10.12.61

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Attleboro To Host Serra District Tomorrow The newly-created District 40 of Serra International- encompassing clubs in the Attleboro District, New Bed- ford, Fall River, and Providence -will hold its first Fall conven- tion at St. John School in Attle- boro this weekend. The two-day event will open Friday evening with a banquet at the Brook Manor in North Attleboro for officers and trust- ees of the four clubs and will close at 4:15 Saturday afternoon following a general session on the responsibilities of a Serrano Serra is an organization of Catholic laymen whose aim is the increase of vocations in young people to the priesthoods brotherhood, and sisterhood. With the exception of the FriQ day night ba'nquet in North Attleboro, all convention activi- ties will center at St. John School. Turn 00 Page FifteeD of Sioux Falls, S. D., Hilary B. Hacker of Bismarck, N. D., and Alphonse J. Schladweiler of New Ulm, Minn. Burial was in Resurrection Cemetery in nearby Mendota Heights. A series of requiems for the Archbishop, who died in Rome, preceded. the funeral services. Thousands filed past the Arch- bishop's bier as his body lay in state in the cathedral for two. days and nights before the final rituals. Auxiliary Bishop Gerald O'- Keefe of St. Paul, Chancellor of the archdiocese and rector of the cathedral, offered a Pontifical Requiem Mass Saturday and the office of .. the dead was chanted solemnly in the cathedral the night before the funeral. "Archbishop Brady brought talent and outstanding ability to every task assigned him," said Archbishop Cousins at the fun- Turn to Page Sixteen Archbishop Leo of Du- buque, Iowa, offered the Mass, after which the final absolutions at the coffin were given by' Most Rev. James L. Connolly of this Diocese, Bishops Lambert O. d DEPARTURE MASS: Mass will be said Sunday morning at 9 in the Dwelly Street Armory, Fall River, for the 400 members of the 3rd Howitzer Battalion, 211th Artillery, federalized to Fort Bragg, N.C. Making plans are, front, Lt. Col. Vincent P. McMahon' and Rev. George E. Sullivan, pastor of St. Joseph's Church and World War II chaplain; rear, Lt. Col. William J. King and Major Raymond J. Carney. Lauds Archbishop Brady As 'Impatient for Good' "Where he saw good to be done he was impatient until that good was accomplished," was the parting tribute pai.d to Archbishop William O. Brady by Archbishop William E. Cousins of Milwaukee at the' Solemn Pontifical Requiem ... Mass celebrated Monday for his soul. Albert Cardinal Meyer, Archbishop of Chi- . cago, presided at the Mass in St. Paul's cathedral in St. Paul, filled to overflowing with pre1- • ates and priests, religious and the . laity who came to pay final re- spects to the spiritual leader of the St. Paul half- million Catholics. HONORED TODAY: Columbus Day, Oct. 12, a legal holiday in most states, commemorates the discovery of America by Christopher Columbus in 1492. This picture of the "Great Navigoator", in the Naval Museum in Madrid, was made in Seville, Spain, in 1504, by an unknown artist. Physicians 'Plan ,Annual Mass October 21 Members uf the St. Luke's Physicians' Guild will' hold their sixth Annual White Mass for physicians, den- tists, nurses and others in the health field on Saturday morn';' ing, Oct. 21, at 8 o'clock in the St. Anne's Hospital Chapel in Fall River. Adopted by the 75 guilds of Catholic physicians comprising the National Federation of Cath- olic Physicians' Guilds, the an- nual Mass to honor their patron is celebrated throughout the country at this time of year. The feast of St. Luke is celebrated in the Church's calendar on Oct. 18. Officers of the Fall River Guild are Dr. Francis J. D'Errico, president; Dr. Raymond A. .Di- onne, vice president; Dr. Thomas F. Higgins, secretary-treasurex:. Purpose of the Guild is to ful- fill Catholic aims and ideals as they apply to those in the field of medicine. Public Schools Moral Training CHICAGO (NC)-Public schools are failing to prepare American youth for the trials ahead because of their vacillating attitude toward moral values, a priest-educator warned here. Father Neil G. McCluskey, S.J., dean of education at Gonzaga University, Spokane, Wash., charged at a Mass here that "some educational leaders deliberately ••• have allowed Judaoo,Christian tradition as f - J' f · '-_ schools but the image reflected _ there is not the true one.", ..,,- " the public school, as presently constituted, is one pub- lic institution that does not re- flect American society as it is," he declared. "The state faces the problem of religious pluralism 'in the armed forces by cooper- ating with the different religious groups in for the spiritual needs of the uniformed person- nel. the same basic problem of pluralism is now officialiy treated in the schools .as something nonexistent, irrel- evant, or . "We have. made it practically lrnp'ossible," Father McCluskey continued, "for the schools to teach what millions of parents believe in conscience should be taught their children. 'We have Turn to Page Eighteen on up to attend the retreat from troops sponsored by clubs, PTA's, and veterans' groups. Registration time for all at- ten<ijng whether in the provi- sional troop or in their own troop is six to six-thirty o'clock so that tents may be pitched be .... fore darkness becomes too great. The retreat is Ii camping retreat and everyone is required to bring his own sleeping bag or blankets, proper clothing for three days, air mattress if avail- able, and ground cloth. No food TurD to Page Eighteeo Aft Anchor of the Soul. Sure ant! lI'i'l'm-ST. PAUL The AN,CHOR Educ.ator Charges Fail Youth Vol. 5, No. 42 . © 1961 The Anchor Second ClolS Moil Privllefles Authorized at Fall River: Mass. Catholic Boy ScoutS. Hold Retreat This WeekeneJ' Neighborhood Commissioner David R. Melancon, a provisional troop leader at last year's Summer camp, will be Scoutmaster of the provisional troop for Fall River's Massa- soit Council Boy Scouts at the first Catholic retreat to be held this Friday, Saturday, Sunday at Camp Noquo- choke, Arthur A. Gauthier in e ha I' ge of arrangements, stated today. Rev. Theodore Hall, O.P., of Providence College will give the retreat. Melancon will be assisted by District Chairman Arthur L. Ber- geron, veteran Scouter and .Sil- ver Beaver award holder, and Troop 21 Scoutmaster Joseph W. Benevides Sr., Jamboree Scout- master in 1950 and 1957. The three leaders will be responsible for some fifty Boy Scouts signed Ordinary to Celebrate Mass For New England Nurses A pontifical low Mass celebrated by Bishop Connolly will open the sixth New England Conference. of Catholic NurHes, to be held Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 28 and 29, in Manchester, N.H. In addition to members of the Fall River Council of Catholic Nurses, over by Mrs. Lillian April, pres- area spiritual directors· will ident of the New England Dioc- attend including Rev. Robert esan Council of Catholic Nurses. L St ·' t F 11 R' '. R Other sessions will consider . ,m on, alVeI', ev. services and. programs for. the John Hogan, "1i!ew Rev. aging, and the history of the Norman FerrIS, Taunton, Rev. Catholic Union of the Sick. Spir- James McCarthy, Attleboro; and itual observances will include a Rev. Cornelius J. Keliher, Dioc- holy hour Saturday and a pon- esan moderator. tifical high Mass Sunday. Social Cardinal Cushing and all New activities listed are· a luncheon, England Bishops will also be reception and banquet for Satur- present at the annual event. day and a Communion breakfast Openicg session will be presided Sunday. 0 P ASTOR'S NIGHT: Participating in the annual Pastors' Night of the New Bedford Serra Club were, seated, left to tight: Most. Rev. James J. Gerrard, D.D., Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese an,d 'pastor of St. Lawrence's Church, New Bedford, and Rt. Rev. George W. Casey, Boston Pilot columnist and main speaker. Standing: Serran Leo A. Gallagher, a 1916 classmate of Msgr. Casey at. Boston College .. FaU River, Thursday, Oc'tober 12, 1961

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L St·&#39;t F 11R&#39; &#39;. R $4.00P:~~Ey~ ·&#39;-_ PASTOR&#39;SNIGHT:ParticipatingintheannualPastors&#39; NightoftheNewBedfordSerra Club were, seated,leftto tight: Most.Rev.JamesJ. Gerrard,D.D.,AuxiliaryBishop of the Diocese an,d &#39;pastor of St. Lawrence&#39;s Church, JohnHogan, "1i!ew Bedfor~j Rev. aging, and the history of the Neighborhood Commissioner David R. Melancon, a provisionaltroopleaderatlastyear&#39;sSummercamp,willbe ScoutmasteroftheprovisionaltroopforFallRiver&#39;sMassa- e ha I&#39; ge of arrangements, 0

Transcript of 10.12.61

Page 1: 10.12.61

Attleboro To HostSerra DistrictTomorrow

The newly-created District40 of Serra International­encompassing clubs in theAttleboro District, New Bed­ford, Fall River, and Providence-will hold its first Fall conven­tion at St. John School in Attle­boro this weekend.

The two-day event will openFriday evening with a banquetat the Brook Manor in NorthAttleboro for officers and trust­ees of the four clubs and willclose at 4:15 Saturday afternoonfollowing a general session onthe responsibilities of a Serrano

Serra is an organization ofCatholic laymen whose aim isthe increase of vocations inyoung people to the priesthoodsbrotherhood, and sisterhood.

With the exception of the FriQday night ba'nquet in NorthAttleboro, all convention activi­ties will center at St. JohnSchool.

Turn 00 Page FifteeD

H~h of Sioux Falls, S. D., HilaryB. Hacker of Bismarck, N. D., andAlphonse J. Schladweiler ofNew Ulm, Minn. Burial was inResurrection Cemetery in nearbyMendota Heights.

A series of requiems for theArchbishop, who died in Rome,preceded. the funeral services.Thousands filed past the Arch­bishop's bier as his body lay instate in the cathedral for two.days and nights before the finalrituals.

Auxiliary Bishop Gerald O'­Keefe of St. Paul, Chancellor ofthe archdiocese and rector of thecathedral, offered a PontificalRequiem Mass Saturday and theoffice of .. the dead was chantedsolemnly in the cathedral thenight before the funeral.

"Archbishop Brady broughttalent and outstanding ability toevery task assigned him," saidArchbishop Cousins at the fun-

Turn to Page Sixteen

Archbishop Leo Bin~ of Du­buque, Iowa, offered the Mass,after which the final absolutionsat the coffin were given by'Most Rev. James L. Connolly ofthis Diocese, Bishops Lambert O.

:,[-:,::~:~~~,-,,-,~~,"-~~£'qr.. d~DEPARTURE MASS: Mass will be said Sunday morning

at 9 in the Dwelly Street Armory, Fall River, for the 400members of the 3rd Howitzer Battalion, 211th Artillery,federalized to Fort Bragg, N.C. Making plans are, front,Lt. Col. Vincent P. McMahon' and Rev. George E. Sullivan,pastor of St. Joseph's Church and World War II chaplain;rear, Lt. Col. William J. King and Major Raymond J. Carney.

Lauds Archbishop BradyAs 'Impatient for Good'

"Where he saw good to be done he was impatient untilthat good was accomplished," was the parting tribute pai.dto Archbishop William O. Brady by Archbishop William E.Cousins of Milwaukee at the' Solemn Pontifical Requiem ...Mass celebrated Monday forhis soul. Albert CardinalMeyer, Archbishop of Chi­

.cago, presided at the Mass inSt. Paul's cathedral in St. Paul,filled to overflowing with pre1-

• ates and priests, religious and the. laity who came to pay final re­

spects to the spiritual leader ofthe St. Paul archdio'c~se's half­million Catholics.

HONORED TODAY: Columbus Day, Oct. 12, a legalholiday in most states, commemorates the discovery ofAmerica by Christopher Columbus in 1492. This picture ofthe "Great Navigoator", in the Naval Museum in Madrid,was made in Seville, Spain, in 1504, by an unknown artist.

Physicians 'Plan,Annual MassOctober 21

Members uf the St. Luke'sPhysicians' Guild will' holdtheir sixth Annual WhiteMass for physicians, den­tists, nurses and others in thehealth field on Saturday morn';'ing, Oct. 21, at 8 o'clock in theSt. Anne's Hospital Chapel inFall River.

Adopted by the 75 guilds ofCatholic physicians comprisingthe National Federation of Cath­olic Physicians' Guilds, the an­nual Mass to honor their patronis celebrated throughout thecountry at this time of year. Thefeast of St. Luke is celebrated inthe Church's calendar on Oct. 18.

Officers of the Fall RiverGuild are Dr. Francis J. D'Errico,president; Dr. Raymond A. .Di­onne, vice president; Dr. ThomasF. Higgins, secretary-treasurex:.

Purpose of the Guild is to ful­fill Catholic aims and ideals asthey apply to those in the fieldof medicine.

Public SchoolsMoral Training

CHICAGO (NC)-Public schools are failing to prepare American youth for the trialsahead because of their vacillating attitude toward moral values, a priest-educator warnedhere. Father Neil G. McCluskey, S.J., dean of education at Gonzaga University, Spokane,Wash., charged at a Mass here that "some educational leaders deliberately ••• have allowed

~~i::~:~~~~~a;:~l~~ r~--~----··-----··'·-""·'·'·--~-·"·-·---··_··'

Judaoo,Christian tradition as f - J'~~tl~~~~~:l£~ f · '-_schools but the image reflected _there is not the trueone.",..,,- "

~'For the public school, aspresently constituted, is one pub­lic institution that does not re­flect American society as it is,"he declared. "The state faces theproblem of religious pluralism'in the armed forces by cooper­ating with the different religiousgroups in c~ing for the spiritualneeds of the uniformed person­nel. Ye~ the same basic problemof reli~ious pluralism is nowofficialiy treated in the schools

.as something nonexistent, irrel-evant, or atien.~' .

"We have. made it practicallylrnp'ossible," Father McCluskeycontinued, "for the schools toteach what millions of parentsbelieve in conscience should betaught their children. 'We have

Turn to Page Eighteen

on

up to attend the retreat fromtroops sponsored by clubs, PTA's,and veterans' groups.

Registration time for all at­ten<ijng whether in the provi­sional troop or in their owntroop is six to six-thirty o'clockso that tents may be pitched be....fore darkness becomes too great.The retreat is Ii camping retreatand everyone is required tobring his own sleeping bag orblankets, proper clothing forthree days, air mattress if avail­able, and ground cloth. No food

TurD to Page Eighteeo

Aft Anchor of the Soul. Sure ant! lI'i'l'm-ST. PAUL

TheAN,CHOR

Educ.ator ChargesFail Youth

Vol. 5, No. 42 .© 1961 The Anchor $4.00P:~~Ey~Second ClolS Moil Privllefles Authorized at Fall River: Mass.

Catholic Boy ScoutS. HoldRetreat This WeekeneJ'

Neighborhood Commissioner David R. Melancon, aprovisional troop leader at last year's Summer camp, will beScoutmaster of the provisional troop for Fall River's Massa­soit Council Boy Scouts at the first Catholic retreat to beheld this Friday, Saturday,Sunday at Camp Noquo­choke, Arthur A. Gauthier ine h a I' g e of arrangements,stated today. Rev. Theodore Hall,O.P., of Providence College willgive the retreat.

Melancon will be assisted byDistrict Chairman Arthur L. Ber­geron, veteran Scouter and .Sil­ver Beaver award holder, andTroop 21 Scoutmaster Joseph W.Benevides Sr., Jamboree Scout­master in 1950 and 1957. Thethree leaders will be responsiblefor some fifty Boy Scouts signed

Ordinary to Celebrate MassFor New England Nurses

A pontifical low Mass celebrated by Bishop Connollywill open the sixth New England Conference. of CatholicNurHes, to be held Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 28 and 29,in Manchester, N.H. In addition to members of the Fall RiverCouncil of Catholic Nurses, over by Mrs. Lillian April, pres­area spiritual directors· will ident of the New England Dioc­attend including Rev. Robert esan Council of Catholic Nurses.L St·' t F 11 R' '. R Other sessions will consider

. ,m on, alVeI', ev. services and. programs for. theJohn Hogan, "1i!ew Bedfor~j Rev. aging, and the history of theNorman FerrIS, Taunton, Rev. Catholic Union of the Sick. Spir­James McCarthy, Attleboro; and itual observances will include aRev. Cornelius J. Keliher, Dioc- holy hour Saturday and a pon­esan moderator. tifical high Mass Sunday. Social

Cardinal Cushing and all New activities listed are· a luncheon,England Bishops will also be reception and banquet for Satur­present at the annual event. day and a Communion breakfastOpenicg session will be presided Sunday. 0

P ASTOR'S NIGHT: Participating in the annual Pastors'Night of the New Bedford Serra Club were, seated, left totight: Most. Rev. James J. Gerrard, D.D., Auxiliary Bishopof the Diocese an,d 'pastor of St. Lawrence's Church,New Bedford, and Rt. Rev. George W. Casey, Boston Pilotcolumnist and main speaker. Standing: Serran Leo A.Gallagher, a 1916 classmate of Msgr. Casey at. Boston College..

FaU River, M~ss., Thursday, Oc'tober 12, 1961

Page 2: 10.12.61

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OIARlES F. VARGAS'2M ROCKDALE AVINUINEW BEDFOID, MASS.

~4YE.. MONEY ..ONYOUR Oil HEATI• Ctl//' ~";

"0'quickdMINty.'

~..~HEATING OIL'

Bishop' to' Speak

At Caritas Gili~d

86 Parishes.SACRAMENTO (NC)-Bishop ,

Joseph T. McGucken of Sacra­mento has established two newparishes for the diocese,' bring­'ing the total to 86.

BOSCO'S 'SALESIANS

ElectricalContraCtors

DONYoung Men Wanted r

• For Full-time Boy Work.• For lifelong action and happiness.• For the Salesian PriesthoocL., For. the Salesian Coadjutor '

Brotherhood. 'Futl informati;'" free. Writet

FATHER DBRECTOR, SACRED HEAR't: JUNIORATE,IPSWICN, MASS.

2500 Boy's Clubs-Camps-Schools-Missions

-B.~. ~.p"",

~4944 County St. rNew Bedford

. Legion 'of DecencyThe ,following films are to 'be

added to the lists in their re­spective classifications:

. Unobjectionable for generalpat~~nage: Greyftiars Bobby(superior ~ .entertainment); TheMan Who Wagged, His Tail.

Unobjectionable for adults:The Ninth Circle; The RomanSpring~of Mrs. Stone.

..Trinitarian

Fathers' . II

BOYS WANTED. for'th~Priesthood and BrotherhocJt.Lack' of funds NO impedi-ment. I

Write to:P. O.Box 5742

lattimore· 8, Md.

.Rev.Pastor,River.

,Necrology i,THE ANCHOR lists the deatb

aumversary dates 01 prieSt.1who 'served the Fall' RiielrDiocet!e since Its formation Ibl

,19M with the intention thallthe faithful wUl ewe them II

~erlDJ remembrance. I, OCT. 14 I

Rev. Dennis M. Lowney, 191111,Assistant, Sac~ed Heart, TauntoJ1.

OCT. 19 IManuel A.. Silvia, 1~2:1I,

.Santo Christo, FaU

"Hart. Lauds KennedyAnti-Red ·Measures'

CINCINNATI (NC):.-supportof' President Kennedy's anti­communism measures and praiseof the FBl in its fight againstsubversion were expressed bySupreme Knight Luke E.· Hartof the Knights of Columbushere. .

Guest of ~ honor at' a' dinderdan<;e .sponsored by' the eom­bined councils of Cincinnati,Supreme ~ Knight Hart .pointedout that the supreme board ofdirectors of the K. of C. hadgone .on .record in support of thePresident and Congresl!. in cop.;.ing. with the communiSt threatin Berlin and elsewhere.

He called on local members~f the, K. of C. to acquire a"working knowledge \of eom­munism," citing the warning 01. ,Pope Pius XI that too few peo­ple understood the nature ofcommunism and its tac·tics,strategy, and objectives.

Sho'rtage of Interns'Conference Subject

,ST. LOUIS (NC)-The alarm-:-. ing' shortage of interns in

Catholic hospitals. will be thesubject of a national·conferencefor medical educators to be .held here beginning Tuesday.Oct. 17. ,.. More than 100 administratorsand· physicians from Catholichospitals. throughout the coun­try are expected to attend theconference sponsored by theCatholic Hospital Associati.9Jl· of

~ the. United .States and Canada.

Meiss Ordo

.FORTY HOURS

DEVOTION ". Oct. 15--St. John of God,

Somerset.Our Lady of the Immae­

late Conception, Taun­. ton.

, Oct.I6-LaSalette, E a I tBrewster.

Oct. 22:-St. Peter, Province­town.

St. Hedwig,' New Bed­ford.

Oct. 29--5t. Michael, FallRiver.

St. Patrick" Somerset.St. Ann, Raynham.

Nov. 5--5t. Thomas More,SoDlerset. ~

Sacred Heart, Oak Bluffs.Notre Dame; Fall River.

THE ANCHOR, Second Class Postage Paid at Fall River.M""p, Published every Thul'llday at 410Highland Avenue. Fan River, Masa.. bythc Catholie Press of the Diocese· ofFan River, Subecr~iton price b¥ maU.postpaid ,'.00 per)'ear. ' . .,

2 n:::: ".: :-:::::;;:-Dioc~se of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 12, 1961 Educational TV

Abuses Surroundi~g Fati~a E~'pands Course

-Border on Superstition .F:w~~~~~~~ .:- Ed~!OWA CITY (NC)-Revelations of the Blessed Virgin eationaI television' has begun

Mary to three children at· Fatima, Portugal, in.1917 have its second year in Catholiobeen abused for purposes bordering on superstitiM,. the schools of the Newark arch-director of the Catholic Student Center at the University· of .. diocese with more grades parti-

r 'd h M . J D,. cipating ~nd more ~ TV coursetl iaiOWa, Sal ,ere. sgr.. • Leiria has' "isplayed regarding' the curriculum.

Conway, who holds a licenti- the alleged Fatima secrets. . Students in elementary schoolate in canon law, urged cau- . "My guess is that he found the grades one through eight will be~tion in applying alleged mes- contents of his famous envelope - . taking at least one eourse OIlsages of Fatiina blindly, without . unsuitable for publication," television. Last year only gradetldue regard to the facts. ' 'Msgr. Conway.said. "As far as I four through eight ..participated

"I do not reject the whole know the Holy See has given no ill ,the program. 'this season,Fatima story, 'though I am not formal, 'positive endorsement to some, students will be taking aspersonally deeply impressed. by the apparations of Fatima-only , many as seven courses' on tele-it," he said. ":! have no serious petm'issive silence." vision.questions about' the credibility , Columnist' The irlBtruction is televised byof the apparitions-that was de- The priest made his coinments WPIX, a commercial station inclareci-by the Bishop of .Leiria in a column appearing in~ the ·New York, in cooperation with(the diocese in which Fatima is ·Davenport Messenger, diocesan. the New York State Board 01.located) after seven years of in- newspaper. ' SCHOLARSHiPS: I, 'R •. h 1 h' from the Regents. 0vestigation and eareful study "It is bordering on superstition. • ecelvmg sc 0 ars IpS As alTang~d by Msgr JosePh'by theologia~. I am not opposed to get religion out !If focus," he '. St., Anne's Hospital Scnool of Nursing Alumnae,Fall River,. P. Tuite archdiocesan' ~uperin­to the Fatima devotions-they exp~ained, '~to make pr~vate rev- '~e, left to dg;ht,' stud~nts Patricia Calnan, Jeanne Gobeil," tendent ~f schools, the progtaJllinvolve penance, sacrifice, the~ elations seem more 1D1portant ¥artha Lafferly, all .of New Bedford, Doris Goyette, Fall ,will involve language. arts forRosary, and devotion to the that. 'the Good News of the Re-, 'R' '. 'th h 1 h' '- 'tt be Mr Ch 1 tt first graders. Science ]s addedMother of .Jesus. demption, ~ place the authority p l~e~~ WI R ~cSc~sl l~ ~:o~ml. e.ealmem. r s. ar 0 e for g~d.e 2, music for' gtade 3,

. Misused o~ ~~~P.I0~~un ah~d.of ~hat _ ~t e leMr: T'" . •MO ah~ IPRS Nwerfe F· SOlI Ra•warded two gr~d~ aDd French for grade 4, in addl-"But I, think it has been often 0 , , lcar. esus rlst. ua es,·. ISS eresa a i:ll',' • .·0 a Iver, now' studymg tiOO. to the other three subjects.

misused for purposes bordering 5 . , .........:....... .at ~Boston Colle~._and Miss Jo-Ann Riley of Warwick, For those in the upper gradeeon 'superstition: as'a threat.to in:" tresses ~eeu studying at Catholic University:' ..- . . theJ:e will also be Spanish, math,silh-e . fear, as 8 good to hatred ~ . ". .:, soeial studies and ''P!aees in the

~~c:U::i~~t ::li~c::u~e:~:~ 0BtF~~~?n:~alo'S~ Providence ~Miission~.r Ope..ates ' N;:s':.uwWlCiog the .expanded

-and I don't mean Russians." 'Bishop Joseph A. Burke upbraid-Thri~inQCent~rin Formosa' ~ program, Msgr. Tuite said "edu-Msgr. Conway, who served.88 ed Pefsons who try to dissUade ..' " I, ~. . eetional· TV, if used properly,

Chancellor of the Davenport, young menan<! women' from en- . .MIAOLI; ~ORMOSA (NG).;... of' rosaries and a mode9t stlack an bring youngst.en new ex­Iowa, diocese for 10_ years, tering the priesthood and rell-' LaSt December, Father Edwin of .Ca~olic literature -would per!ences,' experiences that are

: pointed' out that the real facts gions life. . McCabe, .M.M., of Provi4ellce, remain open more than a week. :current, stimulattDg and inter-regarding all tha.t took place at At ~ the dedication of the. new R. I., opened a modeSt shop in Today the, project is in fun esting, and that will make the·Fatima are hard to uncover. St:John 'Vianrtey Major Semi- the center ,of· t6,is bustling dty , swing, with a reading room,' Subject matter more practical ..

'.'The original r~velations of nary .the Bishop, emphasized the of'40,OOO and··hopefully unf~rl~study hall, bf)o~ shop, lecture' them."Our Lady to the children were. shortag~of priestS, Religious and . a' ban,ner proclaiming. that the' ropm, language classes, and con­fIne," he said. "Those were the Brothers during a sermon at a Catholic' Service Centerw~s in ferences' 011 doctrine all revolv- ,ones the Bishop approved. Much. Pontifical Mass. ' . bu~iness. ~ . I ing around the cenb-ill idea 01.:of the later accumulation is The uncompleted ;seminary . Th«i regional' superior, Bishop making Christ known in thebaSed on the 'memories oUi holy admitted its first students" 122 Frederick A. Donaghy, M..M:., 0If. ' market place.mm who made .I.1er prophecies of thein, the day before the ded- Ne" Bedford, blessed the, ~nter' Outstandingly successful are'. Bishop Connolly will lll>eak .at

h ts h d' " . I'aCommunion breakfast set for

known aftert e even a ication. The students formerly' and summed up its purpose 'in 'English classes for students of '~ • , J 10 Sun.day· morning, Oct. 15 athappened. . attended 'Christ the King'Semi- wor~ which have become itI all grades up to and in~luciing

Secrets and Promises nary at St. Bonaventure(N. Y.) ·motto.: I . college gr,aduates, as well as __ Venus de Milo restaurant, Swan-~ d ""- sea, under sponsorship of the

"To the best of my knowle ge U,niversity, or at.Our L,ady of the "May all who come here fo:r cial classes for bUsinessmen and ,Caritas Guild. .,ttiere has been' no official ap- Angels' Seminary· at :Niagara study or for' work make! government ·officials.proval given to these-and most ·(N. Y.) University,' which. has progresS. in '-things hurrtan Recently Father'McCabe con- The guild raises funds for theof the secrets and promises which since moved to 'the Diocese ~of.· and thin~ divine and iso'· duct~ ·a.Science Exhibition with Bishop's work' in behalf of re-

" I tarded children. Families ofcause all the furor are contained Albany. ' in(:rease their lov.e of God," pictures,. of the space age. sup-t ,. members are invited to attendin hem. Scores Outside InflueDee In . just - ten months, Fatlier plied by,the Ford Foundation. the breakfast, accordi.... io an-

Msgr. Conway suggested Fat- "God takes care of the McCabe" a veteran of the C,hi:na Includ.ed were pictures of· 1'15 --1m " th ·ts" ld 1 . 'nouricement made - Jameaa' en US1as cou earn Church," the Bishop said, "He missions~ before., his, expul.sron Catholic scientists whose names' u;r'1 h B' h f ' ~ Cooney and Robert Souza, co-.from the SI ence t e 1S op 0 issues invitations to the 'neces- from the main.land 'by t.he'ICini-. w,ere..· already known to many chairmen.

sary amount" of young men and nese Commumsts, has, through students from science classes inwomen to serve Him and to pro~ prayers and support of rhany , school. .vide for thy needs of-the Church. benef-actors in. the States, made" An essay contest, "Science forBut outside influences prevent the Center ,an apostolic strflI1lg~ ,Peace,"followed .the expositionsome' young men and women hold. . and studenti from all the Middlefrom entering the religiouS life- When he, started· the pr6jeot, Sohools in Miaoli registered.a practice which is to be wholly most Taiwanese doubted~·'that Presenting aWQrds, Father Me-,condemned. . . Father McCabe's rented shop Oft Cabe had the OPport4nity of ad-

','There'is a crying. need .for' ~ai!J'.-Street - with only a Itray, dr~ing 1700 non-C.hristian stu-_ more, young men and women, to dents and ·of being welcomed

enter God's serv~ce, not only in Plaque 'Is Memoriul and introduced by principals ofour oWn diocese, but throughout T' B- h..... . aU-the Middle Schools in· thethe world. Pray to'God that those 0 ,IS Op ~eUmanl1l city.'persons who receive His invita- .PITTSBURGH (NC) - IThetior:J, accept it," the Bishop added. Kriights of' St. George have !let

up a plaque near St. Philonie:nachurch here in hOllor of Bi~hl()pJohn Neumann, who was he:ild01 the Philadelphia See in 18fi2.

~ Bishop· John J. Wrighti ofPittsburgh, spiritual advisor of.the' KnJghts of St. George, bless­ed the plaql,le, which .....as 'erecti~d

at' Good .Samarf4ln chapel. B'ish­opN~umann .helped· build .theold St, Philomena' church! A~em~ Qf the RedemptOrist'Order, .be was born in 18U 1anddilxtin 1860. I

"

FRIDAY-'-St. Edward; King and, Confessor. III' Class:> White.'

Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed;Coinmon Preface. .

SATURDAY - St. Callistus I,Pope and 'Martyr. '111 Class.Red. Mass Proper;' Gloria; no

.", Creed; Common Prefa.ce.. SUNDAY - XXI Sunday After

Pentecost. II Class~ Green.'Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed;Preface of Trinity.

MONDAY~St. Hedwig, Widow.. III Class.' White. Mass Proper;

Gloria; no Creed; CommonPreface. ' , .

TUESDAY-St. Margaret·· Mary:Alacoque, Virgin.. III ,Class~

White. Mass Proper; Gloria;no Creed; Common Preface.

WEDNESDAY-St:Luke, Evan­'gelist. II Class. Red. MassProper; Gloria; Creed;' Pref- ~

'ace of Apostles.THURSDAY,..,...St. Peter of Al­

cantara, ·Confessor. In Class.·White. Mass .. Proper; Gklria;no Creed; Common I Preface.

Page 3: 10.12.61

Holy Father Eases SorrowOf Archbishop's Death

3THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Oct. 12, 1961

What About VOU?

NovenaFeast of

... A Franciscan Sister!GIVING YOURSELF to a

life completely dedicated tothe salvation of souls . . .through prayer, work, sac­rifice and joy . . . by usingyour talents as a Nurse,Laboratory and X-Ray Tech­nician, Secretary, Account­ant, Dietitian, Seamstress,Cook, as well as in ot~r

hospital departments and 10

a new extension of oW'work in the Catechetical andSocial Service Fields...There Is No Greater Charity!(Write--g;ving your age-IioVocation Director. 767·80th St......t.Rock Island. 11I,inoia. for furtherdetails of thi3 happy life.)

Television ThemeAnti-Semitism

NEW YORK (NC) - The re­sponsibility of U. S. Catholics in'fighting anti-Semitisn'i will bethe theme of a Catholic Hourtelevision program Oct. 15.

Entitled "The Chosen People,"it will be the second in a Catho­lic Hour series called "Prejudice,U.S.A."

The Catholic Hour is producedby the National Council of Cath­olic Men in cooperation with theNational Broadcasting Company.The program will be telecastfrom ] :30 to 2 P.M. over theNBC-TV network.

PenanceWritten by Robert Crean, the

program will open with a quota­tion from an American priest:"We should all be down on ourknees in penance for the murderof six milion Jews, but we don'tknow what to do about it, so weforget 'about it."

The story centers on the com­munity conflict that developswhen a group of teenagers dis­covers that the club they've'chosen for their senior promwill not admit Jewish people: .

Seekonk KC NamesJoseph Amaral

Joseph Amaral is newly elect­ed grand knight for SeekonkCouncil, Knights of Columbus.His supporting officers includeVictor Rose, deputy grand knight;Norman Hearne, chancellor;Donal Joost, warden; HerbertWest, inside guard; Manuel An­tune and Frank Rose, outsideguards; Robert Araujo, recordingsecretary.

Also Annimzio Provazza, treas-. urer; S. Freeman Tracy, finan­cial secretary; Armand Bessette,ad'vocate; Michael George Jr.,lecturer. Rev. Lester Hull, chap-lain. '

Solemnforothe

Sea Sis.Tel. MY 81

Novena Devotions2:00, 5: 10· and 7:30 P.M. Daily

Novena High Masses7:30 and 11 :30 A.M. Daily

SAINT JUDEOctober 20 to 28

SAINT ,ANNE'S SHRINE818 Middle Street - Fall River, Mass.

If you cannot come, follow the Novena en home.Write in for GI Free Novena Booklet.

SOl.thHyannis

ATWOODOIL COMPANY

SHELLHEATING OILS

Capetip ProgramWalter Welsh Council, Prov­

inceto:yvon Knights of Columbus,will observe Columbus Day witha' high Mass at 5 this afternoonat St. Peter the Apostle Church,followed at 7 with a chicken din­ner and the showing of films inK of C hall.

hom ......do riMDiscontents

REYNOLDS-DEWALT

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desires oftener than hom ...... n......G.

Serra Holy HourNew Bedford Serra Club will

sponsor ~ Holy Hour for voca­tions to the priesthood from thisDiocese at 3 this' Sunday after­noon at St. George's Church,Westport. Parishioners and allresidents of the New Bedfordarea are invited to join Serranllfor the devotion.

FALL RIVER WOMEN: Shown with Bishop Connollyat Bishop's Night of the Fall River Catholic Women's Club,are, left to right, Chairman Mrs. William T. Donnelly,President Miss Lorena Pacheco, and Vice President MissJulia M. Harrington.

Return to Natural Law ConceptsBest Hope for World Survival

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Thebest mistaken bookkeeping-or falsi­hope for a reign of law in, the fied bookkeeping-proves any­international community, apart thing against arithmetic, or thanfrom the revival of religious the mIstakes of primitive peo­faith and the acceptance of Rev- pIes, for whom the stars wereelation itself rests in a return to holes in the .tent which coveredthe concepts' of the natural law, the woTld, prove anything againstaccordmg to Bishop John J. astronomy," he said.Wright of Pittsburgh." Unwritten Law

Speaking at the annual ',Red Bishop Wright said the natural,Mass in, St. Paul's cathedral, hiw is an unwritten law. "Man'sBishop Wright said "no small knowledge of it increases littlepart of our hope for the reign by little as man's moral con­of law, its firm foundation on scienc':l develops," he stated.the level of nature and reason, "After the fall, of man, thatlies in the recognition of the moral conscience passed throughvalidit.y of that natural law to a twilight state. As a result, thethe existence and dictates of idea of natural law, at lirst, im­which reason is witness." ~ersed in rites and mythology,

Bishop Wright declared that differentiated itself only slowly,because "every sort of error and as slowly even as the idea ofdeviation" is possible in the d~- nature."termination of the moral obliga- 'Then,Bishop Wright empha­tions stemming from the natural sized: "Only when the Gospellaw this "merely probes how fal- has penetrated to the very depthlib1e is unaided human reason of human substance will naturaland how easily sense and sensu- law appear in its flower and per-ality can corrupt our intellectul:ll fection." ()jlidgment."

Virtuous Actions,

"W~ are scandalized by thefact that cruelty, denunciation ofparents, the lie for the ser'viceof the party, the murder of theaged or the sick should be con­sidered virtuous actions by peo­ple educated by nazi or commun­ist positive law," the Bishopcontinued.

"All'this proves nothing againstnatural· law, any more than :.

Episcopal Bish~psDeplore Division'

DETROIT (NC)-The bishopsof the Protestant EpiscopalChurch have .called on theirpeople "to 'wor~ and to praywithout ceasing" for religiousunity.

The Episcopal bishops urgedconstant efforts to end "thedivisions by which we dishonorour one Lord."

They made their appeal in apastoral letter issued at the endof their 12-day triennial gener­al convention. The letter wasto be read in all the nearly 7,000Episcopal churches, with con­gregations totaling some 3.5million.

Grant to Univell'sityDETROIT (NC) - The Uni­

versity of Detroit pas receiveda $68,000 gra'nt from the Na­tional Science Foudation to con­duct a two-year program for

. the development of engineeringgraphics education. Engineeringgraphics is a study combiningmechanical drawing, problemsolving and the analysis ofgraphs.

of Archbishop Brady, "He wasone of the great men of the.Council."

But like his Master 'beforehim, the Archbishop was notdestined to see the' fruits of hislabor. Where he had sown,others would reap. He wasChrist-like to the end.

Great ChurchmanWhen the news of his death

was announced at the Casa SantaMaria, the residence of Ameri­oan priests studying in Rome,there was a deep sense of sad­ness. lot was evident that Amer­ica had lost a great churchman.

That heavy mantle of sadness,however, that was placed so sud;.,denly on his sister, his classmateand his friends, was gently'liftedthe next morning when the HolyFather sent his private secrebaryto invite Sister Mary William,Msgr. 'Gilligan and Dr. Rea tovisit with him t~at afternoon."He was so sympathetic and un­derstanding," Sister Mary Wil­liam said later. "He wanted toknow ,all the details of mybrother's illness. He spoke ofhim as a personal f,fiend. Andthen towards the end, the HolyFather said, 'Friends on earthmust also be friends in para­dise; this friendship must bek:ept alive on both sides.' Popejohn told us that he had offeredMass for him that morning andthat he would do so 'agr.tin thenext day."

Reunion in ParadiseNearly a half hour later when

the small group arose to leavethe Holy Father said, "Now wewill have a De Profundis," andtogether they recited the beauti­ful psalm "Out of the depths Ihave cried to Thee, 0 Lord .. ."At the door of his study, theVicar of Christ smiled and said,"We, shall 'have a reunion inPa,radise."

On Oct. 4 the body of Arch­bishop Brady was brought to theChurch of Santa Susanna, thechurch for Americans in Rome.Cardinals and bishops and scoresof 'priests crowded bhe ancientchurch to pay their final respectst<:! an unforgettable man of God.Monsignor Gilligan celebratedthe Requiem Mass, assisted bytwo servers from the Archdio­cese of St. Paul, presently stu­dents at the North AmericanCollege in Rome. The Absolu­tion was given by ArchbishopKroll of Philadelphia.

When the service was con­cluded, a funeral cortege sadiywound its way to Rome's Inter­national Airport. The EternalCity was sending its chosen oneback to his people - surely noless a shepherd now that herules with Peter, no less a friendnow that he reigns with Christ.

Austrians Take PartIn Rosary Crusade

VIENNA, (NC)-Over 650,000Austrians -10 per cent of thecountry's population-have reg­istered as members of the Ros­ary Penance Crusade, promisingto recite at least part of, theRosary every day.

The crusade was foundedshortly after World War II byan Austrian friar, Father PetrusHavlicek, Q.F.M., as a responseto the Fatima message of prayerand penance. Main goals of themovement are world' peace andthe liberation of oppressed peo­ples.

The extensive particilpationwas revealed when Bishop JoaoPereira Venancio of Leiria,Portugal, whose diocese includesF-atima, visited Austria recently.

By Rev. Edward J. Mitchell

F~ther Mitchell is a priest of the Fall River Diocesewho began postgraduate studies in Rome this year.. Agraduate of the North American College in Rome, he,served in Sacred, Heart Parish .in Taunton beforereturning to the EtemaU City this Fall.High above the Eternal

City, in Rome's Salvator,Mundi Hospital, death camefor the Archbishop at 11 :15on Sunday morning, Oct. 1. Farfrom his native Fall River,farther still from his flock inSt. Paul, William O. Bradyobeyed his final missionarysummons and went home toGod.

A few days earlier, as theArchbishop lingered betweenlife an'd death, Pope John XXIIIexpt'essed his concern. "Arch­bishop Brady," the Pope said,"has traveled so far to come toRome, I at least ought to comeit:l from Castle Gondolro to seehim." But the staff of doctors atthe hospital had advised againstit, so the Holy Father, likecOuntless friends .. everywhere,simply waited and prayed.'

The Archbishop of St. Paulknew from the start that hiscondition was serious. He askedfOr the last sacraments immedi­ately after his admission to bhe .hospital. It had been a long ariddifficult flight to Rome, but now'as he heard the priest say "Re­ceive, my brother, this Food foryour journey . . .", he knewtblllt a far longer journeystretched out before him. Theprospect of it, however, did notfrighten him. He kept alive hisgentle humor as he talked of thepresent and reminisced about thepast.

Boyhood DaySPart of that past was his boy­

hood days in Fall River. And byQ' strange working of DivineProvidence, his own sister hadQ'rrived in Rome barely a weekbefore his coming. Sister MaryWilliam, 'C.S.J., rormer presi­dent of St. Catherine's Collegein·St. Paul, Minn., had come toRome for a special year ofstudies. Her presence at his bed­side now meant so much to him.. ,Another fond link with thepast was sealed on Monday eve:"ning with the arrival of Msgr.F-rancis J. Gilligan, pastor ofSt. Mark's Church in St. Paul. Ithad p~obably seemed to theA'1"chbishop as only yesterdaythat he and Bishop Connollyand Msgr. Gilligan had set outas young priests for the Dioceseof St. Paul. So much had hap­pened in the years since then­more than a man can remember,but not more th~1n a just Godcan reward.

Ecumenical CouncilDr. Charles Rea, Archbishop

Brady's personal physician, ar­rived in Rome within twenty­four hours. He and the staff ofthe hospital did all that washumanly possible. The rest wasin·'thehands of God.

Archbishop Brady had flownm Rome em the 23rd of Sep­tember to c<:mtinue 'his work onone of the preparatory commis­sions of the forthcoming· Ecu­menical Council. His keen mindand rich administrative experi­ence have made the Archbishop akey man on the commission.Cardinal Marella, chairman ofthe commission, said glowingly

Page 4: 10.12.61

I ,

($

I.....·_N_EW_B_E_Df_O_R_D_1

,Franciscans .LeaveFoil' Korea Mission

BEAVERTON (NC) - Arch­bishop Edward D.' Howard OffPortland in Oregon presided at aformal departure ceremony forthree Franciscan Missionary Sis­ters of Our Lady of Sorrows wheleft here for a mission in Korea.

The Sisters are Sister Dulcie­'sima, Sister Elizabeth and SisterMary FranCis.

Father Terence Cronin, O.F.M..Provincial of the FranciscansSanta Barbara province, spokeat the cerem'ony at OurLady ofPeace Retreat House at Beaver­ton. Sisters Dulcissima, Elizabethand Mary Francis will go toChinju, Korea, where a conventhas been built for them. Theywill instruct 12 girls of highschool age who are preparing forreligious life.

·.Asks EducatiohalPrcgr«llln to fD~~t

C(U)t~o Bhf~uetnlceMIAMI BEA.CH (NC) ­

A Cuban 'called here for a.broad education ~exchange

program between the U.S.and Latin Ameri~an countries tocombat the Castro influence inthose countries.

Manuel Reyes, Cuban attorneyand journalist, referred to Prem_ier Fidel Castro as a "commu­nistic puppet" and said thatmany Latin American nations'"have experienced the infiltra-

, 'lion of Castro communism.". Reyes, now director of LaUn

American n~ws at TV stationWTVJ in Miami, addressed a,session 'of· the southeastern re­gional convention of the CatholiePress Associoation. .

He stated that the youth ofLatin American nations \ "wiDg·row either in an atmosphere ofgood relatioIl6hip or resentmentagainst this .country."

Father Considine Speaker"For. this reason," he contin­

ued, "it·is very important·thatthe U.S. inaugurate a large pro­gram of educational ex~ange

with the Latin American coun­tries. In this way thie nation ..•CC'uld infiltrate in the minds clall children and young people ofLaiin America the good seeds cl·

, democracy.". Father John J. Considine,. M.M., director of the LaHn Am-erican .Bureau, National Catho­lic Welfare Conference, told the

, delegates fuoat there is an urgentneed for lay personnel to he.spread the principles of Christiaafamily life in Latin America.'

Aultiliary Plan~s

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Council, . Wareham Knights ofColumbus, will hold installationceremonies' Thursday, Oct. 19.District Deputy George. Shaw ofNew Bedford will be presidingofficer, aided by Arthur B. Shaw;Taunton district deputy.

W@wfr~'WlhJol~ ~@@~$. New Bedfor.i members of :theLegion of Mary ~nnounce theirFall listing of worthwhile bonksi.~ now available' at all branchesof tlieNew Bedford pubic: li.­brary. It lists 20 titles, includingnovels, spiritual reading, poetryand biography. I

ATOMIC ENERGY' CONFERENCE: Delegates 'from76 member states as well as observers from the UnitedNations, the specialized la,gencies and other internationalorganizations, attended ,the fifth regular session of theGeneral Conference of lhe International Atomic Energy

-Agency (IAEA) in Vienna. Delegates from the Holy Seewere Frank M. Folsom, of New York, head of the delegationand Father . Theodore 14. Hesburgh, C.S.C., president ofNotre Dame University. NC Photo.

. I

Se~ator Says ~ ~Chri'stians ShareBlame folf' SOCiE~ty's Ills Today

HAMPTON (NC) - Sen~tor general 'forms: the use ()! per­Eugene J. McCarthy of Minne- sonal and professional obliga­sota said here that Christians tions as an excuse; the attitudeare in part to blame for the' iUs of some who have chosen "rather.of society because they have: not to judge and condemn the worldtried to Christianize the world. than to save it"; and the con-

McCarthy told a Minne'sota· fusion of those who try to saveKniglHs of' Columbus banquet the world by preserving whatthat "the . development of a they imagine to be an "ideal"Christian world has been sloWed, past.been diverted, and iil some a~eas Only human beings willturned back during the last five .change the world, and "Chris­to seven centuries." I tians must accept the burden of

"Modern man has seen, the their day," McCarthy declared.lights' by which he thought he .was bemg. guided grow dim Iland New Orleans Priestsfade, one by one," he said. "A fl:! Ch I'world which was quite recently ~erve Qlsap GOnSself-confident and ever). arrogant NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Fourtoday has been brought low.;' priests of the Archdiocese of New

"The solon said this has hap- .Orleans have been released frompened "not only because Ithe pastoral duties by Archbishoppromises 'of education, 'of scien':e Jos~h F. Rummel 'to serve asand of new political forms have chaplains in the arme~ forces.failed,but because of the reje,~- Father John B. Bahan, whotion of Christiari principles.'; 'has' the rank. of major in the. He declared that the "progres- Army, served- in World War 'IIsive rejection of Christianity is iIi New Guinea, the Philippinesthe result, on the one hand~ of and Japan. He holds the Bronze·the rejection of Christianity! by Medal and five campaign rib­the world; on the other hand, we bons. Fathers Joseph J. Calato,must 31so pOint to the reject~on, Allen J. Roy and Donald Songyneglect and failure of Christians have been members of the Nat­to meet fully their responsibility ional Guard.towards the world/' i

McCarthy said this fa,ilur~ toChristianize the world has taken.

Fll'eefl'!hlnl1ilke~s Opp@~e'CIro«lllPe~$ «lit AOIi'~crrfr~

NEW YORK (NC)-A suit toprevent construction of ttlreereligious chapels at New YorkIq,ternational Airport has bbenfiled in State Supreme' cdurtby' the Freethinkers of Amer'ica.

The Port of New York Au­thority, which operates' the ~ir­port, leased three half-~cretracts for' annual rentals: of$650 for Catholic, Protestant ~ndJewish buildings. :

Joseph Lewis, FreethinJ{erspresident, contended in tpe ~uitthat the port authority--JIad Ivi­olated the principle of separa.­tion of Church and State'i inmaking the leases. •

~"';>·····~<>C>~<:>"'i.: A FAMILY TREAT I.t BARRB-Q CHICKE.NS, :

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"':'~ese ot Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 12, 1961.(.._----'-------------_-:.....---

Stafnps Get IlhllSOLD BRIDGE (NC) -;- Mter

six months and five million trad­ing stamps a project launchedby St. Thomas the Apostle par­ish here· in' New Jersey succeed­ed. Representatives of a chain offood stores and a trading stampcompany presented to the parishschool officials a 62-passengerbus, valued at $8,000, to be usedby the school.

~lm1)~~1J@~~2te (6@~~~®m®m){[@[(~gM@~6~m@~ @f M~~fi W@mm@lnn

By Father John L. Thomas, S.J.Ass't Sociology Prof.-St. Louis University

"Are men and women really as intellectually, emotion­any, and psychologically different from each other as nearlyall men, including some priests, tell us? Is every woman'splace in the home even if her talents aren't domestic onesand she isn't duty bound by ferences stem - from their mu­children? After studying tual ·complementarity· as a pro-'people around me; I' don't creative couple and are conse­see how these theories apply. quently not strictly comparable.I'm no' fighting suffragette cru-" Jl)jfficult to Assesssilding for equality, but some Third, there is failure to'note'of the stuff you that although sexual differencesrea d . abo u t are distinct and permeate a per-womanhood just son's entire being, individualrubs in salt." men and women differ consid-

It isn't sur- . erably in the degree· of mascu.,.p r i sin g . that linity and feinininty they actu-i n tel I i_ally possess, so that sex-relatedgent women ex- intellectual or emotional dif-perience a slow ferences .are very difficult toburn as tney assess' in practice.rea d .through . In the light of these observa-soY} e 0 f the tions, Betty, it should be clear" stu f f" you that there is no sound basis formention, Betty, making disparaging compari-yet you'll have to admit that not sons between men and womenall of it is written by mel! - in regard to their intellectual,women have contributed their emotional, or psychologicalfair share. either by trying to differences.ignore real differences or exag- Not only do individual mengerating the mystery of the and women differ considerably"eternal feminine". in their natural abilities, but

No sane person can deny that we know too little about themen and women differ in many conditioning effect~_ of early in-'significant ways. Our perennial struction and training"to hazardproblem is to determine the real a.ny generalizations in - thisbasis of such differences, their matter.nature and degree, and their Harmful The9riespractical implications in our Men and women were de-lives. signed to be companions and

'Much Ado __' helpmates in a procreativepartnership, and it· is the com-

Few human problems have oe- plementaryqualities needed forcasioned more discussion or re- . success and happiness in thisceived more varied· solutions, partnership that should be.and judging from the past, "the stressed, rattter than odiousbattle of the sexes" is destined to comparisons.continue as long as there are Moreover, the "th.eories" youmen and women living this side mention are not only irritatingof heaven. but harmful. Some people

Of c('urse, some people feel the speak of woman's "intuition,"whole 'controversy is really much and man's "rationality", of.ado about nothing. Obvious dif- woman as "heart" and man asferences do exist, and we may "head" almost as if they were.as well learn to live with them. describing qualitative differ­Let men be rrianly and women ences in two distinct'species.womanly, and be done with it! Yet women must also develop

_Woman's Place their "head", th~ir capacities'This solution has one draw- for .rationality, if they are to be

back-,-it doesn't solve anything. companions and helpmates to''. What does it mean to be manly their husbands and fulfill theiror womanly? Every society tends obligations. to society.to develop its own definitions in Develop All Gifts.the practical order, based pri- Unfortunately, although girlsmarily on the roles that men and now have excellent oppol'tuni­women are expected to fulfill in ties for education, 'many apar­marriage and the family. ently feel that they can get -by

Because the all-important task on native "intuition." They goof bearing and rearing children to school not primarily to de­necessarily involves so much of velop their talents but to ."geta married woman's energy, in- a man". According to statisticsterest, and time, it is not surpris.., most are successful in the ".pur­ing that we tend .to think that suit", yet what are they pre­"woman's place is in the home", pared to contribute to theyet this phrase has meant many marriage?different things and clearly t.ells . Don't 'be bothered by theus little about woman's native" theorists, Betty.' Develop andability as compared with a man. use all the gifts that God has

Sources of Confusion given you. If this isn't consid-., .' ered "wpmanly",~ then there is

. Past dISCUSSIOns of thIS prob- ' .. something wrong ·with thelem reveal - several com~on definition, for God gave you

. sources of error: and confUSIOn. your talents. to be usedFirst, there is failure to distin- .guish between differences re- Irov~ A~I1!JI1\1\lI7ilU ~e«:eDvesulting from instruction and'training and those rooted in tGi@(Q)Ii'~efr@wl7il 1J=ll(Q)17il@1i'$nature. If boys and girls are PROVIDENCE (NC) - JohnraiSfld differently, and they Carroll awards for distinguishedusually are, they .will reveal service were made to fivedifferent traits as adults. Georgetown University gradu-

Second, there is the implicit ates at an alumni dinner hereassumption that the male rep- in ho~or of the founder of theresents the most adequate ex- 172-year-old university in Wash­pression of human nature. . ington, D. C.Hence, all differences are eval- The recipients were: Fatheruated on the basis. of this as- l.'rederick C. Hickey, O.P., '26,sumed ideal, so that. whatever director of the honors sciencedoes not ·fit the definition of program, Prov'idence C'ollege;what is masculine is· regarded Francis B.. Condon, '16, Chief:not only as different but as Justice, Rhode Island Supremeinferior or worse; Court; Daniel> L. Schlafly, '33,

Yet the Bible tells us that .president of the St. Louis BoardGod made< man "male and fe- of Education; Dr. William B.male", and to His "image and Walsh, '43, founder and presi­likeness". Men and worrien are dent of Project Hope, and Will­both images of God; their dif- ard L. Beaulac, '21, former

American Ambassador' to fiveSouth American countries and

. now deputy director of theNational War College.

Father Edward B. Bunn, S.J.,president, recalled the foundingof Georgetown by ArchbishopJohn Carroll in 1789. He saidthe charter whiCh the U. S.Congress gave the university in1815 was the first such chartergranted by the Federal Govern­ment.

Page 5: 10.12.61

"MADE FOR

PARTICULAR PEOPLE"

But the money to be raised mustcome from a personal sacrifice,he said,

"You must get the money bydoing w\thout something, Ineffect, then, it doesn't cost youanything," he said.

Some members make theilcontributions by eating less ex­pensive' luncheons, by walkinginstead .of riding the bus, bydoing without articles or enter­tainment.

said. "And this has indeedproven so. Daily 'Worldmission­aires are now indeed the salt inour community that savors thewhole archdiocese."

The Cardinal attributed thesuccess of the group to the "dis­cipline of prayer and sacrifice"which each member voluntarilyassumes daily.

Identified With PassiollBishop Sheen told the mem- '

bers their daily sacrifices areidentifying them with the pas­sion of Christ.. He advocated that other dioc­esan directors of the Society forthe Propagation of the Faithfrom other U. S. Sees t>e broughtto St. Louis to observe the DailyWorldmissionaire program inaction. '

According to Msgr. Edward T.O'Meara, 81. Louis archdiocesandirector for the Society for thePropagation of the Faith, eachDaily Worldmissionaire agrees tosay a few brief pr<,lyers daily forthe missions, as well as contrib­ute 25 cents daily to the· missions.

ST. LOUIS (NC)-A mis­sion society composed of2,200 laymen here raised$189,000.for the mis,sions inthe la3t'fiscal year.

Churchmen have been im­pressed not so much by theamount of money raised-nearly$100 per member-but the man­ner in which it was· accom-plished. '

"It was done on a daily basis,"said Dorothy Willman, chairmanof the Women's Division of theDaily Worldmissionaires. "Each 0

member agrees to make somesacrifice' each day for the mis­sions," ,

The monetary value of thesacrifice is then contributed tothe Society for the Propagationof the faith. :

Duri ng the fiscal year whichended Oct. 1, the 2,200 8t. Louism"embers made 4,010,835 sacri­fices to raise the sum. The sacri­ficial, nature of the project wonthe praise of both Joseph Cardi­nal 'Ritter, Archbishop' of St..Louis, and Auxfliary Bishop Ful­ton J. Sheen of New York, na":tiona I director of 'the Sociletyforthe Propagation of the Faith,who came her,e for the DailyWorldmissionaires' annual meet-ing. ,

Cardinal Ritter told the grouphe endorsed "100 per cent" theplans to form the Daily World­missionaires when they wereoutlined to him.

"I did' so because I saw in itthe possibility of the sanctifica­tion of our laity," the Card~nal

)DEBR~~~EOIL)

) Heatinq Oils C) and 'Burners ~~365 NORTH FR~NT STRIET)~ NEW BEDFORD ~

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FIRST STUDENT COUNCIL: Officers"of the first Student Council at recently-openedBishop Feehan High School in Attleboro are, left to right, President Stephen Nolan ofImmaculate Conception Parish, North Easton; Treasurer Gregory Servant of St. Jphn'sParish, Attleboro; Secretary Nancy Arruda of St. John's; Clerk Frank McCauley ofSt. John's; and Vice President Kerry Horman of St. Mary's Parish, No. Attleboro.

Laymen's Society Raises $189,000 For Missions

R. A. WILCOX CO.OFFICE FURNITURE

<l

THE ANCHO~-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs., Oct. 12.1961 5

ill Stock f9r Immediate Delive~

'. DESKS • CHAIRSFILING CABINETS

• FIRE FILES • SAFESFOLDING TABLESAND CI:IAIR5

R. A. WILCOX cq.22 BEDFORD ST.

FALL RIVER 5·7838

...........BEFORE YOU

BUY - TRY

PARKMOTORSOLDSMOBILE

Oldsmo,bile-Peugot-Renault6'7 Middle Street. Fairhaver

Mexicans Aid 'cubanRefugee Seminarians

MT.. ANGEL (NC) - Fiveyoung Mexicans from Monte­zuma Mexican National Sem­'imiry in New Mexico have ar­rived at Mount Angel Abbeyhere in Oregon to continuetheir studies for the priesthood.

They left the seminary, inNew Mexico to make.rooin foremergency admission of fiverefugee, seminarians from Cuba,according to Father AmbroseZenner, O.S.B., rector of themajor seminary, here.

Parents' NightThe parents of freshmen and

sophomore students are invitedto a Parents' Night at CoyleHigh, Taunton, at 7:15 Monday

.night, Nov. 6, The parents willattend their· boy's classes, meetthe faculty, and discuss, theirboy's academic achievement withhis teachers.

11he' California Test of M~n­tal Maturity has been adminis­tered to all freshmen students atthe Taunton boys' school. Broth­er James Derrig, C.S.C., directorof studies, announces a preHm­inary scholastic aptitude test forall Juniors next Tuesday morn­ing, Oct. 17. j

Katherine Carvalho; giee c',ubpresident is Sandra Babiarz..Other offi.cers are as follows: or­chestra, vice-president CarolRiley, secretary Garoly~ John­son and treasurer Patricia John­son; glee club, vice-presidentPatricia Collins, secretary Pa­tricia Murphy, 'and treasurerKaren Daley.. Carolyn Prezalar is president

of the Vanguard Science Club atthe Mount. She will be assistedduring the year by CynthiaFranco, vice-piesident, Paul Ta­vares, secretary and PhyllisPytel, treasurer.

Extra Curricul~

Presiding at the first FrenchClub meeting at the Mount willbe'president Lorraine St. Onge.She will be assisted ,by Kather­ine Carvalho, vice-president andtreasurer, and Carolyn Prezalar.secretary. Sister Ma,ary Adele isthe moderator of the French'Club.

This Fall the Cross-Countrytrack team of Coyle High, Taun­ton, under the direction ofBrother Patrick, C.S.C., showsmuch promise. Led by Co-cap­tains Bill Desmond and P>aulMedeiros, the runners includeBob Beaurgard, Jim McGarry,Steve Nolan and Paul Duggan.

. The Taunto~ boy's school.isagain sponsoring a magazinedrive; this year to rai,se money,for glass back-boards. Leadersof the drive are seniors DickBrazenski, Gerry Kelley, andJeff Kane, along with juniorJohn Doyle.

Preserve FreedomFormer elite member of the

Communist Party of the NewBedford area, serving as liaisonman with the FBI, channelinginformation 'to this bureau, Ar­mand • Pen h a delivered', an

'informative and stirring talkto the student body at MountSt. Mary Academy, Fall River.

Mr. Periha's talk revealed vhepower of the Communist Partyin this country to infiltrate ourdaily lives. Leaving a strong im_pression on the. minds of hisaudience concerning this impacl,Mr. Penha emphasized, the neces­sity of each individual citizen todo all in his power to help pre­serve our freedom in this"repub-b~ ,

Real Paper WorkCINCINNATI (NC)-If there's

a scrap of paper in the westernpart of Hamilton County it's anoversight on the part of SetonHigh School girls. In a CatholicStudents Mission Crusade cam­paign, they collected 3,409,728pounds of paper last month­more than 1,700 tons.

Scholarship Fund Head AnnouncesProgram to Aid Pupils PlanningCareer in Catholic Journalism

By Daniel J. Delaney .Students aiming at a career in Catholic journalism can

soon count on substantial scholarship and other a,id,according to an announcement by the Catholic JournalismScholarship Fund, Inc. The new foundation has alreadycollected enough funds to

. award initial scholarships intime for the 1962-63 aca­demic year, according toMsgr. John S. Randall, founda­tion president and editor of theCatholic Courier Journal, news­paper of the Rochester Diocese.

He made the announcement inChicago after a meeting of thefoundation's directors. Forma­tion of the foundation had beenby Bishop John J. Wright ofPittsburgh at the last annualconvention of the Catholic PressAs!'ociation in Vancouver, B C.

Msgr. Randall expressed thedirectors' unanimous approval otthe new careers in journalismprogram of the CPA. Present atthe meeting with other membersof the directors' board of the

.Catholic Journalism ScholarshipFund was Josepn E. Sullivan ofLowell, the fund's treasurer.

High Scbool AlumniArchbishop Egidio Vagnozzi,

Apostolic Delegate to the UnltpdStates wlil offer' Mass and ad­dress the alumni of CathoHcHigh Schools at th~ir annualCommunion breakfast in Phila­delphia on Sunrtay, Nov. 19.Bishop George L, Leech ,of Har­r.isburg will give the sermon itthe Mass in the Cathedral ofSS. Peter and Paul. Specialprayers wi1ll be offered forPope John.

School ElectionsPresident of the senior' class

,at Holy Family High School,New Bedford, is Thomas Walker.Other officers are: senior class,vice president, Patricia Connor;secretary, Sandra Bobola; treas­urer, Laurence Oliveira; juniorclass. presidents, Richard Perrasand Peter Sullivan; vice-presi­dents, Elaine,Mathews and ROb­ert Clarkson; secretaries, RobertPeccini and Maureen' Osborne;treasurers, Thomas Azar andMary Tynan.

Sophomore class officers at the,'New Bedford eo-educational in­stitution are: presidents, RichardPariseau and Edward Parr; vice­presidents, Dermot Duggan andTimothy O'Leary; secretal'les,Richard Sheehan and Chris~i!le

Roberts; treasurers, B!'ian Hod­son and JV.(a:r-garet Erickson.

With student,government el~c­tions ::ompleted at Stang HighSchool North Dartmouth, theelections of class ofncers for thethree classes are scheduled forTuesday,

Student CouncilsSenior representatives of tne

Stud(~nt Gov~rnment, Moum St.Mary Academy, Fall River, ueSandra Babiarz' and KatherineCarvalho. Other class represent­atives are: Juniors Joanne Lean­dro and Maureen Harrington;sophomores J u d i t h Labecki,Joanne Sullivan, and Diane Mar­tineai'; freshmen Nancy Ferris,Catherine Turgeon, ~il Kerl'i­gan and Joan Ii'asho,

Student Council represent'l­tives of Holy Family High :ire:seniors Karen King, DeniseNunes, David Sylvia and Be:.-­nard Cabral; juniors Rita Es'­trella, Kathleen Sciscento, Paul11homas, and John Townley;sophomores Beatrice Abraham,Margaret Oliveira, Stephen Am­ara'l and Russell Toby.

College BoardsSaturday morning college

board classes will begin thisweek at Stang High, North Dan­mouth. These classes are in­tended for those interested stu­dents whose after-school co­curricular activities prevent thepossibility of accepting this as­mtance on week-day afternoons.

The president of the orchestraat Mount St. Mary Academy is

Page 6: 10.12.61

WorthwhileRecipes

... By I?ev. John R. FoIster ...St. Anfhony'. Churc'" Hew 8eJIonI

The Hail MaryThere is' scarcely a prayer

so well and widely known, . among Catholics today as

the "Hail Mary". Yet theChurch was some 1500 years oldwhen she first started to pray ~as we know it today.

It is a simple prayer yet va.complex since itis made, up of

. different parts.It has as its au­thors the Arch­angel Gabriel,St. Elizabeth,the Church her­self.

The first partof the "HailMary" wasgiven us on ~heoccasion of theAnnunciation when the Arch­angel Gabriel announced toMary that she would be hon-,ored by God Himself who wouldmake her the mother of theSavior, the Messiah. He calledto her: "Hail' (Mary) full <dgrace, the Lord is with thee,blessed art -thou among women."(Luke 1:28). This little part ofthe Gospel found itself oftenquoted. in different rituals a'ldeven in parts of the Mass butit was not used as a prayer bythe early Christians. .

Four PartsThe second part "blessed art

thou among, women" is bar­'rowed from St, Elizabeth, themother of St. John the Baptist.St~ Luke narrates that when

'Mary took great pains to ,visit, .her cousin Elizabeth, the cousin

greeted Mary by saying U~at

.the child John had lept withjoy within her womb at herapproach. "How can it be that

,the Mother of my Lord wouldvisit me!" she cried, and thengave us' our prayer.

Here the "Hail Mary" stoppedfor some 15 centuries. Then,the Holy ·Name was added and

" the ordinary, response ~'Amen''-.'It ,was believed (1474) that thft"Hail . Mary" was thereforeMade up of four 'parts: (1) the'Archangel's; (2) St. Elizabeth's;(3) the ,men~ion of the HolyName . which it Wtas thought'was added by' 'the Popes; (4),the Amen, added by the Church.

Petitions Vary, Now the Reformation - orbetter the Protestant Revo,­lution - came on the scene.These zealots pointed out thatthe "Hail Mary" was only asalutation and not actu'ally aprayer. They objected that thiswas another :proof of Catholics'worshipping the Blessed Virgin.That the' prayer did not possess

"~ petition had long been felt byCatholics themselves and, there­fore, it was customary for themto add some' petition privately.Various countries and peopleswould pray and ask differentthings. An Italian petition ransomething like this:, "Oh, blessed Virgin, pray to

God for us always, that Hemay pardon us and give UB

/grace, so to live here belowthat He may reward us with

,paradise at our death."Asks Blessings ,

There was a great variety ofpetitions but they all seemed to'include a ,petition for help .forsinners and for the hour of death.So, in, the fifteenth centurythere was no officially approved'conclusion to the "Hail Mary"but in liturgical uses it ended'with the "Amen" after the men­:tion of the Holy Name.

The official catechism of the'famous Council of Trent men­'tions the petition as we have ittoday "Holy Mary, Mother ofGod, pray for us sinners. now andat the hour of our death. Amen."

It adds: "Most rightly has theHoly Chul'ch of God added te,this (the first part) thanksgiV:­ing, petition also and the invo:"cation of the most holy Mother

, of' God, therebY implying thatwe should piously and suppli­antly have recourse to her illorder that by her intercessionshe may reconcile God with us

TurD. W P~ Seven

Progress

Prelate to AddressPrison Chaplains

COLUMBUS (NC)---,-Coatlju­tor Archbishop Philip F. Pocockof. ~oronto, Canada, will addresschaplains of correctional insti­tutions 'at a luncheon sessionduring the annual Congress ofCorrections here, starting nextSunday.

Bishop Clarence G: Issenmannof Columbus will preside at theluncheon and Bishop AndrewH. Grutka of Gary, Ind., Epis­copal advisor to the AmericanCatholic Correctional ChaplainsAssociation, will be present.

Other programs for Catholicchaplains during the congresswill include an orientationcourse for new correctionalchaplains, a' joint meeting wiUlwardens and a public relationssession on "How Former In­mates "Serve' the Community."

ordinary discovery, nothing tobe expected in the course ofnature; So the liturgy, our publicworship, even while it uses nat­ural .things like wood, stone,'bread and wine, gestl}res, word5,nevertheless transforms a'nd en­ergizes them all with the super­natural. This is what the saint'does with his or her vocation or"state of life." That he do'es thisby God's grace is .the reason theChristian feels ,no reluctanceabout celebrating public worshipin honor of saints.

WEDNESDAY - St. Luke,Evangelist. 'Again the armortbeme of Sunday comes into thisMass'of the Gospel:'writer.- Fro~his own Gospel the instructionsto the Lord's messengers were tocarry no purse or wallet, andnot to dQ too much visiting onthe way. It isn't common humanprudence that the liturgy isfighting here. It is that commonhuman danger of excess, of notonly admitting the necessity andvalue of human things but alsogiving them a ki'nd of ultimateimportance, and making every­thing else depend on them. To­day particularly we give thanksto God for his holy VVord.

. TUESDAY'- - St. M.argaretMary Alacoque, Virl;in.' The.humanity of jesus was a hu­manity u!1it~ substantially withdivine love, -with God who isLove. Despite tl).e limitations of'anatomical symbolism, this is the'meaning of 'the tamiliar. phrase'."tJ;le Sacred Heart of Jesu~." It.means His humanity, a humanitywhich makes. us blood brothers,but also a humanity 'transformedand vitalized' by supernaturallove. The emphasis is nothingnew: It i5 in the Scriptures and

. the Fathers. It is just that every'age finds 1ts peculiar way of ex­pressing the perennial truths ofthe Faith..

I

Sod~listII

I '. ' .. .",.. ., ,-' ,.er~1to-u.CJh thE CUIEEk With th£ChWtch JBy RlEV~ llOBERT W. HOV~A, Catholic University ;

SATURDAY - st. Callistus,Pope, Martyr., Both lessons,stress the fact that all· authorityin Christ's Church is His instru­ment. That, just as' the sJlcra,­ments do. no stand "betwee~"

.God and man but are personalacts of the Saviour, sanctifyingand' christianizing the present,so the hierarchy, popes and'bishops, are' the tools oy whichHe proclaims pardon and estab­lishes peace and unity here andnow. Jesus lives in His mysticalBody, and we would be well ad­vised to 'stop thinking in termsof some kind of complicated lad­der of mediation and to startseeing the Saviour in both ti)leChurch's sacramentaL acts and inher 'governance.

'TOMORROW -, St. Edward,Confessor. What can man offer'in sl\ch a commerce of divinelove .but that watchfulness: thatvigilance, that, readiness to al~­cept' .of which tC?d~y's Gospel'speaks? Here is· the mystery of,the human will's 'cooperation :insalvation. For' the' Almighty,though He is almighty, does not·force His' gifts upon us. Arid-though, our readiness is' alreadiythe/work ,of His' grace it is pone­theless In a real way our readi­ness. This we dare offer Him bEl­cause it 'admits'- our emptinel~

:and our 'need.

c

21st SUNDAy"AFTER PEN·TECOST. The inadequacy ofhuman justice and of the naturalvirtues generally, in the light of'God'5 gifts, is the theme of bothlessons in today's celebration o:Ethe Eucharist. The Epistle tell:lthose of us gathered around thealtar that it is God's armor; nOltbare human' talents and re··sources, which we must employ.

And the Gospel gives a vivid,example of a man who refuse(J[to even attempt to imitate thE!boundless love and generosity ofthe Father: The point, of course"is. not a' minimizing of humanvalues and virtues but rather a,vision, a glimpse, a call to the'"new man," the divinized man"t~ man who "puts on" Chri5t. .

MONDAY -.,;. St. Hedwig,·Widow. The kingdom of heaveniE a treasure (Gospel). It is D(J

TODAY-Mass as ,on Sund:1Y.The knowledge of pardon andpeace which is one of the great'joys of the Christian experienceof worship is intimately con­nected with the idea of commun­ion. For it is the same guiltwhich has made man afraid to,approach his common Fatherthat separates him from hisbrothers. And God's' acceptanceof us, we are reminded frequent­ly in the, Gospel, is inseparable

o '-from Qur acceptance of on~ an­other.The latter must flow fromthe former, else God's acceptanceof ,us remains unreal and hypo-'theticaL '.

(J

n:: M:C:'()'~'-'Dioceseof Foil River-Thurs.; Oct. 12, 1961

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIQCESE OF FALL RIVER

Published weeKly by'The CatholiC Pr~ss of the Diocese of Fall River410 Highland Avenue

Fall River, Mass. ' OSbo':ne 5·7151. PUBLISHER

Most Rev. James L Connolly, D.O., PhD.GENERAL MANAGER ASST: GENERAL MANAGER

Rev. D,aniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. ~ohn P. Driscoll'MANAGING EDITOR

Hugh J. Golden

®rheANCHOR

The Few llave Preyail~d ,In tension\dddled situations throughout the South, the

integration of the races is being accomplished with peaceand quiet, in sharp cqntras't to the violence that markedthe New Orleans school opening a year ago;

The pres~nt peaceful 'action isa tribute to individuals_ not the many in the South who still cannqt see the whyand wherefore of integration, but the few'in authority,whorecognize that 'the Suprem~ Court must be ,the law ,of theland and its orders obeyed., . ,

If ever there was an example of Father Keller's "Youc~m change the world" it is here. '. '

For the change is the work of the. few - the fewmayors and chiefs of police who gave notice t~at integra,tionwould hl:ke place and that th~y would brook ·interferencefrom no one. ' , '" ,

In the face, of such firmness on the part of a few, themany stayeq at home and muttered dire mouthings - butthey stayed home. Q ' '

True, the integration now taking place in some schpols'and stores is token.· A- few successes along these lines donot indicate a change of heart in an entire 'region. The,

'bitterness and misunderstandings 'and prejudices of 'more'than a hundred years' have not been washed cleanly and..antiseptically away. Charity h~s not taken the place ofhostility. '

But children are not, being spat upon. Rocks arenot being thrown. Cross-burning has been reduced to aminimum. And the many have been treated to the experienceof life going on as usual - almost - in the face of tradition-breaking steps. ,

So the few are to be commended for, their determinationto make the law of the land stick. They are to be hailed fortheir breaking the terror of mob rule. Only th~ir unyield.ingstand has prevented the repetition of the disgracefulincidences that blazed across the fron~'pagesof the country .and the wor:ld last 'Fall.' , , .

A few have changed the world. In the interest of right,the few have, prevail~d.

A convert to the Faith told of the times he sat in hisa~tomobileoutside of Catholk ch~rches during Sunday Masswhile waiting for his wife and children to, come out. Andafter many such vigils, he met a priest who asked himwhy he did not come inside. And his answer was a simple,"Becau'se up to now, no one has ever asked me."

Catholics know that Faith is a gift of God. He gives itto whomever He will. And Catholics bend over backwardto avoid playing God wit'fi a person's life and pressuringhim to come to Mass; the:} go to an extreme of indifference,to avoid the tag of proselytizer~ , ' ,

For this reason, they often give the 'appearance to theirfriends not of the Faith of belonging to a secret sl?Ciety orto a gnostic group that is simply not interested in inv~ting

an outsider in to view what Catholicism has to offer. ,The Catholic explains the lack of invitations to the fact

that anyone attending Mass would have to be instructedbeforehand on ~hat to expect, on what all thi~ means. ..'

The non-Catholic ,sees it as simply a lack of charIty,of interest. ' '. ' '

Perh'aps this is one of the instances Clare Booth Lucehad in mind when she titled one of her talks, '''CatholicMind and Protestant Beart." ,

Catholics seem to be iacking in those qualities thatare associated more often than not with Protestants ­fellow:;;hip, an invitation to Church, charity surroundingservices. " ' '

, The cradle Catholic smiles at the hand-shaking outsipe,the door of a Protestant church. He dismisses as of little. account the sending of flowers to the sick members of the

congregation. He looks bemusedly on the close interest paidby one member of a Protestant flock to another. He reasons,that he, after all, has the truth; these other things arethe frills of reIlgion.

Every Catholic parish could, do with some of these"frills." It could do with a little more warmth, a little mOreof the old-fashioned solicitude of one person for another.

Every parish could do with a few persons with enoughcharity to extend an invitation to Church to one who mayappear interested.' '

Some may smile at su~h a suggestion as being,"Protestanty,1' These same critics should ask themselveswhat they have done in a realistic practical way to furtherthe cause of Christ's Church. ' ' .

o

Page 7: 10.12.61

7THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Oct. 12, 1961

Soul Assurance­Plan to MarkAnngyers.ary

CHICAGO (NC) - An in­ternational prayer movementwill mark the 25th anniverQsary of its program of holyho~rsbefore the Blessed Sacra­ment on Sunday, Oct. 29, theFeast .of Christ the King.

In the past quarter-centuryU. S. adult members of the SoulAssurauce Prayer Plan have ob­served 2,490,859 holy hours,while stlidents have offered 755,­273 hours.

Overseas, the totals are 9,310.­700 hours for adult laymen, and7,412,000' hours for student.;.

The first holy hours undersponsorship of the Soul Assur­ance Prayer Plan were observedby a group of laymen on theFeast of Christ the King, 1937,at St. Peter's church here.

The holy hou'ils a.re now beingoffered in many dioceses inAmerica and throughout theworld. A holy hour book 'hasbeen published in 11 lang~es,

and translations into three 4tlQrelanguages are in process.

The Soul Assurance Pl~yer

Plan, which haa headqua;:tershere, aims' to promote dev",tionto the Sacred Heart among (..ath­olic laymen. Its program inewdes

.consecration of self to theSacred Heart and daily r~ita­

tion of a consecration pl\lYer;daily Mass and CommuniG;i1, ifpossible; and a weekly holybour.

'Famous brand foods at now prices - famousbrand gifts for Top Value Stamps!Thlis. . .combination has delighted New Englandernfor years. By nature, w.Q>men are comparisonshoppers _. and. there's nothmg like know­ing you're getting a ball'galn. 'When youcome in to ,any' Stop & Shop, just notethe low prices in every department .. ~ they

omatch the lowest it?- t~wn'! In addition,Stop & Shop' has. w-on.derfUlll money sav­

.ing specials every w~k .. . and yOll! getT-op' Valu~ Stamps Wzith evexy pm-chase..SO you see"..•.'nobodY,but nobody has ~1;­

ter vai\ll.~ than Stop & Shop! .

legMa~!i' !L~lfI 'd~$$1J We~ksmafj S~e~oanS,

i op Value S~ilm~ Il 110

YOrw~ll DO BEiTERfflJ' STOP, ~ $.~~P~

were no· other teachers avail­able." Religious also staff VanBuren's grade schools.

Father BeUenoit's hobbies in­elude music. He plays the saxo­phone, a talent he expects willbe handy among the musicalSouth Sea Islanders. Other qual­ifications include first aid train­ing, given to all Marist mission­aries.

A cousin who was a ·Maristwas responsible for introducingthe Fall Riverite to the order, hesaid. Activities of the commun­ity in the United States includeteaching and hospital work.Massachusetts General Hospitalin Boston is among hospitalsserved by Marist chaplains.

Young men interested in thework of the priests or in thebrotherhood associated wit hthem can write to the VocationalDirector, Marjst Fathers, 27 Isa­bella Street, Boston 17, notedFather Bellenoit,

He gave another address ofimportance--his own new one,indicating that he will be happyin the years to come to hearfrom friends in his home Dio­cese. He can be reached afterNovember at :::atholic Mission,Honia.ra, Guadalcanal, BritishSolomon Islands, via Sydney,Australia.

1

j

AN

.

N@rr~s H. Y~~fPP:5H'E1El MB'Ai.

JJ.iI1ES'EiR, Prop:RESI[)ENl1IAl

IN[)tJlSTRiIAlCOMMERCIAL

253 Cedar St. New BedfordWY 3-3222

Name

Address_.....:...... ._· _

,Cit:r '. ...... .•

33 priests in 'the South Solomon'.area, working on four islands: Inthe whole South Pacific, how­,ever, there ,are over 200 Maristpriests. Iti.s their largest mis­sionary field, .said-Father Belle­noit.

The priests are joined in theirlabor:sby Marist Sisters whostaff medieal institutions and.schools.

'Catholic' P,ubllc SdloolsPrevious to his Pacific assign­

ment, Father Bellenoit taught atNotre Dame high school, Detroit,and Van B!\llren Boys' High500001, Van Buren, Me. The lat­ter instiw;UlJln, .although a publieschool, was .staffed hali bypriests and half by lay teachers.

"The community is largelyCatholic anyway,"· explainedFather . Belenoit, "and there

53A%:IN'TERESTON YOURSAViIN'GS

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for ,detailed informatiollll'write to ' , .

~BA~LES·A. MURPHYBaglstered R~present~ti~~ ... US' Pond Street .

Winchester, Mass.PA 9-2696 '

Donates New Organ'Ttn Ch~r.chin Rome'

AKRON .(NC)-A pastor fromItaly who .admired :an electronieorgan in a chur.cb na-e last Jnlyis going to get one just like 1'1­.gratis.

The organ cau·ght the eye· ofMsgr. Umberto Di1misi,;pastor of8t. ·Cecilia church mRiome, when.he visited Msgr. An,gelo fJ.Triv­isonno, pastor of St. Anthony'schurch here.

Msgr. Trivisonno ol1ganized acommittee to raise fWll1s to buyone like it for the viisiting prel­ate, but the organ .finaiJ.1y wasdonated by Frank 'Zucco of 't!heFalls Music Store. It is scheduledto be installed in St. Ceciliachurch today.

'S11llu~eVG~Mlt &IH~@~

iEst. 118.97

,Builders ;$u,p,p:lies'2343 :P.urchGlso :Street

'New iBedfordWflY6- iS66'1

66rmingham OpensMewm«:!ln £xhi'b~tion

BIRMINGHAM (NC) - Civicand university authorities coop­er.ated here "to .open what is be­lieved to be the 'biggest exhibi­tion SG far in honor of CardinalNewman, one of Birmingham'smost famlllus citizem.s.

The exhibition follows theCardinal's ,career fr.om :his earli­est years to his ''final 40 years inBirmmgham, including his lifeas an Anglican before his con­versi:m.iIlIimningham Universityhas invited lbG.th Catholic ,andnon~atho1i!:speake.rs to .'deliveran accompanying :series .of lec­tures,

The ,exhibition includes a dis­,pll:\Y of Cardiinal .Newman'sbooks, ,original manuscripts, firsteditions land modern w.orks <onthe Cardinal 1:romallparls ofthe world.

Wh]lfei6'5 IFQ:IDm D,itJ~FY i

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Ftill River Marist Begins Long Sea VoyageTo Lifetime Assignment in South Seas

By Patricia McGowanLast week a Marist missionary -from St. Jean Baptiste parish, Fall River,. began a

journey thatwoIi't end till the beginning of November. Until then he will be voyagingacross the Pacific, towards a tiny speck in the waters near Aust:r~alia. He is Rev. MauriceBellenoit of the Society ·of Mary, and for the rest of his life he will be serving God inthe South Solomon Islands, .Marist missionary territory '-...,---,---8mee the, !beginning of the,eentunr. He will have muchto do. The IslandshB,we a popu- .i1ntion -of 'Same 125,000, of whomabout 25,000 aI'e Catholics, 15,000members of va.riou.s Protestant:sects, ;md the remainder pagans.~

F-orthe fust twoyear.ll ·of his:serVice,. he will be studying the1lan,g:uage of the people. Some 14dialects ar-e in ··use among them..JHre .madeabegUmin,g in 'lan­guage work a f-ewyea.rs ago atF-Ol'dham Univ.ersity's missionins1litl,1te, lbutadmits :he has alang way to go to :attain :tBuencyin ,even one of the .14 tongues.

II'U!;;i OriJiIm.tlon, .

'Tlhemi-ssionary .Us the .son ofMxs. Marie-!LouiseBellenoit andthe .!late 'Ovilil ·~it..Grbw-~'llP in St ,lean Baptiste par- REV. MAURICE BELLENOrr.i5~ hea1i!ended ~ paroetlial:school land .Assumptlion 'lhlgh:schoo~W:lJlNlester.. Afterayea.r,off for work iniFalllRiver, be

.:att~nd!edMarJst :semUmries in.MassaChusetts land WaShington.D .•C._

He was ,ordained .in 11'957 at 51.Jean's Church, the first ordina­tion ever he1dat the t'hul'ch, :&1­thou,ghhe is lIlDt the mst priest tocome from the ,parish..

Father Bellenoit has five sis­ters and a brother. Two sistersare also in religious life, one a.grade schoo'llPrincipal m Hyatts­ville, Md\ .as a Rellgiou.s ofJesus-Mary., and the other a Sis­ter ,of St. 'Joseph, ~ationed at,St. Mli.ehael~s Sohoo:l., Ocean

.Grove.He says his mother is ver.y

happy at his vocation and iswilling to make the sacrifice of.having her son "at the ends ofthe -earth" fGr his lifetime. He'will" however. be permittedhnme visits· everi 10 ye~, :soshe is 'looking forWard nOw to1971, date of the first' such re­.union.

"il1he missionaTy"s 'W1ork will belargely pastoral, and he willfor the most· part be workirig'alone, he. said. The Marists have

HEADS CHAPLAINS: 'Fr.'Carl Breitfeller, a.p., chap­lain at the Federal R'e;form~tory at Lorton, Va., has been'elected president of the Am..erican Catholic CorrectionalChaplalins" Association.·~C ;Photo. ..'

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. ~WorthwhilB RecipesContinued from iPageSix

sinners and obtain for us theblessings W~ need bG1ih -for thispresent nie -and for the 1if~that

··has no end."Act of Penance

Since that time there bavebeen some attempts by pioussouls to add to or change the•Hail 'Mary" but the Church,

·.through her official teachers,the bishops, 'has constantly re­frained from sufferi.Qg such a

· change.1n its long history, the "HaU

· Mary" was .recognized -as a salu­tation.Therefere, it was' 'Oftenaccompanied with' some exter­nal sign of 'a salute: an inclina­tion of the heael, :a genuflection.

· Someorder.s of monks 'bad itin their TOle that the ."Hail

'Mary"be Tepeated a 'set num­"bel' of times 'and -accompanied

each time by a genuflection.Generally it became some-'

thing to be done -as a penanoe.It is ·said ,that St. lVIar:.ga.ret .of .lIunga.ry would" as .a ,penance,

· l'ecite .the "Hail Ma.ry''' a thous­and Umess d~ .and genuflecteaCh .:time..D.ur·Lng ·the time .ofSt. . Domini!;, it was '~lready

customary to Tecite the prayer150 .times a dl:\y-alway.s ·as asalutation or as an act of pen­·ance but no·t as a magical num­'ber lor a iiar'ticular petition.

.FiliaIDevotionThe faithful down throuih the

:ages u.sed to oSee .the· lPfiests andclerics reading ;theiroffice. Butthey w.ere not well .enGugh 'in­structed to be .able to read andthere£Gre, thE;y .turned to arepetition of .the "Hail Mary" a

·certaIn, number offunes. Forthis purpose they 'uSed instru­ments on which to keep countand .gradually we had our Ros­ary. 'They wanted 'to -imitate thepriest praY1ng his lbl'evlary at'Certain boal'S .o'f the ..day and·gr.adually we bad Our "Angelus".

'But most 'o'fall, fthey wantedto 'show ftheiT £lia1l. <devotion ttoMary by sa'lu'ting ber 'o'ften :andrealizing how close 'She was :andif, to Christ her Child, Our'Savior, they wanted to seek ,herhelp. So it is even today, Popesand prelates hau.e It'eci'ted it pri­vately .ond !publicly;; !business­men, 1a'bOI1ers ":00 iJl)easnn1s lhavecherished their .rosary.

The Truth ... There -was a story 1tolii .no.t longago that a Chinese Communist'Soldier arrested ,a poor Catholicwhom he had found reciting' his'rosary. The charge.? Secretlyusing :n de;vice of connnunica­tion. You Iltnow., lhe was ,closerto the truth 'than 'he Tealized.

Next week - The .Apostles'Creed.

Leave for Mg$$o~'nsCHICAGO (NC)-Four priests

'and three women lay mission­.nrJes left here ,Sunday ,to workirl [)Gminican mlssIons.d:n Nigeria::md Eloliwia. A df!P1lrlure cere­mony -was held 'for them 'at St.

'Pius church.

(-' 'j '.i'l • ! \ ..~ I.J. 1 ..

Page 8: 10.12.61

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StaY$ Fres'­Days Longer

Wareham" ParleyFor Women, New Bedford District 'l'w<l of.

the Diocesan Council of CatholicWomen will hold its first openmeeting of the season at St.Patrick's parish hall, Wareham

• at 8 Wednesday night, Oct. 18.The rights and responsibilities

of youth will be discussed by agroup of panelists under chair­manship of Mrs. Vincent J.Keighley, youth committee headfor the district. Atty. Maurice F.Downey will be moderator, andpanelists will be' members ofHoly, Family High School debat­ing tea]ll.

Women are invited to bringtheir families to the meeting.Hostesses will be members of St.Patrick's Circle, with Mrs. Wil­liam Le Favor and Mrs. JohnMaloney in· charge of arrange­ments.

Fairhaven WhistAlumnae of Sacred Hearts

Academy, Fairhaven., will hold awhist party at 8 Tuesday night,Oct. 17 in the academy building.Miss Priscilla Gautreau and Mrs.Frank Rogers are in charge of.

, arrangements.

Urges Teachers to AidEcumenical Movement

BOSTON (NC) - Teachershave a duty "to strengthen theecumencal spirit and movement."Bishop John J.'Wright of Pitts­burgh told a teachers' meetinghere. -

Addressing the final session ofthe four - day ArchdiocesanTeachers' Institute, B ish 0 pWright gave advice on attitudesthat will help to reunite allChristians.

"Catholics should have tact,"he said, "so that the spirit ofconcord will" hasten the daywhen our prayers' and those ofthe other Christian churches

, Will be united. We shOUld' con­sider' where our attitudes maybe offensive."

~', ' ..

for Perfect'

, Mrs. William T: Donnelly and'Miss Mildred V. Carroll, eo'­chairmen, announce that mem­bers and their friends are in­vited.

lau GOLD"MEDALY ,. .. ., '

\:~SCHOOL LUNCHES

Queen's Doughters. Plan Si Iver Teo,The· Queen's Daughters will

hold their annual ..Silver Teafrom 3 to 5 -o'clock Sundayafternoon in the Bishop StangDay Nursery, Third Street, FallRiver.

NON-CONFORMISTS: While others in receiving 'linekissed, newly-consecrated missionary Bishop Benedict D.'Coscia's ring, his three nie,ees did the honors in more typical'little-girl fashion. NC Photo.

.Oven-FreshDaily 'at youoN'eig'hborhoodStoM

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Cape,' Islands' Wom'enTo Me.et at Capetip

Cape ana Islands District 'ofthe Diocesan Council of Catho­lic Women will meet at 2:30Sunday afterno<?I1' .oct. 28 at St.Peter the Apostle Church, Prov-incetown. - 0

Rev. John W. Pegnam,. St.Francis, Xav!er ChurcJ:1, Hyan­nis, will speak on Catholic YouthWeek. He is CYO director for·the Cape lmd Islands.

New officers for' the districtare Mrs. Harold Hayes, presi­dent; Mrs. Manley _Boyce,. vice­president) Mrs. Nestor Robideau,recording secretary; Mrs. PhilipDempSeY,cClrresponding secre­tary;· Mrs. Aqolphe Richards,treasurer: ' '

At every stop sign Ginny stalled,at each approach 0:': an oncomingcar, also when rear view mirror.showed a car about to pass. Shestalled When' a dog got out into.the road, when a boy on a bikewas a half,.blocR: away;' when a

. hOUSeholder would come out tosee who was .racing' an engine.

New Orleans WOmeRTo Honor Archbishop

NEW ORLEANS' (NC) ­There'll be an exchange of.birthday greetings here Satur­day, Oct. 14.

Archbishop Joseph F. Rummelof New Orleans, who will, t>e 85,will be guest of honor at. theconvention banquet of the NewOrleans Archdiocesan Council of

,Catholic Women, celebrating its25th a~niversary. ,There'll be acandle-lighted birthday cake. '

,Convention speakers will in­clude Mrs. Arthur L. Zepf of.Toledo; Ohio, president, andMargaret Mealey of Washington,executive secretary· of the Na­tional Council of Catholic· Wom­

.en. The sessions are scheduledfrom Oct. 13 to 15. '. '

Only Way

All we can say for those stallsis that Ginny learned ,caution,hUmility and how to get a carin motion from It standing Posi­tion. Finally, like a baby learn-

'ing to walk, ~ike a youngstergetting the feel of a bicycle, shelearned to bring the car to a stopand not kill the' engine.

Next step, turns: Signal-right,stick close to the right lane, ·keepclose; for left turns, signal left,keep in the le£t lane,· sweep

_wfde. "And for heaven's sake,'Ginny, don't ever get into theother fellow's side of the street!"

For turns, we found a' goodtip: "Take 'em to a' big parkinglot after hours!"

With ,traffic lanes marked,pIenty of space, ~ practiceturns, even attempt parking.After meandering slowly andstallingly , through our quietneighborhood ana the parkinglot practice, Ginny finally hasthe feel' of the wheel. . ,

It is something that can comeonly from experience, a blendof timing, distance, judgment,poise. No more than one canlearn to swim or dance by charts,

'to golf or cook or write bymerely reading, it is utterly im­possible to learn to drive exceptby driving.

For us, this' is the sixth time,over the course, having taughtthe five eldest-all of them bet­ter drivers thanOtheit: teachers.

We have heard and read thatit is not wise to iri'Struet yourown children in driving. Never-'theless, we'll take our chanceswith this the sixth, 'sharing on afamily basis the step-by-step"how to" of a ,thoroughly ma-turing experience. '

Monday Morning

Monday morning, though; westarted off bright and early.Well, early' anyway, asking 'atrandom some of the 78 ques­tions:

"You are driving in an alleyat ,seven miles per hour. Areyou breaking the speed limit foralleys, driving too slowly, orobeying. the law?".

"Obeying the law."· ,O.K."What causes most accidents,

the road, the car or the driver?" ."The driver."·Cam:e the written exam. Along

with some 100' others, Ginnytook it;' evidently passed" andafter a wait at this window andthat finally. acquired that pre­cious white card, her "learner's."

Then the long, long learning­to-drive.

"It's so easy to memorize therules," Ginny sighed, "but whenyou get behind this wheel, getthe car going-me, I just stam"

Stall she did, time after time.Panic had a lot to do with it, .ofcourse - an uncertain manipu-'lation of clutch, brake and gas.

VOCATIQNAL DIRECTOR:Sister'Oliva, of the Daugh­ters'of Charity of St. Vincentde Paul, largest group ofreligious in the Church, istheir new Eastern Province D of I DanceVocational.Director. She will. Assl,lmption Circle, Fall Riverhave offices at Carney Hos-' Daughters of Isabella, will hold

a h~rvest dance Saturday night, ,pital, Boston.. , Oct, 21 at EaaIes Hall '

I..·r:","'l"!!" U!'J.....':t'~ .. r D· •.~ _'lA' a- I ;.a,,,, ..,.., '':''''1' ~.::1' &'-"1' _'o.i-.' ~' ..~." ...!' ...-r',,::t •. r-, <ell U, ... '.~, .,',~, '.

Sweet Sixteen Means Learner'sPermit to Dr~ve for Ginny

By Mary Tinley Daly .Nowadays at our house, the oest-read book is not the·

.Bible, not St. Thomas Aquinas, nothing on the best-sellerlists, nor the whodunits. It is Drivers' Handbook. Literallyworn thin at the corners, this piece of literature hitsconsumed countless hour13 ofour incipient driver's time.As to interest, Latin' I andLatin II never had one-halfthe concentrated attention.Anyone with a teen-ager whosebirthday is THE birthday, whena "learner's per­mit" may be is­sued, knowswhat we mean.To borrow aterm from edu­cational jargon,.there is "moti­vation" - notcnly,to get thatpermit, tee n+'age stat u s­symbol, put todrive safely and(responsibly. Matter of fact, mas­tery of that Drivers' Handbookis first step in carrying out, theFifth, Commandment with re­gard to' automobiles, Thou ShaltNot Kill - "A moral·as well as'legal duty to drive safely at alltimes," as Father Edward T.Douglas,. S,J., 'Boston Collegetheology professor, asserts.

We 'are ghid that it is takenso seriously, with Latin I and IIfalling into the area of lessermotivation.

Unlike many' of her contem­poraries, Ginny was unable toapply for the "learner's" 'on her16th birthday. It came on a Sun­day.

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Page 9: 10.12.61

9

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Daughters of Isabella, will holda hat show and social eveningSaturday, Oct. 21. Mrs. MurielRoberts, chairman, announcea~bers may invite fl'iends. Aharvest games party will takeplace at 8 Tuesday night, Oct. 1'7at the unit's Robeson Street club­house. A Christmas bazaar illplanned for Saturda7. Dec. I.

Urges UniversalThanksgiving Day

WASHINGTON (NC) - AUniversal Thanksgiving Day ofhomage to God would be astrong antidote to the evils ofSecularism and communism, ae­cording to a Brazilian womanwho has worked tirelessly forsuch a global observance.

Mrs. Alice !snard Tavora ofRio de Janeiro, secretary of theCrusade for a'Universal Thanks_giving Day, said here: "God de­serves not only the thanks ofindividuals but also an officialindication of homage fromstates."

She stressed that "secularismpaves the way for communism"and observance of a UniversalThanksgiving Day would be "apowerful weapon against theadvance of both these anti­religious philosophies."

"Secularism" she warned,"abolishes the name of Godfrom public life and relegates itto the silence of individual life.Then communism takes over andtries to EU1llSe God from indi­vidual consciences."

Mrs. Tavora said in an inter­view here that nine countriesnow have laws establishing cele­bration of Thanksgiving Day onthe fourth Thursday of Novem­ber. They are: the U.S., Bra~il,

Cuba, Paraguay, Ecuador, Ar.gentina, Costa Rica, Basutolandand the Philippines. Other na­tions enlisted in the crusade un­der the leadership ()f theil'Catholic hierarchies are Ghana,Lybia, .Gootemala, Honduras,Salvador, Nicaragua and Pan-1UDll. "

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Oct. 12, 1961

DAUGHTIRS OF ST. PAUl"'vi.. younSl girtI (14-231" Iobot III

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Bringing·Live Fresh

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lffac~ean'sUNION WH F, FAIRHAVEN

Cake SaleAlumnae of Jesus Mary Acad­

emy, Fall River. will spoll8Or acake sale following all Massesthis Sunday at Notre DameChurch.

Commnunlsm No ProblemWilly, who'wants to become a

teacher in' her homeland,' saidcommunism is not a problem inUtanda, where Bantu tribal tiesare strong. '"

No. student, me pointed out,"1sallowed to leave Uganda fOI'studies in a communist land.ThoSe. who do manage to make

. their \1lf'8'1 out through Ethiopiator that purpose at"e not allowedback ia..

Willy is majoring in businessadministration at the College ofst Elizabeth 10 she can teachclerical skills to other girlS lit·home. She feeb tIlat wilen her'country a.ttains independencethere wiiI be a great need forDative women with seCretarialsldUs.

LARIVIERE1SPharmacy

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ingto st. Jude. Next atternOOllcaine a phone call. "rft lOtlOme things that belong to you."the . caller said. It wu FatherJames. Graham. ~ studentasked where she could pick upher belongings. Father Grehaml"eplied: "In South Holland at'lIhe reetory:-St. Jude's rect.oIT."

Remove Saint's Statue1ft Crowded Church

COPENHAGEN (NC) - A.statue of St. Anthony has to beremoved from the church. dedi­cated to him here in suburbaaCopenhagen to accommodate m­creasing."crowds at MUll.. Suburban st. Anthony's waa

built in 1928 to take C8l"e of. 200Catholics. In recent yean man,.Catholic families have' movedhere from the city 110 that todaythe parish has a populatiOil of1,000. About. half of Denmark',26,000 Catholics live 1ft CopeD­hagen and 'its. suburbs. '

K OF C BALL: Enjoying the festivities at the McMahonCouncil, Knights of Columbus Ball in New Bedford are,left to right, Grand Knight and Mrs. John S. Hemingway,and Chancellor and Mrs. Harry A. Sears.

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'College Student Sees Native ClergyAs Boon for Church in Uganda

CONVENT (NC) - A lady Catholics. are beginning to real­named Willy stressed. here that ize that the missionaries did notnative vocations are a boon to come to own the country." Sthethe Church in her homeland, added:Uganda. "They used. to fear .tbet be-

The point was made by Will,. cause the Church gave us a pen_Kiwanuk·a, 21, a scholarship stu- ell, it would take everything.dent at the College of St. Eliza- Now they see the native priestsbeth here in New Jersey. cofuing along and they like it

Explaining how the appearance that way. It even makes them01 native bishops and priests in feel that our independence isher country has helped the near."Church there, she noted that themajority of Uganda's Democraticpar,ty is Catholic.

See Independence NearThis at one time led many

people in the British protectorateto fear that foreign missionariesmight seek to gain control whenthe nation becomes indepeDdeot,she said.

But, with the ordinatioa eI.native cblr,y, sbe said, "DOD-

Okinawa Council JoinsNational Organization

WASHINGTON (NC)-Cath­olic women living on a militarybase on the island of Okinawaare members of the newestaffiliated organizations in theNational Council of Catholl.eWomen.

The Okinawa Council of Cath­olic Women is the newest mem­ber organization directly affil­iated with the Military Council,with headquarters in Heidelberg,Germany.

The MUitary Council was es­tablished in 1957 as a federationfor Catholic organizations ofAmerican women living on mili­tary bases abroad. The CouncilDOW numbers 93 affiliates active­ly working in Ge!:many, Eng­land, France, naly, Spain,Mor­occo and Cuba. In addition, the.Nis an affiliate in Formosa.

Devotee of St. Jude. Finds LostBelongings- in St.· Jude's Rectory

CHICAGO (He) - Small won- The worried girl began pr87'-

Annum ~upperAnnual bean supper of Infant

of Prague Guild, New Bedford,will be held Saturday, Oct. 21at St. Mary's Home, with Mra.

.loseph KiernaA as chairman.

der carol Schranz, 1'7, studentnurse at Little Company ofMery Hospital in suburban Ever­gr.een Park, is an avid st. Judedevotee.

Recently Ibe left school tospend '. weekend with hermother in Argo, lll. One· of herteachers offered her a ride. Theteacher told the student: ''Putyour suitcases in my car. It'. agreen and bl'OWD 1956 Ford ORthe parking lot. rn be along1JOOIl." The student followed dl­l"eCti0Da.

On arrival at ArilO - llOsait­cases. Her clothes and schoolbooks were gone. The teacheroonsoled the girl b¥ suggeetin,

. that the luggage possibly wasp~t in the wrong auto and wtw-e~er bad it would phone. . .

Prejudic;:ed ·'ChildrenReflect"'"Par.ents, How to Combat Bias

By Audrey Palm RikerThe little boy carefully examined an open carton of eggs.

"Mother," he asked thoughtfully, "are the brown eggsdifferent from the white ones?" "No, Greg," his motheranswered, "the only difference is in the color; both areexactly the same on the .inside." She might have said, look elsewhere fora scapegoat.

Help your child to recognize"The white ones are better what he has in common with-we never buy brown," or others rather than how he iseven more ridiculously, "God different or better. Usually, themade some eg·gs brown to punish more people interact togetherthem," Through . the more at ea~ they becomehun d red s of and the more they learn to likesu<lh incidents one anot~er. This was particu-- at home, in larly apparent in World War IIschool, wit h and in post-war integrated hous-pl08yma tee - ing developments. When people ~

children learn a of d!fferent races and religionstenacious, long- live and work together their dif_lasting pattern ferences lessen and their like-of hate and dis- neases become more apparent.crimination or '. C'< Church's Attitudes

::lIJ.~;.tan~.... ::;.'~::"":Ji:U~~~~:Ediscriminate a g a ins t some him to understand that he cangroups. But occasionally prejl1- take a personal stand againstdice is based in reality. It comes discrimination. Children tend tofrom being jlr,1g.htened or hurt favor the people their parentsand it serves as protection accept. But remember they areagainst real danger; But here we also experts at spotting phoneyare talking about irrational righteousness.cruelty toward innocent groups Even the best intentionedor individuals.' ~ents can't barricade the de-

Prejudice is a destructive, cor- velopment. of every negative at­rod-ing emotion. It stands 8Uff titude. Actually, no one' knowsagainst the onslaught of truth exactly when a child learns toand reason; it deeply~ reject people who are different.both victim and discriminatt.or. Probably a baby in arms canNo one is born hating someone sense his mother's muscle .tense­else. But prejudice is 10 easily ness and postural strain whenend so natUl'ally learned that it she meets an ''outsider.''looks as though it is inherited. . But most children' show little

Almost always, the problem. of awareness of differences untHprejudice in children is a prob- about age six. Then, given!em of prejudice in adults. Par· enough negative examples, theyents set the emotional climate quickly learn to discriminate. Byin their home, children ab9orO ei~bt, with continuing eneour­and reflect it. In a real SCftge, agement they'll gang up andyou can teach your children to stallt name calling. And by 12,try to undenrtand what is differ- they're capable of swallowing aent or to flati,. reject it. '!'bese full set of crippling adult preju-auggcstions may be helpful: dices.

Examine your own sttitudes: Help your child to developPrejUdice attaeks the .educeted healthy attitude, of self worth asas well as the uneducated, the well as an aversion to prejudge.religious and the non-believer. ment 'and rejection of anyoneBut even people who are life- simply because he is different.long victims of deeply-l"OOtedbiases can, by seeking facts· aAdunderstanding, modify or chang.etheir attitudes.

For example, countless studiesdemonstrate that given compar­able health and educational op­portunitiea, Negro' chi I d reaprove simibr ill intelligence towhite children.

Consider the words yow.WIe:'!'here is tremendous power illwords. "Lazy, greedy, dirty" peo­ple exist in every group, includ_ing your own. Don't Speak slight­ingly, even in jest, of any min­ority group. Such jokes are athin veneer covering real h0s­tility.

Remember that people ·whohate others hate themselves too.Any bitter, unjielding prejudiceis a' symptom of personal diffi­culty. Rigid, authoritarian par­ents who insist that their wordill law lilOW dangerous seeds.Children who are forced to sub­mit and given no outlet fOI' theiranger develop a need to hate.They don't due turn their fury' .toward their parents, IJO ther

Brewster SocietiesEled Officers

Mrs. Manuel Packett, Brew­ster, chairman of the nominatingcommittee, assisted by Mrs.Daniel Walker of Dennis andMrs. James White of PleasantLake, brought in the followingofficers for the coming year: Mrs.William Jones of Brewster, pres­ident, Mrs. Harold Ellis of Pleas­ant Lake, vice president, Mrs.William Bohlin of Dennis, sec­retary and Mrs. Arthur Norrisof Brewster, treasurer.

All officers and memberS 01.the ways and means committee,will meet Monday evening at 8o'clock at the home of the pres­Ident, Mrs. William Jones illEaster Brewster, for a boardmeeting.

The Holy Name socrietJ'met atUte Brewster Town Hall with Z5mem bers present. Officers electedwere: Manuel Packett, president.of Brewster, David Hodsdoa.vice presideint, of Dennis, secre­tary Francis Gallant, of Brew­ster, treasurer Frank McCar~

of Dennis.

Page 10: 10.12.61

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MONTREAL (N C) - Msgr.Irenee Lusier; reCtor of the Up.i­versity of' Montreal, has beenelected the first president of thenewly formed Association ofFrench L'anguage U'niversities.

Fifty representatives of 43 uni­versities and institutions of high­er learning, in which' French ~the main language of instruc­tion, attended the organizatiollmeeting here. They came· fromFrance, Belgium, Haiti, Switzer­land, Mrica, the Middle and FarEast, .and Canada.

The next congress of the asso­Ciation will be held in Paris ill1963. The association was formedwith the encouragement of both

, Federal and Provincial govern­ments.

Father Lafa rgeTo Re«:®~ve 1961Campo@1l1 Award

NEW YORK (NC) - Fr..John LaFarge, 8.J., veteranauthor and editor and a pio­neer in the Catholic inter­racial movement, will receivethe 1961 Campion Award of theCatholic Book Club.

Father LaFarge, 81, will re­Ceive the award at a testimonialdinner Thursday, Oct. 26, it wasannounced by Father Harold C.Gardiner, S.J.,· director of thebook club and literary editor ofAmerica magazine.

The Campion Award was in­augurated in 1955 to recognizeeminent work in Catholic lit­erature.

Father LaFarge has been OIl

the editorial staff of Americamagazine for 35 years. He is one'of the founders of the CatholicInterracial Council movement.

He is the author of several,books, the most recent of which,"An American Amen," was pub­lished in 1958. A fellow of theNational. Academy of Arts andSciences, has been honoredby many Catholic and non­Catholic organizations.

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Persona I Message to Popehllation of cel'tain nations, fam­ine-would be averted.

The final part of the "secret"was contained in a letter writ­ten by Sister Lucy that was ,tC)be opened in 1960.

.'No CertaintyFather Lynch said he did not

doubt that this letter was for­warded to the Pope, and hassurely been opened by him."There is no certainty that 'it· 'deals 'with world affairs,"Father Lynch added. "It maybe. a purely' personal communi­cation. The fact that it was tobe opened in 1960 may simplymean that its contents were ad­dressed to this Pope rather' thanPius XII.

"There is no confirmation Ofthe· statements that Sister Lucyknew iii advance the course ofhistory during the last' 40 years,that she knows now whetherthe end of ·the world is at hand,whether the age of commun­ism. is about to end or whenRussia will return to Christian-ity." ,

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votioil of the Five First Satul'­days. .AS a good Carmelite shewishes to promote the devotionof the Scapular and she recallsthat in the vision of Oct. 13,1917, Our Lady appeared as Our'Lady ,of Mount Carmel."

Pastoral LetterF>ather Lyn'ch noted that fr<l'ffi

the beginning Sister Lucy. andher two. companions were iJrl-.sistent that Our Lady: had com­municated .a secret to - them. ,Since the Bishop of the FatlDla

'diocese in 1930 issued a 'pasto1'lalletter ,recording what had ap-'~arently . happened during thesix visions. of 1917, some infolr-.

'mation abOut t~is secret h~.dl>een revealed py Sister Lucy,he said.

This information is understoo'dto relate in part to personal malt­ters in the, three chil.dren~s lives,to a vision of hell, to a promi!ie.from Our Lady that in return forthe' consecration of Russia to theImmaculate Heart of Mary andthe spread of the devotion (ifthe Five Saturdays present dan­gers threatening the world-thespread of communism, the anni-'

Expels ~unCOLOMBO (NC)-Sister Os­

win, Irish-born member of·tbe·'Franciscan Missionaries of Mar,l".

who has served in Ceylon for.35 years, has been expelledfrom the. country because shlecould not pay' the residenCl!tax of $80' imposed 'by the gOY'·ernment on all missionaries.

, MADONNA OF LEARNING: Here is one of the last wo.rks executed by the notedsculptor, Eugene Kormendy, former head of th~ Depa;r~ment of S~ulpt~re at t?e Uni­versity of Notre Dame. The,model has been cast .m alun~mum by hIS wIdow~ ElIzabeth,who is now teaching art "at Dunbarton College m Washmgton. Mr. Kormendy s sculpture,'Light of the World", graces the front of the NCWC he~dquarters building in Washing­ton. NC Photo.

Cardinar,CicognaniReceives New, Post

VATICAN CITY (:NC)-PopeJohn' has appointed ArnletoCardinal Cicognani, Vatican Sec­retary of State, to be Presidentof the Cardinals' Commission forthe Special Administration ofthe Holy See.

Named Pro-President of thesame commission was Gustavo .Cardinal Testa of the Vaticanadministrative stliff.

Cardinals Cicognani and Testahold similar offices in the Com­mission for the AdministrationO.t the Properties of the Holy See.Thus the Pope has unified theadministration of the two com­missions, which are resp'onsiblefor the control of the H~ly See'sincome and property. '

" ....l "

, Suggests FatimaLONDON (NC) - A British

Carmelite priest who knowsSister, Lucy, survivor of the

'three children who saw Our.Lady at Fatima, said her fi·hal"secret" may be a purely person­al communication to Pope JohnXXIII.

There is no certainty that 'it.deals with world affairs, FatherKilian Lynch, O.Carm., .said.

The fact ·that it was ~ beopened in' 1960 -:- 20 years after.being written by Sister Lucy -.could simply mean that i~ con..tents were addressed to the new.Pope John and not to his pre­decessor Pius XII.

Father Lynch, P~ior· of theEnglish Carmelite shrine of

,Aylesford who was for manyyears PriOr General of thE:Carmelites, spoke in an inter,;,view published in the CatholicTimes, British national weekly~

Father Lynch has had sev'erallong conversations with SisterLucy, now a Carmelite nun inCoimbra, Portugal, who withher two' sisters saw the visionof Our Lady at Fatima in 1917.

Daily Rosary .Father Lynch noted tba,t Sis­

ter Lucy has been a nun formany years in a strictly en­closed Convent. When he mether, he said, she had impressedhim with .ber goodness andtrustworthiness. She is now 54,still very much a peasant, gay,down.,.to-earth and very bal­anced, the Carmelite added.

"She has certain preoccupa­tions," said Father Lynch. -"Shelongs for people' to dedicate·themselves to the ImmaculateHeart of Mary, to. say the Ros­ary daily," to Ill'3ctice the' de-

THE ANCHOR­Thurs" Oct. 12, 1961

10

Doctrine CourseIn Ninth Year

PHILADELPHIA (NC) -, Afree correspondence course inCatholic belie£' and practice, con­ducted by seminarians, iii now'in its ninth year.

Since its start in 1953, theHome Study Service of St.Charles Seminary here has an­swered some J.,OOO requests forinformation from inquirers in 17foreign cou'ntiies, six provincesof Canada, 45 states and theDistrict' of Columbia..

.Offered without cost or obli­gation, the course is available toanyone, regardless 'of religiousaffiliation. .

Inquirers receive a textbookon Catholic belief and practice.Based o,n their reading they takefive or six examinations, whichar~ corrected and graded byseminarians.

One seminarian is assigned toeach inquirer and is available toanswer any special questions.Those who complete the coursereceive a diploma. '

Sees Greater HopesFor Christian Unity

CHICAGO (NC) ~The'GreekOrthodox Patriarch of Jerusalemsaid here that there are "greaterhopes" for Christian unity todaythan in centuries. '

Patriarch Benedictos I told apress conference that "the great":est existing obstacle 'in the wayof church unity is the past."

"However, rapproachments arebeing made on all sides towardunity, and there are many hope­ful signs," the Patriarch said.

ReC&lhr ~g@rr Ef~orts

0* Ce~lIfn~~i@[fiH~

Otrn pO'~ro,~<em$EVAN8TON (NC)-Com­

munists the world over fearthat the followers of Christwill wake up in time to dedi­cate themselves to solving' worldproblems, Father James Keller,M.M., director of the Christo­phers, said here.

"Once that happens," the priestsaid, "the march of _communismacross the globe will falter andfaii. But not till then!" ,

Father Keller o'utlined a ninepoint program in a talk titled,"More Than Anti-Communism IsNeeded:"

"1) Work as hard for God asthe Reds do against Him. Thosewho are whole-hearted againstChrist are seldom if ever over-,come by those who are onlyhalf-hearted for Him.

"2) Determine for your,self thespheres of' influence on whichthe enemies of God concentratetheir attention. Then get busyto 'see that they are staffed bycompetent persons with soundmoral values.

"3) 'Take special care not toput a Red label on attempts tocorrect social abuses when theyare inspired by the spirit of t~Gospels. .

Every lFacet"4) Develop the bigness of

vision and all-embracing iriter­est in every facet of human af­fairs for Christ's sake that Hisfoes display in their naver-end­,ing efforts to keep Him out ofthe marketplace.

"5) Push your own divineproduct rabher than complaiIiabout those who merchandise al­luring counterfeits., "6) Get your own good ideasinto wide circulation. Don't talk"merely. ti;l those who agree withyou while the Reds talk toeverybody else.

"7) Keep ever in mind that if''those who believe in God do notprovide His answers for, theproblems confronting the world,they are, by default, making it·.possible for mankind to be'over­whelmed ,by .the Reds.

"8) Pay attention to yourschools, fulfil~ your civic duties,and participate in meetings of.organizations to which you be­long.

"9) Acquire leadership skillsarid ex~rience.Every Red takesthe trouble to do this in orderto, be a more effective agent ofthe leftist cause."

Page 11: 10.12.61

l"c'- '-:\'

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- ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Oct. 12, 1961 11

NEW llEDFORD CHURCH REDECORATED: Rev. AlphonseE. Gauthier, center, pastor of Sacred Heart Church, New Bedford,will offlrr Mass. in the newly remodeled anli decorated edifice Sunday.Left photo, main altar; -right photo, fourth station of the Cross.Masses will be offered at 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11 in the morning and7 o'clock in the evening. The Forty Hours Devotion will open atthe 11 o'clock Mass.

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Prelate Urges Closer ParttrnershipBetween Public, Private Welfare

TOLEDO (NC) - A much about the fullest use of the facD.closer partnership between pub- ities these agencies offer.'lie and private we~are agencies This should be done, he said,has been advocated by the new in the interests of public econo­president of the National Con- my e:lficiency and of the needyference of Catholic Charities. the~sclves. H~ emphasized that

Msgr. Micl).ael J. Doyle, direc- children' in need of care would. tor of Toledo's Catholic Char- especially benefit from this pro­ities as well as president of the gram.national organization, said oneresult of 'such partnership wouldundoubtedly be greater publiceconomy.

Msgr Doyle was elected pres­ident of the NCCC at its annualconference here.

He said cooperation betweenpublic and private sectors of thewelfare field would help bringabout recognition and preserva­tion "of. the principle of local,personal responsibility so dearto the hearts of our Americanpeople."

How achieve this closer coop­eration?

"One way of doing this," hesuggested, "would be if the localwelfarE' unit would purchaseservices and care from existingprivate agencies !!nd institutionswhose programs have been ap­proved and licensed by thestate."

_Msgr. Doyle called for a reap­praisal of the relationships be­tween state and county govern­ments and the hundreds of pri­vate welfare agencies, to bring

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Dies in Red JailROME (NC)-Father Andrew

Tsu, S.J., has died in a commun­ist jail in· Shanghai after twoyears of imprisonment for hisopposition to Red efforts to forceChinese Catholics into schism, ithas been reported here by Fides,mission news agency. .

Holy Name UnionMembers PledgeActive Apostolate

CHICAGO (NC) - Thous-.• ands of Holy Name Society

members pledged at Massesin- the Chicago archdiocese tofulfill a four-point program out­lined by Albert Cardinal Meyerf()r 'more active apostolic work.

More than 200,000 men of the .Archdiocesan Union of HolyName Societies attended Masses_,at which·the pledge was made.

The Archbishop of Chicagocalled on laymen for more par­ticipation in the Church's workat a recent meeting of the Insti-tute of Lay Action. -

Cardinal Meyer asked the lay­men to:

Spread the Catholic Faith; par­ticularly through the Confrater­nity of Christian Doctrine;

Make Pius Xl's encyclical onChristian Education of Youth("Divini illius Magistri") theformat for study clubs andCatholic lecture groups;

Promote harmony in race re­lations;

Devote greater attention toexpansion of religious vocations.

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tion or 'intolerance because !Jfrace.

"We believe that liberty is asacred thing, but that law, whichregulates liberty, is a sacredobligation. .

"We believe in inculcating allthe essential liberties of Amer­

. ican democracy and take openfrank issue with all brands ofspurious 'democracy."

'!We believe in the intensestudy of tene~ and tactics ofthose who would seek to destroythese essential liberties of Amer­ican democracy.

"We believe that. 'academicfreedom' should not be used as apretext to advocate systemswhich destroy all freedom,

"We believe that moralitymust regulate the personal, fam­ily, economic, political, and in­ternational life of men if civil­ization is to endure."

Stand GuiltyFather Reinert warned that if

American colleges and univer­sities d() not convey to their stu­

-dents such values as these, "weeducators will stand guilty ofshortchanging our students."

He criticized the tendencytoward what he called "deper­sonalized" education in whichthe student is treated "as a num­berinstead of as a person."

He blamed this trend on ris­ing enrollments, the applicationof technology to education andthe impersonal atti1udes of someeducators.

"It is the academic excellencenot of robots or of faceless mem­bers of a mass, but of hUman be­ings, of person!!, that the collegeor university and its faculty ex•.ist to foster," he reminded theschool executives.

Mission SC,hoOls KeptRunning in Crisis

LEOPOLDVILLE (NC)-Mis­sion school teachers and pupilsstuck to their classes this pastyear while the Congo shookwith post-independence violence,statistics now indicate.

A I m 0 s t 1,400,090 studentsattended Cat hoi i e .missionschools during fhe 1960-61 aca­demic year, the Congo's stormyfirst year of independence fromBelgium. This was announcedby the Office of Catholic Edu­cation here.

Enrollment at Catholic mis­sion schools rose by mGre than300,000 iii. the previous threeyears.

Jesuit .University PresidentSuggests Education ·Credo

WASHINGTON (NC) - Father Paul C. Reinert, S.J.,president of St. Louis University, has proposed a "credo forAmerican higher education" embodying a "basic American'consensus." Father Reinert suggested his "credo" ·in anaddress to more than 900college and university presi­dents and other administra­tors attending the annualmeeting of the American Coun­cil on Education.

The Jesuit educator declaredthat "now if ever we must 'assertJ>ur fundamental agreement onthose values which give innercontent to the traditional beliefsand symbols of western culture."

He proposed this "credo:""We believe in G«i."We believe in the personal

dignity of man."We believe that man has nat­

ural rights which come fromGod and not from the State.

"We are therefore opposed toall forms of dictatorship whichare based on the philosophy thatthe 'total man' (totalitarianism) .belongs to the State.

Sanctity of Home"We believe in the sanctity of

the home--the basic unit of civ­ilization.

"We believe in the naturalright of private property, butlikewise that private propertyhas its social obligations.

"We believe that labor has notonly rights but obligations.

"We believe that capital hasnot only rights but obligations,

"We are vigorously opposed toall forms of 'racism'-persecu-

Page 12: 10.12.61

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The Primacy 01 the S~irltual! How well we know It and 1Il0wrarely we put It into l'racttce. Our Lord told us: "Seek first theKingdom of God and His Justice and all 'these things, will beadded unto you." Spiritu~iize souis and materiallt~eswill foInow.

REASONS FOR THE CHANGE. As the shepherd 90 the sheep;as the' pastor 90 the people. In 1953 the new pastor, fifty yeanold and dying of a heart condition. began the regeneration of hisparish by:

1. IncreasiDg deV'Otion to the Bleseed Eueharld all the bond01 unity among the faithful.' -

Z. -Organizing a daily ro,.rF procession everF morning at 5 a.m.I. Preaching 179 elosed retreats by himself, each Iastin« four

days, and organizing them on the basi. 01 "state 01 Ute": marriedwomen. married men, widows. ek.

4. inspiring 100 people to fast twIee • week fIor the saooe&II ofthe retreats.

Perhaps you would like to 'telp the Holy Father build a ebapel.a retreat house or a ehui'c'" for these zealous priests. To have ashare in tIne work of the mlsldonaries is in itself a blessiDg. Iaany case, give your sacriflees to the HolF Father - he knows theneeds of the Missions bettM than you do. Hismstrument for«athering alms: The Society for tbe Propagation of the Faith.. , _

Send as Four 014 pld .... JeweirF - the valuables TCMI DOlonger lISe batwbleb are too Wood &0 throw awaF. We will reseUthe earrings, gold eyegla8lJ frames, flatware. etc., and 1188 themoney to relieve the suffering In mission countries. Oar-address:'l'llfi Society .for the Propaptioil of the Faith, 166 Filth AVella.",

New York 1, New York.

Cut out' this column, pin 70!oU' 1IaCl'i.flce to It and maD It to theM08t Rev, Fulton J. SheeD, National Director 01 the Societ, forthe Propagation 01 the Faith, 366 FIfth Avenue, New York 1, N, Y..or 70ur Dioceaan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE,368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mall.

What happened here could happen anywhere in the' world. Itonly, proves what Our Dear Lord said: "Without Me you can donothing:" Ob yes, we can build field houses, gymnasiums, parishhalls~ but we eatlDot make t:-te Divine Life grow In soule withoutHim. R just happens that we have mor.e of this reliance on the,sPiritual in the Missions than inprosperoul countries.

" GOD LOVE .YOU to M.E:S. for $1l'."Had the judge aaJd 'guilty'to a false, accusation, the fIDe, would have been $11. Since justice

• prevailed I am sending 'the amount to the Missions." .. :to M~N.K.H. for $25 ~omoiTow I am entering ,~ convent. This dona-'tiOft is in thanksgiving for my, vocation and iD. petition that I maTbe a worthy servant of, God." '

Take the case of ,what happened within seven years in onemissionary parish in South America with a population of 8,000,'only 1500 )f whom lived in the village. 1953­General drunkenness and disorder, violentdeaths resulting from personal hates andfeuds. 1960-seventy-five per cent of thepopulation living in the state of grace-th~

,rest nearly always; a brewery threatening tosue the :)astor because of the decline inliquor sales. Daily attendance at Mass (Ex­cluding 3unday): 1953-80; 1960-2,000. Daily

- Communions: i953-5 to 9; 1960-2,000. Vo­cations: 1953-none; 196P-30. Church opento public: 1953-8 a.m.; 1960-2:30 a.m. Dis­tribution of Communion beginning at 4 a.m.Retreats -luring year: 1953-none'; 1960-179retreats to, 22,045 people. Collections forseminary: 1953-$40; 1960---.:$5,000.NEW PRESIDENT: Fr.

George F. McKinney, chap­lain at Sin,go' Sinn- T'... --~...,.

Ossining, N.Y., has beennamed president or l,u" " ••,­

erican' Correctional Chap­lains Association,an inter-'faith organization. NC Photo.

word 'Liberty' in the F'ourteen­th Amendment is p,ervertedwhen it is held to prevent thenatural outcome of a dominantopinion, unlesS' it can be saidthat a rational and f,air mannecessarily would ad11n.it thatthe statute proposed would in­fringe fundamental principlesas they have been, understoodby the traditions of ou:r peopleand our' law. It does, not needresearch to show that rio suchsweeping condemnation can bepresSed 'upon the StatU11 beforeus.'! .., Holines, the instance, was un­doubtedly right, but r:ight forthe wrong reason; it' was notmerely that the tr'adi1;ions of'oui', people and the "law werebeing viola-ted in refusing jus­tice to the New York bakers,but their God-given' rfghts ashuman beings., Here, ;Ils in somany ,other cases, Holmesfought on the' side' of th(~ angelswhile scoffing _at ,their very, .existence. , '

Notes LimltatiOtuIIndividual liberty, found in

him its most eloquent d,~fender,

..yet at the same time its mostdevastating critic. 'Havillg- dis­avowed principles, he ';"ras still 'wiling, to toll gener9Uflly andunceasingly to defend -th,e rightaof his fellow man.

He had looked onCe at theSphinx, "and then had turnedaway. To Pilate's, question,Quid est Veritas? he replied, ina letter to his friend, Silr Fred-'eriek Pollock, ','I defiln.e thetruth as the system of my limi­tations and leave absOlute 'trutbfor those who are better equip-'ped. With absolute truth I leaveabsolute ideals of, (~nduct

equally to one side."Again, :'It would be well if

the intelligent classes' coiJlld £01'­gei 'the word sin and thiln.k lessof being good.' We 'learn howto' behave as lawyers, sl)ldiers,pnerchants, Or, what 'n4Jt, bT'being' them. Life, ,not the :~son,

teaches conduct. But I s.aem tobe drooling moralities ..." / "

This was one of his' last quips,and one of his bitterest. For heknew-full well. that such a doc-'trine, taken as face 'value, could'only drool immoralilti.~s allover this· sorry 'world. ,P,~rhaps,at the end, he no longer cared..

Moral NakednessBut we care. America,n law

'today lives largely und,~r the:shadow cast by the gaunt, fig­ure of this "Yankee fromOlympus." Admitting'hisgreat-:ness, the salt' of his wisdom,and the' pith of -niuch of hisexp,erimental philosophy, thepungency of much of his socialcriticism' and ,his cornol: ':cant,still, we' inust ask, whether, wecan honestly accept him as an ,inspired' interpreter of ou,r law,as his devotees have claimedhim. In him liberalism camefull roun'd, only to peel' overthe edge of, the ~byss of nirvana.Holmes ,was '8 pagan. ,That hewas a great pagan "dOE!S notcover the fact of his moralnakedness.

12 Tt',E,ANCI-:O~-:-D!()c,es~,ofJaU, Ri'(~r::"!~~r~"Oc:t, l,2/l~6,l

Says H~~'Mes'Paganism Fails.'To C'owe~ Moral Nakedness'

By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.O.Uishop of Reno

"The history of the U:uited States has been written' notmerely in the halls oJf Congress, in the executive offices, andon the battlefields, but to Ii great extent in the chambersof the Supreme Court.'"The soundness of this dictum of thelate Charles Warren, dean of principles. It was a, pity heour constitutional historians, could not have read St: Thomasis hardly to be questioned. Aquinas with a fresh eye be-'In the more ,recent history fore his ideas had hardened intoof the court the influence of prejudices. 'Justice Oliver Wendell Hol~es ~ife in ,his view was alwaysloom s vel' y a struggle. Man's destiny is ac-I a I' g e indeed, tion, and the' core of life isfor our' weal conflict, not repose. As a judgeand woe. The he suspected all legislation astwo decades being fo; the benefit of one,w h i c h h a v e claSs at the expense of others.passed since his He recognized, however, - thatdeath have been unless, the conflict were intoo crowded some measure composed, sheerwith incident, chaos would' result; disputestoo ,filled with 'must be settled' if men are to.the clash' of live. in society. In times ofarms and opin- peace, at least, it is the businessions, to, allow of the judge to attempt to set-'time for calm appraisal. tie them. '

Yet before we ,permit our- Nation's Development,selves'to advance much farther But in his ana!ysill, the lawalong the road pointed out by is only what the individualIUs philosophy of law and life, judge says it is. His whole ju­such an appraisal should be dicial career was one long pro­made. For Holmes, undoubtedly test' against John, Marshall's'one of the cleverest of modern insistence that it was a' Consti­American, jurists and a social tution that he was expounding.philosopher on the bench, intro- For HolmeS the Constitutionduced, into the nation's thinking was not a formula but an ex­concepts which are too impor- periment; not a closed gardentant to pass, without severe but an open ~oad. There is un-scrutiny. doubted fascination 'in...-- this lib-

Democratic Faith eral sUbjectivi!im,Dut ',it if)

As Father James Gillis once _ plainly destructive of the valid­wrote: "Chesterton reminds us ity of~all law and morality:that the most 'important thing Early in life Holmes reachedabQut a man is his philosophy, the conclusion, that "certaintyand Justice Felix Frankfurter generally is illusion." There­nods assent and points to the after~ he' would not entertain,fact that Holmes was essential- any absolute or eternal stand­ly a philosopher who turned to ards to guide him in his judg:'the lilw." . 'ments. Whereas American JUT-

Holmes began: his adult life ists like Story, Kent, and Mar­IlS a soldier in the Union armies' 'shall in their day had not onlyand was so moved by the hot believed 'in' a God-given moralidealism of the New England law, but had recogniz4!d that.Abolitionists to risk his very the,' function of the just judielife for the cause.- He 'served' was to push on to the discoverywith the 20th Massachusetts of new applications, of the un!­Volunteers, the "Harvard Regi- versa1 and' un~hanging lawment," and after being thrice amid, the shifting, ~nditions ofwounded ,was mustered out of. mankind, Holmes could trustIJervice with a captain's brevet. only his own instincts and thatSo much was he willing to give amorphous thing called thefor the democratic faith of his "Time' Sprit."youthful inspiration. Fulidamental Despair, ExperleDce ID Law Even the ,Constitution, for

Yet seen afterwards he was to hun was an experiment~ It didspeak of the follies and Mili- not enact, as he remarked in aties of war and the uselessness singularly happy phrase, Her-ot death in obedience to the bert Spencer's Social Statics.command of a stupid officer.He referred' with angry bitter- The law, which for him is sim-

ply the court's 'decision, mustlless to the crime of throwing • therefore be distilled, as itlife away for the sake of "abit of bunting." In tIie light of were,' from our experience.

Men can have no other guide,this reaction, it would be inter- and ,shOUld give' over the futileeating to know what' he wouldhave thought of our present attempt to find one.world contest with' totalitarian- The Pragmatism of William~. James is written large as tbe

Nevertheless, his Civil War coloring of his philosopby. Butexperience fixed much of his what Holmes failed to reckonsocial, outlook. It predisposed with is the fact that Pragma­l1im to seek knowledge of 90- tism ,was the sterile end-prod­ciety by observing men ,in 'ac- uct of a ma~alis~; ~hat pro,..tion. He was to write in Thevided its own inevitable refu­Common Law that "The life of tation. He began with doubtthe law has not, been logic;, it and could, only end up in ahas ,been experience." fundamehtal" d.espaii-. " , '"

The war over, he plunged Who is' the proper interpreterinto' his legal studies with fierce of ~xperience? Is human expe­ardor, and together, with :his' ',fience me~ely what the Judgefriend William James immerSed ,sitting on' the case considers itbimself in the new currents of to 'be, depending on sucb thingsscientific thought. , as the w.eather and the ..state of .

Judicial Aim his liver? Shall he be censorAs he abandoned., the old and nullify - whateyer appears

legal formulas, so he threw off to him unnecessary and unwise?the last vestiges of the' liberal Holmes was hon~st enough ~oChristianity of his youth. He face s&ch questions! ?ut hISbecame a skeptic,' though it answer lacked convI_chon.may be q4eStioned whether ~s On the whole, he ,tpought not.,skepticism was based on any- Knowing from .bis past experi­thing more solid ,than a kind imce~ what 'it"meantto dependof disgust for outmoded Calvin- upon his fellow soldiers in theism, which he assumed to be army, he feit that men simply:'the essence of Christianity. For had to trust one another. Thehis skepticism did 'not properly' 'judge would have to' trust the

'grow out of disilllisionment with democratic majorbty imd re­the world. Ipect individual 'rights, 'not as

On the' contrary, it was, abased uponl1a~ure and naturalplant whoSe, roots were in hiB law,,-'but because ,they helpedthirst for "enlightenment as to '; the greatest number. This wasthe m~aning of life and ~xpe- the ge.,.'"lesis of' l;Us doctrine' ofrience. To his study of the law jUdicialre8tr~int, as, expressedhe sought to bring the rigid in his famous· dissenting opiniontechniques of the scientist. His, in Lochner v. New York:real tragedy, unfortunately for "This case iii decided upon anhimself and for the law he' was economic theory, which' a largelater to interpret, resided in his part of the country does not

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Page 13: 10.12.61

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mt Am:?fOft-Diocese of· Fa" Riv&r-Thurs., Oct. 12, 1961 13

Suggests St. Thomas As Lawyers' ModelNEW ORLEANS (NC) - St. Preaching at the ninth annual

Thomas More was cited as the Red Mass in St Louis cathedral"model for lawyers" by Msgr: ' . . .Charles J. Plauche Chancellor here, the MonSignor said theofthe New Orleans' archdiocese, saint also was a J:Ilodel husbandwho called upon all "engaged in and father, was loved by his as­the high calling of making, in- sociates and the people heterpreting and applying the law" served, "loved even by the kingto emulate the saint's qualities. who slew him."

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Outlawed in PhiUppines

On their first Sunday in Mqs­cow the Filipino journalistsas·ked to be brought to a Catholicchurch. They were taken to a·churCh where a priest, whom theguide said was Polish, celebratedMass for a congregation of about50.

"Most of them, except one,were old women in black," re­ported Juan V. Saez of the Man­ila Times. "There was a sprink­ling of old men. Our guide saidthey were of Polish origin."

The Communist party is out­lawed in the Philippines, thoughit exists there and has infiltratedseveral fields of Philippine life.Up to now, in its military effortthrough the Huk guerillas andin all its other activities, it hasbeen hampered by poor com­munications with Moscow.

Le«;sves HospitalROME :NC)-Gregorro Plf

tro XV Cardinal Agagianian,Prefect of the Sacred Congrega­tion for the Propagation of theFaith, has left the Rome hospi­tal where he has been undertreatment for several weeks fora kidney ailment. Vatican Radiohas reported that Cardinal Ag­agianian is expected to resumehis re~ duties ill tM Dearfuture.

PRESIDENT: Fr. BruceVawter, C.M., professor ofSacred Scripture at St.Thomas Seminary, Denver,has been named president ofthe Catholic Biblical Associa­tion of America. NC PhotO.

M@~~~w W @ rrn t s~o~~@m@~DC no®sWoli'~ ~!hJo~O~[}»O[fi)®S

MANILA (NC)-Five Fil­ipino journalists, back fromit 23-day visit to Soviet Rus­sia brought word that Mos­cow is keenly anxious to havediplomatic r-elations with thePhilippines.

The five, representing fourManila dailies and the PhiUp­pine News Service, were invitedby the State.,controlled Uoion of .Soviet Journalists. All expense·swere paid by the Russian author­ities. ,

Throughout their stay then~wsmen were "accompanied byRussian 'guides' who loved tocall themselves our shepherds,"according to Francisco De Leonof the Manila Chronicle.

Rebuffed Four TimesOne of the guides. "on the

second day of our stay in'Mos­cow .. =sidled close to me at thelunch table and asked, 'Whydoes not your government wantto have diplomatic relationswith us?'" DeLeon reported.

Having broached, the sUbject,the guide "grabbed the nearesttelephone." Then he said that hewould .arrange .a meeting be­tween the Filipino newsmen anda foreign ministry official.

Before leaving Moscow, thefive were brought to meet Dep­uty Foreign Minister NicolayPhirubin, who argued stronglyfor diplomatic ties. He com­plained that Soviet Russia hadbeen making overtures to thePhilippine government since1953 and had been rebuffed fourtimes.

ST. ANNE,FALL RIVER

The Social Group will hold arummage sale at 360 East MainStreet Tuesday and Wednesday,Oct. 24 and 25. Donations maybe brought to the store from 6:30to 7:30 Monday night, Oct. 23.Mrs. Lorraine Richards 'and Mrs.Alice Gendreau are in charge ofarrangements.ST. ANN,RAYNHAM

Parishioners are holding aChildren's Party this afternoonfrom 1:30 to 4:30 in connectionwith their first country fair imdbazaar. Pony rides, refresh­ments, games, toys and "SmokyBear" will be featured. Mrs.Margaret Bettencourt, generalchairman, announces t hatbooths include dolls, religiousarticles, white elephant, needle­work,Christmas novelties, green

. thumb and foods.OUR LADY OF IFATIMA,SWANSEA

The Holy Name Society andWomen's Guild will co-sponsor adance from 8 to 12 Saturdaynight, Oct. 14 at K of C Hall,Swansea. The Buddy Reis or­chestra will play and parkingand checking will be free. Am­brose Powers and Mrs. EvelynFlynn are co-chairmen.ST. RQClHl,IFAlLL R][VlER

The Council of Catholic Womenwill hold a Fall whist at 8 Wed­nesday night, Oct. 18 in the par­ish hall, it is announced by Mrs.Romeo Charest, president. Mem­bers are asked to donate cannedgoods or gift items for prizes onor before that date.ST. PATRICK,FALL RIVER

Mrs. Alexander Buba heads acommittee planning a ·rummage

. sale in the school hall from 9 to2 this Saturday.ST..MARY'S,MANSFIELD

"Decorating with a Flair" willbe the topic of a talk to be givento members of the CatholicWomen's ·Club at their meetingat 8 Thursday night, Oct. 19 inthe parish hall. Madeline De Cle­mente will be hostess.SACRED HEART,FALL RIVER

Edward F. Daley will be firstpresident of the newly formedMen's Club, Added by Dennis C.Hurley, vice president; QuinlanF. Leary, treasurer; Fred R.Dolan, secretary. The unit willfunction as an auxiliary to theparish CCD and will meet week­ly until a census of the parishhas' been cpmpleted, then holdmonthly meetings. .SS. PETlER AND PAUL,FALL RllVER

The Women's Club will hold awhist at 8 Monday night, Oct. 16in the church hall, under thechairrr.anship of Mrs. StanleyJanick and Miss Mary Tyrell.The unit also plans a rummagesale in the hall from 6 to 9Thursday, Oct. 19 and from 9 to1~ Friday morning, Oct. 20; Mrs.James Wholey and Mrs. JohnPacheco ·are· in charge o{ ar­rangements.ST. PATRICK,WAREHAM

New officers of St. P1ltrick'sCircle are Mrs. Roy Franklin,president; Mrs. Wiliam LeFavor,vice president; Mrs. AlbertMestieri, secretary; Mrs. WilliamFlaherty, treasurer. St. Rita'sAltar Guild of Marion will re­ceive corporate Communion at8 o'clock Mass this Sundaymorning, followed by breakfastin the Harbor Restaurant withRev. John A. Chippendale asspeaker. Mrs. Harold Terpennyis chairman, aided. by Mrs.Fletcher Long.

Parish organizations are re­quested to submit announce­ments for the church bulletin toRev. John Smith ,by Wednesdayof each week.ST. MATHIEU.FALL RIVER

On three Saturdays, the 4th,11th and 18th. of November,parishioners will sponsor apenny sale in the parish hall.Starting time will be 7:30 each·Saturday evening, and, a chil­dren's sale is scheduled for Wed­nesday afternoon, Nov. 15. Gen­eral chairman is Bertrand Des­marais, aided by Gerard Des-. \

marais. '

Halloween Party

The Parish ParadeST. JOSEPH,FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild will spon­sor a harvest supper at 8 thisSaturday night in the parish hall.Mrs. Sally Wilcox is ticket chair­man. A Hallowe'en party forparish children is planned Sat­urday. Oct. 28, also in the hall.IMMACULATE CONCEPTION,FAILL R.IVER

Women of the parish are in­vited to join the Women's Guildin receiving corporate Commun-­ion at 8 o'clock Mass· this Sun­day morning. A breakfast willfollow at 9 at White's restaurant.School busses will be availablefor transportation and ticketswill be available until Saturdayfrom Mrs. Thomas Fleming. Rev.J. Bryan Connors, S.J., will bethe breakfast speakeI!'.

The November meeting willfeature a gift wrapping demon­stration and a supper and mus­ical program are planned forDecember.ST. GEORGE,WESTPORT

A country auction will be heldat 8 tomorrow night in the schoolauditorium. Refreshments willfeature malacadas.HOLY NAMlE,IFAlLL R.l!VIER

The Women's Guild will servea ham and bean supper nextWednesday night from 5:30 to7:30 o'clock. Mrs. William Kingand Mrs. Richard Wordell areco-chairmen.

Other events on the Wintercalendar include a memorialMass and bazaar in November,an open meeting in December, awhist in January and a rummagesale in March.OUR LADY OF ANGELS,FALL RIVER '

The CounCil of Catholic Womenhas set a silver tea for 2 thisSunday afternoon in the parishhall. Rev. Anthony M. ~mes,

administrator, will ·speak.ST. JAMES,NEW BEDFORD

Miss Eileen Lardner, NewBedford Standard":Times report­er, will be featured speaker atthe meeting of Msgr. Noon Cir­cle scheduled for 7:45 Wednes­day night, Oct. 18' in the lowerhall of the church. Miss Lardneris the winner of several jour­nalism awards. Mrs. Manuel O.Correia and Mrs. Joseph J. Con­nor are chairmen ··for the eve­ning.ST. MARY'S,NORTON

Catholic Women's Club mem­bers will attend evening Mass at7 this Monday night followed byCommunion supper at the highschool cafeteria. The event willreplace tile unit's annual Com':munion . breakfast. Mrs. HelenMaxwell Dardis will speak on"The Unforgettable You." Mrs.Ernest Precourt, chairman, an­nounces that reservations mustbe made by today.ST. JOHN BAPTIST,NEW BEDFORD

A Halloween party for· schoolchildren and their friends isplanned from 7 to 9 Mondaynight, Oct. 30 in the churchhall by the Ladies Guild. Mrs.Hilda Pacheco is chairman. Mrs.Gilbert Ferro is in charge ofarrangements for the unit's an­nual bazaar, set lor Friday andSaturday, Nov. 17 and 18, also"in the hall.ST. MARY'S OATHEDRAL,FALL RIVER

November activities of theWomen's Guild will include aChristmas sale from 1 to 9 Fri­day, Nov. 3, at the parish schooland a memorial Mass for de­ceased members at 8 Saturdaymorning, Nov. 4. Mrs. CharlesRichard is hostess for theNovember meeting of the unit.HOLY CROSS,FALL RIVER

The PTA will sponsor a turkeysocial at7 Saturday night, Nov.18 in the parish hall. Mrs. JoanPodesky is chairman. An openhouse is also slated for Novem­ber, while a social evening isplanned for this Saturday, Oct.14.ST. JOHN BAPTIST,CENTRAL VILLAGE

The Ladies' Guild will hold aHalloween costume party tonightand its monthly whist Saturdaynight, Oct. 14,

Page 14: 10.12.61

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Bish.s :in Wr.oc'lawBERLIN \(N.C,~-'I'chirLWbisho.ps

from throughout Roland con­verged on· the JPolish :city (of;Wlr.oclaw nor:a '~Manian W:eek""featuriqg -an . .e~bi:tion ,of mEW­J1'esentati.ves ,of ithe Blessed- Viir­/gin -.from Rolish Lchur.ohe~it.lis,repor.±ed ihere. .,

HOLlY GROSSfiAtrHERS· .NOi'fh. [Easton; {MaSsaChusettS"

A '· CL"'I' " rg~nt_lne7' , 'D,I elLeadeJ's 5 t r,e.s sSp:i~itua·1 Vat'ues

VINA DEL MJAR (lNC~ .­The Presidents 'of Argentina,and 'Ch'ile ina jomtdeelara­,tion at .e.re upheld man'sIspiI'itual :nature land :said 1tbat:repl1esentative (democrat:y .is \the

. (only !basis nor .the just solutiondf ,the ~social ;an-d .economic lPTob­Jlems 'of ithe .Americas.

. President Arturo .Erondizi !Of.Argentina .and .President ;JorgeAlessandrJ .w Chile .issued ,their.statementafter ,thr.ee ..day.sof.talks ,at this ;seacoastresort.

W;arni~g ,of the i~gJ:a:ve ,threats;which ,distur.b \w,orld JPeac~;" ,the:two .heads of ,state :v.oiced ,their'~u1l support ,of .the ,pr.o:vlsion mfthe United .Nations ,Charter, .es­JPecialJ,y .those which .make ,r:ef­.erence to ,the .self-.deterntination

'o'f nations, ,to .the J1'el\pect .for.the SoY&,eigntr .of ,states, .and to.the .condemnation <of all ,types,of .racial .di.sc.r.imina:tion."

Tchey m.ade -.no mention ,byname of Cuba or any .other ,na­tion. But they said:

'Free Society'"'Because tIlhe 'a'tftempt ils being

\ffiade to iiinpose iideo1ogicalftendencies \by ':V:io'lenoe. \tbus Ide­nying the spir:itual \Values ijn­herent in human ,beings, !thetwo Presidents tpl10claim 'oncellllone !their 'support .of lthe tprin­,ciples (0'£ 'Western 'oivilization,\whiCh ;represents a iwuly .{free:society land 'Where ,ideas are \be­ing lex'pressed Iby \means of arepresentative democracy, 'con­'litan'tly rrenewed Iby free :and1periodic elections.

'''ll'che \two Bresidenfts -declarelthtit :in 'Sou'thAmerica 'on17:through lrepresenta'tive .democ­racy can there bea :just solu­tion .:for 'the 1poii1iical, ·economic,'social' and cultura'l 'problems loflthe 'hemisPher~"

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Youth f:o,undati'onH'on'o:lS Admiral

W.A:SIllNG:I:0N JINcr·-N;iceAdmira:l Harold T. Jileutemnann,pSN, received the 1961 JD.unphy­Columbian Awardlat,a'ceremo~

ihe1d.at the ,A-r.ID.Y ,and 'N:av,y:Club. ,here. Presentation ;was made 'QY

Rear AdmiI:al \(,Mllgr.) ,George,A.Rosso, Chief. of NavlY ,Chaplains.

. The award is giv.en 'QY WheDunphy Youth Fpundation" :or­rganized.m ;White .plains, oN"~. in.:l9~8 under 'the sponsor,ship of ,the.:Father Wrl:1liam, A. Dunph'y,Counoll ,of 'the 'Knights <Of(Columbus. ' '

ilt .honors·a !pers,oIj. Ifar <quali­ties of ,leadership;aB 'tCathcili.cof the .year....Westchester 'Coun­.ty." Both. Admiral:Deutermann.tmd ..A:dmkal .Rosso are lI1atives,of M'-estchester ,County. ... 2\:dm.i:I:al tDeutemnann lis lcliief

(Df :staff of :S::\\:cLtA:NIC, \the !N~:r0mav.a:l ;forces lin mhe U.:S.

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TH-E CATHOLIC iSCHOOL ,sr!['.(!)RY,: 'iDheile ~studen:ts ,are partieipan'ts ~n ''''The 'CatholicSeh(l)ol Story"prograrn which ,is teleYUled teach ;month ,m YOUI\gstow~, Ohio. Mem'ber.s o'fUrsuline ffigihScihool':s advanced .ar.f;class 'with ,S,ister .A!lice ;Marie, .aemonstr.ate .theiractivities. They are, left to right, ,iJames Cu:nnirl,gham,~Renee DilBil}no., senioI:s:; JMamlfillLeavitt and Kathleen Whaler, sophomores..NC Photo. -': '

'iNewY\o.r.k,PIGns· Change 'in 'Traf.ning Sem~ijul!"~a:nsNEW YO>R:K :(NC) - :PJans ,donaterl the 'land 'to the archijio- Jinm:y:, :stuilenrts (from (oultly'..ing

have been announced .for tbuild- ,cese after '-:iie~lining to .still fto areas of lthe ,al'chdiocese \Willing a 'new Cure ]])'Ar3 'SeminarYiWestchester County asasite for 'not ha\'e .to commute Ito .ClassesCollege in Hartsdale, N.Y., wtJ.ichalconi.munitycol1ege.',]~helcounty as now is the case 'lit :Catoodralwill .provide anew system of valu~dthe land' at more than <College,:a ;day :institution.seminary ,tr.aining for the Arch- . '$700,000.diocese of New York. lCardimil Spellman 'selected

Francis Cardinal Spellri:lan, .,Msgr. :Edwin'B: :BrodE!I1ick, nowAr.clibishop ,of 'New ¥or.k, .said it JUs ,secret.aJ3':, .to be ,r.ec:tor o.f ,~ewill be anew :four-'£our-four :De"!. Isemmm:y:. iW.hen the '1Ostl­'system - 10ur years of high tution is completed -it will !haveschool at' Cathedral College, ,the' .!acilities :for .300 ,students.minor seminary,; four years at .Jl'he pnesent ;seminar;y tr.aining'Cure V'Ars College, intermediate :system:in ·,the llrr.chdiocese (CaUs,seminary; .:fouryears of. theolog- :for ;s.a:' ,"years .r:i£ ltr.aining :at:leal :study ;at :St. Joseph's M8,iOl' 'Cathedral .college, !fow~ years <ofSeminary, Yonkers, N. y:. Imgh ;school ':and, two 'Years ,of'

Site ,of the new ,seminary is a ' . college, and the final six years132-acre tract, the -former estate ',mSt, .iJ9sepl1',s :Seminary. --of Henr;y .J. 'Gaisman, retired Since ithe 'new 'Cur~ "D'ATssafety razor manufacturer. He rCollege wi1l 1be 'a 'botn"ding 'sem-

tiP0 rillilU-fliC(~I~M {i;lI$$' .Knights :ofColumbus and

their :families irom:this','Diocese: I

'are asked:10 attend a pontifical ' 'high MassinJBoston, today,. spon:.. 1'sored 'by t·he 'state council of the' •,or-ganization at 10 o'clock inHo'ly' Cross, Catl),edr"a'l.

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·Ray.n'ham, Mass.

Korean :. Bishops 'Tese,nl P;lro,!!ill'G'm.To Hetp '..solve ·PopulGltion 'PJlOjbJem

SEOUL :(NC):;'" '.The Kor.ean ihave (children 'by!her w.hile'their,BiShops have pl'eseriteda !five- iegi'timate -wi:fe lis '1ltill :'BliYe.·'point progr,am to :help-:solve \this' "iI. ;A,spiiitiof undivJdual,self­country.'s poptilation :problem "(denial ~by wVhich lriumriage llar:t­'without resorting ;to 'artificial mers, "",'lith ithe (coUDBel of:a 'spiI'':'

, birth ,controLmethods. ..ituaIdirectOr ~and ;a' competent. The program .was issued in a: doCtor :of medicine; peniodical1ypastoral Jetter ~ritfen'l?yBish6p ,abstain lfrom ·!the \P1eEls~es: ofPaulRo, Apostolic' Vicar of, :maritalillif~.'Tliii;Jmethod,:'I'jghtlySeoul, in the name .of the Koneaq ,applied, Ican lbe made 'as 'e£fecfrv.eHierarcb,y. .It was r'elea'sed in ,as the .use \'0£ prohibited .mearis.answer to ,the ;announcement of "4. :Emigration "10 more :pros­the revolutionary junta that took perous :and :lei;scorigested coun-power here last .M~y "that it· ;will .tries.' .launCh a 'birth 'control campaign. "5. Requestlfor.,;acceptance 'and

·'f.he pastora'1 warned :all Kore- -:w'Jseuse>of;assistance:~l)motheran Catholics of the evils of arti- ccountrJes. lFor thelgood.s '.of ·theficial 'birth control "and stated world wer,e ,created ~rall Ithethat Hs use iis ifollo;wed '.by moral !people ;of 'th,e 'world, ISO that (our·decay. Adm'itting that Korea lhas iprosperousnations ;have a ,reala population problem, the Bish- ,obligation to -relie;ve the needs 'of

.-,op"stressed it cannot ·.be solved ';1essifortuna.te i1latiQIls: 11he latter.by. :immoral ;means. In~tead,' they should not feel any shan,le li:n :I1e­said, it can be overcome only; by . questing .or ac~ep,tin~ assistance."

: irn;pro:ving :social :and, ',economicconditions. ., ..

'<Five -Suggestions ' \"The following means may be l

more ,eit:fective':since ±hey -axe Jnot . \'contrary 10 n~tural :1i.w.::, ,

"1. Delay of marriage until.spouses are more malure and'better able to :supporta family·.For J.t -is ,generally admitted tha~'

our.:young people arecontra9ting ...,marriage 'ear.lier than they !

should."2. Elimination of the:abuse of '1b.~_~~__~__;'_~_.lI

conCUbinage, by -which certain',persons -take another ;woman l;lnd

14J'f.{E ANCHOR-Thurs., Oct. 12" 1961

N1@m~ G~li'C'!ll}(alll'll 'S~Ihl@c~F@~ PtrOes!l'.. R=l]eI7G 0

iNEHEl1\ir""HUESTEN {NO)-:­A new secondary school in this'Westphalian town has beennamed for Father Franz :Stock,a German who 'served men ofall . nations in ,Nazi-occupied,France~ . .

President Heinrich Luebke ofthe German Federal Republicsent a telegram of 'congratula7 .tioris. He recalled Father Stock'swork at' .the <German Embassy inParis before World W.ar'ill, andesp.ecially the .selflesscareheto~k of ;prisonersof ap' national-.ities in French prisons -run 'by .the Nazis.

Father Sto&als.o ·organj.zed aseminary in an American pris­oner-of-war Icamp for ,Germanprisoners. He d~edJ.D. ~948: .

CiO~$g{J'j)~lfP'll'@.Ib~emsNEW' YOBJ!{ ,(NC)--"-Afommi

or" ;!bousing :problems, :for :priestsand laym.ep ,of the New Yiorkar~hdiocese, will Clpennext-Mon­day ,at_'Cardinal :Hayes HighSc1lOol,the Bronx. It is the firstin a. five-sesSion'series ",be1n,gconducted QY the New YorKArchdiocesan Committee 0 nHousin&and Ul"ban Renewal.

S:urvey 'EsfimatesCatholic Gift .

.ANN ARBOR (Nq -.siJdy­five per cent' of 'u. S. Catholics,give $50 or more annually totheir Church, according to an es­timate m.ade ,by .the Universityof· ',Michigan ,Survey ResearchCenter. . .., The survey also revealed that24 per' cent of,U. S. 'Catholicsgive $50 or ,mo~e.annually toneedy individuals, 'and 20 .percent of U. S. Catholics give $50or .more.annually to charity.

.n showed that .Americansoverall give 'more ·than $17 bil­lion ,annually" to ,churches, char­ityand needy individuals. '

',The survey disclosed ,that 67per cent df U. S.Lutheransgave$50 or more annually to theirchurch. This was the ·only figureamong the religious groups thatexceeded the Catholic percent­age.

The general .findings of thesurvey are based ,on interviewswith' nearly 3,000 families las~

year.

Sup:poits Ipu!bilicSC:~OGb; 'Off,BC a~il

On Race 1~~ll.Ile"CHICAGO (NC) - The

superintendent of 'Catholic­schools here came to' tbesupport of his public scboolcounterpart who has l~een' ac­cused of practicing rac;ial segre­.galion by failure to break downthe public school district bound­aries.

Msgr. William' E. McMariussaid he believed the traditionalpattern of neighborhood schoolsshould be retained. He observed:"Abolishing .sc.n 001 ,districtboundaries will lead to the samekind of administrative and socio­logical chaos that 'Would ,occUrif parish lines were eliminatedf~om the Catholic :schoOls sys­tem." ,

BenjaminC. Willis,' publicschool superintendent, ~asbeenunder ,fire by various 'groups

. who contend his refusal to shiftcwercrowded schools .in Negrocammuniti~s to other .distr.ictsis'8 form of segregation.

Willis has ;announced 8 bu'Ud­'lng 'program which would re­move 10,000 of 'the 24;811 .stu­dents who ·are attending doubleshifts this y~.

"I .don'·tthiIik the ChicagoBoard of Education snould panicunder pressure fromgro1,1ps thatcomplain 'about double sessionsir. a few schools/' the Monsignorsaid.

"Unless there is definite evi­dence·tib,a,t a ,community~s

·growth will ,continue; doubleshifts are :a 1"easomible solutionto handling temporary popula­tion movements," the Monsignoradded. No sigmfi~antdifference

has been found between thequality of teaching;in a ,school·ona 'double shift and one with asmgle shift, th!'! prelate said.

-

Page 15: 10.12.61

POSTULANTS: Left to right: Linda A. Precourt,Attleboro; Mary S. Kapolchok, No. Attleboro; and M., ,Suzanne Nolan, Attleboro, are among the 44 postulants of

'the Religious Sisters of Mercy at the Mother of MercyNovitiate at Mount St. Rita: Convent in Cumberland.

-

WE GIVE,

49c

29c:59c

LB 49c:

1ge

39c:

INTRAY

LBS

LBBAG

2. BOSe orBARTLETT

lunchbox Favorite

THE"ANCHOR-Diocese pf Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 12, 1961 '115_______________~Il \

JUIcy, Flavorful -

Pears

Apples Mcintosh'-4 .~Gu. S. No. 1 - 2%" and up - Deep Red and Sl'lappy Fresh

.Apples CORT':AND· 5:G'Bu~sting with. Sweet Juice .

Oranges CALIFORNIA

Rich in Garden FlavOr

Green Bea'Hs

WE GIVE­,

'Firm, Crisp - U, S. ·No. ~ - 2'14" and up

Tender ,Pieces of Choice Beef

Stewing Beef LB65cSLICED - lean, Mildly Smok~d

rmour Siar Bacon' LI 65~Same Low Self·Service Prices in All Stores in This Vicinity - (We Reser.ve the Right to Limit Quantities)

---7JAoduee jJ~6..---

Fir..t National Superior Quality Hams are something special! - Mildly Smoked, Tender

HAMS,' Face Portion Sh~!,k 35'45 Portion CLB C' LB

Shank Half LB 4Sc Face Half La SSe Center Slices LB 79cluxury Eating at ~ low Price - Ph to 2 lB Averaife

Rock Cornish HellS

Mountaintop MassSANTANA' (NC)-More than

300 persons climbed Island ofMadeira's highest mountain, the6,650-foot ,Pico Ruivo, to attenda Mass offered for world peace'by Msgr. Manuel Camacho,Vicar· General of the Diocese ofFunchal.

tige of the ola Latin order, forwhich we do not hesitate toaffirm our grateful affection, wesuggest that the recurrent ver­sicle Dominus vobiscum and itsresponse Et cum spiritu' tuo, thebidding Oremus and the saluta­tion Sanctus, sanctus, sanctus, •together with the existing Greekand Hebrew elements, might fit-­tingly remain unchanged."

The society asked that allseven sacraments be adminis­tered in English. It commented:

Radical Nature"We recognize frankly that

these petitions are of a veryradical nature, and we wouldnot advance them save that theyare the natural and logical out­come of the reaction of manyscholars and pastors of souls toa profound conviction that formany centuries the true natureof the Church's liturgy has beenobscured and that, in conse­quence, the efficacy of the litur­gy has not been exploited to thegreatest advantage of all thefaithful. .

"We believe that neither laity'nor clergy have been able to de­rive from the liturgy that wealthof diVine grace, of instr:uctionand motivation, which would bepossible if the liturgy had uponthem the impact for which itwas called into being by thedivine Master and by our holyMother the Church."

Town Approves'CatholD~ S«:hcol

SCOTCH PLAINS (NC)-TheTownship Committee here 'ap­proved the building 'of a coinsti­tutionai Catholic high school,which lias been opposed by agroup of residents.

The committee acted afterTowmhip Attorney Harry. E.Bernstein ruled that nonpublicas well as public schools can beerected in Class A residencezones.

Opponents of the school hadclaimed that a Catholic schoolcould 110t be built in a Class Azone and had threatened a lawsuit.

Groundbreaking ceremony forthe school has been scheduledfor next Saturday with Arch­bishop Thomas A. Boland ofNewark officiating. The school,which will accommodate 1,500

. students, is one of eight newregional institutioris planned forthe Archdiocese of Newark.

Bernstein, in his opinion, said"schools constitute a distinctclass capable of recognition by amunicipal zoning authority forexcep'tJon from limitation to res­idential uses on the ground thatthe welfare of the residentialcommunity demands their inclu­sion in the area."

Serra Club,sContinued from Page One

Registrations 'will be taken at8:45 Saturday morning. A gen­eral session will be 'held at 9:15,wit h Robert V. McGowan,K.S.G., district governor, to out­line the convention objectives.

Two panel discussions arescheduled for the balance of the'morning, one to be conducted byDr. Allyn F. Sullivan of thePro~idence club, deputy districtgovernor, on Serra Internation­al's theme for 1961, "AidingThose Chosen by Christ to Fol­low Him," and the other byCornelius T. Lyons, president ofthe Attleboro District Club, on"Program Depth."A noon Mass will be celebrated

Saturday by the Rev. JamesMcCarthy, chaplain of the Attle­boro District Club, at St. 'JohnChurch.

The principal speaker follow­Ing a 1 o'clock luncheon will bethe Very Rev. Richard H. Sulli­van, C.S.C., president of Stone­hill College in North Easton.McGowan will serve as toast­master.

Three simultaneous sessionsare on the agenda for 2:45, oneon membership improvementand orientation, another on for­mation of a speakers' bureau,and the third will be a confer­ence of club presidents, withTimothy J. Collins, Internation­al trustee, to be the leader.

The closing general sessionwill be highlighted by an ad­dress by the Rev." EdmundLoughlin, director of St. FrancisHome in Roxbury. It will beconcerned with the responsibil­ities of a Serrao to his church,his neighbor, and his own spir­itual life.

The Attleboro club is handlingarrangements for the convention.Judge Edward A. Lee is thechairman, with his aides includ­ing Dr. Henry Bedard, OmerJette, John Smith, George Bank­ert, Raymond Gravel. and· Wil­liam Weber.

'Liturgy Groups Asks GreaterUse of English Language

LONDON (NC) - The Vernacular Society of GreatBritain has appealed to Rom~ for use of the Englishlanguage in the celebration of 'Mass and in administrationof the sacraments and liturgical blessings. The society madeits plea in a memorandum tothe Central P,reparatoryCommission for the SecondVatican Council, shortly toconvene for its second meetingin Rome.

The society in its memoran­dum recalled the repeated callsof the Church for active partici­pation of the lll.ity in the liturgy.It suggested that this is virtuallyimpossible with an all-Latinliturgy, "We humbly ask, there­fore," it said, "that the normalliturgical language of the RomanRite in Great Britain be English,except where the 'local ordinaryconsiders Welsh more suitable."

Grateful AffectionThe society said that religious

orders should be able to continueto use Latin if they desire, andthat bishops should have thepower to require the use ofLatin on certain occasions.

The memorandum then said:"Mass would be said in Eng­

lish."To preserve, however, a ves-

Page 16: 10.12.61

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Parish Buildi"'9Houses PublicSchool Classes

PORT LAVACA (NC)Aft example of· communitycooperation is being demon­strated in this storm-bai;.;

, tered Texas city where 200 pub­lie school children are attendingclasses in Our Lady of the Gulfpaiish school.

The arrangement was inaug­urated in the wake of hurricaneCarla which did extensive' 'dam­age to the public school-buildingbut spar~d the parish schoolbuilding.

.Father Vincent Verderame,O.M.L, pastQr of the parish,realizing that' classes wouldhave to be suspended while re­pairs were being made on thepublic school, offered rooms ililthe parish building to E. V.Huffstutler, public school super-intendent. ..

The parish school buildinghas been used exclusively as acatechetical center since itscomplet,ion last year so that thepresent arrangement with thepublic. school' does not interfere....ith the use of the building bythe parish, Father Verderame,aid. '

Vote-Seekers in'Chile'Have New Gimmick

ERCILLA (NC) - .Winningelections in this small mountainvillage can depend more on foot­work than headwork.

"Since the electoral reformtwo years ago it 'is almost im­possible to buy votes' any more inChile," Father John J. Bradley,M.M., of San Francisco, said here."But the politicIans ,have comeup with a new gimmick.

"Before the eleCtion they givethe voters one shoe. If their can­didate is elected. they' give themthe other shoe. The system isvery successful around here and

'also a boon to the Chilean shoe, industry."

, ,

MONTHLY PAYMENTSAmount Borowed 3 YEARS

$ 500. $15.97. 750. 23.•1,000. 31.M

Any amount from $100 to $3.500 Ina1 be bomMed.Schedule' furnished on request. .

New Be4ford's .. .HOME

TAKE: Of'TO 5 YEARS to REPAY ••• NO DOWN PAYMENT'

'" VICTOR·

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Building ,C~'nt~acto!

Masonry

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Estate

ONE STQPSHOPPING CEN'rER

Real

.'$EGUIJ~ •TruclcBocly Builde...

Aluminum or. S&oel944 County St.

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Rene POy.lntHYCllnnis

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104 Allen 'S~, New BedfolodWYman 7-935·1

CO'RREIA &. ~)ONS.

Mission Group SetsTraining Program

PATERSON (NC)-The Asso:­ciation for International' Devel­opment (AID), a U: S. lay mis­sionary society, will begin a newthree-month training programnext February.

'AID director James J. Lambsaid applications are being ac­cepted. from qualified single menand from families who wish toserve the Church in developingareas of the world. '

'Lamb' said the trainingcourse, which will end nextMay, will offer full-time tl'ain­ing in spiritual development,Catholic social teaching, missi­ology world problepls, and therole of the layman. It wilt' beconducted at AID headquartershere.

.. :cese of Fall River-Thurs.; Oct. '12, 1961

Diocese PatronessDODGE CITY (NC)-Cere­

monies 'were held in SacredHeart cathedral here in connec-­tion with permission granted byPope John to the Dodge CityDiocese to have Our Lady ofGuadalupe as its pa(,l'om:ss.

Sa~n~.. $.~nsQtional.is,m CurbsFo'rce of 'B'~ack' Like Me"

By Rt. Rev~ Msgr. John S. KennedyJohn Howard Griffin is a Texan who has attained some

.celebrity as a novelist. Two vears ago, obsessed by concernedcuriosity as to what it is Hkl:' to be a Negro in the S?uth, hedetermined to disguise himself as one such and fmd out.His experiences during the. ted himself to a definite stand.seven weeks of his all too 'He will go to jail, suffer. any,successful masquerade, 'in humlIiation, but he ~ill no.t b~ckLouisiana, Mississippi, Ala- down. He will. take th.e msuI~sb d Georgia he details and abuses stOically SO that h1Si arr;:ia~~ Like Me" (Houghton childr~n will not have to take,n.. . them m the future."Mifflin. $~.50?, In Atlanta he encountereda book which IS ev'fdence which convinced himb?und to cause that the r"ace problem can bedI~ferent s0:ts solved. There the Negroes areof shock to dIf- united ane: have a shared goalferent sorts of and spirit.

read~rs. N Moreover, the administrationHe chose ew of Mayor Harts"field has been en-

Orl~an~ for the lightened and courageous. And I WARM WELCOME HOME: Most' Rev. Lawrence J.b~gmmng. 0 f the 'Atlanta Constitution' has Shehan, right, forrner Bisbop of Bridgeport, is greeted uponh1S expen:nen~ had the integrity to make a stand hI'S arrI'val in. his native city of Baltimore by Archbishopand there .o~n for justice. .:1 doctor Willing ,,~ . Francis P. Keough, whose V-icar General he. becomes. NCto prescribe· '. Negro, Then Whitemedication and sun lamp treat- Mr. Griffin is certain that the Photo. .ment which, together with t?e press must bear much ·of the fA ILb'· rL III • I\, f G d'periodic application of a stam, blame for the persistence .of ArCflll O$1l14)p' IImpet-enll or !»o.would give Mr. Griffin the prejudicial attitudes and ,prac'- Continued from Pi&ge One the priesthood there in 1923. Heappearance of a Negro. The tices. He says that southern eral Mass. "He' was no dreamer. went to St. Paul shortlY after

ethod worked very well, and papers do not keep their readers He faced, problems and difficul- ordination and, with the excep­~ a short time the author was .' inforihE~, maintaining a "con- ties with a confidence born of tion of a few years for advanced~~le to pass as a Negro. He sp~racy of silence about every-' , the knc.wledge that he was doing studie.'l in Rome; served thereexamined himself in a bathr:,om thmg remotely favorable to the God's work ... His W3,S a driving until August, 1939, when he wasmirror: "In the flood of light Negro.".. .'. force that inspired the loyal co- consecrated Bishop of ~iouxagainst white tile, the fac~ and ,And e?itonal pol~cy is, accord-, op~ration of others because "he, Falls, S. D.shoulders of a stranger-a f1erce,. mg t.o hIm, d~termme? by what, gave unsparingly of himself. He came back to St. Paul inbald very' dark Negro-g~ared publlsh~rs thmk the!r rellders Respect for Prie:sthood . 1956 as' Coadjutor Archbishopat rr:e from the mirror. He In no' want, as w~ll as by fear of eco- The Milwaukee 'prelate said with the right of succession and,"way resembled me." no~~c reprisals shou~d editorial tl!at Archbishop Brady's "down- b'ecam.e spiritual head of the See

R t · ted Opportunities opinion not accord With popular to-e,arth spirituality" was re- . on Oct. 11, 1956 when Arch-es ric . . h J h G ' M

' f d the author opllllOn. . sponsible for his awesome re- bis 00' 0 n regory urraySo trans orme, . ld After spending weeks as a spect for the sublimity of the died. - ,

plunged into the :egr:-t wO~e . Neg,ro, the author began to al- priesthood which he strove to AirpOrt Chapel Servi~ •Both Ne?roe.s an : ~~s first t~rnate between his dark a~d inculcate· in "every l;oung man Archbishop Brady is survived.garded him as Neg~h d' of light appearances and personah- who .had a dream of 8erving the by a,sister, Sister Mary Williamshock was the wre c e. ne~s to ties. 'Master" of the Sisters of St. Joseph, wh9

,the very best.. hotel avallab e "I was t~e same man, whether He l~uded 'Archbishop Brady's was among those who accom-Negroes..' white or black. Yet when I was talent for journalism, recalling panied her brother's body back

During his ,.tr~ve1s about .the white, I received the brotherly- that through his column in the to St. Paul on a plane trip fromcity, and la~er In the cou~trY~~de, love smiles and the privileges. Catholic Bulletin" archdiocesan 'Rome.it struck hilI). for the first 1me from whites and the hate stares newspaper, he reached all of his The plane touched down in,that Negroes do not have access or cibs~quiousnessfrom the Neg- people. . New York'where Francis Cardi-to nearly so m3;ny comfort s~-, roes. And' when I was a Negro "He was constant in hi;! attack nal" Spellman, Archbishop oftions as do Whites, that eatmg the hites 'judged me fit for the upon, anything that threatened New York, Bishop Connolly, and'places for the~ are few, that • k

Wh while the Negroes their spiritual welfar.e, even as a group of priests 'met it. The

even. the procurmg ?f a, glass of Jun ted eap, 'th 'reat ~armth " he was diligent in presenting Cardinal' officiated at brief'water on a hot day IS ex~remely trea, m~ ~Wi g . current affairs against the back- prayers at planesideafter which'difficult, that a place to Slt ~own ' ' WrItmg.,Too Hectic ground of the Church's teach- the casket was taken into Ourand rest during !..-day's tr.udging .' Finally he put aside his ,dis- ings," Archbishop' Cousins ~aid. Lady of the Skies chapel at the

. about in search of work IS hard guise once and for all and began. The 'Milwaukee Archbishop New York airport for a vespers110 come by. a series of magazine artides on recalled' that Archbishop .Brady . service. '

And that search for work was what he had undergone and was in, Rome assisting in theunproductive. He realized how learned.' preparations for the coming ecu-narrowl" restricted the Negro's This caused estrangement ' menicalcouncil when ,a series of'opportunities are, and how dis- from' most of his neighb~rs at heart attacks brought, on hisheartening this is. .home and to other difficulties, death. "

O'ne white man for whom' he which ultimately led to his'leav- A native of Fall River, Arch-'listed his qualifications told him, ing the area where he had long bishop Brady was Qrdained, to"We don't want ,you people. . .. lived and settled elsewhere. . 'We're gradually ".getting. you . What Mr. Griffin' has to say" An'nualMeeting

, people weeded out from the bet- will rile and m.ove a~most .every 'Alumni of St. Joseph's orphan-ter jobs a't this ,plant." reader. Some, like thiS. revie~er, age, Fall River, will :hold their

'H~te Stare' will ihink that his acco~nt might annual meeting at :~ Sunday. . have been more effective as an afternoon, Oct...15. All former

He found it a bitter .thmg to indictment of the inhumanity of residents of the instil:ution arebe ignored, or to be subJected to , racial injustice had the writing invited to attend.systematic discourtesy, or to be been less hectic ,and more coolythe target o~ the "hate sta~e" of factual. •which there seem ~ be alt~- One imagines that Mr. Griffingether' too many white pract1- would heatedly rebut any sug­tioners. gestion that there is an element

Iri very short order he began of sensationalism in his book.thinking of himself as a Negro, Noqetheless, had it been morealmost to loSe' nold of his orig- restrained, and had the languageinal ident'ity, and to feel depres- been, toneil, down in spots, itsion and fear, along with burn- would have gained in foree.ing indignation. Mr. Griffin gives occasional. Occasionally" as he ~rudg~ indications: that racist extremismalong a highway at .night, :-vh1~e ~oes not prevail among Cath~­men would give hIm a bft m bcs. He speaks both of CatholIctheir cars. Invariably, he tells condemnations of the theory andus this ostensible kindness was of courteous treatment extendedpr~mpted by a desire to discuss him by Catholics while he wassex in a filthy and monstrous passing as a Negro.way the assumption being thatNeg~oes are somehow animalis­tic. . -

There were, as well, assertionsthat Negroes are intrinsically in­ferior and that their mi~rable

state is of the~r own choosing.,

Reason 'for Hope: 'In Montgomery and Atlanta helearned that there is reason forhope. In the former, "the Negro:sfeeling of utter hopelessness IS

. . . replaced by a determinedspirit of passive resistance.

"Here, the Negro has commit-

••

Page 17: 10.12.61

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FeU River-Thurs., Oct. 12, 196-1 17

o

..

,"

.\.

Your Fire Department will be glad toanswer questions. When in doubt, seekprofessional help.

Practice the fire drm until each memberof the family knows what to do if afire strikes!

Can a family meeting and' plan twoescape routes for each room in yourhome. '

IT'S FIRE PREVENTIO'N' WEEK.OCT. 8 to 14 ... all year long!,Half of the nation's 11,000 fire deathseach year occur in homes. You can "helpmake your family safer. from fire' if youwill take a tip from Fire Offidals - havea home fire drill!

. This Message ;s Sponsored By The following Individuals

and Business Concerns in G,reC1lf:e, fall'Riyer:

Duro Finishing Corp.Enterprise Brewing Co.The Exterminator Co.Fall River Eledric Light Co.Fall River Trust Co.Globe Manufacturing Co.

KapWan Furniture Co•.Kormon Water Co.MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc.Mason, Furniture ShowroomsMooney & Co. Inc.Newport Finishing Co.

Plymouth Printing' Co., Inc.Sherry Corp. , .SobiioH BrothersSterling Beverages, Inc.Textile Workers Union of

~inerica, AFL·CIO·

Page 18: 10.12.61

Suggests Labor MovementExamDne 'Own Conscience

Cuban RefugeesReturn $25,000Debt to U.S.

MIAMI BEACH (NC)Cuban refugees who havebecome final'!-cially stablehere have returned morethan $25,000 to the U.S. govern­.Q1ent, a relief official disclosed.

Hugh McLoone, resettlementdirector for Catholic ReliefServices-National Catholic Wel­fare Conference, said those whoreturned the money feel. theyowed a just debt to the U.S. forfunds advanced them when theyfirst sought refuge here.

McLoone has directed the re­settlement of more than 6,000Cuban ~'efugees since last Janu­ary. He estimated that about3,000 ilave been resettled byother agencies also working atMi'ami's Cuban Refugee Emer­gency Center.

McLoone explained that al­though CRS-NCWS is reim­bursed by the U.S.' governme~tfor the traveling expenses of

'refugees to qther parts of thecountry, it will continue to op-,erate in Miami as, long as it isneeded. He stated that some69,000 Cuban refugees are stillin the Miami .area.

ONE PRIEST'S PROBLEM'c"K(h,"fARAKARA, Ip ;SO~rl'H INDIA, Illis Oilly one C~thollo' "

priest ••• and he. ~s ,arconvert. His name ,is FATHER ALEX­,. ANDER, For years" now he has shared, ,Poverty, frequently hunger,' with his• ,p~ople. His face is oid with worry.

..bis frame guant with' overwork. But

.a light comes to FATHER ALEXAN;.DER'S eyes when he talks about his.parish. In [93,3, when the tiny chapel

T was built, there were only nine Cath­olic families In all of KOTTARAKA­RA. Today there are 130 Catholic'

, families The chapel is so crOWded. forMasses on Sunday morning that not

The Holy Fathrrt Mission Ai' more than haU of the parishioners canlor the Orimtal Chrl1fh get inside •.• And Ule prospects for

more converts are most encouraging. There are Jacobltes and'Marthomites In KOTTARAKARA-700 families all together­who may one day, please God, come Into the Church en masse•.. But FATHER ALEXANDER'S chapel is much too small.And, he says, the parish,ioners are so poor they haven't enoughto C'eat ... One worries with FA'fHER ALEXANDER about hisproblem. "I am an old man now," he says, "and I wish I could

. believe this work will continue aft'll' I'm gone." ••. The workmust' continue, If SOUls are to be saved. KOTTARA.KARA musthave a new chapel now, -a chapel luge enough to accommodatethe Catholics on Sunday. morning. Plain arid ineXpensive, thechapel will be the center of Cathollo' me in 'pagan KOTTARA.KARA-the place where Catholics will visit the. BJess~d Sacra.ment, wher,e chil(lren will lear·n the catechism. where convertscan be instructed. ; • The chapel will co~t $01,000. To raise thismoney In KOT'TA~AKARA Is out of tl1e question. The parish.loners will do all the work themselves, but' they must have

. money with which to bny the materiills. Can you send $10? $50?$100?-Whatever you can 'send-nickels, dimes, dollars--pleasesend It now: We'll· write to FATHER ALEXANDER, enclosingyour gift. We'll tell hlml "Your problem, .'ather, Is our prob.lem. S*al1 building your chapel immediately."

NEXT MONTH, NOVEMBER, IS THE MONTH OF THE POORSOULS,IN PURGATORY. OUR MISSIONARIES WILL BEPLEASED TO OFFER MASSES. YOUR OFFERINGS .WILL,AT THE SAME TIME, HELP IMMEASURABLY IN THEIRMISSION WORK. SEND US YOUR LIST OF MASS INTEN.TIONS.

When you mention the CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFAREASSOCIATION in your will, you keep priests Brothers andSisfers at work in pagan countries like INDIA JORDANEGYPT, SYRIA, IRAN, IRAQ, LEBANON, TURKEY, amiETHIOPIA. Make yours a Catholic will. Our legal title: THE

GATHO!-'IC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSC>CIATION.

UNLESS YOU WRITE US NOW, YOU WON'T WRITE AT ALL.PLEASE WRIT'E.

~'l2ear&stO)jssions~

~RANCIS CAItDINAL SPELLMAN, Prosldent ;

tAallr. Joatlpfl T. RYGa. Nat', Soc', ''. $end Gil c_mllltica~lolII tOI :. '. CATHOLIC N~AR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION

. 480 ~xing~onAve. «lit 46th St. New York 17; N, Y.,- .-.- -.- -'- -A.

WHO WILL TAKE HIS PLACE?FATHER ALEXANDER, is getting old. When he dies; who

will take his place .in KOTTARAKARA? Priests in INDIA arefew and scattered. Boys who want to bepriests frequently cannot afford to pay fortheir education. Even the Bi,shops, in a' mis­sion country, Jlometimes haven't the moneywith which to run a seminary. For this rea.son we ask Catholics In the United States tohelp boys studying for the priesthood. To

_train one of these boys-,-in INDIA, for in­stance - costs $100 a year - or $600 for the -entire six-yearcourse. Here are the names of six students in ST. JOSEPH'SSEMINARY, In ALWAYS, INDIA, who need sponsors: GEORGETHARAKUNNEL, THOMAS THAYIL, IGNA,TIUS ARIKAT,

. PAUL CHAKIAN, SIMON EDAKKALATHUR, and DAVIDILLIRI<;:KEN. As a sponsor you may write to your "student,"and he will write to you. Space your payments' to suit yourconvenience. Write to us. '

EXILE WELCOMES EXILE: An exiled Cuban womankisses tl;1e episcopal ring of exiled Havana Bishop EduardoBoza Masvidal, on his arrival' at· La" Coruna; Spain. Thebishop arrfved with 13.1 Cuban priests deported by "Fi~el

Cas~ro's regime. NC Photo:

Moral Tll'oilning,'Continued from Pa~ge,One

yielded at every step to the im­portuning of minority groups,'not simply' pushing to remove allreligious influence frpm theschools, but" working to make itimpossible for' chureh gro!Ipseven to wor.:k with t~e ,~ch9Qls:"

Moral. SideHe stated that "the coexistence

'within the same" society of'groups holdirig fundamental dif­ferences regarding the natureand destiny of man has made foran. impasse in the approach tothe moral side of education."

He added that the compromiseor 'nonsectarian' approach advo­cated by Horace Mann, f;:ither ofthe public school, "contained theprinciple of its own dissolution,"arid the, "little common ground"that once existed among variousreligious ,groups "was erodedaway."

ReappraisalFather McCluskey suggeste~

that the time has come for at!­agonizing reappraisal He said:"The question we must startfacing now is: How can theschool, certainly a's formative aninfluence on youthful characte~

as the family or church, help toforge the kind of steel in thespines' of our 'young that will"support them in l:he trialsahead?"

"In, retrospect," ,he continued,"it is only fair to a,dmit thatProtestants' and Catholics mustshare the blame with the secu­larists for what took place in thepublic schools., Whil~ sectarianbitterness and' denominationaljealousies neutralized the effortsof ,religiously-minded people tokeep.a strong moral and spiritu'alfiber in the schools, others wereable to' glorify the vague idealof . the uncommitted mirid 'andthe uncommitted comlcience.

Take Stand"The American public school

is now unable or unwilling,"said Father McCluskeJ', "to t~ke .a stand on or perhaps even.....toconfront the central· Q4estionswhich come to grips wit,h themeaning of man: his origin, hispurpose, his destiny. We haverendered mute our te~lchers andhave fo~bidden them 'riot merelyto answer but often even to askthe great questions, about God,conscience, duty, rights andfuture life."

The Jesuit educato.r said hewas not making an exhortation

. "to scrap tolerance atn9- amityand respect for sincere dissent,"but warning "that -the old pat­tern of compromise is a failure"and the future of this country"depends upon commitment tothe right ideals."

"It is a warning that the timemay be running out," he con­cluded. "It is a prayer that menof good .'will everywhere in theland will mobilize their resourcesto prepare better our youth fortomorrow, so that our 'nation andour world will wax s;trong andpeaceful under God."

Presents Suppos,edRelic toPresidelAt

WASHINGTON (NC)-Presi­dent Kennedy received whllt issaid to be a relic of the true crossduring a visit to the White Houseby Greek Orthodox PatriarchBenedictos I of· Jerusalem.

The relic was containeci in amedallion of' the Grand Crossand Insignia of the Order of the.Holy Sepulchre, highest decora­tion of the Greek OrthodoxChurch, which the Patriarch be­stowed on the President.·, In presenting the decoration

Patriarch Benedictos expressedto the President the hope' thatGod's grace would "bring to youand your government the divineguidance for which you· so fer­vently I;lray."

TIlE A; ;C; :O::-Diocese of Fall·River....,Th~rs:;pet: 1,2,1961 .18

By Msgr. George G. HigginsDirector, NCWC Social Action Department

Time magazine is rather bearish about the future ofthe American labor movement. 'The labor movement,' saystime in a recent cover article on Secretary of LaborGoldberg, "seems surfeited by success. It is to~n ftom withinby jurisdictional disputes labor movement·' is indeed in.and corruption, and it has serious trouble.been baffled by the problems Outside Influencesarising from technological In' my judgment, organized.progress." Hourly wages have labor in this country is riot com­risen dramatically during the pletely to blame" for' the un-past 25. years; happy situation in ,which itall so r t s 0 f finds itself. For example, itsfringe benefits failure to expand its member-have been won ship at a rate proporti<v1ate tothrough the the growth of the total laborprocess of col-.' force is due in large measure'tolective bargain- outside influences.ing; and condi- Even Time magazine, which'tions of 'work can hardly be characterized ashave markedly a pro-labor publication,' pointsimproved. "But out that organizing drives inwith the zoom," the' South 'are fought by "South-says Time, "the ern pulpit '-(ndt .the Catholic'zip has gone.", pulpit, so far as'I know), press

. and public."According to the editors of TIIll~' It' should also. be noted tha,t"labor's trouble stems from a labor cannot. be expected' toflagging of spirit." .

The editors of Time 'are not solve the problem of automa-alone in thinking that the Amer- . tion singlehandedly. The fact

.icim labor movement 'is' currently that this problem is currentlyin the doldrums. Henry J. Taylor baffling the labor ,movement ismade the same point in a ~ecent not at all surprising.synd'~cated column. ' , Come ,from Within

"Out trade union movement," Nevertheless Time magazine\ is correct in stating that "in

he wrote, "struggles agains.t ,meeting labor's 'dilemma, thethe una~rtow of a relentless cur."" driving force must come fromrent, hardly realized by the pub- labor itself."' If labor is 'to meet'iiC. The current is the' quiet

this challenge-if it" is to devel­breakway of American laborfrom unionization... op within its own ranks the

"While the great wave of 'the driving force necessary to re-solve the dilemma in which it

nationaI: labor force has surged finds . itself today-it will havehighei: and h,igher for many to be ruthlessly honest in ex­years, union members!:tip hasstood still and thus fallen further amining its own conscience.

, , , In other words, labor' willand further behind this great have to start taking the lion'su~wilrd march of American life." share. of the blame for its own.',J . In .Serious Trouble I failures and will have to stop

Mr, A. H. Raskin of the New looking for scapegoats outsideYork Times, one of the nation's its own ranks.'ieading. labor reporters, and It is curious, .in this connec­Father William J. Smith, S.J., tion, that the American. busi­director of St. Peter's Institute . ness community is today moreof Industrial Relations in Jersey .self-critical than is the laborCity, New Jersey, have also ex- movement. More and more fre:"pressed the opinion in recent quently' we ' 'find. prominent'weeks, that American labor is in businessmen frankly' discussing'serious trouble. the failures of American indus-""Clearly," Raskin wrote in the try in reputable periodicals

Sept. 10 issue of the New York such as the Harvard BusinessT~mes Magazine, '''labor will Review and Dun's Review,have to work hard to. disabuse Exposes' Myths"youngsters of the idea that A series of. articles writtenunions have become merelyanother form of business, devoid for the latter periodical by

Clarence B. Randall, retiredof idealism and crusading vig-" ' steel executive, has just been

~~ ,Father Smith, a long-time published in book form under

the title The Folklore of Man­'champion of organized labor,agement (Atlantic, Little, Brown,

laid it squarely on the line at '$4.75). Mr.-' Randall is brutallythe recent AFL-CIO mergerConvention in New Jersey. frank in discussing some of man-

agement's myths, and he deligbts"You know better than I do," in puncturing them. '

he told the qelegates to this Isn't it about time for a prom­convention, "what degree the inent labor leader 'to write a

. movement is suffering from the similar book 'about the myths ofevils of modern materialism. organized labor?'You know' better than I how }wide's the 'gap between ideal- Boy ScoutS.·ism of the past and the mis-named 'realism of .the future." Con'tinued from Page On~

Many similar state!11entsby or cooking gear is needed sincefriends of labor as well as by its all meals will be served in thec'ritlcs could be cited, but the new Dining Hall. Scouts 'in thefour I have quoted above, will provisional troop are asked tosuffice for present purposes. If furnish their own tents if theythese statements are substan- can secure them. Those unabletially correct-and there is rea- to do so are asked .to contactson to think that -they are-the Gauthier' at his home, 1803

, . Stafford Road for assistance.Says· Castro Attack Assistant Scoutmaster James

D. McMahon J.r'. is iii. charge ofOn Church Fai~ing the commissary and c}{ef for the

LA CORUNA (NC).:..-cuban retreat.• ,Premier Fidel Castro's effortsto set up a schismatic nationalchurch have failed because allof the nation's priests remai,nloyal to the Holy See, an exiledCuban prelate said here~

Auxiliary Bishop EduardoBoza Masvidal of Havana madethe statement on disembarkingfrom the Spanish liner Cova­'donga, He arrived in La Corunawith the i35 priests arid Brothers-79 of them Spanish-whowere ousted from Cuba. by theCastro regime, on .. charges of"counterrevolutionary" activity.

"We would have 'liked to re­main in Cuba to share' ·the fateof our Catholic brothers," BishopBoza 'said. But he added thathe and the priests. and Brotherswere forced to 'embark on theCovadonga without passports or~aggage.

Page 19: 10.12.61

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THE ANCHOR- 19Thurs., Oct. 12, 1961

Bishop CautionsAgainst Fancy

. Names forSinSTEUBENVILLE (NC)­

Bishop John King Mussio ofSteubenville has urged Cath­olics to "be on your guardagainst fancy names for sin"­especially in regard to sex.

"Listen to God's word, ratherthan to the changing lingo of thechanging whims of man," hesaid in a pastoral letter read illall churches of the diocese.

'l1he Bishop warned that thereis a trend in modern society togive innocent names to sex sills.

But, he Said, "fornicationdressed up bi the modern term-·inology of premarital experi­ence, ildolescent maturity, andthe like ... remains, as ever,fornication."

"Adultery is still adultery, JW)

matter how often a modern stu­pidity would oall It the right tohappiness of unhappy spouSes,"'he' said. '

Bishop Mussio said he bad m­structed pastoJ'lS to preach aseries of sermons on the holineeeof marriage and the evil of sexsins.

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, ,

Leo, 'Pa'radis of .New Bedford ,Eyes 8erthOn Diamond Nine ~t Stonehill College

nine. He hit at a strong .422 clip Nobrega's nine gets set Jorfor the season, and for the sec-, another season.ond straight campaign, reached But the Paroehlals' Wss illbase, safely, in every game. Stonehill's gain.

Classy Slabman Likes First Base,This past selMlOn, when he Leo, a communicant of st.

earned the high..512 batting joseph Church in New Bedford;average, Leo reached base safely said, "My faVOrite position isin every league game. And, Inci- first base." This comes as some­dentally, he compiled an 8-0 what of' a surprise, since' bi6pitching record. pitching accomplishments 8ft

Holy Family, with its league many, and he has always been ntitle, easily qualified for the stellar performer at second bQ6e,Eastern Massachusetts S tat e' A' rather resel,"Ved youth, LeoTournament, and the Parochials' said, "I'd like to go out foor fimgot past some rugged opposition, base, or the outfield at stone­into the final tOurney game. En- hill, because I'm not really mudlroute to the grand finale, Leo 'of a pitcher," He' might havehit safely, in tourney tussles meant what he said, but rivalagainst Hingham, Case and pow- ' batters, especially some fr~

erful Milford. crack tourney ~eems, would~Then, in the final for the than likely be quick to disagree.

coveted title, Leo'. three-year CYO Hoopsterbatting streak'was snapped at 38 'The brown-haired youth, ~oconsecutive games as he finally 'played "just a little bit ofCYOfailed to hit safely. basketball at St. Joseph Church,"

Versatile Fellow sai~ that ne)!:t to baseball, heBut for Leo, ,who is 5-feet, 10 enjoys playing football and also

inches tall and weighs 150 likes basketball. 'pounds~ it was a great Senior Regardless of what positionyear. He played every position Leo goes out for this Spring atfor the Holy Family nine, ex- Stonehill, the odds he will makecept catch, during his schoolboy good are with him. It will bedays. Besides contributing his interesting to watch Leo's pr98­timely. hitting, both during the ress with the Chieftains.league season and in the t~urn­

ament, Leo also came on fromsecond, base, frequently, andpitched his mates to a numberof viCtories. And he was a unan­im~us selection as second base­man on the 1961 Bristol CountyAll Star team.

Holy Family, which compileda sharp 15-6 baseball record lastseason, will certainly miss itsstar ' pitcher-infielder-outfielderth~ Sprl'ng, wtit:n Coach Jack

BIDS FOR STONEHILL BERTH: Leo Paradis, whoset several baseball records at Holy Family High, chats withhis pastor, Msgr. Louis E. Prevost of St. Joseph's parish inNew Bedford, concerning his baseball prospects at Stonehill'JCollege. .

Homework GaloreThis past season Leo, the son

of Mr. and Mrs. Leo H. Paradisof 256 Clifford Street, compiledan astronomical .512 battingaverage. He perSonally led histeammates to a tie for the Nar­'l'agansett Baseball League cham­pionship with Case High Schoolof Swansea.

Leo, a liber~l arts student atStonehill:- run by, the HolyCross Fathers - plans to majorin French. And while he plans.to try ,for a starting position withthe Chieft;lin nine, he has notyet given much. thought to other ,activities "I>ecause I've had somuch homework." -'The likeeble New Bedford

youth stays in the new dormitoryat the' NorthEaston College­just opened this Fall - and getshome weekends' to his parentsand sister Noella, 21. Leo's sub­jec,ts, are English, history, math,'t~eology, logic, and French, hisfavorite.

Leo, who will be 18 on Satur­day, ': worked as a playgroundsupervisor at Brooklawn Park inthe North, End of New Bedford

. this past Summer. He also foundtime to play second base on theAmerican Legion Post 1 baseballteam, which finis~l~ in a' tie lorsecond place in Zone 9.

" Superb HitterIn his Sophomore year at Holy

Family, Leo compiled a credit­able .315 batting average, whilehitting safely in every game ofthe sea-son., A youth with a ,keen interestin all phases. of the diamond·sport, Leo upped his batting ave­rage more than 100 points in hisJunior year with the Parochial

By,Frank TrondA youth who gained fame

in schoolboy baseball circleswhen he hit safely in 3:}consecutive games over athree-year span, Leo H. ParadisJr. of New Bedford is now a stu­dent at Stonehill College, wherehe hopes to continue playing hillfavorite sport in the Spring.

A June graduate of Holy Fam­ily High School in the WhalingCity, Leo' hit safely in everygame of his Sophomore and Jun­ior years for the Parochials. Hisphenomenal batting streak wasfinally snapped, but not untilthe 'very last game of his Senior

,year. '

,Praises WorkOf Missioners

LIMA (NC)-U. S. missionersworking in Peru are beloved byall social classes, "especially ~y

people of humble station," U.Archbishop of, Lima has stated.

Archbishop Juan LandazuriRicketts, O.F.M., commented onthe Holy See's appeal to 1,500U. S. religious superiors, whomet at the Notre Dame Univer­sity in August, to send 10 percent of their personnel to LatinAmerica within tge next 10years.

He said the news '''is truly aheavenly answer, toth~ prayersof ,millions. of, Latin Americanswho have alreadY experiencedand, loved, the ,work of· Ameri­can missioners."

The Archbishop stated thatbe had just visited the two Limaslums where Maryknoll Fathersand Columban Fathers work.

"the affection of the poor inthose areas is living proof ofthe tremendous bond which has

,grown, between the' Anlericanmissioners and the Peruvianpeople," he "said.

Young Workers PlanMeeting in Brazil

RIO DE JANEIRO (NC) ­Delegates of the more than2,500,000 members of the YoungChristian Workers organizationIn 91 nations will meet here Nov.1-12 to discuss problems facingmodern youth.

More than 300 delegates willreport to the YCW's secondCouncil on the living and work­ing conditio!,s of youth in theircountries and on what the or­ganization is doing about them.The YCW is a Catholic Action 'movement which aims to trainand help ~oung workers Chris­tianize their lives and environ­ment.

S'et Up NewmanInstitute in India

BOMBAY (NC)-A NewmanInstitute of Religious Cultureis on ~he way in India.

Its program, similar to thatof the Newman Clubs on secu­lar college campuses in theUnited States, is aimed at bothCatholic and non-Catholic stu­dents and intellectuals. .

Units of the institute will beset up in a number of Indianuniversities. '

Aiding in the establishmentof this new foundation are theSacred Congregation for thePropagation of the Faith inRome; the Catholic Bishops'Conference in India; ValerianCardinal Gracias, Archbishopof Bombay; the rectors of thevarious Indian Catholic Col­leges and a large number ofCatholie lay leaders in India.

Heavy Football Weekend SetFor Greater New Bedfo'rd

By Jack KineavyAnother fuR weekend 'of colorful schoolboy footbaD i9

in store for fans throughout the Southeastern Mass. area.Greater New Bedford has three major games on tap. DUrfeeHigh of Fall River meets New Bedford Vocational Fridaynight un<!er the lights at Coyle decisioned DarbnOUth;'Sargent FJeld; New Bedford 15-8 shut out Stoughton, 6-0 andis home to West Springfield was 'held to a scoreless deadlockon Saturday 3nd aeross the by.a fired-up Bishop Stangriver Fairhaven Is scheduled to eleven last Saturday.hOst high _ scoring Barnstable The capacity crowd thatHigh. The early viewed the Coyle-Stan.g , game1961 season has was treated to a crackm good~n a remark- ball game. The, boys were reallyable resurgence hitting out there and when theinCapefootball final whistle blew both. clubsCurrently both were completely spent. OddlyBarnstable and enough, though Stang out-statis-Falmouth are ticked Coyle, it was the clockundefeated aft- that stopped the threateninger three starts Warrior advances at the end ofwhile Bourne's . the second and fourth periods.only blot is a Close Competitionsecond wee k The Tri-County race shapes22-16 10811 to up as a three-cornered affair.Falmouth. Of particula'r signifl- League-leading Falmouth, Bam­eance .. the impressive Start stable and Case a~e currentlymade by the Raiders, of Barn- undefeated and untIed in threestable under new eoach Jon starts though on~ ~almouth~Parker ' been completely 1Ovolved 10 .

Park~ came to the Cape from Conferenee play. Coach Mik~Brockton High, where'_he served Gaddis' squad has gotten 011 to ,in &be Millett regime that pro- tbe good sta~ that had eludedduced three succesSl~ CIMS A. them for so~ ti.m~ and t?ey areehampiona. John haS evidently ,expected, to SOhd~y their holdinfused more than a little of that Oft. first place agamst Somersetwinning spirit in hie Barnstable thiS Saturday. .eharges who have run off three '. Case, on the baSIS of compara­impressive victories in a row. tive scores, must h~ve qui~ •The explosive nature of the ball club: The Cardmals own aBarnstable offense-which has 6-0 ve~dl~t oyer str:ong Oliveraveraged five T.D.Il per game- Ames Whl~h only last week up- .was clearly illustrated last set Ma,nslleld" 12-0. Coach Mc­Saturday when &be Raiders came Carthy s Cards ·then tacke.doff • halftime deadlock to bury War.!!ham, 18-0 and f?llowed Unsdefending D champion Dennis- up wl.th a 22-8 victory overYarmouth, 30-0.' Franklin. ,~ince Tri-County~s top

BarQstable will be moving up ~ree don ~ tangle u~til late sea-• class in the Fairhaven game S?1I, the title quest ~s apt to goand Coach Hal Conforth's Blue right d?wn to the ~!re.is expected to provide the Cape . It wo~ld be remiss, I daresay,eleven with its stiffest competi- ,if we falled to com.ment on th.etion to date. Fairhaven will take recent World Series. That ita 1-2 record into the game. The lacked the usual l~ste~,and pag­Blue were whitewashed by pow'; eantry th~t attends. the p~st sea­erful Attleboro last week, 26-0. son claSSIC .goes WI~~Ut saying.An opening day 14-0 setback at The lone Cmcinnab VICtory w4!the bands of North Attleboro looked upon hopefully 'but notWB8 followed by a surprising encouragIngly by Yankee phobes.22-0 victory over VOCational. Most clo~ followers of· ~he

Crimson strong' ~ame rea~lzed the compar~tive

Coming home after a most madequacles of the Nabonalsuccessful two weeks' absence is League standard bearers and feltpowerful New Bedford High. that for the pow.erfu~Yankees toThe Crimson launched the sea- succumb to all mfenor club.forson with a 6-6 tie agaJnst Rogers the s,econd successive year. JU~

, High of Newport, then proceeded. wasn t about to happen. It dldn t.) to post successive wins over

Rindge Tech, 28-8 and Chicopee,34-6. Diminutive Paul Mande­ville ran wild against the de­fending AA champions' of West­ern Mass. whose goal line hecrossed no less than four timeS.

We personally felt that Man­deville's early season loss due.tOa broken leg had a dlsastroUliimpact on the 1960 Crimson for­tune. If this is a valid premise,

. it follows that a physicallysound Mandeville will have anequally beneficent, effect as NewBedford moves,into the heart ofa strong independent schedule;The speedy scatbai;:k turned in,T.D. tours ranging from 15 to 81yards in theChico~fray,

The big game' of the dayshould prove to' be the Attleboro­Coyle setto at Hopewell Park.Both elevens are undefeated inBristol County competition. At­tleboro edged Durfee, 12.,8, low­bridged Taunton, 31-6 andblanked Fairhaven, 26-0, while

Page 20: 10.12.61

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 12, '1961

Complete

THE BANK ON

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Above all, the parish must wantthe progra'm -:... for surely anyand every parish mll,st realiiethe importance of thIs training

·and the urgent need of children.for religious instruction., ..

Look where you may - inplain sight and hearing is evi­dence 'ofthe steady drive' to

·for c e secular standards .oneveryone.

Secular WorldThe world about our children

is filled with secularism - it isthrust at them by every ,vIsual

. 'and auditory means. The adultopinions they. mOst generally

·hear or read accept immoralityas ll'ormal. They find that lackof ethics and downright dishon­esty is considered being'''prettysharp." The only sin seems to begetting oaught. Religion istreated with amused cynicism orcontempt.

To fight against the strong andrising tide of secularism. our'children must have some sort oflife line to grasp - and we cangive them one. A life line an­chored solidly on high' andprecious ground.

Now, as never before, they'need the~r faith. We must givethem a set of values - showthem a wayOof life .L- in keepingwith their heritage as childrenof God. And, . like it o.r not, wemust "publicize" this way of lifeas strongly as the. secularistspublicize their,s. And we must1;?egin where they begin - withthe smallest child.

So add a prayer of graUtudetonight for the CCD catecheticalprogram and add another for itscontinued success. And if yourparish does not have a programof religious instruction - stirthings up!

Give freely of your time andeffort. in support of the CCD­make 'ready for the happy daywhen some special group, andyou among them, wait· for thecall to duty- "Teachers-pre­pare to meet the children!"

. left to right, Mrs. G; Patton, Mrs. Mary Courtnell, ,Sister, William Ann.. Center, Sister James, Mrs. Raymond Alvey, Mrs. Joseph Labrecque. Right,Mrs. Arthur LaFrenier, Mrs. ~dwin 'Roderick, l\1rs. 'John Mulligan. CCDteachers seek ,constantly to impro,ve the!l1selves. .

CCD course in Teachl~r Trainingon the Cape-15 two-hour ses­sions covering ·lesson plans, andthe Three Steps and being sureof your facts and the use offlash cards and black):lOards a'rid,most particularly, how' to adaptCatholic theology to fourth gradelevel,

Saturday, April 11, 1959, 61graduates from 10 parishes re­ceivedcertificates as elementaryteachers from Bishop Connolly.

With certified' te,achers onhand, the catechetical programbegan to roll. Space for classeswas conjured into' being, trans­portation'was organized, teachersassigned, and religious instru~­tion became a working realitytwo. days a. week in ea~h par­ish.

Unovelf'$oi'y LoanOTTAWA (NC)-A$3,255,OOO

Federal loan for a student res­idence at Laval University,Quebec, has been approved. Itrepresents approximately 90per cent of a six··storY resi­dence of '465 rooms" recreationand .study halls.

Talk to GOIIl .

So each F,all, in Chatham andHarwich, the grades: move upand new, if not· exactly shining,faces replace the old. And eachFall the teachers assemble tolisten and learn while the Sis~'ters review the Past session andbreathe life into the blueprintfor the future.

And each year it is only thevery new teachel's that need re- .minding that one should talk toGod about the 'childrlen as muchas one tal~s to the .children aboutGod.

The teachers" meeting' in WestHarwich stressed discipline and,the need for strict adherence tothe teaching program and sched­ule. The theme for the' year is

. Unity - the Ecumenical Council,and its influence on the move­ment.

cActive participation ,by thepupils 'will involve self-improve­ment and prayer for success ofthe Pope's council. .

Program Instal~lation

The situation in' Chatham andWest HarwiCh is typical of whatmay be expected by any parishonce the CCD catechetical pro­gram is installed. Of cow-se the

. installation is not a simple oreasy ,matter. Ther~ must 'be in­struction and education in prep­aration ....". and theI'e must befull cooperation of parentS,teachers; Sisters and 1>astor.

Cape f;onirp,ternity' 'Unit~: ·Prepl;lre. to C~~bat :H~r%~eld Directs.Threat of Secularism. toChildre,n ,. '. MISSile Defense

, '. I WASHINGTON (NC) - TheBy Rusc;eU 'Colilinge . top man in a program to defend

"Teachers - prepare to meet the children!" This announcement, made in various ways this country from atomie mis­by varioqs Sisters tovariolis groups in vario.l!s parishe<;, 18 ,the keynote of me!'!tings .siles is also a firm advocate of

.more liberal immigration" lawscalled by Confraternity' of Christian Doctrine supervisors' just before teachers. start a -:-. and for good reason.new year of r~ligious instruction. The meetings give teachers an outline of the program

Charles M. Herzfeld, 36, scien=. tist and president of the CatholicAssociation for InternationaJI.Peace, has. been named by theDefense Department to directand coordinate the staff of thoentire Defender Program.

Wants Laws Libcll'anizellll

Herzfeld was 13 when he camQto this country from his nat'ivoAustria as a World War II refu~

gee. He is ever mindful of theopportunities which were giveo'him in this country and is an­xious the same treatment beaccOrded to other immigrants.

Before committees of Congressand in public addresses he has'emphasized that this country"traditionally encourages peoplefrom all over the world to enjoythe freedom and opportunity

. ,which the United States affords.To carryon this mission es­pecially in these critical timesHerzfeld contends the immigra~tion laws should be. more liberalto keep open the haven for theoppressed.

for the year, an understand-.ing of the "theine'" to .beemphasized, .and achance todiscuss old and new problems- to firidout what they may beup against in the new term.

A. chance, as an instance, forthis year's sixth grade teacherto learn from last year's fifthgrade teacher just ~ho must notsit next to whom.. .

Of course these m~ti~gs don't· just happen. N~' one says: "Let's.see, now - school starts 'nextweE)k, doesn't it? Might be' an,idea if some of us got together

· before then,huhT'Sisters' Plan

'No, the meetings take place,in Chatham and West Harwich,at . least, because the' Sisters ofOur Lady of Victory. start

• planning them at the. end of theprevious year and spend manyICIng, frustrating hours fittingeverything into place, even, ifnecessary, finding the place to·fit things .into.

And more long hours of simplearithmetic - dividing the' num­ber of pupils by the' number ofteachers and then - with .dueregard for personalities, nervoustensions, ability, reliability andavailability; with accurate ev:al­uat.ion a\1d iron-nerved. allow­ar.ce for all the possible foul-upsthat can and will happen - sub­dividing the complicated, dis-

· traeting and' frenzied turmoilinto classes.'

A process that seems amaz­ingly simple when the .resultsare all neatly mimeographedand calmly explained by a Sisterwhose greatest gift is the ability

.to impart her assurance that thisyear everything will run smooth­ly, and to leave everyone feelingthey have got .the one assign­ment they really'- wanted.

Naturally, these meetings re­quire that a catechetical programbe in operation.. And how doessuch a program get going?'Well,take Holy Redeemer parish inChatham and Holy Trinity par­ish in West'Harwich as examples.

First the SistersFirst came Our .Lady of Vic­

tory Missionary Sisters. Onlypausing long enough to unpacktheir bags in the new West Har­wich convent, they surveyed theparish, enlisted' helpers, andstarted the work of religious in_struction as a foundation for thecatechetical program under theConfraternity of Christian Doc­trine.

In 1959, Sister James, OLVM,instigated and directed the first

\CAPE CONFRATERNITY MEETING: At We&t' Harwich teachers'

meeting for Confraternity, of Christian .Doctrine. instructors, Mis'sionarySisters of Our Lady of -Victory point· out 'lesson techniques, refreshminds on teaching skills imparted at previous training courses. Left,

Rabbi ~s Dlfil$1l'ructorAt C«llll'~tfilUq~ C@~le9Je

ROCHESTER (NC)-A rab­bi will be on the faculty of St.John Fisher College here thisfall.

Rabbi David Z. Ben-Ami ofTemple Emanu-El in nearbyIrondequoit will be a part-time'instructor of I'" odern languagesat the col}e:::2, conducted byBasilian :<'uthzrs.

Father ~h;:T',,:)S' J. Lavery,C.S.B., pr: : '~'1t of the college,made the ..~..._.. . _...~nt.

President SignsLimited School'Aid Measure

WASHINGTON .(NC)President Kennedy "with ex­treme reluctance" signed in-.to law a bill which extendssome Federal aid to education

· but f::llls far short of what heoriginally sought.

The measure extends two ex­isting programs-the "impactedareas" program which gives

.money to public school districts'enrolling children of Federalemployees and the National De­fense Education Act designed tobolster scielJ.ce, mathematics andforeign language instruction. . \

Private schools, their teachersand students do benefit undersome NDEA programs, but theyreceive no aid under. the im­pacted areas program.. ·

Far Short. The bill signed by PresidentKennedy will channel about $900

· million ih Federal. funds iritoed­ucation il1 the next two' years.This was far short of what the .President had sought.

The Senate passed a $2,5 bil­lion measure to support publicgrade and high schools, but itwas blocked in the House RulesCommittee and a compromisebill was rejected on the Housefloor.

Catholic spOKesmen so u,g h t .·equal trea,tment for parochialschools as part of ariy generalschool aid' measure. A proposalto· lend private schools funds forspecial purpose construction wasput forward, but was blocked inthe House. Among its opponentswere Protestant· and Jewishgroups.

Hopes for Extension'in a sharply wordeCi-statement

issued in connection with thesigning of the bill, PresidentKennedy expressed the hope that'Congress would' extend the'NDEA beyonc its present form.

He was far more critical of the'impacted areas program, saying:"Individuals who profess opposi­tion to Federal 'aid to 'educationon grounds of states' rights, racialor religious controversy, budg­etary economy or academicfreedom do not hesitate to de­mand this Federal aid' to build'schoolhouses and pay teachers"

. salaries in their own areas.". 0

....