : -

TUESDAY ; -

NORTH EASTON, MASSACHUSETTS ,... , .' >

Institute~fAdutt,Educe-tion 1962 fall Session ", ·C;.o~~ucational .

Tues~ays-:-Sep~ember 25 through December 11Registration by mail or September 25 and October 2-7:00 P.M.

to 9:30 P.M. in Holy Cross Hall 'Minimum registration per class is 12. $20 payable" in full .at

. . . registration.

Please register with:

DIRECTOR' .INSTITUTE 'OF ADULT EDUCATION.

. St",nehil/' CollegeNorth Easton, Massachusetts

September 18, 1962

DIOCESE OF PALL RTVERFALL RIV.ER, JlASBAOIlUSJn'TS

.ORANCBBY OJl'I'ICB

Beloved in Christ:

A little more than two weeks remains for the COJll..vening,in Rome, of the" Ecumenical Council. 'It will bapplease God, a source of blessings in truth, faith and peaoofor the Church and the whole world. But to that end W4ilmust increase our prayers and ·our hopes..Pope John haG

'constantly urged us to pray, and even make acts orsacriafice with such thought in mind. .· There is. mounting ~nterest throughout the Christiamworld in this significant gathering. In token of our earnes~

concern, we will continue'the daily recitation of our prayer:"0 Holy Spirit, Spirit of Truth, come into our hearts.

Shed the brightness of:Thy light on all nations that they·may be one in Faith and, pleasing to Thee. Through ChristOur Lord. Amen.". To This we will add, from October l§t until the lith,

·when the Council convenes, a Novena of spiritual exercisesin all parishes and convents of the Diocese. This will con­sist of the customary October devotions, Rosai-y and Bene­diction of the Blessed Sacrament. Attendance at these exel\­cises should be a matter of strict duty. "More things a~wrought by prayer than this world dreams of."

Besides this, we' ask all the faithful to offer up their. works and sacrifices for .the success of the Council. The

ailing and infirm can offer' tlieir sufferings, the workell'his toil, the poor their privations. But even the hale andhealthy should signify by their conduct the desire we aIRhave for the peace .and prosperity of the Chur~h in thesGtrying times. .

Following the direction of the Holy Father, I hawinstructed all priests of the, Diocese to recite each day, atMass, the Collect from the Mass for the 12th Sunday afteJ'Pentecost. The faithful too are urged to recite, with inasistence, these' words which Pope John says "seem to comefrom heaven" as a light and' guide to our aspirations:

"Almighty and merciful God, through Whose GraceYour faithful are able' to serve You with dignity and joy.'grant, we beseech You, that- we may run without anyhindrance towards the attainment of Your promises. Wefrom .all parts of the world thus implore You. Throughthe merits of Jesus Christ, Master and Savior of alI.Amen."

Such then is the pattern of preparation that we allshould make for the Ecumenical Council. Confident thatsuch prayers will never be in vain, I remain,

.. Dev.otedly yours in Christ. .

~~;;4--. Bishop: of Fall Rive~'

.Mass: OrdoFRIDAY-St. Matthew, Apostle

and .Evangelist. II Class.' Red.Mass Proper;. Gloria; SecondCollect Ember Friq,ay of ~ep­

tember; Creed; Preface of.Apostles. . ..

SATURP~Y - Ember 'Sat~rday INTERIORDECO:~~~Ststart',.'eptember..25)...7:30-9:30 P.M.

of September. II Class. VlOlet. . ..,.Mass Proper; No Gloria; 'Sec- '. "CONVERSATIONAL FRENCH I (Beginning); .

ond Collect St. Thomas Villa- . "CONVERSATIONAL FRENCH I/.(I~termediate)

I:lova, Bishop and Confessor; "REAL ESTATE ("HOW to stort, stoy, rwith and succeed in' Real .Estate")

no. Creed; .Common . Preface. SPEED READING .. The Celebrant may omit the "THE LOGIC OF CHRISTIAN LOVE'~nd, .3rd, 4th and· 5th lessons "CREATIVE 'WRITING FOR PLEASURE, FOR PROFIT, AND FOR' PUBLICATlO~".with ., their versicles and EFFECTIVE SPEAKING AND' THE CONDUCT OF MEETINGSprayers appointed filr this day. MANAGING YOUR MIND AND EMqTIONS' ,.T~e first lesson and the Epis- PAINTING AND DRAWINGtIe, however, must be said. CHARM AND POISE .

SUNDAY-XV Sunday Aft er "A FOLLOW-UP TO"MASSACHU~ETTS CRIMINAL LAW FOR PEACE OFFICERS". Pentecost. II Class. Green. INSURANCE (B~okers' and Agents' Refresher and license Examination Review

Mass Proper;. ~loria; Creed;' THE A ;~:s~F INVESTMENTS'Preface of TrInIty. 'MATHEMATICS REVIEW.

MONDAY - ~ass of·· previous REVIEW OF \RITHMETIC; RATIO; PROPORTION; SIMPLE INTEREST;Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass INTRODUCTION TO ALGEBRA; LINEAR' EQUATONS IN ONE VARIABLE.Proper; No Gloria; Second (Course work may be adjusted to~needs. de,ire and background 'of

, Collect Our Lady of Ransom; students. No pre.requisites.) •no Creed; Common Preface.' HOW TO MAKE THE MASS YOUR OWN (Participation in ·the Moss for the overage

TUESDAY"":'" Mass· of' previous Catholic)Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass . NUTRITION (For. those' interested .in diets, home economics, hygiene)

Proper; No Gloria or Creed; One .credit may be granted for each course marked ".C9mmon Preface.' . __. ._. ---.;, __. _ -- __ - -

WEDNESDAY-North AmericanMarty'rs: •. SS.. Isaac Jogues,John DeBrebeuf, and Compan­ions, Martyrs. II Class. Red.MasS Proper; Gioria; SecondCollect SS. Cyprian and Jus­tina, Virgin, Martyrs; noCreed; Common Preface.

. THURSDAY - SS. Cosmas and'

. Damian: Martyrs. III Class.Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; noCreed; Common Preface. -

MeryknoU StorryTo Be'YeievisedOn Wednesday

NEW YORK -The quietheroism ofa man of God· inthwarting unholy ambitionsof mighty Communist China

. wll be depicted coast-to-coast in"The Cross and the Dragon" on

. Armstrong Circle Theater overCBS-TV at 11 Wednesday night,Sept. 26.

The story details events lead­ing to the arrest in March, 1960of Bishop James E. Walsh ofMaryknoll, and to his sentencingat the age of 68, to 20 years im­prisonment ,by a Red court oncharges of American "espio­nage."

The script, by Bob Crean, oneof TV's top writers, will featureJames Daley as BislJop Walsh.The one-hour live broadcast wasproduced by Bob Costello anddirected' by William Corrigan.

. Symbol 01 Dope'The 71-year-old Maryknoll

bishop, a native of Cumberland,Md., has devoted 34 years of mis­sion work to his beloved Chinese•

As the last remaining foreignmissioner in Red China, he re,.mains a symbol of hope and 're­assurance to millions of silentwitnesses; who are undergoingwhat Church officials describe as"the worst· persecution Ul' 2',000years of Christianity."

J 0 I N 8 HIERARCHY:Bishop Lawrence T. Picachy,8.J., has been' consecratedOrdinary of the new Indian

I See of Jamshedpur in north­eastern India. He was edu­cated by the Jesuits in theU.S. Maryland.Province. Or-.dained in 1947, he served asrector of Xavier College inCalcutta..

OFFICIAL

Necrology. .. '·SEPT•.. 21 ",.'~" .

Rev. George o!oWdr, 1935; Pas­tor, OUT Lady of PurgatOry, NewBedford;:,:""~~~p:t~"~4 '" '" .

Rev. Joseph 'E: : C.Bourque,1955, Pasto~; Blessed Sacrament,Fall River~ .,. .

· '.:. Sept': 26· .Rev. Jolin' J. Donahue, 1944,

Assistant Pastor, st. William,.Fall River.

· .'. ':N~wmg~ :Award· P~TT~BURGH(NC) - Dr.

Francis A. Roy, dean of the lib-.eral arts col~ege at ,the Univer-" ,

· sity of Arizon ain Tucson, washonore(i here with the 1962 Fac­.ulty .Award ')f the National·Newman Alumni Association.

the birth of their third childand thus avoid~..g increasedpublic assistance for them.

The prelate, speaking at aMa~s in St.. Matthew;s Cathedral,noted a Washington newspaper'sreport that 50 mothers had beensterilized at the hospital.

. Unable to PayEach of the womeR had' more

than thI'ee children. Each was· judged· by the hospital to be"medically indigent", which was:defined as unable to pay futuremedical bills. Each consented to

· ste~ilizatiQn" af,!er "being !tp"'proached by physicians attachedto 'the hospital.

TJ:te'50' women were' among176 ,patients '~eated by-the hOs­

~ pital's ma~etnity clinic. The'. clinic;.: accoz:ging . to .iUlspital

doctors; administers a "com­prehensive contraceptive pro-gram." .' .'

.The hospitars program wasdrawn to public' attention when.a group of ·.20 sociologists· at­tending the convention of the

· American Sociological. Assocl-·ation here went on a tour of the· hospital's clinic. The tour' \Vas

sponsored by' the Human Bet­terment Associatioh which pro­motes.voluntary sterilization. "­. About two - thirds Of the

~womensterilizedat the hospitalwere Negroes.

JBishop of Fall River.

Diocese of FaII' River

CLERGY TRANFERS

THE ANCHOo -I);ncese of F",II ~iver-Thurs. Seot. 20.1962

Appointments eHective Tuesday, September 25, 1962.

Rev. Maurice Souza,' Our Lady of Health Church, FallRiver, to become pastor of St. Anthony Church, Taunton..

Rev. Ernesto R. Borges, Our Lady of the Angels, FellRiver, to assistant at St. Elizabeth Church, Fall .River.

Rev. Philip A. Davigon, St. Pius X, So. Yarmouth, toassistant at Sacred Heart Church, 'Oak Bluffs.

Rev. Leo M. Curry, st Augustine' Church, VineyardHaven, to become pastor 'of St. Joseph Church, No. :pig~ton.

Rev. Luiz G. Mendonca, assistant at Our Lady of MountCarmel Church. New- Bedford, to become administrator ofOur Lady of Health Church, Fall River.

Rev. Manuel P. Ferreira, St. Elizabeth/Church, Fall River,to assistant at Our Lady of' Mount Carmel Churc·h, NewBedford. .

Rev. Raymond W. McCarthy, St. Patrick Church, Somer­set, to assistant at St. Patrick Church, Fall River.

Rev. Joseph Oliveira, st. Anthony Church, Taunton, to.assistant at St. Michael Church, Fall' River.

'. ~.

. Rev. Francis A. McCarthy, St. Joseph Church, No. Digh-: ton, to become pastor of St. Patrick Church, Somerset.

2

raJ; ~.NCBOB

a_..d 01... P....... !'atll ., hU a,...II....· P....n._ '''Q 1'b~ at u,Hijrbla..ll 4 "aJl RI.e. ..... IOJ"tho OlOtlroll. " .... Otoe_ .,Pall RI... Suboerh.ttoll p..... -..-u.",,"'Pili••~.OO _ J'_.

Sterilization Backers WeakenSpiritual Aspects of, Society

<I FORTY _HOURS·.. j DEVOTION'I Sept. 23-St. Roch, Fall River." . Sacred Heart, Taunton.'j Sept. 30-St. Louis de France,': I .. Swansea.'j. St. Anthony of Padua,j New Bedford.j Oct. 7-0ur Lady· of the

Holy Rosary, Fall. River.Our Lady of tht> Holy

Rosary, Taunton.q~t. I~St. . JohnQ~ ,God,

'. Somerset. . . ..Our Lady of the immac­

late Conception, ~aun-,ton.

• WASHINGTON (NC)-Arch­bishop Patrick A. O'Boyle ofWashington has .condemnedfrom the pulpit of his cathe~afthe extensive sterilization pro­gram of a hospital in nearbyWarrenton, Va. '

He charged the program withbeing "absolutely immora~,"

supported by "misguided menanti women":.·anda 'potentialdisaster· for Ameiican society if

·widely imitateq.·. ."· Archhishop;O'Boyie said Fa}1­quier Hospital's program has the

.. ~bvious and crudelyse~h"purpose of reducing tax-es by

'., encouraging mothers of poor· families ·to be sterilized after

.. Legion of Decency

. .The followiOg films are to-be, :~ added to the lists in their re­

· spective classifications:" .·Unobjectionable for. general.~patronage: Marco Polo (this'classification' applicable only to

, . prints shown in tnt) .We'll BuryYou. . .

.. Unobjectionable for adults andadolescents: Pirates :of, Blood

;.:River.· .; Unobjectionable for adults: If:A. ManAnswe~s; Who's .Got.. theAction.

Page 3: 09.20.62

4 THe. A ",r/-!I)[l--Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. ,'n 1962 •

II,j

IIII

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Re-elect ProvostROCK HILL (NC) - Father

Maurice V. Shean, C.O., whoserved as Provost of the Oratoryof 'St. Philip N~ri here in SouthCarolina from 1948 to 1956, wasre-elected to the post by mem­bers of the Congregation of theOratory, which was founded in1935 and today has 36 members.It cares for eight Churches andthree chapels in this area

sharply divergent paths.lEarly lLife Orderly

She gives very little indica­tion of the development ofHemingway as the artist he wasto be. Of the personality withwhich he impressed the world,there are some suggestions. Therugged life he was introduced toat l:\n early age, was given hisfirst gun when quite small, wastutored in fishi. _ and hunting.

Even so, his was Ii relativelysheltered existence; at the least,it can be said to have been or­derly, secure, and perhaps alittle stuffy. The discipline wasclose and consistent, if neverharsh, and revolt against it mayhave been inevitable.

It came after Ernest's experi- •ences in World War I. Becauseof eye trouble, he was rejectedfor service in the Americanforces. At 19, he joined theItalian Red Cross, went at onceto the Italian front, was badlywounded.

• Radically ChangedWhen he returned home to

convalesce, he was radicallychanged. "Ernest wasn't thesame old friend and playmateI had known. Though much lessthan a year had passed since, hehad gone to Europe - and onlya year and a half since ,we hadgraduated from high school to­gether - a' lifetime of new ex­perience, war, death, agony, newpeople, a new language and lovehad crowded into Ernest's life."

For 18 months he idled in OakPark, doing nothing, earningnothing. His mother served anultimatum on him - either hegot a job or he would have toget out. He went off to Chicagoand became editorial assistanton the magazine CooperativeCommonwealth.

A little later he was married,and shortly after that he and hiswife were off to Paris, their staythere financed by a small trustfund she had. This proved to bethe beginning of a permanentb'reak with home.

First, Story VulgarHemingway's first book, Three

Stories and Ten Poems, waspublished in Paris in H123. Mar­celline read the first story, Upin Michigan.

"The two main characters ofthe story, a man and a woman;,had the same f~rst names astwo of our close family friends,a couple of whom we were par­ticularly fond. The descriptionsof them in the tale, especially.of the man, fitted our friends soaccurately that as I read on andrealized' that Ernest had putthese kindly people into thevulgar, sordid tale he had in­vented, my stomach turned over.

"It was Ernest's apparent lackof any decent consideration forthe feelings of the people whosenames and detailed descriptionshe had used in the story thathorrified me."

The mystery of the growth ofthe genius and the peculiaritiesof Hemingway is not explainedin Mrs. Sanford's absorbing re­collections of a happy family in'a vanished era. But something ofthe mystery of Hemingway'sconnection with Catholicism iscleared up. His sister says thatwhen he married his secondwife, P a u 1 i n e Pfeiffer, he"joined Pauline's faith."

Recollectsfami~w l~fce

Author's SisterHemingway

By Rt. Rev. lWsgr. John S. KelIlnedy

Authoritative accounts of the early years of ;famousmen always intrigue us. In them we seek, and sometimesfind, clues to the celebrities' later development. Thus, it iswith considerable curiosity and expectation that one opensAt the Hemingways (Atlan­tic-Little, Brown. $4.95), inwhich Marcelline Heming­way Sanford, sister of Ern­nest Hemingway, recalls the"years of innocence" in OakPark, Ill., ofthe family ofw h i c h bothwere members.

The Heming­ways' parents,Clarence Ed­ward Heming­way and GraceHall, Doth camefrom Mid dIeWestern fami­lies of so m esubstance; Mrs.Hemingway's was the mostprosperous and socially promi­nent. From her earliest y,earsshe had the advantage of traveland cultural opportunities. Thus,she was often taken to the operaas a very small child, and hermother once made this entry inher diary, "Baby Grace sleptthrough Aida again tonight."

Promising SingerGrace Hall became" a singer

of exceptional promise. Shestudied in New York with acoach who had MetropolitanOpera singers among her clien­tele and it was thought thatGra~e would have a career inopera herself. ,

She chose, however, to re­turn home, and in and aboutChicago she made a sizable an­nual income from singing andteaching voice. In fact, almostall through their life togethershe earned more than her hus­band.

He was a physician. GraceHall and he became close friendsin 1894 when Grace's motherwas ill of cancer. The Hall fami­ly doctor had taken on youngHemingway, lately returnedfrom studies in Europe, as anassistant, and the assistant oftenmade visits to the Fj:all houseduring Mrs. Hall's last days. Thecouple were married in 1896.

Treated as TwinsMarcelline was born in 1898,

Ernest in 1899. Ther~ were threeother children, but they weremuch younger that the first two.Not only were Marcelline andErnest close in age and alwaysgood friends; they were alsob'eated as twins by their mother.

Mrs. Hemingway had wantedtwins. Not having them did not,revent her from acting as ifher wish had been fulfilled.

She tried to make twins out ofa girl and a boy a year apart inage. "When we were little,Emest and I were dressed alikein various outfits, in Oak Parkin gingham dresses and in little

, fluffy lace-tucked dresses withpicture hats ... We wore ourhair exactly alike in bangs, ina square-cut Dutch bob." Mar­celline was kept two years in~dndergarten so that she andErnest might begin the gradestogether.

Parents' Marriage HappyBiographers of Hemingway

'!ave spoken of conflict betweenlis parents. They represent theioctor as a rugged, out doorsvpe 'of man, and his wife as de­icately artistic. But, by Mrs.";anford's account, this is not inthe least an exact picture.

Mrs. Sanford reports no suchconflict between the two as1ther commentators have sup­losed they discerned. She in­}ists that her parents loved each'ther dearly, and were happily15 one until Dr. Hemingway's.leath. -

There is here no support for~he theory that Ernest Heming­''1ay was torn between the two,11' that the parents wel'e in­'olved in a continuing contest

.0 lead the chiidren down

Page 4: 09.20.62

FiveoMount St.· Mary Graduates Enter Religious Life

·3

PATRI\JIA MURPHY.

EVENING COURSESc .

3 Credits Each

STONEHI'LLCOLLEGE

NURSES

Far further information contact:

REV. ALOYSIUS E. CUSSEN, C.S.C,. Vice-President and Dealt

. Registration:-W~dnesday. Sept. 26 .7:00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M.

AQMINISTRATION BUILDING·

Registration Fee $5.00Tuition $25.00 per semester c,eClIt

North Easton, Mass.Tel. CEdar 8·2052 or

OXford 6·9050 (Boston' Line)

'Mondciy and Wednesday Eveni':'9••

Between 6:30 and 9 P.M.'

October, 1 through January 23

FRESHMAN' ENGLISH COMPOSITION

TYPES Of ENGLISH LITERATURE

INTROQUCTlqN TO SOCIOLOGY

Garden PartyTen special prizes will be

awarded at a garden party to besponsored from 1 to 10 Saturday,Sept. 22 by the St. Cecelia Mis­sion Club at St, Anthony's Con­vent of the Franciscan Mission­aries of Mary, 631 Second StreetFall River. ' '

Proceeds, will benefit the Sis­ters and features will includerefreshments and various booths.

Bg~i\1(Q)lP>many. East Zone authorities didnot allow Bishop Adolf llolteof Fulda· to attend the consecra­tion.

There were 400 priests iii the~rowd. Tohe ceremony was broad­cast in St. Severi church whichwas also filled. West Germanrelatives of the new Bishoptook part in the festivities.

Entering the Sisters of Mercyat Manchester was Patricia AnneMurphy, daughter of Mrs. IreneMurphy, 679 Third Street,Cathedral parish, Fall River. Shewas an active participant in sev­eral clubs during her four yearsat the academy. Besides being amember of ~he glee club and

. earned the organization's certifi­cate.

Savings Bank Life InsuranceReal Estate Loans

Christmas 'and Vacation Clubs

Savings Accounts

5 Convenient Locations

•••••

'DOROTHY HATHAWAY,

NEW BEDFORD,INSTITUTION'for 'SA\lINGS"·

Dancing Every'Saturday~ite to the Music of

Henry Cottrell and hisOrchestr,a

~ ~h~ck These Banking Services

M~YFA!R 4-988~.,.,.4-997'

91 Crandall Rd. Tiverton, R.I.

Planning A Woddini:·shower. Ian­quot .. ' Mooting-Call our Banquet

Dopartment for dotail.. An Partl..giv.. our Export AHention-CaU

Famous for', ou~ PrimeAged Charcoal B~oiledSteaks '~ -also Roast

Beef .. Sea"Food

Buek':Ossicks'RED' ':ANGUS

RESTAURANT

EC$t ,Gtelflm@nS Jam Cati'~~dlf(}jl

[FCff C@!rO$e4:D"Qlfl'a<OlD1) ofBERLIN (NC) - Crowds

filled the cathedral in the eastGerman city of Erfurt to over­flowing for the consecration ofAuxiliary Bishop Hugo Aufder-beck of Fulda.' '

Archbishop Alfred Bengsch,Bishop of Berlin, consecratedthe new Bishop. Auxiliary Bishop Friedrich Rintelen of Padet­born ,and Auxiliary BishopJoseph Freusberg of Fulda wereco-consecrators.

Bishops Aufderbeck and Freus­berg, who reside in Erfurt, ad­minister'the part of the i.Jioceseof Fulda that lies in East Ger-

\ . "-

fHE ANCHOR-Diqcese of Fall River-:Thurs. Sept. 20, ,.196~

sodality for four years; shebelonged to the French andscience clubs and the liturgicalchoir. She was secretary of thesodality in' her senior year andco-editor of'the yearbook.

Miss Murphy also merited a'Certificate of Merit for outstand­ing work in the National Educa­tional Development Test in bothfreshman and sophomore years.

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

380,000 in ChicagoCHICAq;O (NC) ~- The 534'

schools in the Chicago archdio-'ce~e are expected to enroll'

380,000 studel')ts, this September,an al~-time· high. The two­county archdiocese has the na­tion's largest. i>ri'~ate school

, enrollment, ,

." ....

KAREN DALEY

PRINTERS

Auxiliary Plants

BOSTONOCEANPORT, N. J.PAWTUCKET. R!:t

Main Office and PlantLOWELL. MASS.

Telephone LowellGL 8·6333 and GL 7-7500

SULLIVAN BROSe

:NO JOB TOO BIG

NONE TOO SMA'LL

JOAN CAMARA

MissionersOver

ROSE.\WARIE ALVERNAS

.-~: . ; ..

u. S. Foreign'Now Total

Five 1962 graduates of Mount ing her three years at the' acad­St. Mary Academy, Fall River, emy, Miss Camara was an activehave entered novitiates of, the member of the orchestra.Religious Sisters of Mercy, four Karen Daley, niece of Mr. andat Cumberland, R I. ,and ,the Mrs. George ,Grecgory, 131 War­fifth at Manchester, N. H. ren Street, SS. Peter and Paul

The four postulants at Mother Parish, Fall River. During herof Mercy Novitiate, Cumberland, four years at the academy Missare as follows: Daley was'active in many extra-

Rosemarie Alvarnas, daughter curriclular activities. She heldof Mr. and Mrs. Antone Alvar- membership in the sodality, thenas, 39 Chace Ave." North Tiver: debate club, glee club, 'science,ton, R I. Miss Alvarnas was. a club and was assistant editor ofmember of Holy Ghost Parish. the' school yearbook. She heldWhile at the academy she partid- the office of vice-president ofpated in basketball, the French 'the sodality in her senior year.club and the sodality. She was, Dorothy ,Hathaway is theclass president in her freshman daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nor­year and homeroom director' in ,'man Hathaway, 181 Fosterher, senior year. She was also a, .. Street, SS, Peter and Paul par:"member of the Student Council. ish, Fall River..She was an active

Joan Camara, also a Tiv~rton member of the orchestra duringresident, daughter of Mr. and her four years at the academy.Mrs. Charles Camara of 31 During her freshman and soph­Tucker Ave. She was a member omore )'ears, she was a memberof St. Christopher's parish. Dur':' of the, Junior Red Cross and

EDICTAL CITATION'. Diocesan Tribunal .,

Fall River, Mass.1'!'uIlity of Marriage (Silvia-Parker)

Since the actual place of residence- ofMr. Fred Parker, the respondent in the,case Silvia-Parker. is unknown We citethe above mentioned person to appearpersonally before the Sacred Tribunal ofthe Diocese" of Fall River, on October "13,1962 at 9 :30 A.M. at 368 No. Main StreetFall River, Massa'chusetts; to give testi:mony to establish:

Y'he~her ~he nullity of the marriageexISts In thiS case? .

. Ordina!ies of· the places or other ·pas..tors havmg knowledge of the residenceof the above person, Mr .. Fred Parker~ust see to it that he is properly advisedtn regard to this edictal citation. .

S/Felix S, ChildsPresiding Official

Given at the seat or'the 'Tribunal of Fall Riveron this the 4th day of September 1962S/Reginald M. Barrette ' .•

Notary ,. • .•

WASHINGTON (NC)-U.S. mission-sending societiessent more than 700 of their members to missions outsidethe continental U.S. in the past y~ar, bringing to 7,146 thenumber of U.S. Catholic missionaries serving, overseas.These figures' are 'containedin a'new report on U.S. Cath- from 2,070 to 2;185; in Middle,olic mi~sionary activity is-" America from 433 to 537; and insued by the Mission Secre- South America from 91h· to

'tariat,a,clearinghouse of mission 1,247:" '',information and services." ' "Largest Numbers ,

The figures were made public Of the 7,36 mission as~ignments, . in connection with the 13th an- 'in ti:le past year, 400 were ac­

nual meeting of U,S. mission- cO,unted for by men's communi_sending societies, ,which was at_ties, 312 by women's communi-

., tended by an estimated' 1,000 tes, and 24 ,by the ,three lay'mis­priests,., Religious and laymen." 'sionary groups covered in theStatistics on mission work are report. ,,' " ", .'contained in the new edtion of 'Among' the m~~',s communi­the booklet, '.tu.'S. Catholic'Over- ,ties" the ,largest ,number ,of 'as-seas Missionary Personnel." signments was. made by' the

. Includes 307 Laymen Maryknoll Missioners, who 'sent58 !TIen to foreign missions. They

The report on mission assign- 'were follow'ed by the Jesults45'ments. in the· past year covers 50' . , , ,Franciscans, 28;· and Divinecom~unities of men, 45 of Word Missionaries, 20'-wo,nen, and thr~e lay,missionarygroups. It shows a total of 736 Among womeh's cbm'~unitiesmission assignments during the the Medical Mission Sisters mad~past year, compared with a figure the largest ~umber of assign­,of 550 in a similar report issued ments, 29. They were, followedat this time last year. by theD()minican ,Sisters of

ThE! breakdown of the figure Blauvelt, N. y.., 27; and the .Sis­of 7,146 missionaries now serving ,ters of Charity of the. Blessedoverseas shows that this figure : Virgin Mary and the MaristincludeS 3,203 priests,' 270 ,Missionary Sisters, who eachBrothers, 2;764 Sisters, 152 scho- sent 23 .nuns. I

lastics and 307 laymen., . On ll, geographical basis, 'tile. number of U.S, missionaries in­

creased irt Africa during the pastyear from 78.1 to 901; in Asia

Frank Howard CYOMoo::t Popular Pro'·

LOS ANGELES (NC) - Out­fielder Fra'nk Howard of the

"l~.s Angeles oD 0 d g e r s was, awarded a plaque as "the MostPopular Pro" of 1962 in a com-petition conducted here by ,theCatholic Youth Organizationand the Tidings, archdiocesannewspaper. '

The 6-7, '250-pound Howarda convert to Catholicism, polled543 votes, topping pitcher-team_mate Sandy Koufax. by 47 bal­lots. In third place came base­stealing Dodger shortstop 'MauryWills with 471 votes,

The trophy was presented toHoward by Father John P,Languille, CYO director, ahdCharles G. (Chuck) Johnson,Tidings sport editor, in a home­plate ceremony before a nightgame in Dodger, Stadium here.

Requiem Mass,For Sister

A Solemn' High Mass' of Re-'lluiem .will" be' sung 'tomorrow':ijlorning at 10 in St. Ma'ry's€athedral, ,Fall River, 'for' the~epose of the lioui of Sister'1I4aryAngelita, RS.M. who' died Tues­~ay at Mt. St. Mary's, Convent;Fall River.

, ,. Born Abigail Sheehan in NewB.edford, she was the daughter4!f the'late Michael J.' and Alice"Riley' Sheehan..

She entered religious life in1929 and has served at St. Pat~

rick's and St. Vincent's 'Con­vents, Fall River and the NewBedford Convents of HolyName, Our Lady of Mercy and51. 'John the Baptist.

She is survived by two sisters;:Miss Grace ,Sheehan and MisSTheresa Sheehan of New Bed-'ford, and three brothers, Mi­chael, Albert and Frank Shee­han of New Bedford.

Urges Re~i'taHcn'

Of Ma,ss' P[(@yierFor COl1lnco'~,

VATICAN CITY (NC)Pope John has appealed for'worldwide 'recitation of a i

Mass prayer for the coming' ,ecumenical council and indicated,the assembly will dig deeplyfuto ,)cial questions.

The Holy Father said prepara­tions for the council indicate

, ,tpl;ltRome will be the center ofa new era in the history of the

;!,' world. He said 'the council's at­traction to those interested inreunion with the Church causeshim "serene .joy.~~ , . '

He' asked that this prayer be1Iepeated daily until the openingof the council:

"Almighty and merciful God,through whose grace your faith­illl are able to serve you withdignity and joy, grant, we be­seech you, that we may runwithout hindrance toward theattainment of your' promises,We, from all parts of the earth'

- and from heaven, thus implore, you. Through the merits of JesusChrist, Master and "Saviour ofaU. Amen."

He said it would not be pos­sible ,to find "happier expres­sions more in accord with theindividual and collective pre­paration for thesucc~ss of theecumenical council."

Social Teachings0n social teachings, the Pon- '

tiff put great stress on what 'hecalled the need for the Churchto point up the sense of re­sponsibility Christians must

'show in their social life.It is this sense of duty and the

good example it represents thatdraws non-Christians to theehu'rch, he' said;

He added that "the problems"of society today press upon theChurch and he said the council"will be able to present, in clearlanguage, solutions which are,demanded by the dignity of manand his vocation as a Christian,"

The council, he indicated, willexplain the fundamental equa­lity of all people "in the exer-

. eise of rights and duties I withinthe entire family of nations." Itwill also make a "strenuous de­fense" of the sacred character ofina'trimony he said. "

Page 5: 09.20.62

Ii

iI

5

Model 262

Moilel225

hsy terms 1!I1111liiabia

School OfficialsOppo~e U.So Aid

CHICAGO (NC) - A majori­ty of the U.S. public schoolboard members who respondedto a poll have opposed newFederal aid for public schoolsand by a great margin have re­jected aid to parochial schools.

The National School BoardsAssociation said the final re­sults of its poll of 20,000 boardmembers are much the same astentative results _issued at theassociation's convention in St.Louis in April.

The NSBA said' 56.1 per centof those questioned did not wantany new Federal aid programfor public schools. However,most favored continuance ofexisting programs, including theNational Defense Education Act.

On inclusion of parochialschools in future Federal aidprograms, 78.2 per cent of themembers voted negatively. Only13.9 per cent were in favor. Theremaining 7.9 per cent were saidto be undecided. .

THE AtK!-'OR-Thurs., Sept. 20, 1962

Interracial ProjectCHICAGO (NC)-More than

300 Catholic college studentsvisited the homes of Negro Cath-

. olic families here as part of aproject to improve race relations.The home-visiting project wasarranged by Friendship House,an interracial center here.

Avoid disappointment. EnjoY winter with

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Because every year we've ordered more and we stiD

sell out. Even the. factory's increasing production

can't keep up w.ith the amazing demand,

Ii

I~

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"'"

DISCUSSION CLUB: Rita' Sasseville, Helen Conrad,Dr. Walter Conrad and Normand Sasseville use The Anchorto supply background material on encyclical "Mater' etMagistra." The discussion group, one of many in Diocese,meets bi-weekly, has 10 members.

Some homework is needed f9ra successful discussion group.

'Members should have read thetext before coming to the meet­ing, and sh~uld be prepared withquestions, points of disagree­ment, and profitable sidelights

· on the matter at hand.What to discuss? There are

discuss!on aids available for allsorts of groups, ranging fromteen-agel's through adults. Pop­ular with. younger people arethe Queen's Work series of dis­cussion outlines. Information onthem can be obtained from theQueen's Work at 3115 SouthGrand Boulevard, St. Louis 18,Mo.

An adult series of pamphlets isissued by America Press, 329 W.108 Street, New York, N.Y., and

· a similar series is offered by· the Paulist Press, 18 E. 76Street, New York 21, N.Y.

Advanced groups can maketheir own reading lists and dis­cussion outlines. with the aid ofpublic and parish libraries,pamphlets and periodicals, it ispointed out.

One last point. Nothing aidsdiscussion like a refreshment

· break. Over a bite md a sup,conversation flows like the cof­fee.

Most discussion groups areeager to accept new members, soif you're interested, look around.There's probably a club nearyou. If not. start YOUr own

Groups Throughout Diocese Learn

of Faith, ~njoy Themselves Too

New Bedford GuildMeets TonightNEW BEDFORD GUILD-I-14...

New Bedford Catholic Guildfor the Blind will hold its firstmeeting of the season at 8 to­night in K of C hall, SecretaryMary E. Kearney announces.

Plans for the year were dis­cussed at a pre-season meeting,which included an address byFather John Murphy, regionaldirector, and reading of thetreasurer's report by WrightWalker. Mrs. Philip. Dupont,president, op'ened the meeting.The need for volunteer driverswas stressed.

The telephone commttee n­eludes Mrs. Lillian Hughes, Mrs.Florence Doyle, Mrs. Mary Sul­livan and Mrs. Margaret Thorn­WA.

Discussion

Truths

Rhodesia -Mission IsScene of Shooting

EMPANDENI (NC) - South­ern Rhodesia's Prime Minister,Sir Edgar Whitehead, has. call­ed for a full investigation of ashooting incident that took placehere at this British .territory'soldest Catholic mission.

The shooting occurred whenabout 150 African students riot­ed and threatened to attackSisters and girls at the missionschool, shouting: "We will kill'you:" They had already thrownrocks at a priest and cut elec­tric lines.. As the youths were about toattack, a Brother shot at them.Three African students werehit but are not :n serious con­dition. Fifty rioters are underarrest and the mission is beingguarded by police.

'By Patricia McGowan

Like to talk? Who doesn't-that's why discussion clubs are so popular and why, ascold weather approaches, Diocesan groups are limbering up for the "long Winter eve­nings." It's much better to talk, of course, when you have something to say and factswith which to back your statements. Discussion clubs aim to provide such ammuni­tion. They range from in­formally organized groupsof neighbors who take turnsmeeting in each other'shouses to parish clubs and unitsorganized under auspices of theConfraternity of Christian Doc­trine.

These Catholic groups havea common goal - to increasemembers' knowledge of theFaith and, through them, tospread knowledge to others.

Ecumenical CouncilPopular topic just now is the

forthcoming Ecumenical Coun­cil. Groups are delving intohistory of past Councils and theproposed agenda for this one.Of perennial interest is thestudy of Communism, andseveral groups have studied thecatechism as background forfuture teaching of children'sclasses.

Typical of informal groups isone organized by Dr. and Mrs.Walter Conrad, Holy Name par­ish, Fall River. It includes mem­bers· from St. Joseph's and St.Anne's, Fall River; Our Lady ofGrace, North Westport; and St.George's, Westport. '

To begin with, members madea survey of Church history,using "A Popular History of theCatholic Church" by Philip

'Hughes. They are now studying"Mater et Magistra," the papalencyclical on social problems,and plan to' proceed to St.Augustine's "City of God."

There are certain basic rulesfor 'such discussion clubs, mem­bers have discovered. Theyshouldn't be too large, or quietpeople are apt to. find them­selves too shy to speak up; allsmall groups promote better dis­cussion.

Leadership should rotate, or. if one person is naturally fittedfor the role, he may be madepermanent leader. 'His job is todl'aw out each member, makesure that all have a chance tospeak, and be prepared withleading questions ifodiscussionshould flag.

Canada CharityAids HomelessIn Hong Kong

HONG KONG (N C )Typhoon - ravaged H 0 n gKong got a dramatic psycho­logical boost with the ar­rival of 648,000 pounds of

"canned pork from Canada.The SS Slilbura steamed into

the harbor bearing the manna· from Montreal two days after· Typhoon Wanda's l60-mUe-an-· hour winds ripped through this

British possession and left anestimated 128 dead and' 47,000persons homeless.

The Salbura bore the pork: donated by the Canadian gov­

ernment through Catholic Re­lief Services-National Catholic

· Welfare Conference. The 27,000· cases-each containing 24 one­,pound tins of pork-had been- earmarked for relief of the

refugees who fled here from· communist China last spring.

The shipment arrived at atime when foodstuffs were

, GCarce and marketing operations· had been disrupted.

Escape From RedsMost of the newly homeless

· thousands were among the 60­to-70,000 persons who escapedfrom Red China. They had beeneking out an existence in jerry­built squatters' huts or in sam­pans in the harbor--dwellingswhich were. ripped to match­sticks by Wanda. So a large

.' share of the pork designated for· ref u gee s' was distributed to· them,

The typhoon smashed through· this colony and brought with it

III 10-foot tidal wave whichwrecked the shantytowns across

· the harbor from' Hong Kong is­'land itself.

"ote to Incre~se

Aid for Aigell'o«llLUCERNE (NC) - A com­

mittee of the International Con­ference of Catholic Charities re­solved at a meeting here inSwitzerland to increase socialaid to Algeria.

The Extraordinary Committeefor Aid to Algeria, formed lastMay, took the action because ofthe present crisis in that coun­try. Archbishop Leon-EtienneDuval of Algiers attended themeeting, where it was reported-'that Catholics have alreadygiven $5.5 million in emergencyaid to the people of Algeria.

.. 80 0 (0)00 C:~~®llD~~t~

· le ~MW MO~~®01l~umLE PUY (NC) - Close to

80,000 people jam m e Ii thisFrench mountain town to cele­brate the' millenium of theChurch of St. Michael, Romane_

· sque jewel built atop a needle­like rock.

Fernando Cardinal Quiroga y· Palacios. Archbishop of Santi­

agQ de Compostela, Spain's fore­most pilgrimage point, presidedat the rites at this center of de­votion to the Blessed. Virgin.

The famaus statue of the"'Black Virgin" df LePuy - theoriginal of which "Was an ebanyimage given to the cathedralhere by St. Louis IX in 1254 ­was borne in pro-cession

'throughout the city. The proces­sion terminated on the terracefronting the Cathedral .of NotreDame. where Benediction wasImparted.

Stress TiesEarlier there had been simul­

taneous services conducted byvarious prelates in all thechurches of Le Puy. Among theleaders w~s Archbishop JosephMarie Martin of Rouen, a formerBishop of Le Puy.

Among the speakers duringthe ceremonies were CardinalQuiroga, the Mayor of Le Puy,and Charles PIchon, Frenchauthor who is president of theFranco-Spanish Committee. Allstressed the ties that bind theancient pilgrimage - sites of LePuy and Compostela, and thusthe Catholics of France andSpain.

Page 6: 09.20.62

Ecumenism in Architecture

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall Rlvor, 410 Hig!lland Avenue

Fall River, Moss. OSborne 5-7151PUBLISHER

Most Rev. James L. Connolly, 0.0., PhD.GENERAL MANAGER Assi. GENERAL MANAGER

Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo. M.A. Rev. John P. DriscollMANAGING EDITOR

Hugh J. Golden '

JJesllDoll' Il'<o> ~eCe;Ye

1JihJe<o>~o~y A 'W(OHl'd1,NEW YORK (NC) - Father

Walter J. Burghardt, S.J., Wood_stock College theologian, will bepresented with the 1962 CardinalSpellman Award for theologyby Francis Cardinal Spelman,Archbishop of New York, onWednesday, Sept. 19 at the Car­dinal's residence here.

Father Burghardt was chosenfor the honor last June at theconvention of the Catholic Theo:"logical Society of America inPittsburgh.

The award was instituted bythe Cardinal in 1947 to honor amember of the society annuallyfor outstanding achievement in

.' the field of theology. The award,consists of a scroll signed by' the

Q Cardinal and the society presi­dent, who n9w is Father FerrerSmith, O.P., a gold medal and acash award.

, .

-Stresses Th'r.~at,

Agains,t Priva'teCharity Agencie$'. ATLANTIC CI'IT'(NC)~

Archbishop JohnJ., Krol 'of, Philadelphia spoke 'out here

against the threat of govern­~ent encroachment on private'

, charities. ' ;, ,

Archbishop Krol described the'''phenomenal'' growth of publiewelfare programs iIi' the, u~s.as a "mixed blessiilg;'in an' ad:'dress to a general 'session of theannual meeting of the NationalConference' of G:atholic' Chari-' ­ties, the St. ,Vincent 'de Paul'Society and the Association of

_ the Ladies of Charity. He said:"It is a joy and comfort to see

such genuine concern for theneeds of our neighbors. It is Q

cause of urgent concern to seethe increasing government in­tervention stifling' and suffo­cating the private initiative ofvoluntary agencies of charity.instead of encouraging and sup­porting it."

The growth of public' pro­grams at the expense of privatecharities was one of, several"disturbing trends" in the chari­ties field noted by ,the Arch-

, bishop in his address.

Ignore Spiritual Needs

He said all these trends sliare'a common trait: "They focus all 'attention on the physical' aridmaterial needs of the recipient,but ignore his spiritual needsas well as those of all the peo­ple who, contribute or al;e en-gaged in we!!are 'work." ,

He cautioned against ignoring"the essential fact that Christ'scommandment of love was atwin commandment - the firstand greatest of which was tolove God-- without which therecan be no true or enduring loveof neighbor." I

He also warned that unlessdevelopments which menaceprivate charities are halted"th . ,ere IS a danger that, whilewe denounce the evils of com­munism, we will drift into acommunistic pattern of totali­tarian management of the livesof individuals by government.'"

Archbishop Krol urged Cath­olics engaged in charities workto examine whether they sharesome of the responsibility forunfavorable developments.

~hristli~e ~xample 'Fosters Vocations

ST, LOUIS (Ne) - The p~i~'kno~n as a "Good Joe!' seldomattracts' a vocation, Bishop, Ful- ,to.n J. ,Sheel1 said here., . ". '

," 'Jyst'a good Joe' won't g~,a vocation/' he said. "But, if apriest is ,known as another'

'Christ, he will attract others tot,he religious life. And this is

,as' true of Sisters, and of thelaity, as.it is of priests.", He emphasized' the need of,Christlike 'example, if voca­tions are to grow. "VocatioJ1L'!Jdon't co'me from promotion.They come o'nly from God. BUtyou can help make a vocation,by the Christlike lives you live.~

WEDNESDAY,- SS. nSA\A\C.:uogues, .:uohn De ,Brebeuf &Companions, Martyrs. It is hardto celebrate the Eucharist' inhonor of martyrs without recog­nizing how clearly human evilis present, too, in this very actof our rejoicing, Not in themartyrs themselves perhaps butcertainly 'in their pers'ecutors.

"I ought to have been com­mended by you," St. Paul tellsus in the first reading, but in­stead he was misunderstood andattacked. Yet withal God drawsgood' and promis'es the beati­tudes of the Gospel.

TUESDAY - Mass as on SUJII­day. He gladdens us by givingus the power to "do good" (firstreading), to overcome habits ofsin, to emerge from that slaveryinto freedom. Partly b,:cause,though sometimes slowly andhaltingly, the life He gives us(Gospel) overcomes death andall that death carries in itswake. And partly because evenwhile the evidences of sin" anddeath are present in our lives,the evidences of divine life and"doing good" are present too.

FIFTEENTH SUNDAY AF­TER PENTECOST. God's giftsand our dependence on His giftsis 'the refrain of today's' Mass.This in no news to the Chris­tian, nevertheless it is the basicGospel truth which has to berecalled again and again - bothfor the humility of the virtuousand for the courage of the habi­t'ual sinner.

"We live 'by the Spirit," thefirst reading tells us, and theGospel shows Jesus giving lifeto a corpse. Life, whether it isthe life of that' first creationwhich God mysteriously evolvedor the new life of man-in-C,hrist,is God's gift. -And no matterwhat we produce, no matterwhat we "sow," it 'is this life inthe Spirit that gives it 'ultimatesignificance. '

The liturgy provides us Withan opportunity to touch' all ofour dailJC1 deeds with Christ'ssaving deed, because it is aroundthe altar that what we are andwhat we have done meet theChrist Who is and' Who does.

MONDAY - Mass as on Sun-,day. So the entrance song of 'theMass asks, qQd not. only 'to' saveus (we have already spoken ofthe life He gives) but also togladden us, to ,give us joy -

,t~is too is His gift. And in thecollect ,we pray that His caremay always govern the Church,

,,"for without your assistanceshe cannot, be safe." And the

'offertory song reflects that even'our hymns of praise He has putinto' our mouths. ,

EMBER SATURDAY IN AU­TuMN. A traditional ordinationday in the Church, today's Scrip­

, ture readings in most places'may be simplified to include

only' the first and the last, two'(of the seven in the missal).,They teach us that the fact of

'time, the nature of'man's earth­ly life and its "dividedness," re­quire special days of prayer andfasting, designated days of re­ligious feasting. Unless. man al­lows the liturgy to punctuatehis

,life with such events, the Spiritis submerged and direction islost.

TODAY-Mass as on Sunday."Seek first the kingdom of Godand his justice," (Gospel) a jus­tice, an approval we gain aroundthe altar' by making a total of­fering of our lives, a crucifixionof our nature. In this single­hearted offering and "cruci­fixion" we find the kingdom ofGod and His approval. Not oncefur all, for it is a kingdom whichis' rediscovered every day and inevery choice.'

C"fhnOlA.9h th& Week With theChWlchBy REV. ROBERT W. HOVDA~ Catholic University

TOMORROW - st. Matthew,Apostote, Evangelist. Today'sfeast takes precedence over theMass of Ember Friday. And in­stead of the Apostle, perhapswe think chiefly of that Gospelin 'the New Testament which

,bears his name, that writtenword which brings to us thegood news"of Jesus and the sal­vation He offers. As we honorMatthew and invoke his prayersthat we m'ight better understandthe Gospel message, we thankGod for the precious gift of theBible and pledge ourselves to

,study and,toponder it.

SG'lTesses (6«lJIl'!hJoUO<eSo,

~09lhlll'Si Olm rEd]lllJ<e«lJIl'O<Ol1mST. LOUIS, (NC) - Catho­

lics should be aware of theirrights in education even if theyare not permitted" to exercisethem fully in the U.S. 'at present,

, a pri~st said here.

Msgr. John J~ Kennedy saidCatholics do not want 'state aidwhich' would put Cat hoi i cschools "under the State." But,he said, the present system of

,collecting taxes from all cit­izens and using them to aid onlya -p 0 r t ion of the nation'schildren amounts to discrimi­nation a'gainst Catholic children.

"As Cat hoi i c parents youshould be aware of ,your rightsin' education, even if your arenot permitted to ,exercise themat the present time," he toldcongregations in the St. LouisCathedral here.

Atheismfor

THE ANr:HOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. Sept. 20, 1962.. .' - -,' ~ - ~ . . ~ .

VoteAThe official newspape! of the Polish Atheist Societies,

Argumenty, has called for a special campaign in ruralareas to draw children away from religion classes. '

The newspaper article appeared as schools in Polandopened for the year., It seems that parentai demands for religious less.ons

for children have not lessened, and so the ,atheistic paperis urging the promotion of various outdoor events to at­tract youngsters away from the lessons in religion givenafter school hours by lay people and priests.

The idea of deliberately setting out to turn childrenfrom God strikes most people as unspeakably evil.

The encouraging of a program to do this is seen asan abomination. ;:,

Catholic parents in America would - if asked theiropinion --:- be unanimoul'l in condemning it. '. ,

And all- the time, many of them will ,hear announce- 'ments" from their, pulpits about parish schools of religionset up' under the Confraternity' of Christian' Doctrine 'andwill remain supre,mely indifferent to these.. '"

, They will not investigate ,the religious programsplanned for their sons and' daughters, will not insist ontheir attendance at ,them, will not supervise homeworkgiven in these schools of religion, will not dream of partici-pating in the Confraternity work. ' "

And all the while, they will condemn what Polishatheists are trying to do. At least the atheists are' openin their attempts to sabotage religion! '

The 'Confraternity of Christian Doctrine has as its goalto assist parents to fulfill their serious duty to bring uptheir children in the knowledge and service and love ofGod. If priests and Sisters and, above all, zealous laypeople are giving their efforts and time to set up aConfraternity program, it is h(e~rtbreaking to see the num­ber of parents who, by their indifference and neglect, arecasting a vote for atheism.

At a Communion Breakfast of Protestant laymen heldin Worcester, Dr. Arland A. Diriam, former President ofthe Church Architectural Guild 'of America, brought out aninteresting point of much significance to Catholics' andnon-Catholics alike.

The church, architeCt, stating the principle that "re­ligious architecture mirror~s and reflects' the' religiousthinking of the people," remarked that the' "post-warchurches of Europe, both Protestant and Catholic, are re­markably sim.ilar in architecture. The new church is 11. pro..;vocative structure. They are truly vehicles of communica­tion. They reveal a return to the basic fundamentals ofearly Christianity.'~

The architect concluded that the growing ecumenicalmovement can be seen in this growing' achitectural ,simi-larity. '

In recent years, Protestants are looking into tl)e Scrip­tures and into the earIy Church and are trying to cometo a knowledge of the basic truths of Christ. They aretrying to move away from the position of "professional'protestants," reacting almost automatically against any­thing Catholic, 'and present themselves in a positivelight. They are draining away some of the bitterness ofReformation days and are amazed to see in how much theyagree with the Catholic Chur~h.

Their positive thinking on religion is causing themto design churches that embody these beliefs-and theysee how closely these houses of worship approach the Cath­olic church building.

Catholic architects, for their 'part, are concentratingmore on the essential elements in the wqrship of God, and

'are, putting aside the details and trimmings that, in manya Catholic church building, has obscured thepriniary pur­pose of the structure. No wonder that Protestants, in cer­tain Catholic houses of God, are disturbed by overemphasison shrines and devotions that overshadowed the altar andpulpit and baptistry.

Buildings are external expressions of beliefs. It is agood sign that they are--in both Catholic and Protestantchurches~b~ginning to express those, beliefs more truth­fully and skillfully.

,6

Page 7: 09.20.62

.1

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. Sept. 20, 1962

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Sti''f~s~e~ ,Teae~~U1g fUmlction O§ ~0Sh@p$ ·@t C(1Hro~e~O'at~@ffi)HELENA (NC)-'The teachi~g' of Portland, Ore. in his sermon.

function of a bishop was stressed "He is ,to teach. What men doat the consecration her,e of the depends upon what men be­Most Rev..Raymond; G. Hun- lieve. And men cannot belilivethausen as Bishop of lJ;elena. uptll they are taught." ;

"There is no mistake as to the "While the Church adaptsbishop's first function," said herself to the needs of everyArchbishop Edward D. Howard age, in her basic thinking she

PicketsPicrrni~

Carmel In CongoLEOPOLDVILLE (NC) - Six

Carmelite Sisters will open anew convent here at the requestof Archbishop Felix Scalais,C.I.C.M. of Leopoldville. T~

Sisters, from the Carmel of Zazain Rwanda, were welcomed atthe airport by the Archbishop. ••••D •••••III••••••••••••••••••••••Sllmmll.lZlrt.~'•••

.Cou~ci~

K' of C

WINNER: Lorraine N.St.Onge, June graduate of Mt.St. Mary Academy, FallRiver, has received a scholar­shop to Union HospitalSchool of Nursing, also FallRiver. She is the daughter ofMr. and Mrs. R. Roland St.Onge, 401 Whipple Street,Fall River.

Stonehill CollegeStude,nt BodyNow at 960

Stonehill College openedits' 15th academic year onMonday, Sept. 17th, with ane ri!r 0·1·1 men t of :960, thelargest student body in thehistory of the college. There are320' freshmen.

The formal college year wasinaugurated with a Solemn HighMass in the college gymnasiumon Monday at 9 A.M.

Foreign students 'from Iran,Ecuador, Venezuela, Sweden,Ireland, and Canada are repre­sented in the student body.

T·M facilities of the campus ­have been enhanced by the re:cent completion of the Cushing­Martin 120,000 volume li­brary, which will be dedicatedtoday, and a greatly enlarged

'student union building withaugmented dining space andequipment, a larger bookstore,and other fac.;ilities.

BALTIMORE (NC) -Balti-more's Catholic Interracial

, Council" opposing strict segre­gation policies at' Gwynn OakAmusement Park, demonstratedagainst use of the facilities therefor .a' . Knights of Columbuscharity ·picnic.

For·45 minutes 13 members ofthe' prointegration group carriedsigns before the" entrance to"Gwynn 'Oak's parking lot, as,'more than 1,000' people arrivedfor the outing. . .

A:bout' 40 pickets took part inthe demonstrations. Also demon­strating were ,four members ofthe Fighting American Nationa­lists (FAN), a prosegregationgroup.

The park was under heavypolice guard. And there was noviolence.

Contract BasisThe K of C picnic, an annual

affair for members and theirfamilies throughout Maryland,has been under fire recentlyfrom Catholic interracial coun­cils and civic groups favoringintegration.

A spokesman for the Knightssaid the park had been engagedmore than a year previously ona strict contractual basis whichcould not be canceled without aresulting lawsuit.

The Catholic demonstratorsdispersed when the spokesmanassured them that future K of Coutings would be held at inte­grated facilities.

Laymen, _ PriestsDiff®tr in ViewsOf C~®rgy Role

NEW ORLEANS (NC) ­Laymen and priests havesharply differing views onthe work of the clergy, ac­cording to a nationwide' studyconducted by a priest-sociologisthere.

In general, Father Joseph H.Fichter, S.J., of Loyola Univ­ersity said, the priest has a moremodest estimate of himself andhis functions than that held byibis parishioners.

The Jesuit polled 2,216 pa­rishioners representing everydiocese in the U.S., and sentsimilar questionnaires to oneout of every seven parishpriests, excluding monsignors.

Father Fichter said his datashowed that "the people whoknow the ,priest best are thepeople who have the highestregard for the clergy. Yet theywould still like to improve thisrelationship."

Laymen's View"When asked what single

ehange they would suggest toImprove their own parish, most·mentioned a 'closer -workingpartnership' with the parishpriest," he -said.

He said his survey showedthat the priest "does not thinkhe worries quite as much or

o works quite as hard a's the laypeople believe he does. He isnot so appreciative of his ser­mons Or of the way he relatesthe liturgy to the laity, or· theencouragement he gives to sem­inary vocations."

On the other hand, .laymenGee the priest mainly as the ad­ministrator of an organized en­terprise, who must worry aboutmoney problems, moderate laygroups and concern himselfabout the elementary educationof children, Father Fichter said.

"The reason for this is thatparish priests are spending agreat deal of time on tasks thatare essentially non-sacramen­tal," he said.

Prefer Spiritual Duties"The priests themselves agree

that the activities that use upmost of their time are the onesin which they get the least per­sonal satisfaction and for whichthey feel the least competent.

"They prefer and feel mostcompetent for their spiritualduties: h ear in g confessions,counseling, liturgical functions,making sick calls and givingconvert instructions."

The sociologist· said that ex­cept. for counseling ·the priest islargely serving his people in,tasks that are subsidiary to hispriesthood. .

"These are parochial functionswhIch can probably be per­formed by other than an or­dained minister of God," FatherFichter said., "Laymen can cer­tainly handle .financial manage­ment; they do in many placesoperate schools; and they areproliably competent' to directtheir own parochial groups."

Educator StressesPrecedent for Aid

BOSTON (NC)-A specialistin the history of education saidhere that there is ample prece­dent for state aid to churchschools.

Timothy L. Smith, professorof the history of education at theUniversity of Minnesota, saidthat "in the 19th and through thefirst part of the 20th century,church and private schools weresupported by the state becausethere were not enough publicschools to educate the children."

Smith, speaking at the lOthannual meeting of the New Eng­land School Administrators' In­stitute, expressed the hope thatthe controversy over aid to edu­cation can be settled on the basisof what is best for the children.

School EnrollmentNEW YORK (NC) - An en­

rollment of 367,555 students wasrecorded when the New Yorkarchdiocesan elementary andsecondary schools opened Mon­day, Sept. 10. It represents anincrease of 6,323 over last year.

Page 8: 09.20.62

ROBERTSHARDWARE

S~m. J. LaGall~, Manager

. 1872 ,ACUSHNET AVE.near Brooklawn Park

NEW BEDFORD, MASS•

Cape ,DCCWExecutive officers of the Cape

and Islands district. of the Dio~

cesan Council of Catholic Wo­men will meet at 8 Mondaynight, Sept. 24 at the home ofMrs. Bradley Parker, Center­ville. Miss Dorothy Fawcett winbe chairman.

Sucordiu"ni Club SlateiAnnual T~ai Reception

The Sucordium Club of Sacredl,Iearts Acad~my, Fall River, willhold its annual tea' and reception

.at, 3 ~unday. afternoon, Sept. 23in the school's new auditorium"Prospect Street... Members ~f .elementary IlIndhigh school students are invited.Mrs. Raymond. CorlDors, presi~dent, . will. ~troduce facultymembers, club officers and ex-

'ecutive board members. 'Begish:ars vrill' accept 'club

duel! at the meeting. Mrs. RogerG. Petit is chairman for the iea.assisted by . Mrs. RaymolldFletcher.

Mrs. Coni-lOi's announces ·tfuttSister Barbara' Mary, S.u.S:C. bnew club moderator.

fort being made to determine if,the convent belongs to theircongregation, or if they will be

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Pol ish Reds Resort to TrickeryTo Oust Sisters Fr'lom Convent

FIRST TO JOIN: "The first South American post~lantsare received into ·the· U.S. congregation of the Sisters ofthe Most Precious Blood of 'O'Fall(m~ Mo.,' who recently'opened a mi~sion in Lima;..i)~ru. b,oiores Pastor Argume,left, and Nancy Castro·Alvarado receive the blessing from·Father Thomas F. Garrity, M.M., pastor of·St.. Rose parish'in Lima,' during ceremonies 'at· Our' LadY-of' GuadalupeChurch in .Lim~ NC Photo.:.. .: ..

,~ ': : .~

Unearthly StillneS$.bf- East'18~r:linMost Impressive..fo·.:A:merk:cl'riNun·

. CLEVELAND' ('N~)<- "It's ' .. be more easily traced and seen,what you don't; 'hear- the 'un:'-" : and' shot. 'She added:earthly 'stillnessapd quie~that .' "On . the western side 'of theimpresses you most ·a.bout East' . wall,,-the' wall of shame-:.l hadBerlin," said Notre Dame Sister 'noticed someone had scrawledMary Sean, instructor,"at :Notre the 'giant letters 'KZ," the Ger­Dame College here. '.:.. i : man ,designation for concentra-

Sister Sean has returned here 'tion camp. And for' certain, -whenafter studying at University of ,'you go :into the' eastern zone,Muenster and had' made two you feel like you are in a hugetrips into East Berlin, the see- KZ.ond a private walking trip to "No one can trust anyone else.some of the museums. Even the border guards do not

On the first trip, she said, she trust each other. The same twogot the "red carpet tourist deal guards are never stationed to­reserved for foreigners" who gether more than once. And no

. were· restricted to the middle'of guard serves too often at thethe city. 'same spot;"

On the second, she was struck The stillness. of .East Berlin,by the "unearthly stillness" of Sister Sean concluded, is, inthe people and the city, the' sharp contrast to the friendlinessbarbed wire fence, the police of the West sector where peoplewatchtowers, and sawdust trails on casual walks stop and chaton which potential escapees can with everyone. they meet.

Mrs. W.J.K.

'Lauds Women/~New Project .

WASHINGTON (NC)-A car­dinal .and an NCWC official inthe forefront' of the LatinAmerica missionary. programhave lauded the NationalCoun­cil of Catholic Women's newstudy project, Focus: LatinAmerica.

'FHE ANCHOR-DiQc;ese of .Fall. River..:...Thurs.,Sept. 2,0,'1962 ... . . ." . .' _ .. , . .'~' - .8

Dear, Mrs. Daly:I'm not even sure why I am

writing to you, except' to saythat I enjoy your column. Mylittle family c.ons~st!l of fourboys and then a gi'rl: five, four,three, two and one "- each 13months apart, which makes abirthday a month. W',e have justlost a baby. We are sure that theHand of God has had more thana little 'to do with shaping our

BERLIN (NC) - Red autho­rities in Poland must resort tovarious subterfuges in expelling

, nuns 'from their convents toforestall the' Polish people from

The need for this type of a protesting violently, it, wasprogram was cited by 'Richard' learned here. '\:,Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of The information received hereBoston, who said: "No Citizen of told of two ruses 'employed bythe United 'States can afford to . communist officials in oustingremairi unconcerried about con';. nuns from their convents.ditions in Latin America today:"Award Gives Missioner When police and military

The Cardinal added: "I strong- units arrived with four busesNew Encouragement ly urge American Catholics to at the convent of the Felician

MANILA (N C) _ -Mother participate in the study program, Sisters in Wawer to expel themTeresa said that the 1962 ~amon Focus: Latin America, sponsored and seize the convent, theyMagsaysay . award she won by the National Council of 'found a throng of people; armedwould be "a' new source of' en'- '.Catholic Women; to learn of with sticks and stones gatheredcoura'gement" in serving the current conditions and problems, to defend the nuns.

to study alternatives for the The commander' of the unitpoor. fu, tur,e.."· "

The Yugoslav-born foundress told the people that the .policeof the !1:issionaries of Charity, Ina lette~ to' NCCW head~\ did. not intend to occupy thean Indian' congregation that quarters here, Father .John ,J. . convent, but had come to trans;,works among the country's poor~ Considine; M.M., director of the . fer the Sisters because a,n epi,.received a $10,000 award and a . Latin America Bureau, Nationlil demic of cholera had broken olitcitation for the promotion of in:' ' Catholic· Welfare Conference, in the convent. ' "ternational understanding. in said: "The 'appearance of Focus: .,: In" a similar si t u at ion' atAsia from the Ramon Magsaysay Latin America is a historic event. Pniewy, the crowd whicp hadAward Foundation here. . Never before in the English ·gathered was told 'that a dan-

"This award which is given . languMe have we had sUch':a g~rous criminal was hiding 'into me and through me to the fascinating series of illustrated the convent, and the police muStyoung congregation, to the drama studies of our 200 million "ente,r it. to capture him.. Oncecountless benefactors and to our .Latin American neighbors, pre;.- inside, the police seized the nuns .poor ip. India,'" she said, "will pared with authentic portray'al .and made them enter waitingbe a new source of encourage- of the facts as the Latin-Ameri~ velJ.iclEis. . .ment for us to love and serve cans themselves know 'them'; Ii).. .' According to, the informationthe poor." She will use t~e ways with sympathetic appreciii- ,received here,'the Sisters forcedmoney to 'build a house for the' tion of the 'Catholib. roie!.in the ::to le'ave one convent are takenpoor, of, 'Agra, :she sai<J. :;events and situations presented." to· another .without slightest. et-

Believe It or Not;, There'=AreFamilies .Without ' P'roblems

By Mary Tinley DalyLetters of protest, letters of 'compiaint, of misery.'and

.of 'problems - these we see every day. in newspapersuntil it seems as though people write 'only when they' areshocked, angry or depressed. This column gets its share ofsuch letters, but right now I 0

'should like to' share with lives. We feel immensely proud,others, excerpts from two or rather flatter~d, that 'Heletters that seem to me quite cares so much about' us. Losing

this baby has made us want astypical of many young mothers. many as we are privileged to

They come from two widely have.separated p!1rts' I have only. recently Come toof the countrybut each tells see hoW fortunate 'we are too sincere story' have such blessings as eachof "How Ameri- otlier, five ,active little char-ea Lives" in acters, each with his own special

self's ways to love, and a ratherday-to-day life, bedraggled new four 'bedroomwithout smug- home, near' the school andness' but with church. With Donny in kinder-faith.Dear Mrs. Daly: garten, we are beginning to

When I read learn that school days bring theirabo u t your own special problemS and ~

wards. .. twin grandsons,Brendan and Matthew, I just I think the most. importantbad to write because your son's thing I have found' about our:family is quite like mine. We growing famiiy is that our kidshave no twins, but we have .are people. Sometimes I'm askedCleven small children, the eldest .. how we can possibly take careten, the youngest six months. of all of them at once. I say it's

I must say, we have little else. easy most of the time, because'Our house is shabby in compari- they aren't just a bUnch oflIOn with others. You can't have noisy, small "items" but smallfancy furniture when' you're' people 'who happen to be ourscontinually buying shoes. My while they 'are on earth,' arid'husband is a fireman. On his who' seem to be amazingly likedays off. he has painted the us.whole .house, inside, and out. I've f<lund the more of OUT­

This posed problems,as you selves we give, 'the happier we.ean imagine, with tots in tur- become, and the children 'bene­pentine, and various shades of fit too:paint on various people.

This month, with four of them I had many Ideas beginning toIn school" and 'the' other three form when I sat doWn to writetaking afternoon naps, there are to you, but my boys are growingactually s t ret c h e sof quiet impatient a~d are beginning ,toaround,. here. The elder two, scuffle; It's getting a little hardEllen and Jane, are of immense to concentrate.help as I suppose is true. of Lu'" In reading back, I see. thatelder ones., everything I have said is rather

I was an only child and re- trite, and my trememdous (tomember that I was still "baby" me) discoveries have been car­at our Ellen's age. Mother would ried in all the leading magazinesask neighborhood children to as "The Secret of Being Happy"come in and play with me and type article. But, when it hap­she would fix tea parties for us. ,pened to me,' and to Bill, myNice, but dull. How I.longed for husband, our lives became morethe rough and tumble life of the enriched and we felt we are ful­family next door where' there filling God's will" even thoughwas always something doing. we are doing the same thingsMaybe that's why I appreciate each day that we complainedmy 'life, hectic as it is at times. about. before we realized allThere's something doing here, 'this.all right!

Well, it's three o'clock nowand you know what that means_ letter writing time is over.Just wanted to say congrats andbest to the babies, their parentsand grandparenJ;s.

Mrs. J .L. McC.

Page 9: 09.20.62

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'Mobile Clas'srooms EaseSchool Space S~o.rtage

NEW O~LEANS (NC) ~ TheNew Orleans archdiocese hllllbought 16 .mobIle classrooms,each holding 'to to 45 pupils, tobe used in seven' parishes whoseschools could,not otherwise keepup with enrollment., The parishes that will use theunits are in areas where therehas been a rapid populationgrowth in recent years. Evenwith 'extensive new facilities.they could not accommodate allthe children. Once these parisheshave adequate facilities, theclassrooms will be, shifted toother areas short of school space.,

Each classroom,' In two sec­tions for ease in transportation,has built-In educational facili­ties - chalkboards, bulletinboards, and storage space foi'supplies. The weather-tight butwell-ventilated units have flu­9rescent lighting, drinking foun_tains and toilet facilities. Heat­ing is through a baseboard duct.

Singie WomenPlan NY Meet

A seminar on the problems ofsingle women will be held from10 to 4 Saturday, Oct. 6 at theCarnegie Peace Building, NewYork City.

The session, said its origina­tors, "will take a frank look atthe' public image of the womanwho is unmarried and evaluateits validity." Participating willbe women from New England toWashington, D.C., representingbusiness, the professions, thearts and communication fields,and the armed forces.

A panel will feature Joan Paul,radio producer; Patricia Carbine,assistant editor of Look maga­zine; ,and Martha F. Allen,national, director of the CampFire Girls.

Bethany Confei'enceThe program is sponsored by

the Bethany Conference, a 'neworganization for single women,and by the New York Arch­diocesan Family Life Bureau. It'is open to Catholics and non­Catholics.

,Reservations may be madewith the Bethany Conference at315 East 72 Street, New York 21,N.Y. A five dollar fee coverscost of sessions, luncheon and anafternoon coffee-hour. Dead-lineis Sunday, Sept. 30.

ARTHUR J. DOUCR

FALL RIVER, MASS.

,THE ANCHOR...Thurs., Sept. 20, 1962

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Two Federal GrantsFor Nursing Work

JAMAICA (NC)-The depart­ment of Nursing Education atSt. John's University here InNew York state has received twoFederal grants totaling morethan $200,000.

A grant of $197,100 was givenby the Department of Health,Education and Welfare to pro­vide traineeships for graduatenurses and somp. undergraduatestudents. St. John's has been're­ceiving funds under the profes­sional nurse traineeship programsince 1956.

A grant of $11,000 was award­ed for traineeship programs forstUdents interested ,in publichealth nursing.

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Rivier AlumnaeOfficers of the Fall River-New

~edford chapter of Rivler Col­lege Alumnae are Mrs. OctavePimental, New Bedford, 'presi­dent; Mrs. Arthur' Curry, FallRiver.. vice-president; MissIrene Michaud, Fall River, sec­retary; Mrs. George Cote, Som­erset, treasurer.' Mrs. Cote willentertain the unit for a meetingTuesday, Oct. 9.

5e.Jed Nun SupervisorFor Argentina Mission

GREAT· FALLS .{NC)-8lsterMonica Mary, supenr.isor of thematernity department at' C0­lumbus Hospital here InMon­tana, Is one of seven Sistersse­lected to establish the first mis­sion in Argentina ,of the Sistersof CharJty of Providence.

One Sister was selected fromeach of the congregation's sevenprovinces In the U.S. and Can­ada. Sister Monica MlU'¥ ~chosen from 290 Sisters of theSt. Ignatius province, which bn­eludes Montana, Idaho, and east­VIA WashingtolP'

Catholic NursesRev. Thomas ReadY, O.M.I.

wtll be retreat master for theannual retreat of the Fall RiverDiocesan Council of CatholicNurses. 'The weekend event willbe held at Our Lady of GoodCounsel retreat house, Lakeville,I"riday., Oct. 5 through SUl1daJ',Oct. 7. Also In October, the coun­cil will hold Its Fall plen&r7meeting at Marian Manor, Taun­tloA.

By Father John lL.. Thomas, S.J.Af>St. Sociology Protl.-se. Louis University

"Is it wrong to keep company with a divorced person?A former classmate of mine is going steady. for several:.years already with a non-Catholic divorced man whose wife "~ still living. When I talked to her about this, she saysthey don't intend to getmarried. Can she receive the probably hesitate to keep com­Bacraments - which she pany with a married man, theyclioes - or does she live in seek to justify their similar con-

duct with one who has' been,onortal sin?" divorced.

I don't suppose any sincere<Catholic g i r I Leads to Involvementsever s tar t s Considering the current datingdating a divorc- patterns, facile rationalizationsec:J person with and misconceptions mentioned~he serious In- above, we can anticipate con-tention of mar- tinued 'heavy' losses to therying him, Ger": Church stemming from this con_aldine. In· our duct.'society dating According to reliable esti-has com e to mates, some 800,000 persons areBerve a variety 'divorced each year, the majori-of purposes. AI- ty of these eventually remarry,fl h 0 ugh Its and they do not necessarily re-primary pur- marry other divorced persons.pose is to provide suitableop- Like your friend, many Cath-

't' f 't' g d olic girls start out by insistingportUnlleS or mee m an EXODUS FROM FEAR·. Carrying a scrawny chicken

t · '. g that they are dating divorcedaelecting prospec Ive marrla e I'n her hands and a fr'l'ghtened chl'ld on her back, a tired butpartners, it has also become the persons only for entertainment.major means through which the Yet by its very nature such. determined Montagnard woman of central Vietnam is ledUnmarried can participate In dating readily leads to mutual by her young son away from her mountain home. Unwilling

emotional or sexual Involve-Iiocial life. to 'be tools of the Red Viet Cong guerillas, mountain peopleted ments, and once their relation-Datin:~~~~u~,?,c~:entertain- ships reach this stage, they find have. begun a gerieral exodus to th~ lowlands. NC Photo.

=~r:~st~~u~~t ~~t;~~en';i~~::' ~~a~a:~e~~on~~~~~rc~a~~e:~~;~ 'Workers for' ChristL Fo~ndress, greater than their need :for' God, '

~f~~~; a~ce;::~e'a::~g ~i~~: so they contract an invalid mar- R'ec.eives Worldmiss+on Award ,groups today. . 'riage.· WASHINGTON (NC)-A Con- '.. Members of the organIzation

Continuing 'a trend started Typi~i Patterns' . .necticut grandmother who has 'engage in such activities as fundafter World War I, the focus of : .An .analysIs , of such affaIrs _ devoted the past 12 years of her raising, bandage, making andft'2creation and. entertainment reveals several typical patterns. ,life to work on behalf of lepers, prayer for lepers. With 'Mrs.among the unmarried has shifted First, a couple may start out has received the sixth anriual Rickert's encouragement,· someADcreasingly from "he home. ~ with the clear undersbmding Worldmission Award for service 25 'new Pro Christo LaborantesfJaniily toone's', age grouP, lind that,they., cannot marry, ;but' to the missions. groups have been organized inClince their actlvitiesare mainly . since ,they continue to date, this Mrs. Adelaide Rickert of Riv_ the past 12 years. Units averageeouple-centered, most participa- understa~ding serves merely as erside, Conn., founder of the 20 m?mbers each and exist intion in social life involves cross- a c?nvement rationalization en_ Pro Christo Laborantes (Work- LouiSIana, New York, Connect!_!!eX associations or dating. ab~mg them to avoid taking .an ers for Christ) organization, re- cut and Arkansas.

Indeed, this pattern is so gen- obJective view of the situatIon cei~ the award from Auxiliary Each unit meets weekly anderally accepted that any other, until' they are too deeply in- Bishop John J; Boardman of arranges frequent benefits for!relationship tends to arouse con- volved to care about spiritual Brooklyn. '. ' lepers. To date the .organizationSlderable suspicion.' consequenc~s. ' . 'The presentation of the award has given more tha? $150,~00. to

False Premise Second, smce divorce is wlde- followed an evening Mass offered the Catholic MedIcal MISSIonThese popular attitudes tow- ly accepted by non-Catholics, by-Bishop Boardman In the Board, New York, to buy drugs

ard dating go far to explain the they may. proceed well' along in National Shrine of the Immacu- for the treatment of ieprosy. It is .rea so n i n ,g or rationalizing the courtship process b~fore re- lat~ Conception at the start,of believed that Pro Christo r.abo­flhrough which your friend-and veaUng to the CatholIc party the 13th annual meeting of U. S. rante~ is the largest singleil distressingly large number of ,that the~ hav? been d~vorced.. mission-sending societies. private or!lanization in the worldother Cathollcs--try to justify ,At 'tbIS pomt, a smcere,. In- Mrs. Rickett widow of the engaged In work on behalf oftheir conduct when dating aformedCatbolic would discon- late Frederick 'Rickert 'of New lepers. 'dAvorced person.' , .' , tinue dating at once, or at least, Orleans, is 'the mother of three

They usually begin by In- until presented with cl~ar proof daughte'rs and has 14 grandchil_lSisting they are only seeking en- ,that the previous marrIage was drElD. Most of her married lifetertainment, and inasmuch' as all invalid, yet s0n,teCatholics.con- 'was spent in New Orleans.parties concerned are quite tinue the affaIr while blIndly When her husband died thereaware that there can be no clinging to some vague hope or in 1950, she determined to de­thought of marriage, they con- rumored belief that the Church vote her energies for the re­tend that this form of dating of- may not recognize such marri- mainder of her life to' the serv-fers a legitimate means of parti- ages as valid. ice of victims of leprosy in mis-dpating In social life. Reprehenslb!e Conduct sion lands:

Their self-deception is also Third, ,?ome dIvorced Catho- m Four StatesIWpportea by another false pre- lics start dating on the pretext She organized a group ofmise that conveniently remains that their marriage was invalid - women dedicated to the sameimplicit; namely, that' the di- and will shortly be declared in- cause and at the suggestion ofvorced person Is somehow simi- valid or be annulled by the Archbishop Joseph F. RummelJar to an unmarried person, or, Church. of New Orleans the group wasin other words, that the civil Unmarried Catholics should called Pro Christo Laborantes.divorce decree has freed him know that a marriage must befrom the bonds of avalid marri_ regarded as valid until declaredQge. otherwise by the proper, Church

As I say, this premise tends to authorities. "ll'emain implicit, for every in- The mere fact that a marriage~rmed Catholic knows very case is being' studied by awell' that' a civil court cannot Church court or' is ,believed todissolve a valid marriage con- be invalid by the parfners meanstract,even though the civil nothing in teons of freedom to~urtsin this country erroneous- engage in dating.Ju presume to do so. Is your friend doing wrong?

Unfortunately, some poorly If the situation is as you presentInstructed Catholics apparently it, it Is clear that her conduct isbelieve either that only Catholic seriously reprehensibie, for shemarriages are valid or that only is not only giving scandal butthe marriage bond- between is maintaining herself and herCatholics cannot be dissolved by friend in the prox;imate occasioncivil divorce. 0 of sin.

At any rate, whether manyJabor under this DUsconceptionGl' not, it is evident that far too

~ lliany act "as if" a .divorced-per­aon were free from his marriagebonds, 'for though they wou1~

Says Dating' 'Divorced "Person'-,proximate OCCG~~@ll1 of Siro

,0

Page 10: 09.20.62

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DedDcate RosaryWalk SundayAt laSalette

Dedication and bles.Slngof Oqr. Lady's Rosary Walk.'at ·the La Salette Shrine, At:­tleboro, . will be held thisSunday evening at 7 o'clock'with the Most Rev. James L:Connolly, D.D., Bishop 'of FallRiver, presiding.

Pilgrims with lighted candleswill form a guard of honor forthe prelate. The Seminary choirwill sing during the Rosary Pro­cession. ,

Bishop Connolly will also pre­side and give the sermon at the3 o'clock devotions on Sunday,afternoon, commemorating theFeast of Our .Lady of· La Salette.

The ',Rosary Walk project, 10-'cated aroundthe.spring-fed pondat the south side' of the Shrine, .was' begun last Fall. It was de':'signed by the' Fathers andBrothers: The Fathers, Brothersand 'employees at the slirinedid the electrical and plumbing: . . .

::J~~~~~li~c:t~~et'~:i~~~e :ra:~~f ·C.atholic F'armers' Favor M~utual Aid .Pope lauds Hometh~::nd~eMral·.Pie'ce.of ..the. :·.ROME.(NC) ~ 'Catholic far- 'many-other delegates. ~but. an a~~Ietree. Not .~' bag. of' .;FQ...'.'.~e~.~ ~Y. Nu~~Rosary .\Val~ is ·a:.tw.o ton Car-.':mers. and. their-' organizations' in . . Father' Carthage Power; C.P.. ,flour, but seed and a·.plo:w, :": . ,'. :' CALCUTTA. (N C) --;-Pope.rara marl;>l~.~t~tl,le.oJ Ol,lr Lady ·.. some·50 countries are ljetting up'. 'said that ·the secr~tariat can "It is Christian teaching;·Jo~n.senta.congratulatory cable~, L.li\. Salette..mad~ in !tfl~y:..It .' a hands-across-the-sea program . help overcome a major obstacle right in the New. Testament, ·that.· ·..for,the. tenth anniyersary. of the.

~,standl? .I,lpon a tripod ....of rein" .. for:,mutual .:help·· in' tnen, rna:::', to efficient farming in his :·re- no man can be.saved if he·:steels ·.fol.l,I;lding .. 9f :...Nirmal ... lJ;ri.da:r.force<;l .. c9ncret~ .. At the base. o"/,·chines and money. :_ ....:~..... '. gion of the Bechuanaland pro- his heart against a neighbor.in :(pure. Heart) .Hoine for. the sickthe .pedestal. i~ a fountain .with, .' ,;' ....·t.'A·.··.'''.O· u,· ".', t'h.. ·."·": te.ctorateinSo.uth· Africa. ,'. need ".' he stated. "How c'an we and. dying here .in .. India. ", ..' . . .-' ". . . ThIS program .was among. e . '. .' '. " ..16 Jets of water Illummated by "'. .. ·· ..;t·· "f"'''''' ..... "k"l" .. " "We hope' to' ·lease water-'" as a'Jnation·expect·God's blessing:·, '" The.. refuge. was.. ·founded . by ..24300 tt l' h first frUI s. 0 'a wee ong con-. ,'. . . . . . M' th ,y; , . h 'd th, w.a. Ig.ts ot /.yarIed '" "::"'f' C···· h;'l""'· h' "d" .. 't' '.'. divining.'equipment through thIS" .if we steel· ourselves agamst·our ..· .. 0 er..... eresa, w 0 receive e-lors ,,,,, ventIon 0 . at (lICS w 0 eyo e . . '" .... "I '1' d'''' hOO t" , d?"" 1962 M g y a ard'f r ...~ .'... , ... :; ... '. ....,... ,.. '. ' .··.'.'-~·.·· .. i .."· 1 .... program,""he said. earne,,'" nelg r·nalonS·ln··nee..;~ ..... " . a ~aysa ..w or p o.

The rosary begm~ WIth a, I the.~selv~s. to. farm.. P!91? er::~:tha't"a n:ew American machirie ,'; , '. ". . . '" .' " '." ~otm.g mte.~na~lOnaI .. unde~­foot cross. o~ .. ItalIan Istnan ;rhIS. seconq~n;t~I:n~tlOl},a1al,Mt-f' . eari'firid'watera 'mile beneath· c"·' ," . 0'.',· ..... A'<'~"": .... '.:',., ,.·standing, an.d IS. run. by the sarIrstone. 'A '12 foot wrought iron." mg of Catll,o}i~ ~~'. aI,lOrO"d'I1 e 'the 'earth"'" . ~ .'. ommltt,ee . pproves, ,.garbed .Missionaries· of Charity,

r h h Id th d I' f th' drew to·. Rome some 3 e e,. . .... 1" . ti h 1a,c., .o.s e me aIono· e .' . ,". '0"'''' t··· .. Ii.. ·.t fro Elkton SD HOk" ° 'M' °1:'R' t.. ·· .ar~IgIouscongrega ons easorosary. T.he· beads of the rosary . gates from .abo.ut ~ .. «:c>un rIes, _ ." pr~~,. . m.. . ' . ".. I e. In al a. e. founded..are made Qf natural. California' Th~r repr~sented ,:more.:t9~In 1~0 .saId.. thefsecrheta~Iat IC?~ldg" ~our~ .. WASHINGTON' '(N'C) . The ,The Yugoslav.-bQm ,nun saw

, d d d national and internatlOna: or- means 0 . c a n·n el n . - "th d f h f h· x:e . ,woo . an o'!tline .the '~,a- . i tions.···" . blessedabundancei' to needy na- .Senate Post Office Committee" e. nee ,or. t e re uge. w. ~n,.~nry ..:whlCh p!oJectsas an: IS- ... gap. za. . , " .tioris.· . . has. tentatively" approved a 100 ,after she .found a woman dymgIa~.d . mtl? the pond..The. ~ys-·... The:.de~~gates.decIde!i.·at. tHeIr .. . ". . .Parish Venture . per: cent increase in' the 'per" '. on ,a street here, ~he was .unable

• terIel! ()f tl!e;rosary. aredepIct~d~:fin~l'sessl(m,::to·s~t. up .an.Inter- . . piece second~class mail rate for .t~ have her admItted to a .hos-. on. .15 . mosa!c pJaques:, made In... national. ~cretarlat. WIth head- . Father Louis J. Miller said religious' and other non':profit' pItal. . . . . .:..,lJ.o~~ ~aAd:J~~t~nd;.aH>ng ,,.the·S5.0. _. quarters, in Rome, to act .. as a . tha~ prosperC?us farmers of his .. organizations -and 'publicatiortir," .. - . ~~e ...asked Cafcutta Corp~ra-:

'. fo~t ~Ircumf~r,en.ce:of,,the:-pond. clearing house'"for mutual help parIsh of Our Lady -of Good.· . . . .:.' ....-'.' .. ,' ..-~ ..... pop. s,Health. O~fIcer- for a bU11d~ ...'. The a.J!l0unt~of rnateria1:used:.l among ·.Catholic ,farm. orga~iza- ~0!1nselhave beep searching .for _. .T~I.S.J~,,·~h~:o~~g.~~~l~en~~~y. ·ing to house people·found dying :.· ~ th,e ~ol)stru~~.~~,of.the:Rosar.y 'ti0!Is ' of ·the.;..world.. A .pro,:i-;· a m~ns of ~elping farmers in' .adl!!'Ims~r~t.I~n.. ?.ro~Qsa . "~" ,c;~, ... in:the str,eets.IJyitstenthanni:.· ... ~, W~l~ .. IS. ~ather ;.mterestmgr.9Q sional. cQmmittee. of eight· WIll. other· coun,trIes who' ar~ strug- was· J;,~J~.cte.<'.HIn .. th.e '~0:t~~j, ,. :versary (Aug.. 22), the· home had

to')!! of .gran..ite, .~,OOO. c.fEle~ ;of'~ lay the foundations for· the 'sec- '.. gling with. poor· soil ~or poor pa~ bI!!: ..( :.R., '(~2.7) .. '. ~f6" . rec:eived ," .13,8,10 dying men~.ah,unipum ,railing· 1 OOQ ,lineal' retariat. ::. ". :.. . . . ." equipment. .proposed Inc;rea~e,.. ~nd" oth,e.r~, . women. and. children.•.felit. of, r~'c;l wood,' 17,000, 'feet: of' '. A' Pa'ssio·D.l·s·t m'I'ssionary from '.' ,iIt will bea 'p'~rish venture," . brough~ protes.,ts .fr°l~;a.n !l~r~y'.. :..; .. .. ,.'. . ; .. . '". ' .:. ..'1 t· 1 .'.... . .. "..... . " ~. . ' .. of spokesmen .Lor re IglOus pUb- . $5 000 S h' I . 'h o

e ec rIca wu:mg,. 475 feet of· Ireland welcomed the secretarIat he saId, "We hope. to gIve' them " 'Ii'" t' . d . t·,·· . '. ' , .' C· 0 a rs Ip .water p'ipe 135 feet f' l' . . . '.' '.. '.. th '. ca Ions an assoc\a lons, m- ". .· .. '. . o. a !Jm~num " as'.'~~e an~w~r ~. my ne:e<ls,'·':··~..means . of . helpmg··. em- . clu'diilg "the' c~thoiic Pr-ess' Ail.:·: .NEW' YORK (NC)'-America; . ~

, eh~md'8:.~<:>1?Sd'of.~t~e~rods, :.~15 .. and hls .wC?rds 'were' echoed by.'. sely:~s. N.:9.t a b\l$h~l of. apples, . socilition .in ·testim-ony "~J)eioie . -Catholic weekly magazine pub':'.:eu.. y • ,mlxe ·.concrete." •.'''-'J " •.. 1.· •. · , . '.' . . . . " . .' ,. '. '. . •• ,... 'U 'h d' -h h' 1 d' d $5000

pu~~~~~6s::fti~~'t=~~a~I~:t~t~·:'5";'~e~e'~s":: '.:'5;":0:;:+m::~:·e:t:'{I· n::' 'g':.' ..'R·';a':"'d~:'l~c;a~':I'I';y:'. W"r'ong'" '.; .::: ~~~s;e~;.st Office :c~mniit,:' .' .' ts~~~ thle eh~ci,;tF~~lid~ ~I..f:urnahii~mh .:;

tr" sf . b" . . . . " . .n ' . ",' S· k'" "'f "th'" '1' .. .' \;.110 ars Ip un, nc.,. w ICan ormer. ank. The sym- I .• •.•.. . '. . ..-' ., . •... po esmen ore" re IglOUS' .' t t . . d"pqony Of'ligh.~ In the ·fou.·n~ilin!:With ':'Parishes~"Lackilig',Vocations' ;.~presshave C1~iIIied th~t. ~h.e:pro;.·. ':~:e.. ~h:a~~t~:~t~re:~men toand the water Jl;!ts. are all auto-·. . '.' .. ' .... . .'. '. . . . . posed per pIece .rate .·mcrease, '._'''''' ..... ...matically 'operated."··' . . , ;. CINCINNATI' (NC) - Some-' thereligfous . atmosphere' of the .' :would btl' .disastrous' ,to' many.

Seventy. trees; .have' been . thing i~ "radically wrong" with . ho~e; in tli~ prayers .said there, publications, especially smallplanted around the walk to pro- . a parish wliere' religious· voca:-~ .. iJ(the "love manifested' there; in ones:" . .

· vide· shade and· seclusion; :The tions .fail 'to flourilih~ Bishop - the dev'oted service which makesRev. Rene Sauve"·M.S.,· superior . 'John .King "Mussio of Steuben':' . ·th~ home a sanct4~ry of refuge . W·· P II' °of the Shrine, has expressed the _ ville, OhiQ,' tOid.a nationaf co~_· and comfort.'" '. ate"r' 0 utlonhope that the prayers offered·to·. ference. of: diocesan' vocation Instrumen~ of Slaughter WASHINGTON (NC) '- The'God at Our Lady's Rosary Walk directors here., .' "What chan~e have 'vocations" U.S. Public ·Health Service haswill . be a sourc~. ~f. many Auxiliar.y.~isho~PauI.F. Lie-. the Bishop asked,' "w~en the granted the civil engineeringb~e~smgs to; the Illlgnms who: bol~ of C:mcmnatI,warlloo,. ~hat, motivating'forces oHheir,begin- del!artinent of the .. ChristianVlSlt the Shrllle., .. .' parIsh prIests. fo~.t~e .. ~ost.~:~~: ings are'dried up at the head-. Brothers'· Manhattan .College, .

.The Rosary Walk wIll be ·Illu-:. neglec;tto. gI,:e vocatIonal re- i' ·sPfings?Tpe selfishneSs of abdi- -New .York, $40,'136 to' train 'pro":" .niI.nated eyery., ev~nillg until crui~e~t "the.pri~~~~.,i~.s~~~;d . ca~e<i pa~ents, the impersonal at-, "fes~ion,al' specialists in -water'10.00 P.M. begmmng Sunday. receIve In theIr· pa,stor.ab·mmIs-· mosphere' of a house which is 'pollution control.after the Solemn ~Iessing.· . try." " . but an occasional meeting place,~.

Some 80 diocesan' dlrectors; and the 'every man for himself'and several bis~Ops took part in: attitude of the world are lethalthe four-day conference held at· instruments in the slaughter ofSt. Gregory's Preparatory Sem- the·vocation-minde·d."inar~ here.a.nd a~ Sacred He~rt Bishop Mussio called it theJeSUIt N.oVItIate m nearby. MIl- responsibility of parishioners toford, OhIO. . "produce in the parish an atmos-n:ome Atmo.sphere phere favorable to vocations."

Speakmg. of ~~e.Impo~tan.ce .of "They must at all times," hethe parochIal clImate, .BIShop said "show reverence. and re­l\,'Iussio decl;.tred:: .. "Wh~r~.YOca-: 'spedt for. holy "persons, places,~Ions do not sprmg up III a par- . and'things. They 'must especially·Ish, no matter.hQW .1p.uch onthe· show an .external ,reverence' forsU~face,a. s~rong parC?~hial spirit priests and Religious which indi- ..m~ght.. seem: to flOUrIsh, ,,~~m.e- cates an interior"respect for ·the

. ~I~g IS .r~dICallY ~rOng;WI~~ ItS office they. hold and· for their. baSIC SpIr.It ~nd~rIentatIon. .' specia1'dedicatil:)ll'to religion.'.' -.

.He emphasized.that the gener.. .osity. required of. someone called; 1Ii

to th~ r~ligious life"i~ rooted iP:' DoN'NELLY'·PAINTING·'·~SERYICE ,~.:, "

.Com;me;cial ••.ln~USh~ici·I.:·:'-- ..: . ·.Institutional', " ."

. Painting ,and Decorating

'.135 :·j:t~nl{iin~Str~et.. ;: "';F~t1 .RiJer ··'O'Sbo~rie'2'-191.1 '

".'

',.,

THEANCHOR~. .Thurs.; Sept.'· 20,1962' \

Pra ises· CeylQn'sSlum Worke'rs' .

COLOMBO (NC) - Ov~r 100social workers in Ceylon's slumsgathered here for a study dayon the theme: Make the Masses aPeople." .· Archbishop Thomas B. Cooray,O.M.I., of Colombo told' thegroup that charity, which was avisible sign of the early Church,is especially necessary today. " .

'He welcomed the interest ofso many in slum work, not mere­ly in giving alms,:but in actually

'working . "to uplift 'the slumdwellers. .,.

The study day was o~ganized!>Y the. women's·.section; of the COR.·RE·IA".& S..ON·.S·Christian Workers' Mo~merit. ~.

Most of the participants are ONE STOP···.··· .,' .actively engaged ,in slum work' .,' " . "." . .

· in Ceylon: They included priests, .. , SHC:>~PI~~ ..~I;NJER , .. '.', ,·Religious and members ,. of the I .•. TelevisioD";·. 'Furniture: "Ladies.o~ Charity, .the St.Vin~ '. ApPIi'ances."'. 'Grocerj'''~cent de Paul Society, the·Legion : .... . '. '. .of MarY,the Students'Federa'- .. : . 10~ ·AlleD· ,st;. New, Bedford

,tion, the, . sodalities" and, the.' ..,' :., ·.~ID~D:,1-~I$( .. ' '... _ ',-__ ; c .;,: ~o~g.. Ch.ri~~ian Worker~ .: '... '

Page 11: 09.20.62

11

ORLEANS'

Dorothy Co~Home made

CANDIESCHOCOLATES

'150 Varietiel

ROUTE 6 near

Fairhaven Auto Theatre

FAIRHAVEN, MASS.

~ BA~R:DAH L'MAKES VoUl

CAR' ,RUN BElTER,. NeW ear DeaMN... Service $tati....

h .. , ...... '

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Sept. 20, 1962

Clev®~@D'i)(dl CLUWarrJU~ ~~I},ools

On ~®~n~BonCLEVELAND. (N C )

The local Civil LibertiesUnion has warned publicschool officials here it standsready. "to use our forces" againstpUblic schools which permitreligious exercise.

In a statement to 500 publicschool officials and in a com­ment to the local press, theunion said it is opposed to Biblereading, .recitation of prayers,observance of "religious festi­vals," sectarian instruction, re­leased time for religion classesand use of public' property todisplay "religious symbols."

Victor Gelb, a union spokes­man, said that "if there areabuses reported to us,' we areready to use our forces againstviolations." ,

Quote BlackThe warning quoted from U.S.

.Supreme Court Justice Hugo L.Black's opinion for the court inupsetting recitation of an of­ficial prayer for public schoolpupils in ·New York state.

Black said the Constitution'sFirst Amendent was to guaran­tee "that neither the power nor

, the prestige of the Federal gov- 'ernment would be used to con­trol; , 'support or· influence thekhids of prayer' the American·people can say - that the peo..;

, pIe's religions must 'hot be sub-'jected' to the presSures'of gov- .

, ernment."

CHAT~AM •.H~RViICH PORT ,.

THE "FRIENDLY" CAPE COD FIVE.

LE M lEU XPLUMBING & HEATING. INC.'. for Domestic

& IndustrialSales and

Oil Burners ServiceWY 5-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVE.NEW BEDFORD

~ "

gz· ..IU

~-:::.

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IU,:I:~

.• TH'E~IFRIENDLY" CAPE' COD FIVE '.•. .' - .... -.. .' ••.•• ,~ '~..:. M~ ...". • ... :' •.•.•• ", ;'.: -'.'~'

Resettle's .ExilesMIAMI (NC.) ....,., ..More. t,h;lft

90,000 Cuban refugees are regis-. tered on the rolls of the localoffice of Catholic Relief Ser­vices - National Catholic Wel­fare Conference here which hasalreadY resettled 22,000 of theexiles. .

d'

,..FAIRHAV·EHLUMB~R'

':.' ;

'COMPANY,' ,

,Comp'l~te. Lin~ ,.', .B.uilding Materials

S SPRING ST., FAIRHAVENWvm'an' 3-2611 .. I.. ' ..,.. . ...,

Everyone at ChurchBERLIN .(NC)-The showing

of an antireligious' movie inthe Soviet village of Novo Selonear Kiev to :"enlighten" the.people· about ,the "superstition"of· Christianity .had to be can~

celedj, according to reports here. "Ev.eryone . in ~ the village," in- !:cluding .. the· secretary' 'Of the ii:Young. Communjst League,wasat, church, reports ~id.

:.Label. Sterilization

GREETED AT SEMiNARY: Rev. Mr. John Dias, C.S,C. welcomes Father John J.Murphy, .C.S.C.,newly, appointed Superior, to Holy. ,Cross ,Fathers' Seminary in NorthEaston. Rev. Mr; Dias is a' member of St. Michael's Parish, Ocean ,Grove.

Suicide Study CenterAt Catholic Aospita'i, SEOUL (NC) - A 30-bed H A ·penter to treat and study cases of : onor r.zona~ttempted suicide .has been ,i:.O'S ANGELES (NC)-Lt>yolastarted at Korea's biggest Catho- University of Los Angeles will..!lic hospital. commemorate Arizona',s 50th an,:"

Psychiatrists, psy;¢hologists . "~iversary of statehoOd, during,'and sociologists of st; Mary's its third annual 'CitizensllipDayhospital i here will study case dinner here Saturday. Gov. Paul'l).istories of people 'inclined .to . Fannin of Arizona. will deliver,commit suicide. Suicide is. fair- the principal address. Hawaii's'ly common in Korea in the Gov. WilliamF, Quinn and Loy-'Spring and Summer, and' 'is' olaRegent ·John McCone haveusually blamed on financial been previously honored on Citi~

worri~.. .' ~ns.hip paY.,by ~yola: ' '

Population of Manila'92 Per Cent Catholic

MANILA (NC) -'- Catholics'constitute better than 92 per;c~nt of this city's ,population,"according to newly released cen-, 'sos statistics. Out of a total pop- i'ulation of 1,138,611, they num-'tier 1,056,653. :

.. The survey results gave new;perspective to political pressures:of a local sect, Iglesya ni Kristo(Church of Christ), because ofits supposedly large number ofvoters. The census tallies ad­herents of Iglesya ni Kristo inthe city at only 16,674.

The census reports the' fol­lowing figures for other' 'de­nominations: Protestants in the'

· city number 24,268; Buddhists,22,035; Aglipayans (allied withEpiscopalians), 9,873; and Mos­lems, 551.

Parish Forms.Bus Company;Pastor Drives

FRONT ROYAL (NC)Parishioners of St. John'schurch 1n this· Virginia com­munity have gone into theb",s transportation ,business., The object is nothing so com­

monplace as making money butjust getting children of the par­ish to Sacred Heart School, in .Winchester, some 25 miles away.

Official name of the "bus com­pany" is St. John's Family­School Association. The firm has"hired" the pastor, Father JohnCilinski, as bus driver, on a tem­porary basis. Plans have beenmade to secure a regular drivernext month, then Father Cilinskiwill be demoted to substitute.

Makes 12 StopsThe priest finishes Mass each

morning in time to leave on hisrounds at 7:25. From the rectorythe bus makes stops at eightpick-up points In the FrontRoyal parish area for 34 boysand girls. Four more stops aremade in Stephens City andKernstown to take on 10 morepupils.

Father Cilinski estimates that,counting all the stops, the trip .from St, John's Rectory to SacredHeart School is 35.1 miles. Th~route, in 'reverse, is followed on

·the ,trip' home.Three years ago the Front

Royal 'parishioners, .having noseliool of Uieir own, began send-ing their children to the Win- ,.'chester school. A·Winchester.buS'· ATLANTIC CITY,: ( N:C) - ,our society that' would.strip . based on law ••. and yet therecompany. ·transported the young'; Groups favoring .• sterilizatio~ . from the PQI1rait pf a Chris~ian are" those' who literally jeer a,tsters·at a"cost '-()f 50 cents per:'" represent one ,symptom. of·. an . ~emocra~y. the,Pll~terns '. and .. the'upholding of the 'law of God,child per. day..•' . -< .;: ' ',infectious paganism,tba,t·is·seek~ . id~~tification ma,r!ts o~.God. , because it hampers their ease;

Raise $1,000' ' ,i ing. to. destroy the spiritual as- ':These people," he cQnUm,led,., their s~1f-iildulgenCe;'their ulte-Lillit· July 'the' full~time bus"" pects of society, the secretary of "can .have ab~Q1utely,:no concept ,rio1' purpose." . " " . .

company gave notice that this:"· tl1e 'National' Conference of 'of·God nor the' slightest appl,'e..", ." Prelude to'Decadence . Quebec Enrollment.arrangement .was no longer pos- . Catholic. Charities warned here.' clation of, His 1?eneficent domin- , He theri'said thatiIi' view of ',To'ps On'e M.o'llo.o·nsible. Faced with the problem of Msgr. Raymond J. Gallagher " ion over His children when they this "we may very well ask our_renting, a, bull at the rate of $35. told delegates to the·, annual ,will put the knife to the bodies selves" the following questions: QUEBEC (·NC) - More thaillper day, the parishioners decided ,meeting of.the Conference and of' of. public beneficiaries rather "Are we about' to be the vic'; one miilion students will be at­to"look for a more economical, the St. Vincent ~e Paul Society' ,than face the.challenge ofmeet_.·· tim. of the pagan beast, who te~ding elementary: and second­arrangement. . that "the malignancy of pagan-. lng' their responsibilities by ac- wIth one thrust seeks to destroy ary schools of the Catholic

That's':whEln the Family~School· Ism~ is displaying its symptoQ1S cepting moral means. They'en- all vestiges of· godly. concern in . scho<ll boards in .Quebec thisAssociation' was formed..Com';" in more quarters of .ourlife than . courage people to maim their ,public life, who with another.~ab . school. term, according to earlybining some parish funds onhann ever' before." . , bodies and ignore their responsi- destroys the ,ideal· of, personal re:' ,registration figures.with $1',000 raised at a· lawn "With greater audacity and bilities while' ·preserving their ~ sponsibility· above all other con- Attendance in the elementaryparty; the assocUltion purchas'ed . imprudence than' we have ever privileges' and ~eir·rights." siderations, who with an addi;. 'Catholic schools lias been estl­a 1962 model 54'-passengerbus' witnessed," he said, ~'we hear . Msgr. Gal~aghel' said ,that :"we tional thrust proposes·that we by ,mated at 852,000 and in the sec-

' .. of its own'.' ' .. the' c;roakin'gs or groups within" ar!J supposed, to be a, society law : .countenanCe·· sterilization ondary schools at 231,000. ThisThey also'bought a 1959 model ", . ',." ' . and 'abol'tion:or maiming of. the makes' a' total of 1,083,000. This

foreign make "economy" car· Ch " h .... d" ..... M·· " . humanpersonwithoutlegitimate . is'an overall increase of 58,000which, is used as a shuttle. The .' .. urc. ·,.~ee s· .~ew,. Issionary"" .and ,morally'acceptable ,reasonll.?·. ov~r the previous year.car is left 'in Wjnchester. After S S·, ." " ,:"Is all of this a prelude to, theth~pupilS are discharged at.the ,p.irit ·to ~ ·urmount:. Problem.s ' . . decadence of our democratic sO-,school Father CI'II'nski hops ,,;. . 'cietv " a decadence which ,de-"~..

. .,. .., ' .. ,':'~,I -NOTRE -DAME,(NC)-Only a - Citing the 'iihcreasing momen- "th~,.a\,lto, '~eturns to lfront. Roy.al Pentecostal spirit, like that of the tum and world-wide dimensions" stroyed 'the philosophies and 'theanli takes .care of' his parish,;, cultures of civilizations befored~ties. In the. afternoon he drives' first, apostles can cope' with, the·' of. human progress, Father Mc- us?"bal;k to Wipch,ester in the, (:;1r" pr9!>~ems fa~ing. tl!e .Ghurch to- Guire, declared: "Our thinkingboards the bus' and returns with,. day, one. of the nation's t()p. ·mis- on .human problems, and more

'. siQn authoritjes' d~clared .per~. .:' particularly our missionarY.t~e ,childi'e?- to F~ont'Royat~ : Fatl).er Frederick A. McGuire, prQblems, has not kept pace with

· told, t~e prIest drIves140:4 miles, .C.M.; executive ~ec:retaryof the the unbelievable' iechiIologicala day. be~een his rect-Ory and . Mission Secretariat told' 'niore advances of the past 25' years."the schooL than 4,0<;10 delegate~ to the 20th

Catholic Students Mission Cru- "There is growing disbelief insade national convention: GOd," ,he said, "which chailenges

"We cannot indulge oursel.ves. the Church in every sphere ofin the luxury of inaction while action. The world-wide charac­Christ suffers ~n 'a billion spir- ter of contemporary paganismitually underprivileged souls." thus denies the universality of

)rather McGuire .'warn~d . the the Church in the sociologicaldei¢gat!'!s-high schOOl and col-" and, geographical, spheres.lege 'students, anq· seminarians "Here'at home we 'face a grow-.from' 30 states-that time is not ing practical atl)eism 'which doeson the side of the Church" as not fight against' religion butthe world's population multi- simply Ignores it." -plies.

"In those lands which are pre­dominantly non-Christian," hesaid, "the population expands atthe rate of 40 Itlillion a year,while less than 200,000 are con­verted to Christianity."

Moreover, with an estimated10,000 new priests needed eachyear "simply to take care o~

present needs," only a littlemore than 5,000 -are being or­dained each year, Father Mc­Guire pointed' out. "We' aremoving - but moving back- .wards," he added. "

Page 12: 09.20.62

I

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. ,

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JUST at All LeadingASK FOR Food Stor..

SWEETNICS in'Mallachuse...

Be· Thrifty '- 'Be W...,Afk your Meatman for a

. DAVIDSON'S, .(MacGregor Brand) .

• SW£ETNIC •Bake"in the BaiJ-No Boating-Mac!' says-

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WITH, ITS FLAVOR"

653

YOURS TO LOVE AND TO GIVEI.... life of II DAUGHTER OF ST. PAUL Lon Godm_, and g,.... eo .oul. lUlowiedge and love ofGod by nrving Him in a MilliOft which ue. "'..Prea, lleidlo. Motion "'Ictu,.. OIld tv, to bring.. Word to Mule .verywhore. Zoalou. youngeim. 14-2lJ '/80" Intore.tod ~ "'1. unique.ApoBtolato may writ. to,

REVEREND MOTHER SUPERIORDAUGHTERS OF S1. PAUL •

50 ST.· PAUL'S AVE. BOSTON SO. MASS.

Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to theMost Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of the Society forthe ·Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New· York 1, N. Y.,or your Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE,368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass. .

IG:~OfL;~:OYOM, By Most Rev. fulton' J. Shee~,D.D.

'll'mS COLUMN 'lIS ADDRESSED 'll'0 PRmS'll'S 'In the Old Tes,tament and in all pagan reUgiorts, the priest

was always separate fr{)m the victim, whether be offered a lamb,a goat or a bullock to Divinity. But. Our Blessed Lord united inHimself both priesthood and victimhood, for "He offered Himself."Inasmuch as we are priests of Jesus Christ, we are never to separatevictimhood from p~iesth{)od. Yet, though' we always insist on the'dignity of our priestJ:1ood, we seldom insist upon the Indigni&7of our victimhoo·d.

It may be as~elll why m state of vlctlJimood 011' sacrifice.is so essential for our' priesthood. The reasons an as follows:

1) In the Mass we not only offer OurLord to His Heavenly Father - we offerourselves in Him. His death is mysticallyrepresented by the separate Consecrationof the bread and the wine, which Sacra..:mentaily reveal the separation of' lI3Iis'Body and Blood, the manner. of His ·death.If all. we did was to offer Christ without,dying with. HbD, wi!, would be parasitesupon the Mystical Body of Christ. .

Z) ,Expressing our priestly lives' insacrifice prevents piety from bec·om1D.gemotional. If all we had toward our' 'goreatlIIligh Priest was religious feeling, withoutany appropriate form ,of' sacrifice, our.feelings would eventuaUy clie. Nothinggives so much power to the words of the priest in the pulpit, theelassroom ot' tbe home as his self-denials.

May we now suggest some appropriate forms of victimhoodor sacrifice:

1) Send your surplus Mass stipends to The Society for thePropagation of the Faith that we may send them to the Bishops.They will, in turn, forwardUlem to priests in the Missions, manyof whom, have no. other livelihood than that of the- stipend.

2) taucate a ~min:arian in Asia, ,Africa or. anywhere else in~e Missibwi for,. the priesthood. This will cost only $250 a year.

3) Unless you are really "pinched," send ,the offerings whichyou receive for,Mas~es to the Holy Father·throtigh·his Society,forthe' PrOpagation of' the Faith. , .

. Thus, whllt'is'myst~cl1-11y presented in the; morning ,Mass' willbe, bo'dily: pre:sentedtl.u"0u$h. Ule rest of the day and the year.. .

GODLOVE YOU toV.L~M for..$2 '''l1.at I may be blessedwith a normal, .healthy: chiJd,;) offe~.dti~ ..tci· the Missions.'" • ~.to M.B.A. for $5 "while reading your appealS to priests, to 'sendM~sS stipends to the Missions, it' oc~'o~red to ine that I ~iglitbOrrow the Idea to make·some return io the priests who havebeen .particularly helpful' to me and mine. Accept this in theirname." •.• to Mr: a.nd Mrs.' O.K. fOr, $300 "As we contino.eto'make money on stocks, we feel some of it should' go to the hungorl.

, throughout the' mission' world." . '

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PATRIARCH:' Archbish­op Louis Batanian has beennamed' Patriarch of the Ar­menian Rite Catholics; suc­ceeding Gregorio Pietro XVCardinal Agagianian, Pre­'feCt of. the Sacred Congre­gationfor the propagationof the Faith. The Turkey na­tive become Patriarch Ig­DaCe Pierre XVI Batanian ofCiliCiaofthe Armenians.

Help Refugees, LUCERNE (NC) - Switzer­

land's Catholic charities organ­iZation coUected $50,OOO.ast·yearto help Care for ,the 10,749refu-

.gees from Hungary still in thiscountry, more than half of whomII~ depend: on relief. . ,

NCCSDirectoll'Dunham's citation was ac­

cepted by Mrs. Dunham. Mrs.Gertrude Broderick accepted asecond plaque honoring Dunhamon behalf of the U. S. Office 01Education." "

Dunham was the first execu­tive ; director olthe NationalCatholic Community Service, aUSO memberagency~ holdingthat post in 1941 and 1942.

Father Trivett said the cita-. tions 'were given at· the close

of the first decade of develop­ment in' educational televisionto. honor, two' individuals <whohad d,one much to promote ETV.

MosNem.$. ' Give landTo Catholic College

. JOLO (NC)-Moslem officialshere in the Philippines, will give

'!lmd to a college founded 'by anAmerican Catholic Bishop.

The mayor of Jolo and the, governor of the province of Sulu'.have agreed to give the isnd toNotre· Dame College, started' in1955 by Bishop Francis J. Mc­Sorley, O.M.I." Vicar Apostolicof Jolo, a nati~ of Collingsw~,N.J. ,

The gift, which' will enable·tbe;college to expand, is a .mark01 gratitUde for its contribu­tions to Moslems,. who' make· up98 .per 'cent oof 'the province's'population. ,

Out from the gate, in solemnprocession, marched Heracliusthe Emperor and Zacharias thePatriarch, clad in regal and pon­tifical glory. Down in the dustthey bent at the approach of thecavalcade, and when the horse­men pulled' up, the Emperorhimself stood up to embrace the 'Cross.

Like his Lord and Master be­fore him, he would carry it over'his shoulder to the place ofCalvary, now part of the greatbasilica of the Empress Helena.

Patriarch's SolutionHe took the Cross, hoisted it

to his shoulder, and gave thesign for all to follow. But not astep could he take. It was asthough a' paralysis of will andpurpose, no less than of physicalstrength, had come over him.

The pause became noticeable,then embarrasSing. It was thePatriarch Zacharias who solvedthe puzzle. '

!'See, 0 'Emperor, it is not insuch triumphal vesture that thoucanst imitate the poverty and F' -IIlL ' C·thumility of Jesus Christ', in ' oW'UrtlOm. I, es~arrying the Cross!"." ETV .',suiting action to advice, Hera- 'P.ioneers·

clins threw, off his ro.bes ·andWASHINGTON(NC) - Thehis diadem. and clad only.in his Fordham University communi­tunic. found strength to taite up cations arts, department ,hasthe Cross and bear it up the hill. saluted. two deceased .pioneersorte . hopes that, the Patriarch in . educational' television.gave his mitre to the altar' boy .Plaques . carrying citationsand relieved the train-bears of were, presented 'to members ofthe worst of their duties. ' the families of the late Frieda

When Cross Means Contempt ' ' B.' Hennock, only woman toLegend it may be, but how un- serve as a member of the Fed­

iversal . in its application. We eral Communications Commis­are always talking about the sion, and the late Franklin Dun­imitation of Christ and about ham, who was chief of radiocarrying the Cross, but we find and television of the U.S. Of­it extremely difficult to get be- fice of Education.yond the talking stage. Father William K. Trivett,

So'mehow, ,when we, set foot S.J., presen1edtheplaques at aon ,the path; our legs give out,' luncheon here. The citation

- unaccountably. Like Heraclius, honoring Frieda Hennock' waswe are all for taking the Cross accepted by. her .husband, WH­in triumphal procession, but by Ham H. Simons. A second plaqueno means interested in carrying in her honor was accepted byit as a badge of shame: FCC commissioner Robert E.

It is all well- and good, and Lee. I .

quite pleasant really, when' wecan wear the vesture of pompand circumstance, Or ,when weare pitied for our heroism, orcommended for our bravery. Itis another matter when theCross means contempt and ridi-cule. '. ....

Point Well:Taken'That is why so many of us

_ give up trying. The story of theEmperor's clothes is the storyof half of humanity. When the

. going is good there are no bettercatholics anywhere than our­selves. When the going getstough, .surely God, does not ex­p~t such sacrifices from, HisElect!

It is to be supposed that thePatriarch gilded the lily in his

·sermon which he undoubtedlypreached .when ~hey got to the

·Basilica, though likely enough· the Emperor' would have told: him that the point was suffi-ciently well·taken. At any rate,

,it is still. there in the liturgyfor 'all of us to think ~bout. .

First ChurchJ'YVAESKYAE (NC) - The

:.·first Catholic church in centralI Finland was .opened here.

It''l:Jishop William P. B. Cobbeo,· S.C.J., consecrated St. Olavchurch, which has an annex with

· a kindergarten, a convent and• a home for high school students!

Now that so many familiar liturgical landmarks havebeen obliterated in the recent reform of the CaJendar, it iscomforting to the elderly that September 14. still marks

· the feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross. To-be sure,it rests upon a solid histori.cal basis, even though thereare legends which havewoven their strands into thefabric. Above all, it reminds usthat the Holy Cross, exalted overthis troubled .world, <is thesole sure signof Our salva­tion.

The feast re­calls the trium- ,phant return ofthe True Crossto its shrine inJerusalem fromwhich it hadbeen filched by

.th e invading-Persians. The incident dates

back to the early' years of the'rth century, when the Iranians,Illn.der their v i g 0 r 0 u's ,.king;Chosroes, had inflicted, defeatafter defeat upon the EasternEmpire,' humbling the' pride ofByzantium in the dust, and pro-.riding a. dress-rehearsal, so to

_say, for the more terrible Ar~~bian conquests of the oncomingcenturies. The symbolic', cli­~acteric of We'stern defeat wasthe capture of Jerusaiem-andthe loss of the relic of the TrueCross. ." ,

·Near-~ach~

To say that Chrilltendom wasmocked would be a poverty­stricken _understateD:lent. There.may have been doubts .as to thE!lIluthenticity of the Wood of theCross, but no doubt whatsoeverIllS .to the meaning· of the relic.

It was as though we todaywere to hear· that Russian armshad· conquered' Rome and rifledthe Tomb of the Apostle.,For the time,' however, the

Empire was helpless. Only withthe succ~ssion of a new and en­ergetic Emperor, Heraclius,could an offensive against-thePersians be thought of. The .un­wieldy Empire had to be mobi­lized, the army 'and- fleet re­serviced,· revictualed, and themoney 'f{)und. By 628 Heraclius.had performed the near-miracleof setting the vast pageant inmotion.

Return True CrossAs matters turned out the

gesture of power proved suffi­cient. Persia herself was in the.throes of dissolution, premoni-

I tory of that internal weaknessI which made the land and its an-

~ient civilization fall like Iihouse of cards when the Arabianhordes swept out of their desertto preach their new evangel ofthe Sword' and Cresent.

The satraps, as a result, wereonly too glad to treat with Her­aclius and to buy, immunity atthe cost of the Holy ·Cross. Withsomething of the relief, one

,thinks, of. the "Philistines re­· turning the Ark 'of the Covene­: llant they sent back' the True

Cross, intact in its reliquary.The date was the 3rd of May

of that year, but the feast wascelebrated on the traditionalSeptember 14, associated 'with

'ihe devotion to the, relic overrhe previous two centuries. ' T · 0 11I..." rapplstspen .~ew

Solemn ProcessionSo much is history, soberly Monastery In Eire I .

recorded. The rest is the delight- DUBLIN (NC)-A Ilew Trap- 'ful - and pointed - legend of pisf monastery~-willbe openedHeraclihs and the Cross. Great in County Kildare ai,the invi­was the rejoicing in the city; tation of Archbishop"John C.

.'we read, when the emissaries of ..McQuaid; C.S.Sp., of Dublin. :the army brought back from the The fifth Cistercian house "tobontier the ·precious relic. be establishedm Ireland since

, the Trappists returned in 1833Will be at Bolton Castle nearMoone in County' Kildare. The'other abbeYs,are at.Mount Mel­leraY, Roscrea, Mellifont andPortglenone' -,- the only one in­Northern Ireland.. Bolton Castle, built hi the 13th

century and partially destroyedby Cromwell's troops, is 40 miles

'southwest: of Du~

-Tl1E ANCHO~-o..iocE!~e of Fa!I,Ri;y,er-:-Th~r.~ .. S.ept.•20, 1.91$2.... .. ". ......" ..... ~. '. '. ",.' ~ . .... . . - ..

Say$. [l®@®ndl' ,of H~r@~~o[lJJ~, :... . .

H(C1l$'~[{i)DV®tf$@~ Ap~~~e@~~@~By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D. D.

Bishop of Reno "

Page 13: 09.20.62

13

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Safety Bel'ts I MustS :For Priests' Cars

MUENSTER (NC) - PrieSi!!Jin the Muenster diocese have 00install and use safety belts imltheir cars, according to the ~­

ficial journal of the Muensterrdiocese here in Germany. .

Authorization for personlllicars will not be given from nowon unless ,the safety measure iofollowed, the journal said.Priests are also required to re­commend the use of safetybeltoto all laymen employed by theChurch.

THE ANCHOR-Thurs.• Sept. 20. 1962

Baptist LeaderLauds CatholicRacnal Record

CHICAGO (NC) - ANegro Baptist leader praisedthe Catholic Church's standon the racial integrationquestion.

"If, prizes were given tochurches that did the most tobeat down racial discriminationand segration this past yeai',first prize would go to theRoman Catholic Church," saidJoseph Harrison Jackson, ad­dressing the 82nd annual meet­ing here of the National BaptistConvention, U.S.A., Inc., atwhich he was elected to hiutenth one-year term as presi­dent.

He cited the attitudes of PopaJohn and the elevation of Mar­tin de Porres, Peruvian NegroDominican Brother, to saint­hood last May. He also recallecllthe excommunication by Arch­bishop Joseph F. Rummel oxNew Orleans of three segrega­tion° leaders for trying to im:­pede racial integration in Cath­olis schools of New Orleans.

Deepens FaithHe recalled his private audlo

ence with Pope John last Decem-. ber at which they discussecll

problems of world peace,h~.relations and plans for the Sec­ond Vatican Council, which con­venes in Rome on October 11.

"Some of his 'statemenicdeepened my faith in the futureof the Christian church as oneof the .champions of freedomand human rights," he said; ,

The National Baptist Conven­tion, U.S.A., Inc., claims a mem­bership of six million, tMlargest Negro religious orgam­zation in the world.

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IMMACULATE CONCEPTION,NORTH EASTON

The Women's Guild wi~l meetMonday eveimg· at 8 o'clock inthe new Parish Center.· Rev.

, Martin L. Buote, assistant at theparish, will speak.ST. MATHIEU,FALL RIVER

Monday, Sept. 24 is the datewhen new members will be re­ceived into the parish Councilof Catholic Women. Benedictionat 7:30 in the evening wll pre­

.cede the reception. The unitplans a rummage sale from 9 to5 Friday, Sept. 28 at 308 EastMain Street.SS. PETER AND PAUL,FALL RIVER

The Women's Club will spon­sor a whist at 8 Monday night,Sept. 24 in the church hall. Mrs.Rocco Postiglione and Mrs. Stan-

. ley M. Janick are chairman andco-chairman.

,Returns and prize donationsfor the parishola are now beingaccepted at the rectory.SACRED HEART,NORTH ATTLEBORO

Lay Apostolate Sunday is lletfor Oct. 7. This occasion will co­ordinate and publicize programsof parish societies, includingyouth groups, men's andwomen's organizations, the choirand the Home and School Or­ganization. Norman LaCasse andEmile Morin are in charge of abanquet which will close theday's activities, while EdwardSuprenant and Mrs. RichardDeschenes are general chairmenfor the day.

Ladies of St. Anne will spon­sor a Sisters' Tea from 2 to 4Sunday afternoon, Sept. 23 in theparish hall. Mothers of parochialschool children are especiallyinvited. Presentations will bemade to the Holy Union Sistel'tlstaffing the school;

BISHOP NEUMANN, RECORDS FOUND: FatherJohn Pertz, of Suffield, Ohio, looks over the well-preservedparish baptismal record of 1841 in the handwriting ofBishop John Nepomucene Neumann, C.SS.R., fourth Bish­op of Philadelphia. The Bishop was then a 30~year-oldhorseback missionary. Bishop Neumann's cause for beati­fication is now being advanced. NC Photo.

The Parish Parade

New ApproachNFO is trying to bring the so­

called laws of supply and de­mand under rational control bymeans of a form of collectivebargaining. This is a brand newapproach in the United States tothe problem of farm prices. _.

It will not be easy to put itacross, but with patience andpersistence it may eventuallybecome the normal way of es­tablishing prices in argriculture.

SACRED HEART, HOLY ROSARY,NO. ATTLEBORO FALL .RIVER

St. Anne's Sodality will spon- Annual Women's Guild mem-sor a Sisters' tea in the hall on bership tea will be in charge ofSunday afternoon from 2 to 4 , Mrs, Editli Burton and Mrs.o'clock. Mrs. Arthur Roy is' Frank Baccari. It· is set for 3chairman for the affair. S",nday . afternoon, Sept. 30 in

The following officers have the parish hall.been elected for the coming year ST. DOMINIC,and will take office in,Jan., 1963.. SWANSEAMrs. Anna Plante, president; Mrs. ,-The Women's Guild will spon­Emile Londrault, vice-president; sor a concert· by the AllegroMrs. Louis Mayer, secretary. . .Glee Club, under direction of Dr.

Mrs. Joseph Beauchaine, treas- Normand Paquin, a,t 8 Sundayurer; Mrs. 'Paul Laramee, pub- night, .Sept. 23 in' K of C Hall,licity chairm,m; Mrs." Lionel Swansea. Titled "A Touch of'Lallier, flower,.fund•.. ' , Broadway," the show will fea­IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, . turemusical comedy tunes. Re­BREWSTER AND DENNIS " freshments will be served and. Officers and committee chair- ,tickets will be available at the

men of the· Women's' Guild . door. or. may be obtained from. met at 8 Tuesday night, Sept. . Mrs. Robert Tschirch, OSborne18 at the home of Mrs."William .2-8106 or Miss Dolores Silva,Jones, president, to plan the : FRontier 9-9861.year's program.. First Fall meet- The guild was responsible. foring is set for 8 Tuesday night, a well-attended parish tea, heldSept. 25 in Brewster Town HalL on the church lawn. Rev. Edward

. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, Burns addressed guests on ritesFALL RIVER . in the Church. other than the

The .Women's Guild will open Roman: A souvc:nir. history ofits Fall season 'with an open the gUIld was distrIbuted.

'meeting at 8 Monday night, Oct. ST. PATRICK,1. A coffee hour and entertain- IFALL RIVERment will be featured. Other Cub Scouts will meet Thurs':'Fall plans include a communion day, Sept. 27 and display handi­breakfast Sunday, Oct. 21; a crafts. Movies will also befood demonstration Monday, shown.Nov. 5; a harvest festival Satur- ST. GEORGE,day, Nov. 17; and a Christmas WESTPORTparty in' December. The Women's Guild will openOUR lLADY OIF ANGElLS its Fall season at 6:30 MondayIFALL RnVER '. night, Sept. 24 with a potluck

The Council of Catholic supper to which members andWomen will serve a potluck prospective members are invited.supper for members and guests The event will take place in theWednesday night, Oct. 3. Mrs. parish hall.

, Mary Matthews is chairman. OUR LADY OF VICTORY.Planned for Saturday, Nov. 24 CENTERVILLEis a Christmas fair. Mrs. Mary Fall activities for the Women'sSilvia is in charge of arrange- Guild will include a parish socialments. , at 8 Saturday night, Sept. 29 and'Parish CCD officers include a rummage sale from 10 to 2

George Pontes, president; Joseph Saturday, Oct. 27. Both will beVelozo, vice _ president; Miss held in the parish hall. APatricia Medeiros, secretary. Christmas bazaar is set for Sat-HOLY GHOST, urday, Dec. 1.ATTLEBORO ST. JOSEPH,

A card party, will be held at FALL RIVER8 tonight in the Portuguese- Women's Guild activities willAmerican Hall to benefit the include a Communion breakfastchurch building fund. in October, with Mrs. VincehtOUR LADY OF IFATIMA Dowling in charge; a rummageSWANSEA. sale and turkey whist in Novem_

The Women's 'Guild is plan- ber; and a chicken patty supperning a "Christmas Village" to be and bazaar in December.held from 5 to 10 Friday eve'- ST. MARY'Sning, Nov. 30 and from 1 to 9 NOR'J!;.ON·Saturday, Dec. 1. . The Catholic Women's Club

Booths will include candies, will ~old weekly, whist partiespastries, green thumb, handmade at' '8 Friday night in the parisharticles,aprons, foys, '(folls,,<!!Cr- center, Route 123: The publicamics relig'Ious articles'!. and is invited. . .Christmas decorations. A Christ- $'1'. WILLIAM, ..mas Restaurant will feature hot 'IFALlL RnVERdishes, sandwiches and, pastries Sunday afternoon, Sept. 23and will be staffed by teen-age from 2 to 4 has been c~osen bygirls of the parish. ' the Women's Guild for its an-ST. MARY'S, nual membership tea. A musicalNEW BEDFORD program will be presented, ac-

The Women's Guild has set cording to announcement. bya Halloween dance for Saturday,Mr~.John Malgieri, president.Oct. 27, with Mrs. 'Joseph Bar- The guild's sewing group hasbero as chairman. Also planned resumed T u e s day afternoonfor next month is a' guest night. meetings in the parish a,ll-pui-Hal Peterson will speak. pose room.' .. ,..

Has Determination, Drive

The NFO was organized in1955 in Iowa at a time when hogprices were disastrously low. Itsprang up almost spontaneouslyas a grass roots movement withlittle or no outside encourage­ment or support. By the end of1958 its membership has soaredto 50,000 and today is estimatedto be in the neighborhood of125,000.

It would appear, however, that",hat NFO lacks in numbers andfinancial strength it more thanmakes up for with dogged deter­mination and drive and with thefreshness and originality of itsapproach to the problem of de­flated prices in agriculture.

'Height of FollY'More than one newspaper ac­

count of NFO's unprecedente'dwithholding action .fo·!.' higherprices for farm products has in_dicated that some of the otherfarm organizations are aghast atNFO's seemingly reckless pro­gram of direct action.

To many of the leaders of theold line farm organizations, areporter for the National Ob­server has pointed out, "NFO'sidea that farmers can control a

Imarket that has always been de­pendent upon··the laws of sup­ply and demand (and Govern­ment price supports) seems the

Says 'Farm' Products "Pri'ce"System .Economic Anarchy

By Msgr. George G. HiggilllsDirector, NCWC Sociai Action IDepariment

. One entire section of PQpe John XXIII's encyclical,Christianity and Social Progress (Mater et Magistra), isdevoted to current problems and prospects in the field 'ofagriculture.. In almost all countries, the encyclical says,agriculture is "in a state of. .depression, both as regards height of folly."labor productivity and the I hope that time will eventu­level of living of farm pop- ally demonstrate tbe very oppo­ulations." If this situation Is site. There is nothing sacredever to be corrected farmers and about the so-called laws of sup-rural workers ply and demand in agriculturemust develop a or in any other sector of econom-greater sense of ic life.solidarity andset up mutualaid societies andprofessional as­sociations. "Allthese· are nec­essary," the en­cyclical pointsou·t, "either tokeep ruralworkers aoreastof scientific and technical prog­ress or to protect the prices ofgoods produced by their labor.

"Besides, acting in this man-ner, farmers are put on the samefooting as other classes ofworkers, who, for the most part,'join together in such fellowships.

"Finally, by acting thus, farm";ers will. achieve an importanceand influence in public affairsproportionate to their own role..For today it is unquestionablytrue that the solitary voicespeaks, aa they say,' to thewinds."

Growing ForceThis section of the encyclical

has thus far received relativelylittle attention in the UnitedStates. Articles on the encyclicalhave usually concentrated onthose sections of the documentwhich pertain more directly tothE> industrial sector of oureconomy.

We have recently witnessedhowever, a dramatic and highlysignificant example of closersolidarity and cooperation amongfarmers for the general purposesoutlined in the encyclical andfor the particular purpose ofprotecting the prices of goodsproduced by the labor of farmersand rural workers.

I refer to the strike (or the"withholding action") voted bythe members of the NationalFarmers Organization in an ef­fort to secure .higher prices forcattle, hogs, sheep, corn and soy­beans. As of mid-Septemt>er,this "withholding action" by themembers of the NFO was stillin effect.

Whatever its immediate out­come, competent observers gen­erally agree that NFO itself isa growing force to be reckonedwith in th~ Midwest.

Page 14: 09.20.62

o

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Lutheran to ·StudyInterfaith Relations

STRASBOURG (NC)-GeorgeLindbeck, U.S. layman namedby the Lutheran World Feder­ation to attend the coming ecu­'menical council 'as an observer,'has left here for a month's tour

. of South America tO'study inter_ ''faith relations.

Lindbeck,' 39, is on leave fromthe Yale Divinity Schoo1 where

"he teaches the history of theo­logy. He was appointed 'by theLutheran federation as an ob­'server at the council alohg with'Kristn-Ejnar Skydsgaard of Co':':penhagen University. '

Before leaving France, Lind­beck stressed that his SouthAmerican tour aims at fostering"mutual understanding and re-spect." But, he added, "-there is 'no part of the world where therelations between the confes­sions have been as' bad as inSouth America."

, Popees Retteat'Sets PattternJ'

VATICAN CITY (NG:)-Pope- , ",·f ' '

I John has .set a pattern for the'spiritual preparation he has

asked of all Catholics for the "COming' Vatican council.

The Pope is making a private"retreat this week; seven days of.pr~yer and 'meditation· beingbroken only 'by his scheduled'radio message to the worldTuesday.

The Pope has also ordereda triduum of spiritual prepara-

'tion for all Vatican personnel,both clerics and laymep, to runfrom Sept. 24 to '26. Familiesliving in Vatican City as well asmembers' of the Noble Guard,Swiss Guard, Palatine Guardand Vatican Gendarmerie willjoin in the triduum.

A similar triduum will beheld for- personnel of the Vic­ariate of the diocese of Rome.

Spiritual exercises of the tri­duum will be preached in vari­ous offices of the Vatican.

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Then' he added: "There aredeep-seated implications, preju_dices and deep feelings'involved

, in the matter and I may 'realize' ... that I should have 'been more· restrained." '

In the meantime, Msgr.John, . S. Elsaesser, Covington diocesan

school superintendent,' said' ina statement issued ~o the pressthat "it continues to amaze

, people'" that bus rides are re- .fused the childnin, even thoughstate laws grant permission forthem. •

Save $6 MillionCovington diocesan schools, he

said, save the taxpayers $6,649,­850 a year, not including "the

'possible construction cost which·would be involved in housing,these 24,178 pupils." That 'cost,,he said, "wQuld run into un-told mil.lions." • ,

",I feel confident," he said,"that our elected offcials, who

,have the welfare responsibility, and the welfare' of county resi-· dents at heart, will be able tooffer school bus, transportationservices to 'all pupils.":

He' noted that unlike Boone· ,County, transportation is' pro­"vided : illlschool children, re­,gardless: of the,·' school' they

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'companying some of the students say they are protestingthe ban against use of Boone county school bUses forparochial 'schoolstudents.. Last year, parochial school' stu­dents were carried on county school buses, but this yearthe county 'refused to allot funds .for their transportation.NC'Photo.

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BROOKLAWNFUNERAL HOME, INC.a. Marcel Roy - O. LorrBlne Roy

Roirer LaFrance

lEndo~~eReiigaonIn' School' '.

AMARILLO (NC) ~ Amarillo-public' ,s c h 0 0, I admin~strators

stressed the impor.tance of reli­gion in the schools in talks be­fore the local Rot"ary Club.

The speakers' were RobertAshworth, superintendent ofAmarillo public schools, and A.B.Martil,l, president of 'AmarilloJunior College. (

'~Ther:ight Of the pupil ,tolearn is not served by attemptingto isolate the school from thecomplunity and the world, andforbidding any men t ion of

'things politi<;al or religious;",said ~shworth. " ,

Continue, ObservancesHe told the West Tei'as Regis,,"

ter, newspaper of the Amarillodiocese, that 'public schools herewill continue'daily religious ob- 'servances, including say i n ggrace before meals and prayers

'by students.Martin in his address said that

to -.ignore spiritual truths ineducation "would be disastrousto the value systems based upona belief in 'God."

. , . ,,'#~~~~:'~~,':':''''~~' ~:i'r~ ~;:~;~!··..,,":'·i'·;:;;7. _~~-.. ' .~ ~~": }V:';", ';' ' ... ,.... -;. ~', " ..

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fd#~~i;~:er;;t~lir~;1S;'p(20;'I962":':i::~' ",- ,"-' , .' ,.~ ," 'I " .. ~ •• ..' ' •

14'"

Conditions l!mproveBefore the Harrison Narcotic

Act in 1926, patients sometimesreceived bottles of morphinetablets from their visitors. Pre­sent day synthetic narcotics and"narcotic substitutes" have madepossible a graduated scale ofpain relief.

In the early years 'the Sisterstended many cases of severeface cancer, requiring exten­sive dressings four Or five timesa day; today, however, suchcases of face cancer are rare inthe Homes, due appare~tly toimproved surgical techniquesand successful radiation therapy.

Among the guests, all of whommust be unable' to pay for theircare, all classes of society havealways been represented, as along term illness such as canceroften, drains the resources ofmany. persons even, in higherincome brackets.

F~)[l'mYi1~!r C@!fll~teW H@~~ rra~@@j-~B~~t

191)'COm'mM~ityto MGO'~'JlUJlbi~tee,A'former, administrator of the '.,":", "

Rose HawtHorne Lathrop Home Sister, mentions that today'sin Fall River, Sister M. Stanis- ,plastics' '. anlf' 'disposable'items'laus,' O.P., last Friday became ,haY,e ,'reduced':, 'the Volume ofthe first member of her branch ,laundry, whil'e nylons and washof the Dominican Order to reach and wear fabrics have cut downthe 5{)th anniversary of her reli- on:',i!:cining, but' whim .asked , if

that'meanstha't the work is now'gious ' profession. 'A Jubilee Mass was celebrated a"~snap," she : quickly replie.d,

at the'Sacred Heart Home, Phil- ''No, 'it, is no snap yet, but moreadelphia; where she is present- . ofa snap than it used to be."ly assigned. Sister M. Stanis- ~~ides.her ,Fall River assign­laus was in charge of, .the Fall ment,:'Sister M. Stanislaus spentRiver Home from 1942 to 1948. over 30 years in St. Rose'sHer, niece, Sister M. ,Teresa, "Home, :New York 'City, and an­O.P., is presentiy on the staff other six yearS in Our Lady ofof the same Home. ' GoOd Counsel Home, 'St. Paul,

Only 10 years had passed since Minn.Rose Hawthorne Lathrop hadproIJ,punced vows as Mother M. 'Alphonsa to perpetuate her id,ealof providing free Homes forpoor incurable cancer patients,regardless of race, creed orcolor, when, as a young Polishimmigrant; Sister M. Stanis­laus 'joined the handful of nunsoperating the city Horne' and thecountry Home at Rosary Hill,

..~,Hawthorne, N.Y. 0

She recalls that most patientsthen knew they had cancer andapplied for, themselves (some­times arriving unexpectedly,with, all their belongings);' to­day referrals come from physi­cians 'or medical social,worker,s,and patients are, for the mostpart, unaware of their diag­nosis.

Gove!I'[ffior _of K@;'ntucky Sup,port$.

M@frhe~solP@~BifBO!rn on, Buses 'COVINGTON (NC) - Ken­

tucky's governor- has sid~d with:the Florence, Ky., mothers whoare protesting' the . failure ofBoone County school buses to'to carry their children.

Gov. Bert T. Combs said on atelevision interview that the sit­uation is "ridiculous." He said:"I feel these children ought tobe transported on buses."

.Mothers almost each day arewalking' about 75 pupils of .St.Paul's school, Florence, alongbusy U. S. route 42 to dramatizethe traffic 'hazards the childrenmust face in getting to school

, Fr'• "l'I"1IJI n-e", M"'sferr without bus rides. The children's~ ~..... route is about '1% miles along

At Rehe,«lit House the unpaved side of a majorthoroughfare.

ALLENTOWN (NC) - Father Boone County has refused thisFrancis J. Tucker, O.S.F.S., for- 'year to carry the parochial

,merly of, Monaco, has been school pupils on 'school busesnamed retreat master at the new unless $17.23 is paid for eachVilla Maria Retreat House in child. The .children were' carriednearby Wernersville, Pa. without charge last year.

" The' appointment was an- Pay Taxes. nounced by Father John J. Con.., . St. Paul's school has refused to

, my, O.S.F.S., Pronvincial of theP~«!IU'il H,all'm....n" Talk... ObI pay the price. The mothers have

\WI I ", ates of St. Francis de Sales, . protes,ted that 'they' already haveI ...a IIoh I I .Jl who. will conduct the retreat,iii l"'llOli'n ern re anQl h . paid taJ!:es to provide the buses.

BELFAST (NC) - In ~n at- ouse. ' " , Gov. Combs said on TV thattempt' to develop harmony be- Nationally known as a speaker' ""I feel tliese cilildrE!n ought to be't C th 1· d P t t tan d retreat' master, Father transp'orte'd· .".. If "'thes'e"" 'C'hl'ldre"nween a 0 ICS an ro es an s, Tucker con~inues a distinguished

Orange Order leaders will meet priestly career. He returned this go to parochial schools, we' tax.:'with nationalists here in Octo- Summer' froin l'iomico, where he payers, are getting a break inber; . had served as chaplai'n to Prince that we' don't have to' pay for

Senator J. Go' Lennon, leading Ranier' and Princess Grace. He educating them." ' "~nationalist in the Northern Ire- was ~,member of the General The governor said he thought

land Senate, said he would like Curia of his 'order in Rome and 'it was silly to see'a·schoo1,busto meet Sir George Clark, the at the same time was pastor of going along the road picking upOrange grand master, to try to St'-Charles Church, Monte Carlo ' certain children and not others.remove the "clouds. of, bitter-, : 'M6n'acd.~He' was a diodesan' con~ness,~" Ciarkaccepted the invi- 'suitor, 'canon of the 'cathedraltati~. "" ' .

Nationalists support the idea . a n4 chapla~n ,of the palace,' '. - ~ ~

coCa united ~eland independent Husband, Wife' Joinof England. The Orange Order,a masonic organization named 'UniversittStaff'after William of Orange who ANTIGONISH (NC)- A hus-drove out the last Catholic b d d' .' .aI", .. an 'rife team, natives ofking, of England in 1688, favo'r South Africa, have joined thethe Ii res e n t partition with faculty of St.' Francis Xavier'Northern Ireland united to Eng- University here in Nova Scotia.land. Southern Ireland gained Donald D. Moerdijk and his.its independence in 1937. ~ife, Joan, received their mas­

ter degrees from the Universityo,f P.reto!ia in South Africa. Healso did post graduate studiesthere and at the University ofStrasbourg. He joins the depart­ment of philosophy here.

'His wife was awarded a two­year post-graduate scholarshipto the Sorbonne by the FrenchGovernment. She joins the de-'partment of economics and so­ciology here.

Pc~<e Pr(tllDSeS WOlI'kOf CIhlMli'ch Aides

VATICAN CITY (NC)-PopeJohn has praised parish churchpersonnel for helping to make"the house of God a place ofwelcome to all."

He spoke of their work duringa general audience when 3,000church personnel had gatheredin Rome for an internationalmeeting.

The Pope told them that"wheth~ryou serve in' a majesticcathedral or in a humble village

__ chapel, it is always, the same.Church that you serve by as­sistiRg at sacred functions and',contributing ~ith your dailylabo: <. '''ard maldng the house'of God a place' of welcome toall.','.

Page 15: 09.20.62

NEW FACULTY MEMBERS: Sister Magdalen Julie,seated, Miss Carole Almeida, left, and Sister Mary St.Michael, right, have joined the Bishop Stang High faculty.

STANG TEACHING ADDITIONS: Left to right, Sis­ter Michael Raymond, Sister Edwina, and Mr. Daniel Dela­ney. !--

THE ANCHOR- . 15Thurs., Sept. 20, 1962

incoming freshmen.This year's yearbook theme,

"Live, Love and Light up theWorld," was presented to theassembly in a series of tableauxdepicting such illustrious wom­en as Helen Keller, such seld$>m

,commended women as the de­voted nurse, and last of all, thewoman who has played the mostimportant role in history, OurBlessed Mother.

The various characters wereportrayed by Pamela Audet,Pauline Gagnon, Pauline Lepage,Charlotte Pelland, Linda PurdY,Donna Sears, and Joan Vezina.Narrator was Colette Janson,yearbook editor.

Monday and Tuesday 'of lastweek were testing days for all,from freshman to senior. TheIowa Tests of Educational De­velopment were given for thesecond consecutive year.

The faculty plans once againto hold a parents' night with Mr.Robert E. Hoye, staff associatefor Science Research Associates,who will discuss student devel­opment, as revealed by the testresults, with individual parents.

Class OfficersSenior class presidents at

Dominican are Rita Chouinardand Jeannette Laroche; juniorsare Irene Gagnon, MadeleineBelanger; and Doris Breault.Sophomores chose Marie Paiva.

Bishop Stang High School ex­perienced the last of its "firsts"in welcoming for the first timea full quota of four high schoolclasses and a complete teachingstaff. '

Sister Magdalen Julie, for­merly of Emmanuel College, hasjoined the Stang Chemistry De­partment. Miss Carole Almeida,Emmanuel alumna and duringthe past year student of Middle­bury College in Madrid, isteaching the audio-lingual ap­proach to the study of Spanishto Sophomore classes. SisterMary St. Michael, from St. Gre­gory High School, Dorchester, isin charge of the newly estab­lished Physics Department a~

Bishop Stang.Sister Edwina, formerly of St.'

John High School, PeabodY,teaches Math and Biology toStang students. Mr. Daniel De­laney, from Durfee High School,will serve this year in thecapacity of Guidance Director.Sr. Michael Raymond, formerlyof Notre Dame Academy, Rox­bury, is teaching art and me­chanical drawing.. Sister Marie de Lourdes, from

St. Mary High School, Law-'renee, teaches Math and Latinclasses. Mr. Charles Connell,from Bridgewater State, con­ducts Gym classes for Freshmanand Sop hom 0 r e boys. Sr.Francis Veronica, from S1. MaryGirls' High Scliool, Lynn, isteaching classes in French andLatin.

To replace them have comeBrother Raymond and BrotherJerome of Plattsburgh and newBrother Ronald of Wash College.Welcomed back after a year ofmilitary service at Fort Bragg isMr. Arthur Canuel, math teacher.

With the growing studentbody .and the enlarged facultyat Feehan High School, the pro­gram of co-curricular activitieshas also widened to includemusic appreciation, personalitygrowth, developmental reading,public speaking, journalism, li­brary club, and home-making.

The year ahead is full of ac-'tivity and accomplishment. Ri­valr:' between the schools sharp­ens the desire and brings out thebest in the students. Athletics,debating, math, science, lan­guages,-all are fields in whichthe 12 Diocesan high schoolscompete to develop greaterprogress and achievement. Theyear 1963 promises much.

Sacred Hearts Academy inFairhaven now has 135 girl stu­dents and Sister Marie Claire asits new principal, and SacredHearts Academy in Fall Riverwith its new addition handles370 students. Fall River's Domin­ican Academy, with Sister MaryGerald, O.P., as its new princi­pal, has 272 scholars.,

In all, 1758 boys and 2714,girls are' being educated in thehigh schools of the Fall RiverDiocese.

Yearbook ThemeThe beginning of a new school

'year at' Dominican Academy,Fall River, was marked by thetraditional for m a I assembly,open~d by school presidentCecile Levesque, who greetedstudents and especially welcomed

at Msgr. Coyle High in Taunton.Appropriately, activities in­

cluded Mass celebrated by Rev.Joseph P. Delaney, senior reli­gion teacher. Orientation exer­cises were absorbed intently bythe 570 boys.

Getting into the swing ofthrngs, a roving reporter findsmost schools already in highgear. Seen at Stang High is adisplay set up by the guidancedepartment depicting collegesand careers which might be ofvalue.

Also seen is Mr. L. Gene Ad­kins describing the JuniorAchievement movement in theNew Bedford area and urgingthe students to view the Amer­ican economic system in actionby visits to industrial and util­ity plants.

Over at Mt. St. Mary's a spe­cial Sunday get-together is heldfor the freshmen. Talented sen­iors give the newcomers a pic­ture of life at the Mount bymeans of lively skits.

Dialogue MassAmbitious Feehan High is out­

lining plans for the Feehan Bandand Feehan Chorus while newathletic director, Mr. HaroldHanewich primes the studentbody with news of the comingyear's sports activities.

As usual, First Friday of themonth is celebrated by a Massin the school hall, offered byRev. Bernard Sulliyan,;area Cyachaplain. 'StudentiJ and facultyjoin in ihe responses of the' dia­logue Mass with soph RobertLynch as lector. '

Assuming their important po­sitions as officers of the HolyFamily graduating class of 1963are Peter Sullivan, Richard Per­ras, Elaine Matthews and MaryTynan. Famed for its debatingteams, F. F.'s new officers of theStudent . Council are BrianHealy Russell Foley, KathleenSCisce'nto and Margaret Ericson.

'Former Superior, Mother St.Jean Baptist~ has fin911y tastedthe first change in her religiouslife after 33 years of service tothe students of Jesus-MaryAcademy. She has been assignedto Goffstown; N. H. while MotherCleophas has left J.M.A. to be­come new superior and principalof Our' Lady of Lourdes inProvidence.

Mother Mediatrix' transfer isfrom J.M.A. to St. Clare's inWoonsocket, R. I. Mother Fidelisfrom the Bronx, Mother Claudiafrom Auburn, N. Y., Mother St.Antoinette and Mother St. Fran­cis Regis of Notre Dame Gram­mar School have all joined theteaching staff of J.M.A.

The new superior is MotherMary of the Savior who has ar­rived from Hyattsville, Md. withenthusiasm and a spirit of dedi­cation.

Co-Curricular ActivitiesChanges often mean new spirit

and new ideas. Prevost High hasunfortunately lost Brother Ed­mund to Detroit and BrothersRoger and Andrew to Platts­burgh, N. Y.

COMPLETE TEACHING STAFF: Addedto the staffat Stang as the No. Dartmouth High welcomes its firstsenior class are, left to right, Mr. Charles Connell, SisterFrancia Veronica, and Sister Marie de Lourdes.

Students at Diocesan High SchoolsReturn to Routine of Homework..Extra-Curricular Orgciizations

By Clement J. Dowling

, Everybody's in the groove! Two whole weeks of schoolhave gone by and, the excitement and surprises of openingday are history. At home Mother is now used to the strangequiet that settled around her. School is school again.

Homework and studies are A new look has 'been intro­the same even though evel1Y- duced at St. Anthony's in Newbody' looks a little older and Bedford. For the first time schoola little taller. Some students uniforms are' being worn andare missing and some teachers though the original investmenthave been transferred. The new is stiff to some, both parents andcrop of Freshmen look pretty students are happy with the in­young to sophisticated upper- novation.classmen who have long gotten Student Richard Beaulieu re­over' the strange and thrilling ports that a new pride has been

, feeling of being in high school. added and nobody has to worryBrother Roland, Msgr. Pre- about what they will wear to­

vost High's principal warns, morrow. St. Anthony's has an"Anyone who tries to continue enrollment of 79 boys and 167

his vacation schedule while at- girls.tending school is bound to do a Novelty was the order of thepoor job in his studies." And the day at Mt. St. Mary's opening250 boys at the Fall River high day in Fall River. After theschool, representing 22 parishes, initial greeting a panel of fourappear to have taken his words Sodality officers, Mary Annto heart. Ferreira, Maureen Harrington,

Opening day at our 12 Dioc- Joanne Leandro, and Kathleenesan high schools included as- Cordeiro shared with the stu­semblies at which the student dent body their experiences atbodies were briefed about new the Summer School of Catholicregulations and the routine 6f Action held at Fordham Univer-the comin8 school year. sity.

New Teachers Additionally an informal wel-Many schools, like the Attle- come to 162 freshmen was pro­

boro's Bishop Feehan High witl} vided by seniors who presented200 boys and 230 girls found that a humorous fashion show, ex­they had new teachers. This sit- hibiting what the well-dresseduation always evokes much com- "Mountie" will wear during thement as students compare their year. Enrollment at the Mount'analyses of new instructors. has jumped to 545 girls.

, Feehan with its new sophomore Before the school year is up,class has six new religious and St. Mary's High of Taunton willfour new lay teachers. become Catholic Memorial High

Bishop Stang High with its in the newest of the Diocesanfirst year of senior students has ohigh schools. Sister John Eliza­six additional religious and three beth, S.U.S.C. is the new prinei_new lay teachers on its staff. pal at the all-girl school, havingThe North Dartmouth students left a similar post at Sacredattended an opening day Votive Hearts Academy in Fall River.Mass of the Holy Spirit cele- St. Mary's now has a studentbrated by school chaplain Rev. body of 284 girls. Mary Morin,Joseph L. Powers to implore the Mary Yelle, Ann Foley, andaid and blessings of the Holy Christine Haggerty are its newSpirit on the works and activi- setHor class officers.ties of the coming year. A bee-hive of activity has

Stang now has an enrollment been generated at Prevost High,of 525 boys and 336 girls, highest what with a tennis tourneyin the Diocese. pending in addition to meetings

Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, of the debating team and theauxiliary Bishop of Fall River, Science Club.offered the traditional opening More New Uniformsday Mass for Holy Family stu- Newness is not to be denied atdents. The New Bedford school Jesus-Mary Academy either. 194with 134 boys, 186 girls and girls are seen trooping to schoolSister Charles Francis, R.S.M. as in Fall River's Flint section inthe new principal, also has fac- 'new pleated blue-gray skirtsulty changes. with navy blue blazers adorned

New Uniforms ,by a J.M.A. insignia. For thoseFormer principal Sister Mary habitual last minute arrivals a

Virginia has been transferred to new outside bell tones a warningFeehan High after serving H. F. 'of the impending start of classes.for 23 years, 16 as 'principal. The bell is a gift of the thought­Sister Mary Nolasco is studying ful senior class of '62. 'for her doctorate at Lava! Uni- The curriculum and format ofversity. Sisters of Mercy coming the new year's schoiastic andto H. F. are Sister Mary Diane athletic programs highlighted'and Sister Mary Laurita. the 30th opening day a'ssembly

Page 16: 09.20.62

16 THE ANCHOR-;J),ieceseM 'fall River....:lihurs. Sept. 20, , 962

.'~~~ ~~~.~9 •••••~OO.tGOOOOOOG.O.I•••••• I 41 ••••••••••••'.OOOOO~+~•••••~ ·

The Catholic Committee onof "the -Diocese of :Fall

.ScoutinqRiver

c

announces 'reqistrations" for" ~

Ad .Altare Dei- ,land Marian Awards

I '

NEW BEDfORD AREA:Registration: September 23, 1962

''Examincrtio~: September 30, 1962

All Cape ·Cod .area "boy and gif'l scouts who· aN prepared for ­the examination-win follow the New Bedford sched,,1e

ARt£BOROAREA::Oate: October 2, 1962Place: St~ John's SchoolJeime: 3:30 o'clock

TAUNTON AREA:Date: October 3, 1962Place: CYO BuildingTime: 7:00 to 9:00 o'clock

(>

fAILL RIVER AREA:Registratiol'll: September 28, 1962.Examination: October 1, 1962P·Daee: CYOHail, AnawClII'\l StreetTime:· 1:00. to 9:00 o'clock' ....

A~~book work for boys and gir~s C1pp lying for the Catholic awards must be

turned in at registration time. Book work must be COMPLETE and NEAT.

AIi'1lI1\l D(QJ~e frod/lUds, DlllJc.IFjr«:lldly lE~edll"nCSlUlpp~'t? 160.

Cascadle lD)ll'lUlg Co•. ,IEIl'Il~eB'pIl"Dse ,18~~wDlnlg C@;,,­

Go~d Mecll(QJ~ 8read!

G~obe Mam.ll~adlUlril'Bg Co., ...'

This MessGge ;s Sponso/l'ed By The Fo~'owing'ndiv;duals

Gtnd BMSOflj)eS$ C@flIcerns in Glfeaf:er !Fall R.iver:

IHIIUl~ChilnlSCllJn1©OO ~@. Gs@rga R. M@nt~e, ~BllJlmbell'

Drn~ell'lnllClfrDo'Il'llIClO Il.l/JIdie$ IP~WIl'\Tll@uth IPrinting Co., Illile.tGlClrme~it W@r~sl1'S UlnlOOI'll ~obi~oHBrothell'$

AAlClcKeml:8s ~ WO!I'Q$U@W, DlI1lce. S~eU'~Dli'1lg Beverages, mnc.Mason flUlrnDlI'lUl&"s SIh@wll'o@m$ TextB~e Worken

UnDon of AmeriCQ, AFl-CIOGerlCl~d fE.McNally, Contractor Y II C b Coe ow a ~pan,.

Page 17: 09.20.62

....

T~B~Il1l\'hed <C.~~'t?~~<mIl1l<dl

fupils Sld~ Gf!'@QJ~CLEVELAND (NC- - Msgl'.

Clarence E. Elwell, superin­tendent of Cleveland diocesanschools, has directed principalsto inaugurate a program ofp,lanned acceleration of excep­tIOnally talented children inelementary schools.

The accelerated program 01'

"skipping a grade," was i~tro­duced in grade schools here onan experimental basis by MsgJr.Elwell in 194'2. It advances ex­ceptional children in groups,usually from grade 3 to, 5 and6 to a. Some schools have usedit, the majority have not.

In directing all principals tostart the program" Msgr. Elwellsaid that scientific studies. havesince been made on it and "noGa single study had negativefindings."

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Priest ~ens Bookfor 'P~@[[macists

The moral problems. of pharmacists are the subj,ect of "Normsof Conduct for Pharmacists" byRev. William L.. WoIkovich, cur­ate at Immaculate ConceptionChurch, East Cambridge, Mass.

The volume includes a generalsurvey of moral principles, andtheir application to specificquestions arising in the field ofpharmac.y. Such subjects, as oralcontraceptives,. abortion, rhythm,counterfeit drugs, relations withphysicians and hospitals, pre­scription ownership, and pro­fessional secrecy 8J!'e covered.

Appendixes, contain two papaladdresses: to pharmacists, th<i!Bishops~ statement of 1959 onbirth control and. excerpts fromfederal laws.

Father Wolkovich has hadwid~ experience in his field,havmg lectured to students ofpharmacy and nursjng, writtenfor the Boston Pilot, and ad­dressed a convention of pharm­acists. Previously he wrote abooklet, "Pharmacy, A NobleProfession," now in its secondedition.

THE ANCHOR- 17Thurs., Sept. 20, 1'962'

Fall Ffl'olicThe Catholic Youth Adult 011­

ganization of North Attleborowill sponsor a Fan Frolic daneefrom 8 ~o 12 Saturday night,Sept. 22 ill Sacred Heart Parishhall,. Church Street, North At­tleboro. The Gene O'MaHy bandwill play. Tickets will be avail­ab.le at the door, refreshmentswIll be served and young adults18 and over are welcome to at­tend................: A IIAMILY fREAT

• BAR-B-Q CHICKENS

: RO'SE.LA,WN• ' FARMS,.l45 Waahingum St.., Fairhaven• .rust oU Route 6•• ~. 7~9336• Watc/:r for Signa• . While out for a, Drive: Stop at this Delightful Spot..............

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110 BIG, STORESWe Gi,ve Gold,Bond Stomps;

the history of Our Lady ofLourdes, has become acknow­ledged as a "Cape Codder" asis evidenced by a citation pre­sented by town officials in 1952,an honor which those familiarwith the distinction betweenCape cod natives and visitorswill recognize as singular. Hispastorate has mushroomed inrecent years because of thegrowing popularity of that se~­

tion of the Cape.Our Lady of Lourdes Church

also had a possession whichvisitors from all over the coun­try have come to view, a sam:­tuary rug of rich red and goldwhich was designed by FatherJoseph in the early years of theparish, and hooked by thewomen of the Ladies Guild, alasting monument to the indus­try of the first pastor and hisparishioners.

that marks the fourth centenaryof the death of its creator, theRenaissance master Michelan­gelo Buonarroti (1475-1564).

It will be taken to the fairfrom the chapel in St. Peter'sbasilica where it. has stood sincethe 17th century.

Also to be shown at the fairis one of the earliest examplesof Christian art, a third'-centurystatue of the Good Shepherd byan unknown sculptor, which isbeing lent by the Vatican.

OUR LADY OF LOURDES-WELLFLEET

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FOR YOUNG WOMEN196 Whipple St., Fall RiverConducted by Franciscan

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Honor Father SpykersFather' Joseph remained at

Wellfleet until 1928, when hewas succeeded by Rev. ArnoldDerycke, SS.CC. who served aspastor at Our Lady of Lourdesfor four or five years. Then Rev.~

Egbert Steenbeek, SS.CC. wasnamed pastor until the arrivalin 1935 of Rev. Dennis Spykers,SS.CC., who has remained pastoruntil the present. To assist himFather Spykers has Rev. StephenCordeire, who has been in Well­fleet only a few weeks.'Fa+~er C:~.rl<-"rs, .. ···')se pas­

torate has been the longest in

r--~--'-"-~~---"-'~~C"'-~0;";,"'Z'TIZ~m\1''''<''r:m;~pp:;:,,%'''''_..:'~\

1

-Deny 'Reports Pope Cl,anged MindAbout Sending p'ieta To Fair ..

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Vati­can officials have denied reportsthat Pope John has decided notto send the Pieta, Michelangelo'sfamed statue of the Mother ofSorrows holding her dead Son,to the 1964 New York World'sFair.

Last March, Pope John toldFrancis C a I'd ina 1 Spellman,Archbishop of New York, duringa private audience that he wouldsend the statue for display, atthe Holy See's pavilion at thefair.

Later, some art critics andothers expressed fears that thestatue might be damaged bythe move to the U.S.

The Pieta will be on displayin New York during the year

Truro, while at the motherchurch in Well fie e t sevenMasses, two in the basement andfive in the upper church, arecelebrated. Three Sacred HeartFathers assist the pastor and hisassistant during the tourist sea­son.

Sanctuary Rug In W ellile~t Chutch Recal~s

Industry of First Pastor, Parishioners'By Mai"ion Ullllswortilt

The history of the Catholic Church in Wellfleet on the lower Cape begins long be­fore there existed a parish in that town. The Catholics in Wellfleet were few and Masswas celebrated at least as early as 1877 at' the homesc of Joseph DeLory, Henry De­Lory and Simon Berrior, Sr. Wellfleet at that time was a mission 'o:ll St. Peter theApostle Church in Province­town, as was Truro, and itwas not until 1900 that achapel was erected by Rev.Manuel C. Terra, pastor of St.Peter's, at Wellfleet. This chapelwas originally an abandonedschool house which Father Terrarenovated for use as a church.Even earlier, in 1895, FathelTTerra purchased an old skatingrink and used the lumber tobuild Sacred Heart Chapel inTruro.

Covered Large AreaUp to 1904, Wellfleet was un­

der the Providence Diocese, aswere Provincetown and Truro,but when the Fall River Diocese

'was created the two missionswere made part of the Harwichparish, in which they had beenmany years previously.

Seven years later Wellfleetwas established as a parish andplaced under the charge of theSacred Heart Fathers, who thenhad Truro as a mission. TheSacred Heart Fathers in Fair­haven had been helping out atWellfleet for several years. Rev.Hilarian J 0 s e p h Eckerling,5S.CC. who had been residingin HaI'wich, moved to Wellfleetin 1911.

The new Wellfleet parish atthat time covered a large areaof the lower Cape. Until five orsix years ago Holy RedeemerChurch in Chatham was servedby Wellfleet clergy. Our Ladyof the Immaculate Conceptionin Brewster, which had St. Joanof Arc Church in Orleans as amission, was once a mission ofWellfleet also and was taken,over by the LaSalette Fathers ayear ago. The Harwich parish,which had been a mission since1911, was separated and estab­lished as a separate parish in1931.

Father JosephSoon after Father Joseph, as

he was known, became the pas­tor at Wellfleet, the need of anew church was recognized sincethe small chapel, formerly aschoolhouse, was no longer suf­ficient. In 1912 and 1913, FatherJoseph built Our Lady ofLourdes Church and Rectory onthe main street of Wellflee't,using the windows from thechapel in the new edifice.

In 1915, another mission wasformed from the parish, OurLady of Perpetual Help in NorthTruro. During the Winter oneMass is held each Sunday ineach of the chapels, and twoMasses'in Wellfleet to takecare of the approximately 70families in that town.

During the busy Summer sea­son, two Masses' are necessaryin Truro and four in North

Catholic Veterans Ask Am~ndment

To Permit Prayer in SchoolsPffiLADELPHIA (NC) - A 'delegates urged Congr~s to en­

resolution favoring a constitu- act legislation which would pro­tional .amend~en.t which would vide increased compensat'ion' forauthOrIze recItation of prayers .. .in the nation's public schools was veter?fols. With servIce-connectedadopted at the Catholic War disabIlItIes.Veterans national convention Oppose Admissionhere. The delegate,> voted in favor

The resolution pointed out of continued opposition againstthat such an amendment would the admission of communistoffset the June 25 decision of the China to the United Nations.U. S. Supreme Court which de- Another resolutio', commendedelared unconstitutional a prayer President Kennedy for hiscomposed by the New York "courage and foresight" in re­state Board of Regents and re- suming nuclear testing.cited voluntarily by students in The convention also went onthe state's public schools. record in favor of recognition by

Atty. Gen. Robert F. Keimedy the United States of a "respon­in an address at the convention sible" Cuban government-in­banquet called upon the CWV exile and support of such a re­to participate more fully in the gime with arms and money.fight against communism in this The delegates tabled a resolu_country. He reminded the mem- tion which would have sup­bel'S that a prime purpose for ported withdrawal of the Unitedwhich the CWV was founded in States from the United Nations1935 was to oppose the spread of and would have favored thecommunism in the U. S. ousting of the UN from U. S.

In another reSOlution, the 4,000 territory.

Says Indiffere~ce.

Is Unity Obstacle'GARRISON (NC) - Catholics

cautioned against becoming "my_opic, complacent and so con­scious of ourselves as a Church"as to forget their duty to workfor religious unity.

Father qeoffrey Wood, S.A.,urged Catholics to reread theGospel ot St. Matthew andcatch the aggressive, apostolicforward look, broader Church­like spirit of that inspired book."

Father Wood, professor 'ofScripture at Atonement Semi­nary, Washington, D. C., said thatspirit is required for successfulecumenical activity.

He suggested that if, in workfor unity, Catholics "proclaimedthe Church less, ceased spendingso much effort at proving itsrights, assel·ting its claims, andproclaimed Christ and Christiansalvation more," they might be"perhaps more successful alldindeed more true to the Churchand its reason for existing... ·

Pope ContributesTo U.N. WorldFood Program

UNITED NATIONS (NC)-Pope John has contributed$1,000 to the World FoodProgram being conductedjointly by the United Nationsand the United Nations Foodand Agriculture Organization.

The gift was announced at thePledging Conference held atU.N. headquarters. AuxiliaryBishop James H. Griffiths ofNew York, who attended theconference as the representativeof the Holy See, stated he hadbeen authorized in that capacityto present the gift as a tokenof the Pope's "deep personalsolicitude for this noble cause'."

The World Food' Program,which is the result of a 1960General Assembly resolution, isan expertmental program underwhich $100 million in food andcash is to be expended throughU.N. channels over a three­year period.

'Generous Undertaking'Contributions to the program

are to be used to meet emer­gency food situations, to buildnational food reserves in orderto combat famines, to helpgovernments, initiate land re­form without early cripplingfood shortages, and to ration­alize livestock industries.

In his statement to the con­ference, Bishop Griffiths re­called the message of Pope Johnto the F AO when it inauguratedits Freedom from Hunger Cam­paign, of which the present pro­gram is a part. The Popestressed his desire to renew his"paternal . encouragement forthis undertaking which is sogenerous, so compatible with thetrue welfare of mankind, sowell suited to inspire the in­terest and collaboration of allgood-hearted men."

Page 18: 09.20.62

· J $~O A MONTH .,-Mark your gift "Stringless" and we'll use~~I""'."""I'.., ..~ it where it's .needed most. It wiU buy ,medicIne for a clinic~ Back' 10 le.ool ~ b.ooks, for a ~i~sion school, buy a new ro~f for a mission chapel:

~ La'Uridry' Fiber Case $4..95 ~ :::I $75 A MONTH - 'Buysa complete medical 'kit fOl' a mi~ .

.~ 31" School Trunk,$11.95 ~ ,ioner's use,

~ 2 Suiter $15.95 ~ O. $2ioo AhMO

INTH - WiU build, in only one year, a 'brand-new

,... • . . ~. mISS on sc 00. - You may designate the school as a permanent~ ZI~per O~er",ghtB.ag ~ .~'.. " memorial to your family or your loved ones. - Write to \lS.

..... Spht Cowhide $9.95 ...~ 16" Zipper Envelope ~ . MAKE A WILL! REMEMBER THE MISSIONS

~. h~ Le.ather $3.95 -OUR LEGAL TITLE: THE CATHO~C,.... NEAR EAST WELFARE I\SSOCIATION.~ Famous Naine Brands ~ .~m ~_ ' . .~ VENT~R~UggU;:~EARY ~ ·ltatl J.tmr·f8st01issions~~. SAMSONITE SKYWAY ~ L fRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Pre.ldeM, ... Mit'. JOsep' T. "CIIl, 'Nat', Sec', .

~ CUSHIIG'S ~ . , .. Sencl all c_...alcatioM to:,... CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION~' . 211 UNION STREET .... 480 Lexington Ave. at 46th St" New Yo~ 17"..., Y~:hI~~~ --'.--_.~- -.:-__~~--J

Asks ·Government,·To Aid' School's":

SYDNEY (NC) - Australia'scardinal has asked the govern­ment of New South Wales, thenation's most populous state, forfinancial assistance for Catho­lic and other private schools.

Norman Cardinal Gilroy,Archbishop of .Sydney, 'pre­sent~d a five-point petition forsuch 'aid to state 'Premier Rober.tJ. Heffron.

The Premier said the state ad­ministration wi'll consider thepetition, but added that anychange in gover~ment policywill have to be' decided by aconvention of the ruling Austra_lian Labor party. At present,'Catholic . schools receive - nostat~ aid. .

Cardinal Gilroy's pet it ionseems likely to touch off amajor educational controversy.Protests against, it have alreadybeen made by Anglican, Metho­dist and Presbyterian bodies aswell as the New' South WalesCouncil of Churches, which in­cludes Angli(;:ans, Presbyterians,.Methodists, Baptists, Congrega­tionalists and the SalvationArmy.

But the chairman of the Head­masters' Conference of Indepen­dent· "'~hools of Australia, C. O.Healey, said the Cardinal's re­quest for aid is fair.

WHA.... YOUR SACRIFI<.::E .WILL. DO

'CJ$1 . A MqN,!,H - .. 'Food, clothing;' m e'd Ic a I attention.lepers.. Send· us $1 now; and say you want' to joinpAMIEN LEPER. CLUB." . " . .

The Missions~Whars Your Part?

Q $5. A MONTH - Th'l! rent-money to house a family of Paleif-'tine Refuges in BETHLEHEM. -' Write to us. .

O:~8.32 'A- MONTH -' The cost'of traIning a native priest. The.entl1'e course of training lasts six years, costs $100 a year $600alto~ether. - Write to us,' '

· 0 $10 A MONTH - What 'it costs to feed a family of Palesti~eRefugees - Arabs who lost everything as a result of the 1948Arab4sraeli. War. - Write to us. .

0. $12.5.0.A MONTH - The cost of feeding', clothing, housing,and training a· native Sister. -.We'll send you "your" Sister'sname .and address. You may write to her. She. will write &0you.

·0 ~ ~MONTH - 'A'blanket, shoes; ~ye-gi~sses, for an orphanboy at Father Poggi's home in CAIRO, EGYPT. - Mark yuur'sacrifice, ~'Father Poggi." '

~ . \ .

D' . IOlJ tt'.r..n..r.; d 4'·A(,J.~:S'i·, .I.vv IU "Jv,&· _ H,a.;.".&:.IIS.

COUNT THE COST. Iln INDIA, 1>1UTR£A, ETHIOPIA,, .r.;UAlt'·j,', mAN, you'l1 live With

. hatred," exhaustIOn, 10Dliness, dis­ease. :You'd sacrifice yourself, in 011'­

Iter to .administer the sacraments •..U you were a Sister, you'd wash outme sores of frightened lepers, wacoUle' catechism in fetid, bamboo huts,care tor the blind, the 'ag'cd, orphans,me poor . . . :You'd be, iii otherworos, Ii missionary .•. :You'd livein a hut not lit for dogs, sleep on Uneground, eat what the natives .eat.

.Tk Holy FaIhtr's Mission Aid :You'd wear yow'self ou~· and dne.for 1& Orimtal Chmrh probably, before you reached liny ..

This is the Near East mission world. It's peopled bi pagilD&­for whom Christ died. It's peopled, too, by CatholicS like 01ll1l'­

selves, Catholics. too poor to support' a priest or Sister . . . F@1l'27(1' a day (less than the price ofa pack of cigarettes) you llaD1l

train a native priest ... For 33c a day you can' FEED A FAMILY!of Palestine Refugees.' .. Not much money, you say? . It isn'e·much for.· us who have so much. In the Near East missiollDworld, however, $1 is a fortune! .. . For each of our priesooaDd Sisters actually in mission .work, we need len "missionarieD"Uke you a~ home. We. need .people at home who pray evell'Yday, for the success of what our priests and Sisters do. We neelllhousewi'Ves,. mailmen, ste~ographe~, engineers,. who .will' "cllowithout" and· "make do!'. in order. to send a monthly. sacrlfie2. : ~Is. $1, $5, $10,$50, every' ,month too much to askT Onlll7

'. VOD can 'say • • . What's .t worth to save a lioulT ,

CELESTIAL IGLOO: They ,don't look chilly, but thesepeople belong to the Celestial Igloo Club. Their contribu­tions aid Jesuit missions in Alaska. From left, Miss MaryHart, Miss' Lillian Hart, Bernie Sweeney, Rose Ann Mc­Andrew, Rev. Paul C. O'Connor; S.J.

Superior General of, PallottinesGen-man World WQr II Veteran

late (Pallottine. Fathers) o~priests, Brothers and nuns in

.1835. He died on Jan. 22,.1850.'

Provide VacationsVIENNA (NC) - The Catho­

lic .charities .organization of theVienna archdiocese providedSummer vacations for 6,000

.children, more than 1,000 of.whom w~re sent on holiday toSwitzerland, the· Netherlands,.~"ll{ium and' ·Luxe~bourg.-

BALTIMORE (NC) -r TheSuperior General of the farflungPallottine Fathers' communityvisited here during the conclu­sion of his officii:1.1 visitation offoundations' in the Pallottines'eastern U.S. province.

- German-born Father WilliamMoehler, S.A.C., visited theeastern provincial headquartershere and will terminate his U.S.trip with inspections of founda­tions in New Jersey and NewYork.

Father Moehler was draftedinto the German army duringWorld War II and saw action on .the Russian front, where he waswounded.

Sisters, members of a nativecommunity founded ih 1954 byFather O'Connor with the aid ofan Ursuline' Sister stationed athis mission. Appropriately, theyare known as the Little' Sisters'of the Snow or, 'more formally,as the Oblates of Our Lady ofthe Snow.

Pre-Historic TidbitFather O'Connor related that

in his territory many pre-his­toric rna s t 0 don s have .beenfound. In at least one case acarcass was 'so well' preservedthrough millenia of freezingtemperatures'· that when itthawed Eskimo dogs ate its fleshwith. relish.

.How did the Fall River Dio­cese ~ome to .play a part in themission endeavors in this far­off state? Miss Mary· Hart, origi­nator of' the Celestial IglooClub, relates. that some 20 yearsago her sister, Miss Lillian Hart,wrote to the Alaskan mission­aries requesting an Eskimo doli·for Mary's collection. .

Father O'Connor respondedwith the doll and a lively cor­respondence ensued. It has con­tinued through the years, andthe missionary has by now be­come "just like a member of thefa.mily." Some 53 area residentshave joined in helping FatherO'Connor and "the igloo keeps

. getting bigger," say the Misses. Hart.

Hea'ds EducatorsMONTREAL (NC) - Msgr./

Irenee Lussier, rector of. theUniversity of Montreal, 'l~' tflenew president of the Canadian.··Association of French Language"Educat.ors.

.:18 ," THE ANCHOR~Diocese ofFoIIRiver:-Thurs. Sept;: 20;.1962~

.:.Loo·klr@rrw@r~f·t~·C~I~~ticl:'i'gio@Continued from Pa:;c One

top of the chilly state.> There are two Dioceses in.A~aska, the energetic. missionerexplained, Other orders share·th~ work in the. "banana belt"southern part of the sta~e, butthe' Jesuits go alone in the arcticnorthern region.

Illustrating the frigidity of thearea, Father O'Connor showed aWhiter. scene of nuns going toMass. The picture looked likearlY' group of Sisters' battlingthr~lUgh the snow in this Diocese- until.Father 'addl:;-d theinfor­mati'on that. at' the time it was65 .degrees below zero. ~ .

."1 have taken Our Lord onskis, by dog teain, motor boat,plane, and whaleboat to the

· sick,". said Father O'C6nnor."Often i say to Him, 'Well,Lord, I'm taking you somewhereyou've never ·been before.' "

. He told of baptizing an Eski­

. . rno baby "who opened her bigbrown, eyes just as I baptizedher, then closed them forever."He emphasized that in 'an age of

~ satellites and moonshots, it iseasy to, get values mixed, but~hat 'the soul of that baby,

· praising 0 forever, is of more·valu'e than all space explora­tions put together.

She Got Her DollOn the lighter side, he told of

visiting a family atdeath'sdoor. If he had not come upontheir· isolated igloo, they wouldhave perished of diphtheria, He

: was able to aid them 'to health,. ,however, and on leaving, he in- Continued from' Page One

vited them to his mission. .' University, and was .ordained byThe little girl of the family .the late Bishop Cassidy on June

was clutching a stick with a 10, 1933.rag wrapped around it: "If you For the next two years, Father

· visi't me, I'll. give. you a real. taught at St. Joseph's College,doll," promised Father. Mountain View, California, and

. Some months later, battling then pursued graduate stUdies"against snowstorms and arctic at the Catholic University oftemperatures, the family' did Louvain, Belgium, from which

h. d Heads 2,500

, come to the mission, a five day e recelve a Doctorate injourney by dog sled. Alas, it was Sacred Theology. The 51-year-old priest, servingjust after Christmas, and Father . In the .following years, Father his sec.ohd six-year term ashad no dolls lef( . .was a professor at St..Edward's Superior General, is the head of

"I went to our store room' and Seminary, Kenmore, Washing- 2,500 P.allottine priests and~ld the Holy Ghost a~d Our ton, and St. Mary~s Seminary, Brothers stationed in 20 -coun-

. Lady, 'You'd better gel;' going Baltimore. tries.' He came to the U.S. twobecause this little 'girl has never Father Galvin then' did pa'rish months ago and has visited com-

"had a doll in her life,' "r,e- work in St. ,Mary's, T~unton, munity houses in Texas, Nevada,counted Father. "Then I took St. Pet~r's, Dighton; and SS.. North Dakota, Wisconsin andone last look through the after- Peter and Paul's, Fall River. Michigan. He also visited sever-Christmas debris. In a box I Father served as a pro-syno- .. al foundations in Canada.found it"-the best doll I'd ever dal judge of the Diocesan Mat- Father' Moehler officiatedbad at the mi~sion. I'll never rimonial Tribunal. recently when 12 men wereforget the. look in :that child's He leaves'a brother, Rev. Wil- . vested with the Pallottine habiteyes as I gave it to her." . liam A. Galvin, J.C.D., chaplain and 13 others m~de their pro-_Tlle.missionarY said that there . of .the Catholic Memorial Home fessions at the Pallottine novi-

is..one n.ative Eskimo priest 'in : Fall .River; and a sister, Siste~ tiate' in Sag Harbor, N.Y..alr Alaska. There .are six' Eskimo ·J.VIaiy.Olga, H.S,M., professor of Since his return to the Palot-

, ,', se,ience at Salva' Regina College,' tine headquarters in Rome early

CCD C· . . N.ewport., and an u.nc.le, Mr. in September, Father Moehler

.'. > • " ·ong.ress P~tet Duffy"of Fall River. has directed preparations for theContinued :Ciom Page One'. ,Deacon of the Pontifical Mass' canonization of Blessed Vincent

. .' , . . '. was ReV." JohnE. Boyd with Pallotti, Scheduled for' Sunday,Auxiliary Bishop of the Dioc~se, Rev. William E. Collard as Sub- Jan. 20, 1963.presided in East Catholic' High' deacon.. Deacons of honor were Blessed' Vi'hcent Pallotti, born

~.' School· at a session ,for ."Hi.gh··Rt.·'Rev:;'Jaines'Dolan lind Rt. in Rome in 1795, was character-.,School Students-Future ·ParIsh 'Rev:' Raymond T," Considine'. Rt.· ized by Pope Pius XI as the~oard Members." . Rev.' Humberto S. Medeiros was "pioneer and forerunner" of

.Rev, ~osepJ:1 L. ?~werii, DIO- .. Assistant Priest.· . Catholic Action. He founded thec:s~n Dlrec~or of the ~CD, ~~s Minor' officers' of the Mas~ . Society of the Catholic Aposto-c alr'~Lan 0L adgenh~ra .sessltohn were Rev. John' F. Regan, -Rev.on. . ay ea ers Ip l!l" e Jame' E M h R NParish Executive Board".. in '. s.. urp y'. ev. orJ'!lanS th C th i' H' h S hi'· ,J, FerriS, Rev. Damel L. Freitas,o~ a O.IC 19, . c 00 on Rev. John F. M r h' R

Fnday evemng. u p y, ev.F S· t f 0 L'd' f Donald E. Belanger and Rev

V' .~ur f ~s er~H°i TU~ .ta .~ o. James A. McCarthy. Masters of'. lC ory rom .0 y rim y ar- . Ceremonies were' Rev. John' Hl~h, West Ha!wlch, were present Hackett and Rev. John P. Dris~f9r the entre Congress. . . . . colI .

Sessions of the Congl'ess were .attended by Re~. John' J·'C' t'h' , I·'· p' bl' .~ .Steakem, Parish CCD Director a 0 IC U Ic;ationsof Irrimacul'ate Conception Show IncreaseChurch, North Easton; Mrs.Timothy Neville, CCD Chair- NEW YORK (NC) - Circula­man of the Diocesan Council of tion of Canadian Catholic publi­Catholic Women, and' member' . cations has increased by 169,084;of the Parish Exetutiv.e Board nearly 12 per .cent, over the totalof Sf. Joseph's Church, Taun- listed I a year ago, according toton; . and James Kellehar and the 1962-63 Catholic Press Di­Davi<i .' D.ris~oll, also of. ·.St. rectory.Joseph's Parish, Taunton. Total circulation of the 43

The Congress closed Sunday Canadian publications listed inafternoon' with a Pontifical Mass the 1962-63 directory is 1,470,­sung in' th~ new St, Joseph's 324. The heaviest percentage ofCathedral, Hartford, by Most increase was in the group ofRev: Henry J. O'Brien of Hart- magazines which do not acceptford•. Richard' Cardinal .Cushing advertising. Circulation for 18'was in attendance and preached. &Uch publications listed in-

creases from 775,693 to 910506an increase of more than 17 'per'cent. '

Newspaper circulation climbedby about 35,000, while the totalcirculation of magazines ac­cepting advertising remained·virtually the same,' it was re­port!ld.· " ...:....

.....

Page 19: 09.20.62

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19

Foods

NEW BEDFORD

Seminary

<)

BOWlJNGBANQUETSSKA'f~NG

273 CIENVIU\l AVE.

WY ~-6216

BLUE, RIBBON

LAUNDRY

'OPEN ~ll WINTER

TRI·CITYOFFIC~ EQUIP.

BUSINESS ANDDUPLICATING MACHINESSecond omd Morgan Sta.

FALL RIVERWY 2-0682 OS 9-6712

E. J. McGINN. Prop. I%%%%%% .%%5££3: - - - - i03IlISlil:A

school" and violate the c1?use.After stlldylng the county

prosecutor's opinion, the boardsaid it had dec~'Jed that the term"day school" would not applyto the seminary.

..' ,·r~, ,~i& _

New Engl~nd's Playgrou~d

UNION WHARF; FAIRHAVEN

MacLean'sSea

WHILE.THEY LASTALL SIZES .••

~ ElectricalJ~~~i.v~~ Contractors~~ ,

, ~4t~4t

•944 County St.New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall'River-Thurs. Sept. 20,1962

erty changed hands several timesand was eventually acquired bythe Yakima diocese. .

Objections to the proposedseminary were raised on the

'grounds that the deed accom­panying the property contains aclause forbidding use 'of theschool building for a "dayschool."

In June the Highland 'SchoolBoard asked the Yakima countyprosecutor's office for a legalopinion as to whether the sem­inary would constitute a "day

Priest to TrainOlympics Team

,TORONTO (NC) - A priesthas been' picked to seleetand

, train a team of college all-starsto represent Canada in the 1964hockey Olympics.

The Canadian Amateur Hock­ey Association at a meeting hereturned the job over to FatherDave Bauer of the University ofBritish Columbia, who coachedst. Michael's College of Toronto,to the Memorial Cup champion­ship .last' year.

Father Bauer said he will tryto· attract outstanding stUdentsas well as top hockey playersto attend the University' of Brit­ish COlumbia for two yearsunder his coaching. '

Board Withdraws Objection ToSchool

DODGERS' OUTFIELDER FAVORITE PLAYER: Frank Howard of the Los Ang~le8Dodgers has been named "the Most Popular Pro" of 1962 in a competition conductedby the Catholic Youth Organization of Los Angeles and the Tidings, archdiocesan news­paper. Howard, a convert to Catholicism, ,received the award from Father John P. Lan­guille, Cya director, and Charles 'Chuck" Johnson, Tidings sports, editor. Looking onare Johnson's sons Stephen, left, and, Kevin, both CYO members. NC Photo.

COWICHE-TIETON (NC) ­The Highland School Board hasvoted against attempting toblock establishment here of IIminor seminary operated by theYakima, Wash., diocese.

The school' board took thisaction after receiving a.legalopinion suggesting that it wouldbe on ,shaky grounds in seekingto block the new St. Peter theApostle Seminary.

In a statement on its action,the board said it has concludedthat the seminary would not bein direct competition with theHighland school sy~m.

The dispute arose when BishopJoseph P. Dougherty of Yakimaannounced plans for establish­ment of the minor seminary inan old school building owned'here 'by the dioCese. The'cowiche-Tieton district is II

farming area about 14 miles westof Yakima. '

'Da.y School'The school building had for­

merly been owned by the High­land School District and used asa public high school. It was soldseveral years ago when a newhigh, school was built. The prop-

BEST FIST FORWARD:, Heavyweight champ FloydPatterson shows a mighty big right hand to Sister Mildredof St. Joseph's hospital, Elgin,o Ill., when she paid a visitto his training camp. Patterson is hopeful he can use the_right hand to retain his heavyweight crown against chal­lenger Sonny Liston in Chicago next Tues,day. NC Photo.

Over'subscribe brive17,0r Minor "Seminary

WHEELING ',' (NC) -A $2million campaign fur' construc­tion of a minor seminary nearParkersburg, ;:W'. Va., was over­subscribed by more than 50 percent. , , .. , '

During the campaign some31,000 'Catholic wage earnersin the, diocese's 99 parishessubscribed $3,112,348 for thenew St. Joseph' PreparatorySeminary bl.dlding, fun~.",

future of the AFL itself wasweighed in the balance. Thegame was televised nationally­blacked out in N. E., though­and from all indications thePats came over the tube quitewell.

The game was the first everto be played by professionalteams in historic Harvard Stadi­um. The site was obtainedthrough the intercession of Bos­ton's Mayor John Collins withUniversity President NathanPusey and the Board of Over­seers. The halftime show, ac­cented a "New Boston" themeand this presumably was theselling point.

Record Test,The major league pennant

races seem to be anything. butthat at the moment. Despite theevident faltering course of theno longer vaunted Yankees,Minnesota and Los Angelesfailed to close the gap appreci­ably. In fact, the bewitchinghour is just abo'ut at hand forthe Los Angeles club whichunder Bill Rigney's guidancemade a stirring challenge forleague honors. Minnesota stillhas a shot but the Twins needhelp.

The National League focuspresently is on Dodger shortstopMaury Wills and his attempt toerase Ty Cobb's base stealingrecord, a mark most people feltwould withstand the test of time.It may yet, but Wills with 92thefts has one week and a halfto get another four to tie Cobb,five for a 'new record.

Manager Walt Alston hasgiven Wills the green light allyear. Now with the pennantpractically sewed up and thepressure lessening, Alston nodoubt will give him, "carteblanche" the rest of the way. Theelement of surprise will be total­ly lacl~ing~.however. Opposingbatterymen; only, too aware ofWills'speed and design, will bebearing down' extra hard to keepMaury honest~ We hope hemak,es it.,

Coyle-Stang Sunday Clash"Top'S Bristol County Slate

By Jaek KineaV)'To Taunton and New Bedford Vocational goes the

honor of getting the 1962'schoolboy season· officially un­derway. The Artisans, in their first start under CoachTony Abraham, will host a veteran-studded Herringtowneleven in an afternoon en­counter tomorrow at SargentField. The Friday date wascontrived to avoid conflictwith the Mt. Pleasant-New Bed­ford game scheduled loll' Satur­day at the samefield. Defendingco-championsofBristol County,Attleboro andNorthAttleboro,have traditionalopening day as­signments. TheJewelers aredown to faceDurfee atAlumni Field,Fall River, inwhat has long been regardedas one of B.C.L.'s top grid con­tests. The Rocketeers who upsetAttleboro to gain a share of thetitle in '61 are at home to Fair­haven. Coach Ed Marx is opti­mistic 'about his club's chancesof staying up there again if onlythe injury jinx doesn't rear itshead.

Having the high school scenecompletely to themselves onSunday will be Coyle and Stangwb.o wlll meet at Dartmouth'sMemorial Stadium in the firstSabbath encounter in the historyIl)£ the BCL. This shapes up as a~tar. The schools played to aI::l:oll'eless 'tie last year in a rock'em-sock 'em affair at HopewellPark and those close to the scenelook for this clash to follow theoame pattern.

Coach Carlin Lynch's SpartansCi'12 a veteran team, though lastyear marked their first full var­sity schedule. The team hasshaped up well in pre-seasona::'?immages, showing to partic­UDOF advantage on defense. Theultimate success of the Dart­mouth Parochials hinges on theeffectiveness .o~ their signalcollers who will attempt to' fillilie shoes of the great TomGiasson.

Game NotesAssisting Lynch once again

ore Chick Corniell of Fall Rivermull Peter Bartek of Somerset,botlil, former Coyle stars. New00 the staff is Ray McDonald ofFalli' River, ex-Durfee and U.'Mass.' operative. The Spartans'will'play a full Bristol Countyschedule in all sports 'this year,commencing with football, andthe general consensus' seems tobe ~nat the rest of the Leaguehas.::a healthy regard for thenewcomers.

Pre-season reports from Fr.Woodley Field, Taunton, indicate'that the Warriors have good sizeand a solid nucleus aroundwWch veteran coach Jim Burnsand' his aSsistant Jim Lanaganhave molded the '62 edition. Oneof the lettermen returning, BillAsack, a 6-4; 270-pound, tackle;'comes from the famous Rayn­ham football family. BrotherBob; , f9rmer 'Ta'unton High­Columbia University "great, cur­rently is with the Providence'Steamrollers.

With any kind of a break fromthe weatherman you may expecta record turnout for Sunday'sgame. It's a natural attractionin that it involves not only twoof the areas better eleyens b'utalso' the' area's only two Catholic'high schools Which presentlyhave varsity football. '

Sports TownBoston, a much maligned spor'ts

town, showed its true mettle lastSunday when large crowdsturned out for each of two head­line athletic attractions whichthrough some oversight werescheduled opposite one another.In the windUp of their three­game series in Fenway, theYanks drew some 25,000, whiledown the river toward Cam..bridge the Patriots had 33,000 inHarvard Stadium.

This was a crucial game forthe Pats~ Their future in Bostonhinged on it and it, perhaps isnot too far fetched to say the

Page 20: 09.20.62

20" THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sep,t. 20,1962

FATHER R. W. McCARTHY FATHER OLIVEIRA ,FATHER FERREIRA FATHER DAVIGNON FATHER BORGES

,'''Hope keeps, us with '.

a song in our heart."

Fall River Savings Bank

'U'he

141 INO. ,MAINFALL RIVER

Old Red 'Bank

Save at The Bank that specializesin Savings. $1.00 open's your account'

Current

Annual

'Dividend'

,SAVEBY MAIL

Diocesan: PriestsNine

,703: S. Water StreetNew' Bedford

act expressed it as !'thl! senseof Congress" that the Presidentshould make' "maximum'" useof the services and facilities ofvoluntary organizations regis­

,tered with t~e 'Advisory Com­mittee on Voluntary ForeignAid. '

The advisory 'committee is abranch of the U.S;' Agency forI n t ern a t ion a I Develop­ment (AID).

The statement said efforts byAID administrators and staffmembers to carry out this con­gressional intention have been"heartening."

'Duty of Conscience'The Catholic Relief Services

statement, reaffirmed 'the 'or­ganization's sup'port for the U.S.foreign aid program.

It said U.S. aid to needy na­tions is "a requirement of worldreality and a duty of conscience."

"Weare convinced that suchaid is a moral and humanitarianduty deriving... from theJudaeo-Christian heritage fromwhich the people and purpose,ideas and ideals of our nationhave sprung," it said.

, '

Cassidy. Son of Mrs. Maria (Al- Father Oliveira,meida) Mendonea and the late Father Oliveira was born'Luis G. Mendonca, he was born Sept. iI, 1924, son of Mr. and',Sept; 26, 1919 in New Bedford. Mrs. Antonio Oliveira: He: 'Following' graduation from studied at ~t:AnthoJ;ly,inAngra,, Holy ,FamilY High, School he the Seminary ,of Angra, St.:completed" hiss'tudies for the Mary's ,Baltimore and at thepriesthood' at the Seminary of' Catholic University ,Graduate

, Angra" Terceira" Azores; He has, " Schoolo£ Arts and Sciences.served as, assistant at Santo ,Ordained' by Bishop Connolly

,Christo, Fall River; -Immaculate .. June 11, '1949" he 'has served asConcep~0!1 and Mourit Carmel, "assista.nt, 'at ,Santo Christo, FallNew 'Bedford.' ' .. ',River; M()unt, Carm~l, 'New ;Bed-

, 'Father." R., W; McCarthy . ~ ford and 'at, 5t. Anthony, Taun-,'Father RkYR,Iond McCarthy, Jon., :",son of:~r.andMrs. RaymondW.. ," ,- Father Davignon

: McCarthy,' '~as ,born Ma,rch'~, • 'Father 'Davignon was or­'1919 in North Attleboro. He at- dained ,May 11, 1962 by Bishoptended Providence College and 'Connolly and. assigned, to" St.St. Mary'sSerriin~ry, ane, was' Pius. X, South Yarmoutl). Son ofordained'Feb. 24, 1945 by Bishop Mrs. Alma G. '(Malay) DavignonCassiily. He has served 'as a'ssist- and the late Philip~. Dav.ignon,ant at Sacred Heart, Fall River. 'he was born Aug., 20, 1936 in At-," F:atherFerreira," .tleboro. He' prepared for theFather, Ferreira is the son of priesthood at St. Thomas Semi­

Mr. and Mrs. John P. Ferreira. "nary, Hartford, and St. ~ary's, ,'He was born Jan. 24; 1930 in Baltimore. . ,~Provincetown. F()llowing' ordi- . Father Borges,nation by Bishop Connolly on Father Borges, son' of Mrs.

',April 2, 1960 he was assigned to Maria (daLuz) Borges and 'theSt. Elizabeth's, Fall River. He late Manuel Borges, was born

,serves as notary on the Matrt- Sept. 9,1913 in Lomba da Fazeda,monial Tribunal. ·St. Michael. He studied at An-

'gra, Terceira,' Azores and· wasordained there' on June 20, 1937by Most Rev., Bishop Wiliam A.

'Guimares. Following service in,Angra he was named assistant atSt. Michael's, Fall River and has,also served at Espii'ito Santo andOur:Lady of Angels, both in FallRiver.

Contraetors sinee 19i3

WYman 3;.0911.

JEREMIAH COHOLANPLUM'BING 6' HEATING

Asks Funds, for AdministrationThrough Voluntary Ag~ncies

WASHINGTON (NC) - TheU.S. Catholic ~oreign relief'agency has urged a House for­eign aid subcommittee to con-,sider earmarking some futureforeign aid funds for adminis-

~tration thro~gh voiuntary agen­cies., Catholic Relief Services-Na­tional Catholic Welfare Confer­ence called for "careful, long-

, term consideration", of, this ideain, a' statement to ChairmanOtto E. Passman of Louisina andother members of the foreignoperations subcommittee of theHouse Appropriations Commit-tee. ' "

The statement was submittedby Msgr. John F. McCarthy, as­sistant executive director ofCRS-NCWC, on behalf of AuxiI_'iary Bishop Edward E. Swan­strom of New York, executivedirector. CRS-NCWC had beeninvited to make its views knownin connection with hearing bythe,lJouse unit on U.S" foreignaid ,appropriations.

Maximum UseThe CRS-NCWC 'statement

noted that the 1961 foreign aid,

Assignments Affecti:ng

IPla,ns

I<:atlier," A. McCarthy

Father Francis McCarthy, sonof the late' Francis J. and MaryL.' (Carey) McCarthy, was bornJan~ 11, 1904' at North Attleboro. <

ant at St. JohI', Baptist, NewBedford; 'St. Anthony, East Fal­mouth; St. Anthony of Padua,Fall River; St. Anthony, Taun­ton; and as administrator of Our'Lady of Health Parish,FallRiver.

AnnouncesChancf1ryI

Press OfficeFor Council

Continued from, Page OneFather Souza

Father Souza, son of Mrs. Leo­poldina (Silva) Souza and, thelate Manuel R. Souza, was bornSept. 24, 1912 in New Bedford.He studied at St. Charles Col­lege; Catonsville" Md., St. Mary's

'Seminary, B:ntimore, and Grana, Seminary, Montreal. '

Ordained' J~ne'3, 1939 by thelate Most Rev. Bishop James E.Ca~sidy; lie has served as assist-

Monsignor Dolan Jubil~eContinued from Page One Bedford will be toastmaster.

Msgr. Dolan has spent many Speakers will include Richardyears as a distinguished and Bentley, parish trustee, Josephvalued member of the Taunton Megan Sr., lay chairman; Rt.L,ibrary Board. , Rev. Bernard J. Fenton, Colonel

On Friday morning, Sept. 28, in the Chaplains' Corps and athe children from the Elemen- native of St. Mary's Parish,tary School and lijgh School will Taunton.attend Mass at 8:30 and present , Most Rev. James L. Connolly,a spiritual bouquet to Monsignor Bishop of the Diocese, and MostDolan. Rev. James J. Gerrard, Auxiliary

Sunday has been set aside as Bishop of the Diocese, will alsoparishioners day. Rt. Rev. Fran- address the gathering.cis McKeon, pastor of the Sacred The evening will close withHeart Church, Taunton, will Monsignor Dolan's address andpreach at the 11 o'clock Mass benediction by his brother, Rev.that will be celebrated by the William H. Dolan, pastor of Holyjubilarian. - Family Church, Taunton.

A reception will be held Sun- A solemn High Mass will beday afternoon at 4 o'clock at. the celebrated Monday aft'ernoon,Lincoln Park Ballroom followed Oct 1, at 4 o'clock in St. Mary'sby a dinner at 5:30. At press Church. Officers assisting Mon­,time, it was announced that signor'Dolan, the celebrant, willmore than 1150 tickets have been be Rev. Norman: Ferris, deacon,sold. and Rev. Gerald Shovelton; sub.,.

'The invocation at the banquet deacon. The Seminary Clioirwill be delivered by Rev. Wil-, }t:0m St. Pius X Seminary, North_l Ham F. Morris, assistant at Easton, will chant the Mass. ­Corpus Christi Church, Sand- A reception and dinner forwich and former, assistant at St. priests wiU he held immediatelyMary's Church, ,Taunton, and follo~ing the Ma3s in the schoolgeneral chairman of the affair. hall and the Sisters will have a

,Rt. ,Rev. Hugh 'A, Gallagher, dinner in tba Convent at thepastor' of St. James Church, New same time '

Following studies at St. Charles,St. Mary's 'and the Sulpician'Seminary; Washington, he 'wasordained June 10, 1929 by thelate Most 'Rev. Thomas Shahanat the Shrine of the Immaculate

,Conception, ,Washington. 'He has ,served as assistant at

St. Paui's,' Taunton and St.Mary's Cathedral, Fall River; asadministrator at St. Peter'sDighton,' and has been pastor ofSt. Joseph's North Dighton, sinceFebruary, 1956. '

P. ' ." Father' Curryrepar.,n,'9 ,Father Curry was ordained by'.!Jishop Cassidy May 26, 1934·

C.overag'e following'studies at St. Charlesand St. Mary's. Son of the lateRobert J.' Curry and Ann M.

VATICAN CITY (NC)-All the facilities needed:br ,(Mullaney) Curry, he was bOrn'the world press to report adequately on the 'cQining ecumel1i- Oct. 31, ,1908.cal council are being provided by the officials, of the council's,' , Pr~vious assignments includepress office. This was brought out 'J:1ere, ~n an' ~l!terV~ew ,assistant, at St. Patrick's Ware-with Msgr. Fausto Vallainc, , ".ham·;' St. Joseph's, Taunton, and

, ~SLPati:ick~s, Fall River. He has'who for the past two years is authorized for ,release, by the served as administrator at St.has been, director of the 'secretary general of the .council; 'Augustirie's, Vineyard Havenpress office. Msgr., Vallainc ,Telephone and radio commu- since April 6, 1960.said that "only those will be dis- nication facilities at council ' Father Mendonca

press headquarters., : Father Mendonca was ordainedapPl;linted, who either do not Press offl'ces for: seven sepa'- 'd' t d th' t f 'June 10, 1944' in Mount Carmelun ers an e na ure 0 an rate language groups; 'Chur'ch, New Bedford b'y BI'shopecumenical council or do not ap_preciate the limitations which Periodic conferences by ex-must be imposed for the sake of perts in various fields on matters

which are to be discussed at thegood order." council;The council press office isalready well along in readying An information office at the

service of the bishops. ' "the following facilities for mem-bers of the press and other com- Msgr. Vallainc stated .that somunications media: , far his office has issued press

Credentials on request to pro- credentials to more than 500 per­,fessional correspondents and' sons. He expects, he said, thattechnicians of the communica- last-minute applicants may totaltions media; another 300.,' '

Conference halls and working The credentials - a smallspace for those accredited; leather folder called a tessera-

-:-J' A series of, brochures provid- are issued to persons of profes:"ing background material for use sional standing 'who make for­in their reports on the council; mal application and append a

Verbal conferences and printed letter of authorization, fromcommuniques whenever material their editors or other superiors.