05.03.62

20
Hotel To Become Home for Aged PROPOSED NEW HOME FOR AGED IN NORTH ATTLEBORO TO SERVE FAITHFUL IN NORTHERN SECTION OF DIOCESE His Excellency, Most 0 :lames L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of Fall River, is interested in a petition to the Zoning Board of Appeals of the Town of No., Attleborough' for. necessary iIluthority to .establish a Resi.., dential and Nursing Home for. the Al!ed on the premises of the present Hotel HIxon. If the MceSSary authority is granted " to the, Diocese of Fall River, 'Bis- hop Connolly plans' to refurbish the present Hotel, facilities and construct a million dollar addi- tion to serve approximately 125 Aged. The planned facility will in- clude a Chapel to be built in front of the present structure and a new Nursing Wing which will be added to the rear. The Chapel will accommodate ap- proximately 150 and the nursing , area will include 80 beds, with four-bed wards, double and single rooms. ' Included in the plans are dining rooms, a new main. kit- chen, social and T.V. rooms, occupational and. physical ther- apy areas, a beauty parlor, nurses lounges, treatment and a recreation center. Modern hospital equipment and specialized installation for the safety and care of the Aged will dominate the. new structure. The former hotel rooms will be 'revitalized for residential guests and, will have accommo- dations of private rooms and baths for approximately forty individuals and couples; The institute will be staffed by the Grey Nuns of Ottawa, Canada, who will serve in supervisory capacities. They will , be assisted by a comp.1ete staff of lay personnel in the engi- neering, malhtenance and kit- chen departments. In the house and nursing areas lay people as maids, aids" licensed practical , ,Turn to Page Twelve Explain Church on Basis of True Values , Keynoter Tells 1,000 Diocesan Educators mind and causes our separated brother in Christ to draw strange conclusions about the validity of Catholicism to be the bearer of the Christ-announced good news of salvation." "Some Catholics, in speaking of the Faith to those outside the Church, slight essential doc- trines while making much of what are, at best, subjective reactions to, and devotions fol- lowing upon, these doctrines. We all know of the Catholics who have made more of the Fatima letter than the' necessity of feasting upon' the Body and Blood of Christ at the Sacrificial Banquet of the Mass," Father Driscoll commented. The teachers of the 12 high Turn to Page Twelve "IN CHARGE:: DiOcese's thousands of elementary :andhigh are Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, 'superintendent,. Sister Miriam, R.S.M. and Sister M. Felicita, R.S.M., Diocesan supervisors of elementary schools. John P. Driscoll, Assistant Gen- eral Manager of The Anchor, called upon Catholic teachers, .both religious and lay, to further the cause of Christian unity by an understanding and communi- cating of the truths' of the Faith in the prayerful atmosphere of charity. . Father .Driscoll charged, be- fore the almost 1000 teachers present, that "too manyCatho- lics, even teachers, look upon their. F.aith as a sort of spiritual , grab-bag, in which the doctrine of the Incarnation, the green scapular, the Holy Trinity, and devotion to St. Jude all seem to be on the same level of value, all holding equal importance, all equally necessary for salvation. This, confuses the non-Catholic MAY 20-30 Delivering the keynote address at the Seventh An- nual Di 0 ce san Teachers' Convention, meeting today and' tomorrow at Bishop Feehan High SchOOl in Attleboro, Rev. \ u for 5)eamerrtl Catholics are asked to ob- serve May 6 as Apostleship of the Sea Sunday, offering special prayers for the wel- fare of seamen here and through- out the nation at the request of Most Rev. Leo R. Smith, S.T.D., director of the National Catholic Apostleship of the' Sea Confer- ence. In this Diocese, Rev. John F. Hogan, director of St. Mary's Home, New Bedford, is also port chaplain in partiCUlar charge' of the ,spiritual welfare of seamen. The sea apostolate is difficult, notes Bishop Smith, because men at sea have no contact with priests and must go for long periods without attending Sun- day Mass. "The ordinary means of grace which \ the Church provides in abundance to landsmen are lack- ing to them. Still, perhaps be- cause of our Lord's special love for them, immense numbers of them are deeply Catholic men." Bishop Smith 'said that Pope ' John has called attention to the fact that "seamen must be very dear to our blessed Lord, for He chose them to found his Church." emphasis than that of non-Cath- olic Christians, he said. The non-Catholic observers at the council "will have broad of studying and fol- lowing the work of 'the counCil," according to Cardinal Bea. "These 'possibilities evidentlY will not be limited to, assisting at the solemn sessions 'in· the presence of the Pope, in which there is no further discussion,' but in which those theses which have already been discussed and approved in preliminary sessions are simply read out and formally voted on." addition, he continued, ob· servers "will even be able to participale in the, plenary se(l- sions, the so-called general con- gregations of the council fathers -the cardinals and bishops, that i&-i,n wWch the theses which have already been examined by the various commissions' of the Turn to Page Eighteen The ANCHOR River, Meus., ThMrsdlaYII M(tJy 3, 1962 v , L II Il..R O 19 © 1962 The Anchor, " $400PRICEyl0C .., g =.... . De, ea' Non-Catholic 'Observers To Attend Council ROME (NC) - Non-Catholic observers at the forth- coming Second Vatican Council will not be limited to formal fJessions but will be able to attend the plenary sessions. Augustin Cardinal Bea, S.J., head of the Vatican Secre- tariat for Promoting Chris- tian Unity, told more than 60 representatives of the, world press that' the Holy See will invite- to the council @lose non-Catholic observers -'who want to be invited." Cardinal Bea made it clear Giat non-Catholic representa- tives at the council which opens next Oct. 11 will be observers m fact, and will take no active part in the work of the council. He said also, that the observers cannot simply be interested ehurchmen without any official but must be representing Christian bodies of significant iltanding., ' , Asked if non-Christian observe era might also attend the coun- en, the 80-year-Old German- born Jesuit said that the matter lhad been discussed by his secre- tariat lind was still under study. tlhe interest of non-Christians MJowd certainly be different in.

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will be added to the rear. The Delivering the keynote address at theSeventhAn- nualDi 0 cesan Teachers' Convention, meeting today Catholicsareaskedtoob- serveMay 6as Apostleship ofthe SeaSunday,offering special prayersfor thewel- en, the 80-year-Old German- present Hotel HIxon. If the m fact, and will take no active @lose non-Catholic observers -'whowanttobeinvited." Cardinal Bea made it clear Giat non-Catholic representa- tivesatthecouncilwhichopens next Oct. 11 will be observers .., g ~ II "

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 05.03.62

Hotel To Become Home for Aged

PROPOSED NEW HOME FOR AGED IN NORTH ATTLEBORO TO SERVE FAITHFUL IN NORTHERN SECTION OF DIOCESE

His Excellency, Most Rever~nd 0

:lames L. Connolly, D.D., Bishopof Fall River, is interested in apetition to the Zoning Boardof Appeals of the Town of No.,Attleborough' for. necessaryiIluthority to .establish a Resi..,dential and Nursing Home for.the Al!ed on the premises of thepresent Hotel HIxon. If theMceSSary authority is granted

~ "

to the, Diocese of Fall River, 'Bis­hop Connolly plans' to refurbishthe present Hotel, facilities andconstruct a million dollar addi­tion to serve approximately 125Aged.

The planned facility will in­clude a Chapel to be built infront of the present structureand a new Nursing Wing whichwill be added to the rear. The

Chapel will accommodate ap­proximately 150 and the nursing

, area will include 80 beds, withfour-bed wards, double andsingle rooms. '

Included in the plans aredining rooms, a new main. kit­chen, social and T.V. rooms,occupational and. physical ther­apy areas, a beauty parlor,nurses lounges, treatment ro~ms

and a recreation center.Modern hospital equipment

and specialized installation forthe safety and care of the Agedwill dominate the. new structure.

The former hotel rooms willbe 'revitalized for residentialguests and, will have accommo­dations of private rooms andbaths for approximately fortyindividuals and couples;

The institute will be staffedby the Grey Nuns of Ottawa,Canada, who will serve insupervisory capacities. They will

, be assisted by a comp.1ete staffof lay personnel in the engi­neering, malhtenance and kit­chen departments. In the houseand nursing areas lay people asmaids, aids" licensed practical

, ,Turn to Page Twelve

Explain Church on Basis of True Values,Keynoter Tells 1,000 Diocesan Educators

mind and causes our separatedbrother in Christ to drawstrange conclusions about thevalidity of Catholicism to be thebearer of the Christ-announcedgood news of salvation."

"Some Catholics, in speakingof the Faith to those outside theChurch, slight essential doc­trines while making much ofwhat are, at best, subjectivereactions to, and devotions fol­lowing upon, these doctrines. Weall know of the Catholics whohave made more of the Fatimaletter than the' necessity offeasting upon' the Body andBlood of Christ at the SacrificialBanquet of the Mass," FatherDriscoll commented.

The teachers of the 12 highTurn to Page Twelve

"IN CHARGE:: Supe~isirig DiOcese's thousands ofelementary :andhigh 'school.g.tu~ents are Rev. Patrick J.O'Neill, 'superintendent,. Sister Miriam, R.S.M. and SisterM. Felicita, R.S.M., Diocesan supervisors of elementaryschools.

John P. Driscoll, Assistant Gen­eral Manager of The Anchor,called upon Catholic teachers,.both religious and lay, to furtherthe cause of Christian unity byan understanding and communi­cating of the truths' of the Faithin the prayerful atmosphere ofcharity. .

Father .Driscoll charged, be­fore the almost 1000 teacherspresent, that "too manyCatho­lics, even teachers, look upontheir. F.aith as a sort of spiritual

, grab-bag, in which the doctrineof the Incarnation, the greenscapular, the Holy Trinity, anddevotion to St. Jude all seemto be on the same level of value,all holding equal importance, allequally necessary for salvation.This, confuses the non-Catholic

MAY 20-30

Delivering the keynoteaddress at the Seventh An­nual D i 0 c e san Teachers'Convention, meeting todayand' tomorrow at Bishop FeehanHigh SchOOl in Attleboro, Rev.

\

u~g~s Pr(lJ'f~r~

N~xt Su~d1ay

for 5)eamerrtlCatholics are asked to ob­

serve May 6 as Apostleshipof the Sea Sunday, offeringspecial prayers for the wel­fare of seamen here and through­out the nation at the request ofMost Rev. Leo R. Smith, S.T.D.,director of the National CatholicApostleship of the' Sea Confer­ence.

In this Diocese, Rev. John F.Hogan, director of St. Mary'sHome, New Bedford, is also portchaplain in partiCUlar charge' ofthe ,spiritual welfare of seamen.

The sea apostolate is difficult,notes Bishop Smith, because menat sea have no contact withpriests and must go for longperiods without attending Sun­day Mass.

"The ordinary means of gracewhich \ the Church provides inabundance to landsmen are lack­ing to them. Still, perhaps be­cause of our Lord's special lovefor them, immense numbers ofthem are deeply Catholic men."

Bishop Smith 'said that Pope 'John has called attention to thefact that "seamen must be verydear to our blessed Lord, for Hechose them to found his Church."

emphasis than that of non-Cath­olic Christians, he said.

The non-Catholic observers atthe council "will have broadposs~bilities of studying and fol­lowing the work of 'the counCil,"according to Cardinal Bea."These 'possibilities evidentlYwill not be limited to, assistingat the solemn sessions 'in· thepresence of the Pope, in whichthere is no further discussion,'but in which those theses whichhave already been discussed andapproved in preliminary sessionsare simply read out and formallyvoted on."

~n addition, he continued, ob·servers "will even be able toparticipale in the, plenary se(l­sions, the so-called general con­gregations of the council fathers-the cardinals and bishops, thati&-i,n wWch the theses whichhave already been examined bythe various commissions' of the

Turn to Page Eighteen

TheANCHOR

FQ:d~ River, Meus., ThMrsdlaYII M(tJy 3, 1962

v, ""'~o LII

Il..R O• 19 © 1962 The Anchor, " $400PRICEyl0C.., g =.... . De, ea'

Non-Catholic 'ObserversTo Attend Council

ROME (NC) - Non-Catholic observers at the forth­coming Second Vatican Council will not be limited to formalfJessions but will be able to attend the plenary sessions.Augustin Cardinal Bea, S.J., head of the Vatican Secre­tariat for Promoting Chris­tian Unity, told more than60 representatives of the,world press that' the HolySee will invite- to the council@lose non-Catholic observers-'who want to be invited."

Cardinal Bea made it clearGiat non-Catholic representa­tives at the council which opensnext Oct. 11 will be observersm fact, and will take no activepart in the work of the council.He said also, that the observerscannot simply be interestedehurchmen without any official~atus, but must be representingChristian bodies of significantiltanding., ', Asked if non-Christian observeera might also attend the coun­en, the 80-year-Old German­born Jesuit said that the matterlhad been discussed by his secre­tariat lind was still under study.tlhe interest of non-ChristiansMJowd certainly be different in.

Page 2: 05.03.62

• HYANNIS" ":- HARWICliPORT

t~~

--­DOANI;·8E.AL·AMtS, INC~IlPOR.ATltD

Necero!ogyMAY 9

Rev. J. E. Theodule Giguere,1940, Pastor, St. Anne, New Bed­ford.

Rev. John P. Clarke, 1941,Pastor, St: Mary, Hebronvilie.

J;lIlJlN~~A~ IOg~rneii'~Ui~

ll.l5, lllltV1ING'I'ON fu.WY 7-78311il

NlEW IBE][)!F'OlltD

O'ROURKEFuneral Home

571 Second St.Fall River, Mass.

OS 9·6072MICHAEL J.' McMAHON

Lice~sed Funeral -DirectorRegistered Embalmer

[BROOKLAWN1f1llNltRAl HOME, INC.a. C1orcol RD7 - O. LorrolDO RCI'I

Rouer LaP'ranc;o

Rebukes Laymen'For CtriticismOf Prel~tes

TRENTON (NC) - Bis­hop George W. Ahr of Tren­ton haa rebuked "certainlaymen" for' "ignorant, in­solent and arrogant crittci!!m ofthe Bishops of the ~untry."

'~Tbere has been IB recentmonths a vast volume of iU­considered, badly advised andpoorly defined talk about the

\ place of the laity in the Church.which has resulted in attitude.and understandings that are un.­theological and uncanonical,·Bishop Ahr said.

Sow Seeds of Schism"This talk has already re­

sulted in igno"rant, insolent andarrogant criticism of the Bishopsof the country by certain lay­men: Such talk can only buildfalse hopes of unattainablepower_and, 'prominence in theminds of proud and ambitiousmen. Such talk sows the seedsof anti-clericalism and' schism."

Bishop Ahr, speaking to a ban­q~et of the Anicient Order ofHibernians ana their auxiliary,said the Church was "foundedby Jesus Christ, as a monar­chical, hierarchical society in'which all right to rule and thedivine right to teach were re­stricted to the Apostles under;Peter and to their suceessors, theBishops of the Catholic Church,with and under the Pope.

"And no amount of talk bycompromising theologians orambitious laymen will changethat fact," he added.

Quotes Holy' FatherThe Bishop praised the "har­

vest of sancity" in Irish tradi­tion, attributing it to aevotionto prayer, love and' loyalty' to

, the Church, and reverence fO'l'the priesthood.

He contrasted these virtueBwith the attitudes of thosewhom he criticized, saying: "Farbetter was the love of theChurch and the respect for thepriesthood so marked in thelives of your fathers." .

He recalled that Pope J ohBlast year told a group of Catho­lic' Action pilgrims that theapostolate. ,of the Church is "Illmission, the execution of an or­der," which Catholics must carryon under the' direction of theirbishops.

F~tt\l!t"al Dome

550 Locum St.Fail River. MI3SfI.

@$ :Ml3'1Rose E. Sullivan

Jeffrey E, Sullivan

~o ~ri' [x]£~~~~@'ii'@~

,lrlUJ~IE~fQ\[' IHI©AAIE986 Plymouth Avenue

Fall River, Mass. 'Tol. os 3-2271

DANiEl C HARRINGTON,Ucenso(, Funoral Dlroclor

and Reglaterod Embalmor

~" !i>. $~~~iw~n & Son's,FUNERAL HOME

469 LOCUST STREETPALL RIVER, "lASS.

OS· 2·3381WHIred C. Jam....

DrilCOll .....lvan, Jr.

JEFFREY E. SULLIVAN

,Al!J~~~'i8!N~Fltull!ralHcme

.Heleft Aubertine '8raul/lh

Owner aJld DirectorSpacious Parking Area

WY 2-2957lit Allea lit. New..,....

StressPI~1n of Life

GRADUATION IN JAPAN: A Japanese student bowsformally as she receives her degree from Father FrancisX. bizumi, S.J., president of Sophia University, Tokyo, atthe school's' recentgrl;tduation exercises. The Jesuit in­stitution 'gradu~ted 669 students out of a student body of,more 'than 4,400.' NC Photo.'

,llUi:h a home, looks ahead \tosuch a job, is hardly a suitablerecipient for truth. Where thetreasure is, not ,only the heart,but the mind _is-and the treas­ure today is in earth-bound se­curity, self-centered. advance­ment and man-made decisions."

Newman teachers, he said,must expose for collegians "thepossibilities of the Mystical Bodyof Our Lord as a plan of life."

,[E©J~ft@r~@n~,~~@(9)@~ [»@(§~~®rro~

l@~if ~h~g1H~e tEU'i3(6Y<6~C~a~, DETROIT (NC) -A lay editor told Catholic educators

here that 'he rates 'His Holiness Pope John XXIII's Materet Magistra as ",a \last •chance encyclical" 'because, if thesocial practices urged in it and its predecessors are not put,into effect shortly it will be 'for the ,Spiritual ,-Life Institutetoo late. Donald Thorman, of America, a cultural projectformer managing' editor of of theD i s cal c e d CarmeliteAve M~ria magazine, tolg a Fathers, noted that Pope Johnsession of the 59th annual con- repeated an app:al ma~e 25,vention of the. National ~athplic years before by p~us. XI m hisEducational Association that the encyclical on AtheistIc Commu­Church's social teachings have nisin. It is that the' Church'sbeen scorned by being ignored. so~ial teach~ngs sho~ld ~ ''re-

• ' ][g' d' qUlred currIculum" In Catholicnore ' hi' 11 .,, ..' .t " sc 00 s, espeCla y semmarles.

"Let's be reahstIc about 1, S t 1 'I' hii'Nt' tth 1 f ,oca eac ngs

he .said. 0 ,Jus e ru ers 0 yet' he said few Catholicsnations have s cor ned the, ' ,,' ,t h · f th Ch h I state responded. How many peopleeac mgs 0 e urc. 1 . 1 R l' 1't . 1 f t· Shave - c erica, e IgOUS or ay­1 as.a simp e ac. 0 do' you know who really under-Cathohc educat.ors and members stand what th'e Church's socialof the C~thohc press and. -:- teachings are all a'bout?" hewell, you can make up your hst. k dWe have scorned the Church's asEed · ti. 1 . t·tut· he; 1 t h' ' b ., uca ona Ins 1 Ions,socl,a eac mgs y Ignormg .d st beg' t turn outthe " sal , .mu In .0

T~~rman, who was recently ,pe~ple knowledgeable in thenamed ;director of 'development SOCial encyclicals. '

"I do not think it melodrama­tic to suggest tha~ this might beyour last chance to answer therecurring plea of the Church forour educational' structures tomake' the social doctrine of'theChurch an integral part. ofCatholic education. At least, Ifyou decide to ignore this lastchance, be prepared to live withthe inevitable fruits of yourneglect," he" said.

1l.<e@D@I!'t' @f ~~~~IJ'il~}fThe following films' are to be

added to the lists in their re-'spective classific,ations:

Unobjectionable for' generalpatronage: Runaway.

Unobjectionable for adults andadolescents: Lisa.' ",

Condemned:. Jules and 'Jim(utterly immoral).,

C han g e of Classification:"Wild Harvest" is changed from

'Condemned Classification toMorally Objectionable in Partfor All. Revisions have improvedtfie film somewhat but it is stillsuggestive in costuming andsituations. /

6 - Our Lady of the'Immaculate Conception,North Easton.

St. Vincent's Home, FallRiver.

St. Mary, Hebronville.

FORT¥ HOUtltS

lD>/EVOTfiOIM

May 13 - St. Patrick, Fal­mouth.

St. Joseph's "Orphanage,Fall River.

May 20-St. Casimir, NewBedford.

Villa Fatima, Taunton.Holy Ghost, Attleboro.

May ~7-St. Mathieu, FallRiver. '

St.'Kilian, New Bedford.

May

, '

May 6--2:00 P.M., Holy Family,East ,Taunton; St. Francis

TBB &.NCBOB Xavier, Hyannis.Second CIa... Poataa. I'aid at r.D at..... 4:00 P.M., Sacred Heart, Taun-

Kaaa. Pobl'-1McI ."17 l'h1lftdQ at 61eBhrblaDd A......_ h11 RI..... ......., 'ton; ~t. Patrick, 'Falmouth.~ 1:i~~~1e8Q~I::''=-m;--'f ':30 P.M., St. Peter, Dighton;_tpl4 ,..00 ..~ ~. :.'.'" ...... '.,~ Ii. .Joseph, Woods HO~J' ':. ,

,

Hai~s Bib~e- ~m~h~~m~In Religious Tra~ning

WASIDNGTON (NC) .:- ~he content and methods'of'religious education-' have undergone "revolutionary"changes since the 1930's, according to a specialist in the,field. Father Joseph B. Collins, S.S., director of the NationalCenter of the Confraternity Biblical Met~o~of Christian Doctrine, out- "From the authority of God'slined the new developments Word derive motivation forin an address yesterday to loving and loyal acceptance ofsome 90 CCD diocesan direc- His message of salvation. The

,tors attending their" 26th an- method is inductive and bibli-Dual m~eting 0 here. , cal, no longer deductive and

Father Collins summed up ,analytical,'" he said. .the changes under" the heading Father Collins' declared that"Kerygmatlc Renewal." -<Keryg- this is a "far, cry" from ,thema is a Greek word for herald, "atrocious but unhappily per­and "kerygmatic" was the term slstent" system of having chil-,applied in primitive Christian dren simply meplorize chunkstimes to the central core, of of the catechism text.Christian truths.) Such a procedure, he said,

New Approach "c~_.n~~· be called, teaching reli-A fundamental change in re- gion; and 'the catechism cannot

~nt years has been that the be blamed for such cavalierdeductive approach to religious treatment."education, starting with formal Catechism Lastpropositions and theses, has ,Today, Father' Collins com-given way to an "inductive mented, "the catechism is placedprocess," Father Collins said. 'last in the catechetical triad:

Under this new approach, he Bible, liturgy and catechism .. .continued, "the Bible story of It should never be placed in theGod's goodness 'and love toman- hands of the pupil. Rather itskind, 'and the liturgy, which is material is properly placed onlythe living worship of God en- in guides or manuals for teach­shrined in prayer and in the ers in graded and illustratedmyriad details of the ecclesiasti- pU~il texts, and in book1ets for081 years,~ are today made the parents,"evidences and proo~s of the Another important aspect oftruths and precepts that are to the new approach to religiousbe taught and explained." education is the emphasis on

Referring to this as a "bibli- teaching methods, the priestcal-historical method," he said continued: 'a typical religion lesso~ begins '''Modern catechetics must bewith 'he scriptural source of its jllst as concerned with methodtheme. \ ;,. . as with content,'" he ,said.

"Skill in method . . . is· a markof a well-trained catechist to­

leIay."FRIDAY -St. -Monica, Widow. : As for the basic, orientation

III Class. White. Mass Proper; of, the new religious education,he' said, "the former stress on'Gloria; no Creed; Preface of

Easter. Two Votive Masses in knowledge alone has been' .re-honor of the Sacred Heart of placed by emphasis on love.Jesus permitted. Tomorrow is : "The message of Christ, thethe First Saturday of the teaching of His Church areMonth. looked uponas the express invi-

SATURDAY-St. Pius V, Pope, tation to men to love God inand Confessor. III Class. White. return for His love."Mass Proper; Gloria; no.Creed;' Father Collins said the newPreface of Easter. approach also underlines the

SUNDAY _ II Sunday after Christian apostolate. "ReligionEaster. II Class. White. Mass is not taught as' a personalized,Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface endowment of the individual,of Easter. but as a mode of the apostolate

MONDAY-St. Stanislaus, Bish- and mission which Christiansop and Martyr. III Class. Red. share with Christ and His suc­Mass 'Proper; Gloria; no Creed; cessors. the bishops, in the sal-Preface of Easter. vation of all men," he explained.

TUESDAY - Mass of previous \Sunday. IV Class. White, Mass Prelate Urges TeacherrsProper; Gloria; no Creed;

Preface of Easter. Mw~g.;rtllft BOdy asWEDNESDAY-St. Gregory.Na-

zianzen, Bishop, Confessorimd I DETROIT (NC)-A new deep'Doctor of the Church. III Class. South" archbishop told Newman

'White. Mass Proper; Gloria; ~oundation teachers here' thatno Creed; Preface of Easter. the students they face today are

THURSDAY - St. Antoninus, ~ictims of depersonalization,Bishop and Confessor. III many'raised in homes which areClass. White. Mass Proper; no more than big ,telephoneGlori~; Second Collect SS. booths.,Gordian and Epimachus: Mar- Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan of

'tyrs; no Creed; Preface of Atlanta, Ga., said that "uprooted_Easter.' ness is a phenomenon of ,the big

apartment building, the stylizedsuburbs, the faceless factoriesand the mechanized office build­"ings..

"These are the places fromwhich students are coming; theyare the places where they willeventually work.'", The prelate called upon the

chaplains in their educationalprograms on non-Catholic cam­puses to show students a higherground than the valley of con-'formity and complacency. .

Personal E:il;perience"Far too many homes," he told

a dinner meeting, "have becomelarge telephonr booths where wemake arrangement to go out; too~any jobs are only occupationsdevoid of craft, pride and prin­ciples. "

"The student who lives in

Page 3: 05.03.62

\

3

TotalsTHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fnll River-Thurs., Mav 3. 1962

ISing175u806 O~ TeO~~IDLrn~ S)lfcQJ~§S

Of u. So C@U'ho~~~ ~~lro@@~~N~W Y~:>R~ (~C)-The fulltime teaching staffs of

ed~catIonal mstItut~ons under Catholic auspices in "'theUmted States ~ave mcreased by 7,129 to a record total of175,806, accordmg to the Official Catholic Directo f1962, published here by P. J. . . ry orKenedy and Sons. or nOVItIates and scholasticates;

278 colleges and universities'The new total comprises 1,566 diocesan and parish high

11,586 priests, 818 scholas- schools; 8~9 private high schools;tics, 5,016 Brothers, 100,871 Sis- 10,177 pansh e.lement1!ry schools,ters and 57,515 lay teachers. . and 453 pnvate elementaryThese figures represent increases sch~ols. ,!he~e are also 127 pro­in the past yea'r of 26 priests, 248 tectIve Ins~Itutions, with 12,­scholastics 209 Brothers 2015 832 youths In attendance.Sisters and 4,631 lay teach~r~. Candidates for Priesthood

A high of 14;015 separate edu- . New educati?nal institutionscational institutions _ 54 newly Inc~u.de two dIOcesan and sixestablished during 1961 _ in- r;hgIOUS o~der seminaries estab­eludes 98 diocesan seminaries; hshed dur~ng !961. The 98 dio­447 religious order seminaries cesan semInanes report enroll-

. ~ent of 23,662 ~eminarians, anIncrease of 2,342, while the 447novitiates and scholasticates of

. the religious orders have 22,592students or 2,041 more, indi_cating a total of '46,254 candi­dates for the priesthood.

In 1945, the directory listed311 seminaries and novitiateswith an enrollment of 21,523. In1962 there are 545 'such institu­tions with 46,254 shiClents.

Catholic colleges and univer­sities in 1945 totaled 210 with92,426 stUdents. There are now278 such institutions with 336-604 students. '

Enrollment DoublesHigh schools in 1945 numbered

2,3~1 and had 447,699 students,whIle today there are 2,435 suchschools with 945,785 students.Elementary schools increasedfrom 8,030 enrolling· 2 029 012pupils in' 1945 to 10630 'en­rolling 4,451,893 in 1962..

Overall, the number of U.S.Catholic educational institu­tions h~srisen by 2,976 (27.3 percent) Since 1945, while their en­rollment has grown by 3189-676 (123.1 per cent). "

The upward trend in Catho_lic college and university en­rollments for the ninth year isreflected by an increase of 14­605 college students during 196i.The record postwar decrease of31,699 occurred in 1951-52. Cur­rent enrollments now total 336,.604, or 64 per cent more collegestudents than 10 years ago - anin~rease of 131,667 over the 204,­937 in 1952.

High School IncreaseThe number of fulltime pupils

in Catholic elementary and highschools reflects an increase of121,604 during the past year.The 1,566 Parish and diocesanhigh schools' rep 0 r t 588 968pupils, an increase of 42;709above 1961; the 869 private highschools with 356,817 show an in­crease of 16,781 in one year.

Pupils in 10,177 parish ele­mentary schools now number4,367,076, or 66,845 more, whilestudents in the 453 private ele­mentary schools now total 84.817. In addition, 12,832 studentsare accommodated in the 127protective institutions.

Released Time InstructionThe further progess of reli­

gious instruction to children un.der released time, in religiousvacation schools and otherclasses, is evidenced in the 1962reports of 3,749,522 public schoolchildren receiving religious in­struction, indicating a year's in.crease of 277,346 pupils, or 7.98per cent.'

The directory reported 992,691high school pupils and 2,756,831in elementary grades receivingsuch instruction. There is a total(including orphans) of 9,542,.890 American youths in aUgrades under Catholic instruc­tion - 'an increase of 418,698, or'4.58 per cent over comparablefigures for 1961. .

SurveyCurriculum

DISCUSS CAMPAIGN: Discussing plans for annualCatholic Charities' appeal are Bishop Connolly and J. HarryCondon, Attleboro, this year's lay chairmaP

Catholic EducatorsDecisions o.n

DETROIT (NC) - Catholic high school educatorslaunched here a nationwide analysis of how their. schoolsare reacting to movements which have brought many tradi­tional courses of study under fire. How many schools, forexample, woul€l support anew movement to have pro- P?rtment and educational su~er-

. . . VIsor for the Northern ProvincefesslOnal people outSIde the of the Xaverian Brothers.,schools correct student com- "Our curriculum is being'positions in English courses? handed us from far too many

This is one aspect of the proj- sources today," the Brother saidect which began at the 59th an- in an interview. "Many coursesnual' convention of the National of study co~ing this way areCatholic Educational Association. good. But the question is, should

Other aspects are weightier. we merely accept them? ShouldFor E'xample, the study will seek not we analyze them? Find outto find how schools relate their the philosophy behind them andcurriculum deCisions to, the relate it t9 our philosophy? TheseCatholic philosophy of education. are the questions we will study."It also will ask how curriculums The six' advisory comrriitteesa~e related to accrediting agen- will gather information on pres-Cles. ent practices in curriculum' de-

Six Subjects velopment in Catholic highAdvisory committees, made up schools. From this information

of Catholic teachers and admin- they will sketch a 'picture of theistrators, have been formed to new trends.study six subject areas: English, The committees then will sur­science, foreign languages, reli- vey the new movements and trygion, mathematics and history. to determine which may be theIf they are successful, school most acceptable.administration, educational tele- "We actually have two majorvision and other areas may be goals." explained Father Koob.added to the study. "The first is to encourage local

The project is being coordi- schools to take a long hard look'nated by Brother Bartholomew, at how they got their. presentC.F.X., of· Newton Highlands, course of studies, and the secondMass., retiring president of the is to assist them to choose fromNCEA's Secondary School De- among the' new movements...·

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DETROIT (NC)-The newpresident general of. theNational Catholic EducationAssociation said - Catholic'education:is so essential today

, that not a single grade should beconsidered expendable.

Coadjutor, Archbishop John P.Cody of New Orleans made thestatement in an inaugural mes­sage to delegates at the NCEA's59th annual convention.

"Indeed," he said, "our. pas­toral concern must be so keenour support must be so generous:that no grade in a parochialschool and no level in a diocesansystem - from kindergarten tograduate school-should be con­sidered expendable.

creased by 461, to a present totalof 25,633, while 22,895 childrenare cared fur (in foster homes.The total of 48,528 dependent·children reflects an increase of1,678 within the past year.

Homes for invalids and theaged were increaded by 16 andnow number 355, with additionalfacilities. of 2,367, for 33,738residents.

125,000 ConvertsFor the ninth straight year,

tht! number of converts enteringthe Catholic Church exceeded125,000. During 1961 128430became. Catholics, bri~ging' th~total conversions during the pastdecade to 1,354,968.

The number of infant baptismsduring 1961 - 1,352,371 - is anincrease of 3,131 for the year.Marriages recorded increased by36&. to 319,847. Dur-ing the sameperiod, 356,878 Catholics died inthe U.S.. 8,349 more deaths than'in the previous year.

Lauds DialoguesHe stressed that such an atti­

tude does not entail a compro­mise in essential beliefs but aworking together in a spirit ofbrotherhood.Fath~r Baum, the only Cana­

dian consultant on fhe Secre­tatiat for Christian Unity pre­paring for the Second Vatical1'Council, lauded current "dialo­gues" between Catholic and Pro­testant theologians as a meansof reducing bigotry.

Urge~ Positive'"',

Out~ook, TowardOthel1' Re~i~ions

VANCOUVER . (NC) ­A priest-convert from ag­nosticism said here thatCa·tholics should "cultivatea positive outlook to the tem­poral world, Protestants _ and .Jews,"

Father Gregory BaUlll, O.S.A.said in a talk at the Universityof British Columbia that modernanti-Semitism has taken on"fantastic dimensions."

The Augustinian priest, whowas born of Jewish parents inBerlin, Germany, and reared asan agnostic, delivered the fifthNewman Christian Culture lec­ture at the university.

He said that "Catholics shouldcultivate charity in attitude andpractice towards other Chris­tians, Jews and people of goo.dwill."

Number of U.S. C~tholics ' NowClo~~ to 43 Million Persons-

NEW YORK .(NC)-The exact total of U.S. Catholicsis now 42,876,665, according to the Official CathOlic Direc­~ory for 1962 published here by P. J. Kenedy and Sons. Thenumber includes those in the 50 states, all families of thedefense forces at home andabroad, and the diplomaticand other services abroad.The new total is an increaseof 771,765 over last year's figureof 42,104,900, and a 10-year in­crea.se of 12,451,650 (or 40.9 percent) over 1952's figure of 30,­425,015,

There are now 27 archdiocesesIn the United States and 120dioceses.

Chicago LeadsThe 27 ar~hdioceses reported

a growth of 35,306 and the 120dioceses 736,459. The eightarchdioceses with Catholic pop­ulations in excess of one millionare Chicago, 2,163,380; Boston,1,698,138; New York, 1,651,400;Newark, N.J.,. 1,495,298; LosAngeles, 1,421,478; Detroit, 1,­396,346; Philadelphia 1251 934and San Francisco, 1;121,595. '

Brooklyn continues· as thelargest diocese, with a Catholicpopulation of 1,493,164. Otherswith more than then 500,000 are:PiLLsburgh, 903,688; Buffalo,N.Y., 873,089; Cleveland, 818,­~40: Rockville Centre, ·N.Y.,694,497; Providence, R.I., 521,­358; Trenton, ~.J., 518,307, andCorpus Christi, Tex., 504,250.

Clergy IncreaseAn increase of 899 in' the

number of the clergy brings the~tal of ordained priests to 55,-

. 581, the largest ever recorded.There are now 33,774 (633 more)diocesan or secular clergy, and:U,807 religious order priests, anincrease of 266. Newly ordainedpriests listed for the first timenumber 1,679.

One cardinal, five bishops and780 priests are listed in thenecrology. Professed Religia'uspersonnel inciude 11,502 Bro­thers and 173,351 Sisters, repre.:.senting respective increases of574 Brothers and 2,913 Sisters.

Two new general and fourless special institutions bringthe number of Catholic hospi­tals to 947~ Bed capacities havebeen increased by 1,660 to pre­sent facilities for 152,912. '

. The number of g'eneral hos­pitals is 816, with 141,331 beds,and the 131 special hospit!lls ac­comndate 11,581. Patients treatedin 1961 increased by !>81,208 toa record high of 14,442,188 inthe 947 Catholic hospitals.

Dependent ChildrenCurrent, enrollments of 35,700

students in the' 344 Catholictraining schools for nurses rep­resent a decrease of 194 in thenumber 'of student nurses.

Children in the 272 orphan­ages and infant asylums in-

SERRA DISTRICT MEETING: Principals in the Dis­trict 40 meeting of the Serra Clubs of Providence, FallRiver, New Bedford and Attleboro area were Bishop Ger­rard; Bishop McVinney; Bishop Connolly and Very Rev.

., Kevin Harrison, O.F.M. Cap., guest speaker.

Page 4: 05.03.62

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CareJincd CushingSees Plf@paganda

~n Image, WorryBOSTON (NC)-Richard.

Cardinal Cushing says he isweary of hearing the word"image" used in reference tothe U. S., Massachusetts aAdBoston.

"The continuous reference tothe 'image' of the United States,of Massachusetts and of Bostonwearies me and, many others,"the Archbishop of Boston de­clared at a Knights of Columbusdinner honoring U. S. H 0 useSpeaker ,John W. McCormack ofMassachusetts.

, Far More impOrtant

He urged that less attention bepaid to "images" and more tothe fact that the U. S.is a natioa"under God."T~ th~ nations of the world

and to all 50 states of this coun-'try, "the dictum of Thomas A.Kempis appl~es just as effective­ly as it, applies to individualS:~It is not what men say about Ufl

that matters; it is what Godknows about ~.' " '

For information about the

Holy' Crass Fathers or. Brothers, w;ite to:

HOLY CROSS FATHERSNorth Easton, Massachusetts.

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A~er.ican ,Pre~s, Inc.;OFFSET - PRINTERS - LlTTERPRESS

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where in some instances only 10per cent of the worker familiesare now self-sufficient:'

Both religious and lay volun­teers (effective workers - notjust those who can be "spared")should .offer to work in LatinAmerica in areas where they areneeded.

. Americans shouid work active­ly,with groups ,in our own coun­try: such as the Peace Corps,which are attempting to funnelaid into the country.

Americans must, keep informedand concerned about the LatinAmerican struggle for Ii betterand more just life.

Lawman Genu,flects,Then ,Nabs Es~apee

SOUTH' SAN FRANCISCO(N~) - Deputy Sheriff RayGaribaldi, a Catholic, ran into:All Souls' Church here, genu­flected before the altar, thenraI! behind it and captured aJl

es~aped prisoner.The prisoner had appeared in

municipl(Il court on a bad ,checkcharge. He ~s bein'g hand­cuffed for the return trip tojail when he, broke loose. .

.' Garibaldi raced after him into".the church, brought him out' at

gunpoint from behind the altarand marched him back to court:'

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Lauds lHIonse Spe~ker

Mceormack received the sixthannual Lantern Award of theK. of C. Council for his "extra­ordinary patriotic service" to thestate and nation.

The Cardinal lauded Congress­man 'McCormack and his wife,Harriet, "for exemplifying inpui?lic life an ideal union b&­tween husband and.wife." Healso said that McCormack is "apublic' servant who needs noartificial image to present him ina favorable light locally ~

nationally."

FREED CUBANS AT MASS: Liberated prisoners from"'. t "ForI 81 Ihong

. tbime and. veryH' 'P'" P . s rong y ave een convillced, av~na ~ n~cIpe rlS?n c~pt~;ed after the ill-fated Bay that all this worry-about our

of PIgS InVaSIOn kneel In MIamI s Gesu Church during Re- 'image' is a lot of misplaced em­quiem Ma,ss. offered for the 94 freedom fighters killed' in phasis, if not propaganda on thethe invasion attempt. NC Photo. ,par.t of on' of the two' major

" political parties in our country orboth," the Hub prelate said.

Declaring that those who usethe "image" phrases "must havea limited, vocabulary," the Car­dinal continued: "Tpey believe,whether right or wrong, that thereputation of the country, ourBay State, our capital city isbadly tarnished. We have been'smeared,' 'betrayed' and 'black­mailed,' they proclaim. We mustimprove our 'image.' Get Madi­son Avenue publicity agents'" ,. •spend a millon or more on adver-,tising our virtues."

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Guidance CounselorsElect Fr. Moreau: CHICAGO (N'd) - Father

qeorge H. Moreau, O.M.I., guid_ance director at Bishop Fallon~igh School, Buffalo, N. Y., wase~ected president of the National' ,Gatholic Guidance Conference at 'its eighth annual conventionhere. -, '. Brother Mari~ Belka, S.M., ofSt. Mary's Uniyersity, San An­to~io, Tex.; conducted by ,theMarianists, ,was chosen presi­dent-elect. 0ther officers electedincluded: J!'ather Edmund W.Olley, St. Joseph~s High School,Kenosha, Wi,;., executive direc­tor; Carl Fisher; University ofSanta Clara, Calif., treasurer,and Sister Marie de Chantei Im_macu~ata High School, Deiroit.All are 'guidance directors at therespective institutions.

More than 1,000 guidancecounselors· representing 750 uni­versities, coll~ges and . highschools throughout the' countryattended the two-dayconventiOD..

Based on Love: Moreover, althou';;h the child

may obey. a parental order be­cause he wishes to avoid disap­proval or gain approval' in a~p~cific instance, this is not anadequate basis for solid charac- Father ConsBd;ne Asks Personaltel' formation..

The child must so identify Assistolrnce foil' Latin Americawith both parents that he wantst'o conform; that is good behavior LOUISVILLE (Nt) - Latinis valued because it sustains and Am~ica, a "rebelliously poor"strengthens a relationship that region and "one of the world'she desires. major areas of destitution," needs. This means that parental au- more than economic aid from

thority can fulfill its real pur- America.,poses only if parents are loved "It needs us to send people, as, which is another way of sayirJJi well as dollars, to work for jus­that parental· authority must be ,tice, to understand and to sharebased 0:1 love, since it exists for' th e people's,. poverty-strickenthe well-being of the children. lives," according to Father John, Parents are Models J. Considine; M.M., director of, Adequate exercise 'of parental the Latin America Bureau of the

authority raises serious problems National Catholic Welfare Con­fo~ the modern middle-class ference, Washington, D:C.father, who tends to spend much Father'Considine told 600 peo­of his time and energy away pIe at Ursuline College here thatfrom the home and consequently the people of Latin America are'confides the rearing of his chil- convinced to~ay that "they aredren almost entirely to his wife. unjustly poor, and they 'are

Yet it is not the time spent at detenniJ:led to have 8 chance."home but the image' of tne par- Reds Active~nt imprinted in the mind of the The communists, he said, havechild that is significant. hundreds' of agents located in. Couples who have learned, to the "misery villages" outside

work together and to share au- big industrial centers to enlistthority appear equally loving to the discontent of the people. ontheir children, though one must the side of communism.

, be absent much of the' time. '''I challenge you," Father~ Fathers who avoid all exercise Considine said, "to find a group

cif authority.or are harsh and im- " tl)at goes to the lengths they doIJUlsive in giving orders cause ... Their aim is to destroy every

,children either to identify aU vestige' of JJ:l,oral or spiritualauthority with the mother or to' prindple remaining with theobey unly. out of fear. Latin American people."

In brief, Lester, you will te;ch The 'Cath'olic Church in Latinby what you are. Since growing America is in "deep trouble," hechildren look upon their parents said,pointing out that there isas models, you and your wife only vne parish priest for everyhave your work 'clearly ,cut out"'- 6,000 persons there.for you. . '. Practical Steps

He suggested several practicalsteps to help "widen the base ofself-sufficiency" among a people

THE ANCHOR-~jocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 3,,19624

P@rent@~ tEx@mpl~fCff®~ts

Chi~d' ~h~rr~cter fCrmoi'Bon

Hit Suppression ., 'l>

VAN NUYS (NC),--The VanNuys-Sherman Oaks MinisterialAssociation here in' Californiahas passed a strongly wordedr~oJuti9n prot~sting attempts todelete' all reference to God andJleligion from public life. .

By Father John L~ Thomas, S. J.. '- .Asst. Sociology, Prof.-St. Louis University

"How can parents' be sure that, their children' arereally learning the right values? My wife and I often' dis­euss this problem because we h~ve seen young people fromapparently good homes who give 'little evidence that theyknow right from wrong in . . ', . eral prmcIple' such as truthful-many .resp~cts. Our chIldren ness, honesty, or brotherhood,are stIll qUite young, but we and then applying it 'tospecificalso know that character situations as they occur in hisformation begins early. Judging expanding' experience.from present trends, our, chil- . Rather, his understanding ofdren are going a ge.oeral principle 'is always into 'live in a terms of a specific situation. Forbadly confused this reason, parental example isworld. How can of supreme importance.we p re par e Thus parents may teach truth_them to meet fulness as an important value,this' challenge but if they send the child to theas Christians?" door to tell an unwelcome visitor

The l' e are that they're, not at home, themany serious child :voks upon such deceptionparents who as truthful.are ask i n g Parents teach the generalthemselves the principle of universal brother-same question" hood under God. but if they treatLester. others as unequals or make dis- '

They learn from .daily experi- ,paraging remarks about mem­ence that people in our society bel's, of another race, class! orno longer agree on basic moral nationality, the child learns toprinciples, with the result that ~e.concile the general principleconflicting_or contradictory pat- ~Ith such forms of discrimina­terns of conduct receive equal tion.public approval.

Traditional distinctions be­tween right and wrong have nowbecome matter of personal pref­erence, while· what were for­merly regarded as moral abso­lutes have evolved into conven­ient ideals, to be aimed at onlyif the personal cost is not toohigh. .

Developmental Pro'cessChristian parents have' good

reason to be concerned, for they'cannot hope to segregate theirchildren from all outside influ­ences; and besides, they recog­nize that such a type of "hot­house" training 'would be nopreparation for life particularlyin our morally pluralist society.

Hence their aim must be to. teach principles and to guide thecharacter formation of their chil­dren in \ such fashion that theywiV be. capable of maintainingtheir moral integrity eventhough their ideals receive littlesupport from "':1e socictv withinwhich they must live and workout their salvation.'

How can par,ents promote thelearning of ,values? In the firstplace they must keep in mindthat the learning of values, likeaU' other learned experiences" isa'developmental process-a mat:'tel' of gradual growth. The childis not born with right attitudesand values.

Learns ResponsibilityHe first encounters them as

they are reflected in the gestures,tones of voice, 3l1d words of hisparents, and 'because he wantsto be loved and 'accepted, hetends ~o adopt them very quickly"

Thus he learns that some ac­tions carry parental appro~al,

while others lead to. rejection ora negative response.

As imitation, learning, and thecontinued testing of' parentalrules continue, the moral bound­aries of the child's world emerge.more or less clearly. If he is for­tunate enough to' have sensibleparents, these boundaries areconsistently defined., He knows where he stands and

what h~ must do to win the ap­proval of the important others ,in his small world. This does notmean that he will never test,th,ese bmmdaries or even violatethem by an open act of disobe­dience, but if he does, he knowswhat kind of parental responsewill inevitably follow and thuslearns responsibjlity for hisactions.

Specific SituationsUnlike an adult, the child it

DOt capable of learning' a ,gen-

Page 5: 05.03.62

• NEW BEDFORD

273 CENT~Al AVE.

WY 2-6216

!3lU~ RUB3S0N

LAUNDRY

THE ANCHOR- SThurs., May 3, 1962

[F~~ .~ML0®1['\70~@[?

W@I[U1)~ ~®~D011~G'

Red [}=(jW~l1'®I[O@DETROIT (NC) - An

alarmist response to the com­munist threat will do moreharm than good, a Federallaw enforcement official has tolda nuns' conference here.

"We must not indiscriminatelylabel as communists those whoseopinon on a particular question /

.may, on occasion, parallel theofficial Communist party posi­tion," said Arbor W. Gray. asupervisor for ,the FederalBureau of Investigation.

Minclls of Men

Gray noted that communismhas achieved success largely be­cause of its ruthlessness and to­talitarian power, and the keyquestion facing Americans -isthis: "Can we meet the challengeof communism without imitatingits methods?"

... "Any response to the challengeof communism which is based onhysteria, alarmism, extremismor vigilante action," he said,"will do more harm than good."

Gray asserted that a construc­tive, effective opposition to com­munism must be continued, "butwe must also *. * '" deepen ourown heritage of freedom - ourmightiest weapon in the strugglefor the minds and loyalties ofmen everywhere."

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, BLESSES CENTER: Bishop Connolly blesses cruci­fixes to be hung in new parish center of St. Elizabeth.Church, Fall River. Aiding him is Rev. Manuel P; Ferreira,curate. Center includes sports area, portable stage andscreen, reading room and TV lounge. It is air-conditioned.

OPIEN IfR!lOJA.V 9 A.M.. to 8 P.M.

.Cites' Optimfism in- EncycUca~COLUMBUS (NC)-The pre- peeved because Pope John made

dominant note in Pope, John's only one direct reference toencyclical 'Mater et Magistra is communism in the encyclical,optimism, a priest expert in the Sulpician priest stated, "Butsocial action said here. . if you were to ask the Pope:

Father John F. Cronin, S.S., 'Why did you overlook com­assistant director of the Social munism as a social problem ofAction Department, National our day?' I think that the Holy

. Catholic Welfare Conference, Father would smile and say, 'Oh,told 200 priests at a clergy con- but I didn't overlook 'commu­ference of the Columbus dioc~se nism.' "

'that the Pope "is essentially Father Cronin added, "Youoptimistic." \ . will find under every aspect of

Under J!:very Aspect the encyclical-population prob-"He seems to be of the firrri lems, farming problems, prob- ­

opinion that men of good will lems of developing nations-thecan solve man-made problems," Pope's uggestions for meetingFather Cronin added. the threat ,of communism under

Noting that some critics were each of its -aspects."

YOU KWOW YOURPRESCRIPTION WILLGET CAREfULATTENTION.

~@{1'g.tf~8\1' ~f ~op®

~(9:lC';\I1'il~ Bml ~@C<!n~att:@ROME (NC) - A mosaic of

Pope John XXIII has been addedto the long series of popes' por­traits which line the nave of the'Basilica of St, Paul's Outside the·Walls.

The serie", of oval portraits be­gins with St. Peter and repre­sents the line of popes to thepresent day. With the newestaddition, there are now pQrtraitsof two Poryes John XXIII.

On of these is the portrait ofthe ant;~n'~e Baldas~?r~ Cossa.'who took /tne name of JohnXXIII in the 15th century butwho later renounced the title.

Before installing the portraitof the present Pope John XXII~,

it was debated whether the por­trait of the antipope should beremoved. It was decided to leaveit in the basilica because of thehistoric value of the series.'

The 330.-polInd mosaic was de­signed by Italian artist FaustoConti and was executed by theVatican mosaic laboratories. Itmeasures about five feet indiameter.

of time it has come to· be almosta wall of separation betweenpJ;'iest and congregation."

"Since this is thEl place where.Communion is distributed, andsince this is the sacrament thatunites, we should try to have aCommunion rail that doesn'tconnote separation," he stated.

Father Diekmann pointed outthat the altar "must be the focalcenter of the church," and that"it should be. free of all but theessential elements."

Symbol of Christ"The altar," he 'added, _"is

consecrated as the symbol ofChrist, and it is a far better

.symbol of Christ than even themost realistic crucifix,"

He s.tated that. the sacramentof penance is a "second bap­tism," restoring the penitent tothe worshioing community, andtherefore the confessional "ide­ally, would be located near theentrance, or at the rear of thechurch."

He also said he favors lessemphasis on visual "secrecy."

"The priest should at least beable to tell whether the penitentis an adult or .a child," he said."And the penitent should beable to see the priest extend hishand. Let's preserve anonymity,but let~s not make the sacramentcompletely impersonal."

L~H1D@$ . ~ccll(!M;:@~~!f~O

S®ff"7R~~ {(@ y @M~GuDETROIT (NC) - Pres~dent

Kennedy has praised Catholicteachers for counseling youthto combine krrowledge with agenuine love of their fellowmenand nation under God.

The Chief Executive madethis statement in a message tothe .:>pening general session ofthe 59th annual convention ofthe National Catholic Educa­tional Association. In his mes­sage to Archbishop John F.Dearden of Detroit, presidentgeneral of the NCEA, PresidentKennedy said:,

'Eloquent Tribute'"The an~ual convention of the

National Catholic EducationalAssociation serves as an eloquenttribute to the teachers who havedevoted their lives to educating

· the young. Truly it ca,n be said· that they foster in youth' thatlove of knowledge which is awellspring of truth and a source

, of national stren~th. ."Equally important is the

guidance they give the student totemper the use of knowledge,under God, with a genuine lovefor his fellowman and an abidingconcern for the needs of themation.

"Please extend to the delegatesto the convention my congratu­lations for the achievements ofthe past and my best wishes forgreater accomplishments in theflAt,ure."

Pri~st A~ks C~urc.h BMB~~Dng

~ [f@0lfi)@U'@ ~ rru 0U');f g[fi) W@&~ [}u g~CINCINNATI (NC) - A priest liturgist suggested

here that specific changes in the structure of churches areneeded to draw the priest and· congregation together inwor$hiping God. F.ather Godfrey Diekmann, O.S.B., saidthat the day of expensive"cathedral - like par ishchurches . is rapidlydrawing to a close," and"simpler, less expensive, yetartistically superior structures• .. would seem called for."

The Benedictine priest, who iseditor of Worship, monfhlyliturgical review, gave 'a lec­ture at McAuley High School.It was under the auspices of theLiturgical Arts Group.

ProcessionPrior to Father Diekmann's

talk, Archbishop 'Karl J. Alterof Cincinnati offered a dialogueMass in the school gymnasium:At the Offertory processionartists and architects brought tothe altar samples of their work.

Father Diekmann said thatchurch builders must draw theirplans with the role of the con­gregation in mind as well asthat of the clergy.

Since the laity have an activerole in the Eucharistic' sacrifice,he said, there should be "8 senseof physical 'togetherness,' andvisual and auditory contact withthe altar." Systems for am-­plifying the priest's voice shouldbe installed at the altar as wellas in the pulpit, he added.

Sense of HeadshipMore room is needed also for

processions, he stated. "Thereare. certain occasions when thepeople of God are on the march.We are. pilgrims~ and, we marchin procession to remind us thatwe are on our way to heaven."

But the church building mustbe the image of the entire bodyof the living Church, and notonly the laity, Father Diekmanncontinued. Therefore the struc­ture must also possess "a senseof headship," reflected chiefly inthe arrangement of the altar and'sanctuary.

He said that placing of thealtar in the v~ry center of thebuilding isn't a satisfactory ar­rangement. "To whom would thepriest address' 'Dominus vobis-

. cum'? To whom would he reaathe Epistle and Gospel?" heasked.

Wall of SeparationFather Diekmann did not spell

Q'\lt any ideal arrangement, butinsisted that "the sanctuaryshould be elevated, and the 'altarmust be separated from the naveby an adequate space."

Referring to the Communionrail, he si:lid that "in the course

Page 6: 05.03.62

At the conclusion of the annual Catholic Library As­sociation meeting, Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburghcalled .for the "rehabilitation lof words." His request ihaggreat validity. . " I '.

'As the Bishop pointed Ol).t, the present-day world is.much concerned with actions., The age is one where per-formancepays off. It is one' i;mpatient "'for deeds. I. .And, men would forget only at their ultimate perilltheimportance of words, for language is. the vehiCle of ideasand ideas shape, the lives of'men and the course of ci--(rjli-zation. 'I

SO many obstacles in the world today - obstacles inthe areas of politics, peace aclong nations, efforts towiardthe reunion of all calling themselves Christians - so inhnyof these obstacles rise from the inability of men to chIn-municate in lang~age acceptable to all. . I .

Sometimes it IS a matter, simply of translation. One,wag came up recently with ~he horrible thought: "Sup­pose Khrushchev really loves, us and it's his interpreterwho hates us!" ; .'. I .

Sometimes it is a matter of many men 1,1sing Ithesame words with far different meanings.· .. Sometimes it is the difficulty ~of finding a vocabul~

acceptable to all parties. . :', '. I. Yes, words do count. And when men grow impatient

of words they ,run the risk or: clouding up their own ~on­cepts and the' spread of their own ideas: And they tiskignoring the' contributions thait others can make to theirknowledge as well. .

Coming'Vatica,u.Coun.cil

51. Martin de Porres

<Th7tO'u'<fh' thE CWu:k With th£ ChU11.ChBy, REV. ROBERT ,W. lHIOVDA, Catholic 'Ullliversnty

. -

. ~@Ii' . <Q)li'g~ili'ilcoi'~iifr~'PITTSBURGH (NC)-A tav­

ern on Pittsburgh's North Siderated an '0' for originality forthis Lenten advice iJriparted via'a window display card: "If YouMUST, Drink, Drink Hereo"

By ~ev. Wm. ~. ~n, C.S.C.

~,Si'onehill. Professor --<'0

The Council of Cbalcedon

An interval (}f but at.·years separated the thiN.and fourth ecumenical coun.­cils 'of the Church, for' allabbot at Constantinople, by thename of Eutyches, began teach­ing that Christhad but onenature as theresult of theIncarnation. He

. maintained thatthe humannature was ab­sorbed into thedivine. This wasa denial of theIncarnation be­cause he claimedthat Jesus didnot have a human nature likeours. It is, possible that thiserror arose from a misundep­standing of St. Cyril's terminol­ogy in the Nestorian 'controversyinasmuch as he spoke of Christhaving but one nature in thesense of one person.

TODAY-Mass as on Sunday. MONDAY-St. Stanislas, Bisln- "1I.'ome of Leo' ' ,Baptism is a commission to teach op, Martyr. Despite the fact of Flavian, the patriar~h of Con-aswell as a commission to wor- Jesus' claim on us and 'our ac-ship. The East'er-made Christian ceptance of it, our gratitude for stantinople, summoned the monkis a prophet as' well as a priest. it, our trust in it ... Despite the Eutyches before a synod of someOur 'central experience of wor- fact that His claim is one so in- 32 bishops and 23 abbots. Whenship at Sunday Mass is designed, timate as to !nvolve our sharing the latter refused to retract histo nourish us ~ith grace an,d His life, as the branches share here~ical views, he was deposed,with the Word of God, with His the life of the vine and live only degraded ana excommunicated.IHe and with His truth. So that as long as they have a real or- 'Eutyches appealed against theoui:' tea hi g will not be the gailic union with the vine (Gos- sentence to the patriarch of

c n l Alexandria, Dioscurus. At theteaching of men,but the teaching pel) ... Nevertheless our assent instigation of Dioscurus, Theo-of the Spirit of God is weak. 'and our capacity ......... , . .."'" dosius II summoned a council fM

faithfulness feeble. Our environ-TOMORROW - ~t: Monica, ment, social habits and customs March 30, 449 at EDhesus ·f') re-

bWidow. Jesus' raising from the influence our life and thought consider' the sentence madedead of the mother's only "son against Eutyches. Flavian mean-and action far more than theis theo Gospel meSsage today. It Word which comes to us at Sun- ,while wrote to Pope St. Leo thetells us of the' mysterious inter- day Mass. So we ask the prayers Great.relation of human -beings, of a bishop who preferred de1lth St. -Leo sent three legates to'through the Son of Man, which this -.:ouncil to read the famousto .i!1fidelity in tOd.ay's Mass. T' . . .enables our prayers for one an- ome of Leo in wll.ich the Popeother to be effective. Our Lord TUESDAY-Mass as on SUD- expressed his official, decisioBis teaching us that Monica's day. The Epistle reading, too,' concerning' the points at issue.prayers for her son Augustine, in takes the Gospel theme of our In this letter Pope St. Leo clearlyGod's providence, contributed Lord as shepherd and the Chris- taught that 'Christ is one Perso&toward his conversion and' his tian people' as His numbered . with two natures, divine andfruitful apostolate as a bishop in flock, as the sheep to whom He . human, which are not inte...Christ's Church. Mass, especially individually attends. The modern' mixed.at the mementos for living and Christian has perhaps a special 'Robber Synod'dead, always leads us to pray for need to meditate on this symbol, Upon their arrival at Ephe-.one another. if his prayer and worship are to sus, the papal legates found' the'

SATURDAY-St. Pius V, Pope. attain the depth and. warmth· council in session under the pres­Confessor. Not all popes have '"possible. Too many of our expe- idency of Dioscorus. The bishopSbeen saints' nor have all been riences, even of ~ur relation- who had taken part in the synodgreat te~ch~rs of the good news, ships, are more or less imper- .which condemned Eutyches wereof the Gospel. Holiness in the sonal. We dare not let this hap- excluded and this council atChurch is not a matter of office, pen to our relationship to God: Ephesus under pressure ap-but of personal commitment. proved Eutyches' teaching, con-Teaching in the Church' is not WEDNESDAY - st. Gregory demning the doctrine of the' tW(l)

f · d th h ff"t Nazianzen, Bishop, Confessor,con me to ose w ose 0 lce 1 natures in Christ.. t . d h' h '. Doctor: This Mass, celebrating aIS 0 JU ge w at IS and w at IS Flav~an was severely beaten. t' f't 'th th' great teacher and father of theno 10 con orm1 y 'W1 e and died shortly afterwards: the,

t h · f th A tl Th" Church, draws our attention toeac 109 0 e pos es. IS papal legates had to flee for theirf t · .' th 'b' h ' t h one of the perennial lessons ofunc 10n gIves e IS ops eac - lives. Emperor Theodosius n,. . th "t B t't the liturgy. Christ draws us tomg a· umque au or1 y. U.1 however, approved ·the decrees.does not relieve the rest of us of the Father in worship not only History books have called thisth d . t h' h d for our sakes but also 10r "the -e uty of eac mg were an council "the robber. synod of

h . . d th' f f others,'" for those who belong inw en we can,. an ere ore 0 Ephesus." -I . d 'f . f 1 His sheepfold no less than weearnmg an 0 pray109 or zea . Pope Leo condemned this mis-

'but who for one reason or an-SECOND SUNDAY' AlF'lI.'ElIt other have not yet recognized it carriage of justice and truth in

EASTER. The good' shepherd nor found the gate. It is our pub- a council at Rome and sent tWillclaims' the sheep as his own; lic worship, above all, that letters of protest to the emperor,never .disclaims them (Gospel). should instruct, inspire and requesting a new council. TenOur. salvation lies precisely in strengthen us for the witnessing months later (July 450 A.D.)

Theodosius died without heirthis fact: Jesus Christ claims us and teaching mission which is and the rule of the empire passedas His own, He claims us in bap- ours.tism and in our annual Easter to his sister and her husband

Marcion.baptismal celebration. And, since re>n· Il"'hILevery Sunday h'as, for the Chris_ IrU (D]IJ'ilIl'DBIJ'il\':lj to UllllSi&R'V~ , General Counciltian, the significance of a "little ffl:ll,fro;m.a" Afl'ill1loveli'.Sfl:llIr\\9 A local council at Constanti-Easter,"Christ renews this claim y nople condemned Eutyches and •at every Sunday's Mass. The FATIMA (NC) - Francesco accepted Pope Leo's Tome. Map.altar is Christ, so it is the most Cardinai Roberti, Prefect of the cion' convoked a general COun­venerated symbol hi the church -Supreme Tribunal of the Apos- cil to meet at Nicaea but before

.. building.. And around' the altar, tolic Signature iR Rome, will it opened, its site was transferredat least on Sunday, the disciples preside at rites here on Satur- to Chalcedon on the Bosphorous.gather to be claimed and to ac- day, May 12 and Sunday, May. IS Historians tell us that thh:Jcept .His claim,approaching it making the 45th anniversary of council opened on Oct: 8, 451 in,vith the'baptismal sacramental. the first ap.parition of the Virgin the presence of the emperor anellwater, on their heads. Mary to the three shepherd empress as the Fourth Ecumen-

children of Fatima. . ical Council ~th some, 500 to'Bishop Joao Pereira Venancio' 600 bishops in attendance. With

of Leiria, who announced the the exception of the pap'al leg­Cardinal's coming, said the in- ates and two African bishops, thetentions of. the mid-May pilgrim- members of the council wereage. to the Marian sanctuary will orientalS.be peace in the world, and espe~ The papal legates (two bishopscially for Portugal anl;l her and a ::>riest) presided, while thooverseas prQvinces. , Turn to Page Seven

THE At-1r l-l()P-Diocese ,of: Fall River-Thurs., May 3, 1962I6

Worldwide VisionParochialism - the willingness to live

one's 'own boundaries of life OF occupation-of Catholicism. .

RehabiUtate, .WOJrd~

About Time I

An English' Catholic educ~tor has said that the Jtu,"dents ,themselves hold thekeyi; to many»roblems in theirown hands. Students should: be encouraged to gre~ierheights of initiative especially, in matters religious. I .

One. President of a secular- college hailed a student­sponsored reb'eat with the words: "It is a joy to find itheCatholics doing something' fo~ the colle'ge at last; u~ tonow they have taken, everything and given nothing." I

There will always be Catholics attending non-CatWolicschools on every level. Those iin the higher grades eSpe­cially should be encouraged to be leaders in school ~ndcommunity efforts and to shot their interest· and supportas Catholics o~ all t~at is worthy. . j

I

I

solely withinis. the en~my.. I.

Catholics must have an interest first of all in <:}od.And then in God they must 'see all other Jhings - theirfellow men and all the arts and sciences that pertah't tohumanity's progress here on earth and 'its journeYil1 toGod. ' .

Such an occasion as th~ Seventh Dioc.esan CatholicTeachers' Convention now going on at Bishop FeehanHigh School in Attleboro helps break· away from 1theparochialism of one classroom or one school or one l;lrea .of the Diocese. .: '[ .

Teachers - religious and :lay - from the 12 highan~59 elementary schools of the D~ocese are gathering to reviewthe aims of Catholic education, to keep u'p to date on Ithenewest methods and texts, and curriculum studies, todraw from one another a g~ater degree of enthusi~sm ,.

'in their vocation and a 'higher degree of purpose in their. dedication. " :'" ' . "j

These, m~tings surely breftk down the parochial sp~rit,

the narrowness of vision and .interest, the limited horizonwhich are the contradiction of true Catholic educatIon!

. I I

At the National Catholic Educational Associationmeeting recently concluded in Detroit, Father John J. <bon­'sidine, a native of New Bedford, urged this worldwide but­look on the teachers present. rhe Maryknoller pointed Ioutthat the Catholic's interest must be in the human race,destined by God to serve Him :through His Church.

This is the spirit in which the diocesan: teachers aremeeting.

, ,

Ai., oN:':, C~"II::'O;:"'R':'"'f, ':J I,,;. . (";. :'"

. }~; ~: ~.' _. • . ,;-i "

I.OIFFiCUAll. NEWSPAPER Of THE DIOCESE. OF FALL RIVER, . . I,Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland ~venue I:Fall River, Mass. I OSborne 5-7151

PUBLlS.HERMost Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD.

GENERAL MANAGER l ASST. GENERAL MANAGER• Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. I Rev. John P. Driscoll

\ MANAGING EDITORHugh t Golden

Page 7: 05.03.62

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SULLIVAN BROSo

[QlUli1lli1l@1i' ~[9>@@lk~1i'LA CROSSE (NC) - Gov.

Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsinwill speak here on Tuesday, May15 at a civic dinner commemo­rating the dedication of theCathedral of St. Joseph theWorkman. ,The cathedral will bededicated on Monday, May 14by Francis Cardinal Spellman,Archbishop 'of New York.

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., May 3, .1962

lL®~Jo~~@U'@[f ~@)f~

$~!}u@@~ ~[f@)f®[f

B~n RcdJac~~@M~_ WASHINGTON (NC)Congressman Don L. Shortof North Dakota has criti­cized a challenge to a prayerrecited in New York publieschools as "ridiculous and el&­plosive."

A case c hall eng i n g the. prayer's constitutionality is nowbefore the U.S. Supreme Court.

The Mid-West legislator ina statement placed in the Con­gressional Record, said thatwhile public schools should notteach or advocate religion,"neither do I feel they shouldbe a forum for advocating athe­ism.", He also placed in the Record

a Washington (D.C.) EveningStar editorial in favor of theschool prayer.

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A high point of the busy yearcomes today and tomorrowwhen the Sisters will be a focalpoint of the teachers' conven­tion at Bishop Feehan HighSchool. .

"We'll be a hospitalitY com­mittee and information center,"modestly rem ark e d SisterFelicita.

Outstanding Recoll'dOne achievement of the past

year that will be discussed todayand tomorrow is the high ratingachieved by eighth graders ofthe Diocese in a· test covering10 areas of learning that wastaken in all schools last Decem-ber. .

In general, Diocesan studentstested about a year over gradelevel and 23 per cent of theyoungsters well.' e considered"ol4tstandingly talented" by theBoston College testing serviceoffice administering the exami­nation.

"A rather impressive pool ofhuman talent" was the commentof Dr. John Walsh of the testingservice, apropos of the FallRiver record.

Another source of pride forelementary schools of the Dio­cese is the consistently good re­

. cord of students in penmanship.Palmer method tests are admin-

· istered yearly and a careful re­cord of results is sent from NewYork headquarters of the pen­manship teaching institute.

Two years ago,' Fall Riverchildren did so well that a dis­play of their writing was afeature of a national educators'

· conference.High Schools

While the Sisters are keptmore than busy with 59 elemim­tary schools, Father O'Neill alsokeeps track of 12 high schoolsin the Diocese. Regular princi-

·pals' meetings are scheduled forthem and curriculum and text­book standards are maintained,as with the primary .schools.

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WIN S FELLOWSHIP:Catherine Goulet, daughterof Mr. and Mrs. Julian Gou­let of St. M~thieu's parish,Fall River, has b~en awardeda mathematics fellowshipto Fordham University. Sheis a graduate of Jesus-MaryAcademy,Fall River and ispresently a senior at Brad­ford Durfee College of Tech­-nology, also Fall River.

with fractions. The Supervisorsat down with her for half anhour, patiently helping her withtrouble spots; Reward came amonth later when the little girljubilantly ,sent a package ofmath papers to the Sisters,clearly showing her progr~ss

since the tutoring session.When the Sisters are pre­

p?~ing to visit a school, saysF,ather O'Neill, they'll checkprevious work of. students andmake a point of commendingparticularly noteworthy accom­plishment.

"You get much further withpraise than with scolding," saysgentle, Sister Miriam.

To Share lR,esoull'ces·"I prefer to think of the

Sisters as consultants ratherthan supervisors," says FatherO'Neill. "They visit, schools tobring classroom teachers theresources at the disposal of theDiocesan office."

The Sisters agree, noting thatin many cases supervisors fromindividual communities of nunstake care of personal' growth ofteachers, suggesting courses tobe purs1,led and so forth, whereas ­the Diocesan Supervisors aremore interested in curriculum

~ application and new methods ofteaching. .

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By Patricia McGowall1lIn a few weeks; some 18,904 Diocesan elementary school students will 'be groaning

over annual examinations - but their toil will be as nothing compared to the work ofpreparation going on right now in the Diocesan School Office. There Sister M. Felicitaand Sister Miriam of the Sisters of Mercy, the Diocesan supervisors, are hard at work

llJ)i@~e~d1um Sch([J)Q~ Office(C([pll1J,W®l{[L~ii@ln 1f~ .W®«Jlrr9

g)

at their twin facing desks.They're sifting hundreds of

'questions in every subjecttaught in the eleIllentarygrades, submitted to them byteachers throughout the Diocese.They'll standardize them, dou­ble-check for ambiguities, runoff thousands of copies of eachcompleted test - and get theminto the hands of their reluctanttakers - all before the end ofthe school year.

But this is only a part of theSisters' work. For 21 yearsthey've been good shepherds ofthe elementary school system,visiting' every. school .periodic­ally, keeping records of teachers,helping decide. on textbooks,ac" -j as'couriers spreading newideas and techniques from schoolto. school.

Twin Call'eell'sMore than their desks are

twins, as far as the Sisters areconcerned. Both were publicschool teachers before enteringthe Sisters of Mercy, 'both wereteachers and principals in vari­ous schools of the Diocese andboth hold Master's degrees ineducation.

They have held their schooloffice positions since 1941 andnote that Fall River was' thesecond Diocese in the countryto institute such a, supervisory'

. system."Sisters who have taught ill

. Fall River, then have beentransferred to other· areas, arealways glad to return," saidSister Felicita. She explainedthat the clearly defined FallRiver' curriculum and educa­tional .goals are appreciated byteachers. "They know wherethey're going."

Great credit for the well-or­ganizedschool set-up of theDiocese was given by the Sisters

'to Rev. Edward J. Gorman, un­til this year: Superintendent.From 1932 to 1941 Father Gor­.man ran the office alone, setting.up ail admirable system of rec­ords and curriculum· guides. .

.Still in use is an imaginatively'~named "shadow card," whichfollows a child from school to .school, giving his scholastic re­cord in a nutshell.' A "child ac­counting' system" keeps tra~ oftransfers, new students, etc., andis correlated with pri'ncipals'record cards 'and census cardskept on permanent file in eachschool.

Happy Job ."The warm hospitality we re­

ceive at the schools we visitmakes our 'work very re:'warding," said Sister Miriam.She noted that hostess Sistersmake a big occasion of theSupervisors' visits, with specialmenus the order of the day anda ge!1eral air of festivity in con­vents, although business as usualin carried on in the schools.

But pleasant relations are atwo-way street and Rev. Patrick·J. O'Neill, newly appointedSuperintendent of School$, hasmany anecdotes to relate of theSisters' personalized interest instudents.

Michael Wojcik, he said, nowa top student at Durfee HighSchool, Fall River, while aparochial school pupil benefitedfrom special projects plannedby the Sisters to challenge hiscapabilities.

On another occasion a child ina fifth grade. was having trouble

!P@lIi'~o@rnru®lI1lt A~WJIi'@'\Y®s)

M@'l,7D@ ~@ml$@Ii'!i)IkJO[,iD ,ROME (NC)-Italy's Ch..iauber

of Deputies has passed ~ bill toset up censorship commissionsfor movies and plays judged"detrimental to public morals."

A similar bill was passed last"October by the Italian Senate.Because of differences, the billpassed by the Lower house ofParliament must be returned forSenate approval by Monday,April 30, when the present cen';'sorship law expires.

According to the Chamber ofDeputies bill, censorship com­missions will be made up of gov­ernment officials, judges andrepresentatives of the moviesand stage. The commissions willreview movies and certain typesof stage productions and issuea certificate of approval if theyare considered to contain nothingharmful to public morals.

Continued from Page Six

management of conciliar' busi­ness was in the hands of imperial~ommissariesappointed for tha~

purpose.. 'lP'eooIl'llJias Spoken'.

In the first session Dioscorus,the leader of the robber council

· of Ephesus, was confronted withhis accusers 8J!.d in the thirdsession a sentence-of deposition

· was pronounoed against him; hisfollowers, however, were treatedwith tar less severity.

In the second session the Tomeof Leo addressed to Flavian wasread in accordance with PopeLeo's r:ommands and the Nicene.Creed. The Tome 'was receivedwith great joy aild shouts: "Peterhas spoken through Leo." .

In ;he sixth session, at whichMarcion and Pulcheria assisted,

· a prOfession of faifr. in accord­ance 'Nith Leo's Tome was pro­mulgated and signed by all thebishops; this concluded the doc­trinal part of the council.

.. ,DiscipInnall.'Y Canons.Marcion was anxious to have

some jisciplinary matters settledand the council was prolonged to

'Nov. 1. Some 28 disciplinarycanons were formulated concern- .ing the clergy, their conduct,ordination and rights, monks,nuns, episcopal authority a~d

jurisdiction.The last of these canons was

vigorously opposed by the papallegates; for it stated thatthe see of Constantinople, the

, new Rome, should have the sameprerogatives as that of Rome andshould rank second after Rome.

Pope Leo protested against thiseanon which attacked the veryprimacy of the papacy. When heconfirmed the decrees of theCouncil of Chalcedon, he re­stricted his confirmation to thedoctrmal decrees.

It is .said that Nestorius, whodied about the time of this coun­cil, welcomed Pope Leo's Tome;he claimed that it expressed theteachings he had propounded.

. However, it seems that eitherNestorius had changed his her­etical ideas or he misunderstood

. Pope Leo's teachings.'

MonophysitiSllll1This Council of Chalc,ed.on is

mmportant because, in addition··to a clear definition about theIncarnation, it protested against .imperial claims to decide. doc-'trinal questions in the Church. !

It could not, however, suppressthe aeresy of monophysitism:(there is only one nature inChrist) started by EutYdhes. Thisberesy took on a national. char,:"acter in Egypt and the adjacent ~territories; bloody riots occurred, .in Alexandria because of it andfor more than 'a' century theemperors made desperate effortsto subdue the Monophysites.

Most of the heretics, though,were not reat' heretics in thesense of having false beliefs;they simply objected 1hat theterminology of their Ale9andrianpredecessor, ·St. Cyrll, had beenrejected and that the distanteities of 'Rome and Constanti­nople had Jmposed formulaswhich to them sounded' unor­thodox.

Next week: The Seventh Ecu­menical Council.

Page 8: 05.03.62

Grant' for BooksDETROIT (NC) - Marygrove

College here received ,a $10,000grant from the Kellogg Founda­tion of Battle Creek, Mich., topurchase books,' Sister MaryEmil, president, has announced.Grants were given to' 12 privateliberal arts colleges in.Michigan.

'Conference to StudlyService Opportunities

WASHINGTON (NC) - Thesecond annual Conference on Op..

, portunities at Hofne and Abroad'for Catholic M~m and Womenwill be held at th.. Catholic Uni-versity of America here Sunday.

. Specialists will survey OppOl'­tunities for service in both Cath­olic and secular organization.during the day-Ion'g conference.

Attending the conference will!be representatives of such groupe

,as the Association for InternaQtional Development, the Grail'Institute for Overseas Service.'the International Catholic Aux­iliaries, the Women. Volunteers

, Association, the Young Christian,Workers, the Papal Volunteers,for Latin America, the PeaceCorps, the United Nations and

, other organizations. '

A ',Little' Child) To Lead Them

SAP P 0 R 0' (NC) - 'me. prayer and persistence of a five_year-old Japanese kindergartenpupil' has led her entire familyinto the Church.

Little 'Kimiko Watanabe p;tttinto action the lesson she'learned from the Sister in theMaryknoller kindergarten here:"If you don't pray, Q()d wonttlike you."

"Each ,even.fng Kimik-o h­sisted that her parents andolder brothers and sisters kneeland pray with her." Father Bert­rand A. qramelspacher, M.M..of Jasper, Ind., said. "Since bel'

,family knew nothing of God,much 'less prayer, they came toour mjssion to learn how topray, like Kimiko."

This contact sparked furtherinterest in the Church whichwas climaxed 'when the ent'ire

, Watanabe family was baptized.

BRAZIL 'ICE,; ~REAM

MillionHall

C.S.C.., university president, an-nounced the gift. . '

He said the new hall, by pro­vidiDl~ a year-round residence,would enable' teaching nuns toearn their ,master's degrees in15 months, rather than throughfive Summers' work as'is nowthe case., The gift from the Lewis FoUn­dation will be augmented by a$500,000 .grant from the FordFoundation under the terms ofan arrangement whereby it isto give Notre Dame one dollarfor every two the school re­ceives in gifts from othersources up to J:une 30, 1963.

Amigos •• ; Hood Coffee Brazil Ice Cream ismade from rich, full-bodied" fresh roasted coffee(that means 'true coffee-flavored ice' cream)with big bits.. of crunchy Brazil nuts mixed

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I

Not~e Dame Receives $1For Sisters' Residence

NOTRE DAME (NC) ...: NotreDame University has receiveda million dollar gift from theFrank J. Lewis Foundation,

,Chicago, for construction of aresidence hall for nuns studyingfor advanced degrees.

Father Theodore M. Hesburgh,

NEW BEDFORD AREA WOMEN: Mrs. John J.Maloney, left, Wareham, chairman. of the Spiritual

, Development Committee, and Miss Lillian Ross, New Bed­ford, president of the New Bedfqrd District DCCW; studyschedule of evening's conference progra~ at Stang High.

Catholic DaughtersAppoint Secretary :

WASHINGTON (NC) - AnnelR. Dillingham of the administra~'

. Itive staff of the Youth Depart-Iment, National Catholic WelfareConference, has been appointedexecutive secretary of the Junior,Catholic Daughters of America.!. Her appointment' was an-;

nounced l1ere, by 'Ma,rgaret" J.IBuckley, supreme r~gent of ·the:Catnolic Daughters of America,;and Father Frederick J. Steven:-fson, 'director of the Youth De-Ipartment._ .,

Miss Dillingham, attended ITi'inityCollege, Washington, and Ihas been on' the Youth Depart-,ment staff for three years. She:has also worked in ,the office Ihere. of the National Newman t,Club: Feder'ation..

\ I !

WOmen'S Council to Aid:, I

impoverisJ)ed Mothers IWASHINGTON (NC) - The:

National Council of Catholic iWomen has announced a Mother's·Day remembrance' in the form 'I~of a donatiqn to assist impover-ished mothers of the world. .

Mrs. Arthur' L .. Zepf, NCCW :'presipent, said the remembrance Iis called the Madonna Corsage, .and the donation is part of the Icouncil's Madonna Plan to aid ihungry and anguished mothers.

~- 0-:1 : 1 j L~ : J~' •.., ...:. .. 1 ~'j

Elect Mother GeneralSCRANTON (NC)-Sister M.

Beata Wertz has been electedMother General of the Sisters,Servants' of the ImmaculateHeart of Mary here. ,The Bed­ford, Pa" native succeeds MotherM. Kathleen who died recently.

Father Peyton CreditsGenerosity of Women

SOMERSET (NC-Father Pat­rick Peyton, C.S.C., has creditedthe generosity of Catholic wom­,en with making possible hisFamily Rosary Crusade radioprograms and films.

'Father Peyton, in an interviewin News _and Views, officialpublication of the CatholicDaughters of America, said "herein Ohio, it was a $30,000 grantfrom the CDA in 1951 that madeit possible to launch the radioprogram project. '

The radio programs in turninspired the 15 Rosary films,which are now being shown inLatin Ainerica and underdevel­oped ',areas of the world, FatnerPeyton stated.

I

. I.8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 3;'1912

• \ I I

Enumerates Tricks of' TradEfFor Hopeful W~~~d-IB~ Writer:

By Mary Tulley Daly, ,

Dear Mrs. Daly: , ,For a long time I have wan~ed to write, .professionally

that is. Trouble is, I just don't know how to get starte~.This past year, I have writte~ several "Letters to tqeEditor" of our, local paper and' two of them were used.

Subject of these was a tra~- you 'submit your manuscl'i;is,fic light. (By the way, we an' editor'who knows his reade~-got the light!) Perhaps if I ship. \ . , , , ;tell you more about myself - Seems to me, Mrs. H., that youyou cap help me. We have five have your subject' matter right,.children. The three eldest are in 'your own backyard - litei'-married -a n d ally. With a garden which isliving, within "the 'envy of the' neighbors\" .100 miles of there must be gardeners galoreour town. We who would love to' get first-

hand "how to" information froinhave a: boy ineollege and a someone like you. i

h . And there must be still other~~loo:.n hi g wO,uld-be gardeners, like myself,

My husband who would enjoy reading andkas a good job fol}owing your adv-ice. Obv~-from which he ously, you not only know howwUl retire in to 'make a garden grow, ,butanother seven have the enthusiasm that woul~

carry readers through the bugs-years,' so 0 we \'li"eally don't need the money, and-weeds stage -' :thoughI'd like to make a little This summer, as you go abo~tby writing. We have a cpmfort- ,the ,tasks in your garden, youable home and a nice garden will be doing what all goodwhich is my pride and joy, and writers find of inestimableibe envy of neighbors. value - piling up a backlog ~f

As you can see, my' duties research. The s~ills, tricks ¥have 'lightened considerably. the you will, that ,have becom~last few years and I suppose second nature to you are exactlythat is why I find time hanging the sort of thing your readerson my 'hands, especially in the will want to learn and translatewinter. I get so bored playing .int~ their own experience neXtbridge, having luncheons with year.,'"the girls" and just generallY . ReSearch Notes Iwatching the world go by ss I Write down those tricks Il6sit on the sidelines. yo~ go, Mrs. H., and don't tak~

I have a good education (two 'it for granted that "anybodyyears of college) 'and write III would know that." Keep an ac~good; clear hand as you caR curate log, also an expense aCisee by this letter. count. When you transplant,

No Bobby divide plants, rotate and all tMrest, write down how, when and

Now that spring is here' and why. These will become yomduring the summer, I'll have my research notes from which togarden, sure cure for boredom work during th.e non-gardening,. Grants for New' Colieg'eIn my' case. But I do dread to d f tsee another winter come when a~~ °th:e:~dw~~e;~mmer, yaJ"" CLEVELAND (NC)-Urs~liriethe days are long and I have should have data for many an College for Women here receIvedDO real indoor hobby. Many. t'> I I two, grants of $100,000 eachwomen must feel the same way, arlC e. st t 'ght which will hasten constructionMrs. Daly. You could give us s ~ ar er, you ml ap- of new college buildings on aell a boost. if you would lay p~oach.your l~~al newspaper 112-acre site in nearby Pepper

. WIth the proposItIon of ~ garde~ Pike'down a few "ground' rules" column to start early in the .about the writing business. spring. Or you might try' one of

Sincerely, the :gardening magazines which'Mrs. C.F.H. .yoU~ undoubtedly read. i

"Dear Mrs. H.: , . Before submitting a manu';Your let t e r to me, 'as script to a national magazine;

your letters to the editor, indi- however, it is wise to study thatcate that you have the ability magazine carefully. over a sixto express yourself clearly and to ~ight month period. Note th~cOncisely. You can "paint a, worli length, ·the style, andpicture" in words, a first re- tackle a subject- that, has notquisite of a ~riter.. " " bee*. used for a long time, oz1

You do write a legible hand, add your own 'variation and ne~but for professional writing you findings to a familiar subject. ~,

must use a typewriter or hire Gpod luck to you, Mrs: C.F.H.I'Isomeone to type your material M.T.D."- double spaced and ,withample margins. This is a minorbut important "ground rule."

Most important, of course, mthat you have something to saywhich will' be of interest toreaders. That something will bejudged by the editor to whom

Page 9: 05.03.62

o

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Miss~on WorkCLAYTON (NC) - Sixteen

girls from Fontbonne Collegehave volunteered for mission as_signments on three fronts.

One will be an Extension Vol­unteer for a year's service in aU.S. home mission field.

Eleven will work as lay cate­'~ists in the rural areas ofsoutheastern Missouri, wheretl' percentage of Catholics isless than it is in China.

Four will remain in St. Louis,as "missionaries" to an allNegro parish on the city's northside.

The volunteers were recruitedby Sister Agnes Patrice Shee­han, who is instructor of theo­logy at the wome'n's collegehere in Missouri.

Plans Nursing Schoo~DETROIT (NC) - Madonna

College .in nearby Livonia hasreceived approval from theMichigan State Board of Nursingto initiate a newly organizedprogram of professional nursingeducation this Fall. The college,conducted by Felician Sisters, issetting up a four-year currIculumleading to a bachelor of sciencedegree with a major in nursing.

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Gen. William G, Clark approvedan inheritance tax assessmentagainst the cats. Flat Nose, whois only 9 years old ,and has !llonger life expectancy than hisfour playmates, paid an inherit­ance tax of $181.83. But Big Boy,Brother Cat, Blue Eyes, andMommy Kitty, all 12 years old,paid less because of their age.,They were assessed $15.10 each.

Mrs. Montgomery left her es­tate, which has £I net value at.$13,086, in trust for her cats.William J. Fields, now 72, wasleft 60 per cent of the estateupon the death of the last at. thecats, provided he takes good careof them meanwhile. He and thecats live rent free in an apart­ment building that Mrs. Mont­gomery owned.

The other 4() per cent at. theestate then goes to the Sistersat. the Blessed Sacrament.

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CECILIAN SOlLOJISTS: Preparing for annual concertof. the Cecilian Glee Club of Jesus-Mary Academy, FallRIver, are, from left, Jeannine :St. Laurent JeannetteRobidoux, Vivianne Ouellette. All will be sol~ists at theWednesday, May 9 event.

inheritanceAfter Death

,Gd~s toof Five

SPRINGFIELD (NC)-A catmay have nirie lives, as they say,but just like humans it can besure of at, least two things­death and taxes.

For the five cats that werepets of Mrs. Margaret Montgom­ery, who died in 1960, death hasbeen long delayed by good careand an ample legacy to insurethey continue to live the lifeto which they have been accus-tomed. .

Forty per cent of Mrs. Mont­gomery's estate will go to theSisters of the Blessed Sacramentof Corn'wel1s Heights, Pa., uponthe death of the last of the cats.

Inh~ltance TaxMeanwhile, taxes have caught

up with the cats. Illinois Atty.

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Alumnae Style ShowSacred Hearts, Academy Alum­

riae Association, Fall River, willhold a style show at 8 Wednes­day night, May 9 at Venus deMilo restaurant. Mrs. Helen Tier­ney and Mrs. Mary D'Ambrosioare' chairmen and announce thatproceeds wiif benefit SacredHearts Academy building fund.

Diocesan Nurses PlanBiennial Conference

The Fall River Council at.Catholic Nurses will hold itsBiennial Conference beginningat 5 Saturday afternoon, May 5at St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River.

Principal speaker, Sister Mau­reen, R.S.M., of Nazareth Hall,Fall River; will be presented at5:45. Benediction and a banquetat' which Bishop Connolly willbe guest' of honor and featuredspeaker will follow.

-Look for cues and en­courage growing independence.When your child shows interestin the cup, let him' handle iteven if it means spilled milk.

Asserts Parents FaceTerrmc C;:hallenge

SCRANTON (NC) - Parentsfaee "a terrific challenge" inprotecting their children fromevtt influe~ce of trashy materialin the mass media, according tosociologist Michael P. Penetar ofCanisius College in Buffalo. Hesays there is neeq for "concertedpublic opinion" in working toremove objectionable materialfrom the media.

''Whether a child is physicallystrong, emotionally sta'ble, intel­lectually capable is determinedgreatly by' parents," Penetar de­clared. "The molding of a childis the art of arts and one thatrequires hard work and,patienceand love."

l§uftt2.bUe P,eli"Rooo

'-SOme periods in childhoodare better than others forweaning. Research indicates thatunless a baby is weaned veryearly - before the end of hisfirst year - he learns 'to enjoysucking so much that he mayfight to retain it.

o The upset is greatest between13 and 18 months. But after ayear and half the reluctancedecreases and by age two mostyoungsters find life so full andinteresting that they are morewilling to switch.

Catholic DaughtersTo Convene Mqy 13

MIAMI BEACH (NC)-Catho­lie Daughters of America fromthree dioceses will participate insessions of the CDA state three­day convention scheduled to starthere Sunday, May 13. .

Mrs. Mary Ket'Inedy of Pensa­cola, state regent, will preside atthe m~eting in the Hotel,Sevillewhere Bishop Coleman F. Car-'roll of Miami will be the princi,­pal speaker ,at the closing ban­quet May 15. "Spiritu~l Growthand Maturity for the Laity," isthe convention theme. Membersfrom the Mobile-Birmingham,St. Augustine and Miami dio­ceses will attend.

-Qne task at a time. If toilettraining is in progess, or if yourtoddler is working hard tomaster walking, take it easy onweaning. Once you. definitely

,,start" however,proceed gradu-.~lly and keep at it.

Substitute the cup for onefeeding at a time' and wait atleast a week before the nextswitch. Be generous with lapsesand regressions,' but try to finishwithin three or four months.Too much indecisive. waveringis only confusing for mother andchild.

Nuns Inherit $100,000ST. LOUIS (NC)-Fifty years

~o Orner Everaert, then 19,eame as an Immigrant from Bel­gium and began working as ajanitor for the Sisters of St.Soseph of Carondelet at theirNazareth Convent in nearbyKirkwood. He served the nunsfor 50 years until his death April20. His will filed for probate dis­elosed that he left an .estimated$100,000 to 0 the community ofmm.s.

l

Educator Stresses ~ mportanceOf Good Music for Children ,/

BUFFALO (NC)-The presi- that members of the associationdent of the National Catholic "have a special opportunity toMusic Educators Assocfation has bring music to children andcalled for a greater effort to youth."make good music available to He said that good music "haslrOung people. the unique power to purge the

Msgr. Sylvester J. Holbel .mind and heart of the grossness.tated that the kind of music to of the outer 'world.... and makewhich chlldren are exposed "will th~ receptive of the finer things 'greatly determine the place of life, even of 'the spiritual."music will occupy in their adultJives."

"One need not be an educatedIlotener 0 to appreciate and enjoythe 'music of great composers,"be said in an article in Musart,the publication of the NationalCatholic Music Educators Asso­dation. The Monsignor added

~®~~ Are SM~~~s'®~fr~@~~ 'to"E~'s'®'W®cID [[[) 0[[[)~ [P®if0(Q)(& ~(Q) if (C,~0~ cd] if®[fj)

lBy AUlI411i'ey lP'aDIl1J'il JRilkleJi'The tousle-haired, husky four year old pads softly to

the kitchen where his parents sit talking over a late cupcf coffee. Solemnly from the depths of his sleeper heoxtracts an empty nursing hottle. He thrusts it towardhis mother. "Fill 'er up," he 'commands. A cautious vet- -The greater the preparation,

thl2 less the emotional upset.eran of many bottle-battles, Forceful, abrupt weaning is al­mother sighs 'and complies. most always disturbing to 0 aLater she worries, "I'm afraid child. While your infant still is!be'll take that bottle to kin- fully breast or bottle fed, 'youdergarten with can offer him sips of water,biro." juice, or milk from a small glass

Most, parents or cup. Held upright, evenare not faced young babies are surprisinglywith the embar- adept at sipping.,Z'assing prob­!em of packingII bottle in theschool lunchbox, but manydo feel ashamedrz their young­mer's attacharnent lasts more~o years. In our speeded-upoociety it is considered an ac­complishment for the parents£1 a baby w weaned early andcompletely.

But every babr is different.One may cheerfully and finallyswitch himself to a cup longbefore his first birthday. An­oeher may insist on a nightbott~e well into his third year.

, How b WeanNo matter when it happens,

though, weaning is a big adjust­ment. Not only must your babyabaridon the loving' closenesstilat goes wIth feeding, but hemust learn to chew and drinkend master the intricate skills'of handling ti cup .and spoon.There are no ironclad rules, but,these suggestions sho8kl makeweaning easier.

-Preparation starts early inf:nfancy.If you dislike the ideaof nirht bottles, hold your babyior his last feeding and neverput him to bed with his formula.Once he associates sleep witho bottle. it is difficult to changehis mind.

Overcrowded SchoolsTo Drop First ~rade

KANSAS CITY (NC) - TheCatholic scqool bot.rd here hasInstructed parish schools to drop'their first grade if enrollment is110 hi ~h that other grades areGWercrowded.

The eight-member board <alsoordered the dropping of kinder­gartens which are cotnbined'wl.thother grades and do not 'have8Ufficient room or a .separateteacher.

In its directive, approved byArchbishop Edward J. Hunkelerof Kansas City in Kansas, theboard saill: "It will probabU,. notbe possible to m~t future edu­ational demands in every 'par­lib."

Page 10: 05.03.62

I

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Urges 19brarionsWork ~@rr RacQ@i·,JU~~O~®D Urrnoty

PITTSBURGH (NO)­The president of the Catho:­lic Library Association urged '800 delegates to the group's38th animal meeting to workfur racial justice lind to sharein the ecumenical. movement.

Father Francis X. Canfield o:f'Sacred Heart Seminary, Detroit,'noted that "the desegregation ofour schools is moving along at'a measured pace." But "howabout our libraries?" he asked.

He remarked, that "surely thesocial implications of libraryservice and of the Faith thaiunites us oblige us to voice theprinciples of racial justice wherethey relate to the use of li­braries." ' "

Noting that the' Second-Va ti~can Council's "first emphasis"is on clarifying and advancingthe Faith, Fat h e'r Canfieldadded: "In his own sphere ­acquiring and distributing books,periodicals and pamphlets - theCatholic librarian can helpmanifest what is the first mean­ing of the ecumenical spirit:the Vatican council as a sym­bol 'and embOdiment of truth,unity and charity."

"The truth remains our over­all concern," Father Canfieldstated, "and where else but inthe written records of man andin the inspired texts of Scrip­ture - the materials that weselect and catalog and classify,that we promote and circulate _where else will:' we find thetruth expressed and preserved?"

M. ~. u. SlJ»fJakerrCAMBRIDGE (NC) - Father

Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C.,presidento of the University ofNotre Dame, will be the 'com­'mencemeht speaker at the Mas­sachusetts Institute of Techno-'logy here on Friday, June 8.

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Describing himself'as a "card­carrying member of the extremecenter," the Jesuit editor urgedthat Catholic colleges "standfaithfully by our full Catholicheritage of 'reason~a very pre­cise amalgam of ideas and prin­ciples that are both conservative _and liberal in the best traditionof those words"

Father Davis also called for astop to talk about the alleged in­feriority of U. S. Catholic col­leges..

Alluding to discussions abouthow -well Catholic colleges con­tribute to the nation's and theChurch's intellectual strength, hesaid: "The question has now' beenbooted around so badly that it'no longer has any meaning.""~ objective appraisal of the

relative merits of all 2,011 U. S.colleges made on purely objec­tivegrounds would put the vast

, bulk of 'our Catholic colleges in·'anabove~average position with:ft!spect to, all other Americancol;le~es," he declared.

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TAKE VEHL: Fou~ postulants don habit of Sisters of Our Lady of La Salette at La. Salette Shrine, Attlebolio. Left' to. right, Sister Madeline of the Cross (Jeanne Marchand,Attleboro); Sister Mary James '(Eloise Remillard, Douglas) ; Sister Mary John (LucilleTriilque, East Blackstone); ,Sister Raymond Marie (Juliette Turcotte~ Woonsocket). TheAttleboro foundation is! the first for the community in -the United States. ..

,DETROIT (NC) - The editor The words ·are being' "pinnedof America magazine said :here on individuals and on groups inthat Catholic colleges must beinprecise and misleading ways,"faithful to the "full Catholic her- he said.iitage of reason," which ~omtiines The term liberal, for example,'both' liberal and' conservative has become "a kind of nasty:principles. ' l

Jword to denominate anyone from

Father Thurston N. Da~is, IS.J ., an Americans for Democratic'told a college educators' session Action sympathizer to ,someat the :i9th annual convention 'of freshman caught reading Father'the National Catholic Educatlon- J 0 h n Cronin's 'Communism:al Associations that 'Cathblicsspend too much time tal~ing Threat to Freedom" or Popepointlessly about "liberals" 'and John's Mater, et Magi~tra'" heI"conservatives." 01 said.

,U [j'®®~ [F'l}uD~@~@!pl}u®[j'$ U'@ !?'@ml©l®rr

!Pr@lh~em~ @fS©(bg@~ ,J\!.!l~q.B~e '. I' ,

- LOUISVILLE (NC)-Philoso- be heard ,outside our own Cath­.phers should put their mind,S to olic circles, it can be. only by anwork on social justice probfems appeal to ethics, and It must be aand not leave thf' field of morals natural ethic, not, an ethic sub­entirely up, 'to theologians, a ordinated to moral theology."priest-philosopher asserted ~ere. . Father.. Grindel ,mad; clear

"We have too often been' con- that he IS not advocatmg any'tent to leave general discussions system of life based upon a "nat­of social economic and political ural ethic," an'd stated that it isquestion~ to the:social and 'p6lit- ,not possible i'to live solely by an'ical scientists and their inhral ethic' subordiiiated :'to moralaspects to the theologia:ns," theolo~;":, . .,' "Father Carl W. Grindel C.M. of . Callmg upon philosophers toSt. John's University, Brooklyn, do their share in thE: field ofsaid at the 'meeting of the An\.er- morals, he added: "Phl1osophersican Catholic Philosophical As- cannot abdicate the field ofsodation. '1 morals to the theologians. If they

"I submit that this is a sad ~nd do, we w~ll cOI;ltinue to talk only.danger9us omission," ded~red to ours.e~ves an~ our impact ,~n,the Vincentian priest, wh~ is the pohhcal, SOCial a.nd economicpresident of the association) thought of the nahon and the

Appeal to Ethics I ",:orld will c.ontinue to be negli-"If ' . h t ff t th' ,glble. ,

.. we WIS ? a ec e po- "Scarcely a day goes by,"hhcal, econom.lC. and sO~lal Father Grindel continued; "thatthou~ht and achvlt~,of our t~e some headline in the newspapersand ~~ our country, he con~I.n- does not suggest problems thatued,. we cannot, delegat~ the <:!IS- the philosopher cO,uld stlidy withcusslon of mo.ral matters so~ely profit. and offer"to aid the~o the theologIans. If we hOPlf to solution."

~@IJ'lfil[p>@fr® DIm Au<dIul1'il®,A~li'u«:(OJl1'il ~frM<dI(Sl)l1'ilfr$ I

WASHINGTON (NC) - Ger­many, 'England, Russia ~ndFrance are all in 'competition /with the, U.S. in offering scho­larships to talented African stu­dents, according to an Ameri~aneducator. I

I This was the report of FatherJoseph M. Moffitt, S.J., directorof admissions at Georgeto\vnUniversity ,here, who receritlyreturned from a visit to Nigetia.

He and officials fr.om Harvardand Yale Universities and B~r­nard College went there as: acommittee representing the Afri­can Scholarship Program iofAmerican Universities to screen4,'000 students for 207' U.S.schools which will give 300scholarships, with African gdv­ernments paying transportation·

, Icosts and the U.S. governmentpaying for the' students' r06mand board. !

II

I

,~@{f[}u@~O~ [}l®[f01f@@®, • 6 , •

THE ANCHOR­Thurs., May 3, 1962

10,

PODe to Receiv~

12.00Cl MiQro-,tsROME (NC) - An audience

with Pope John and participationin Stations of the Cross in theColosseum will climax a pilgrim­age of 12,000 migrants and refu':gees here on Sunday, Aug. 5.

The pHgrimage will commem­orate the '10th anniversary of theissuing of Exsul Familia, PopePius XII's apostolic constitutionregulating religious assistancefor the world's refugees. '

The pilgrimage will include,refugees from Poland, Lithuania,Germany, the Ukraine and Spain.It is bein? promoted by .theSacred Consistorial Congrega­tion, the administrative office ofthe Holy See which has jurisd!c­tion over the. religious care ofrefugees. A, special committeehas' been established and isheaded by Carlo Cardinal Con­falonieri, Secretary of the con-gregation. -'

Five airplanes will fly groupsof pilgrims from the UnitedStates and Canad,a for the occa­sion.

Oak~armd Pt1'e~Qte

~~~~@IJ'®~ C~~j[rgU')'

'QllM~®n,@f 'VD IT\IM®§i', OAKLAND (NC) - Thefirst' spiritual head of' thenew Oakland diocese besideCalifornia's 'Golden Gate hascalled upon his people to practice I

the golden rule.Most Rev. Floyd L. Begin said

the" practice of "fraternal char- iityj, is the "spiritual barometerof our love of God" at his en­thronement ceremonies in thenew Cathedral of St. Francis deSales here'.

Magic Formula'During his 35 years as priest

and Auxiliary Bishop in theCleveland diocese, Bishop Beginbecame widelY known for hiswork among the poor and theNegroes. He told his people herethat God has given "each of usthe chance to dispense each

, other and others from the neces­sity of suffering by an act ofcharity or service we perform."

"All 'of Our Lord'; miraclesand services to mankind weretruly dispensation.s from thenecessity of suffering," BishopBegin noted. "Our Lord was notcontent to relieve only the vic­tims of His own 'day. He found away to lift the cross of suffering

. from the members of' his Mys­tical'BodY until the end of time.The magic formula is fraternalcharity." '

Bishop Begin urged his peopleto inaugurate the history of thenew Diocese of Oakland bydwelling for a few moments oncharity~"theQueen of Virtues."

Help Fellow ManHe pointed out that· Christ

spent His public life removingfrom others the cross of pain andsuffering; that when He healedthe man born blind He alsochanged his v~cation so that hemight now save his soul withq,utthe affliction. ~ ,

"In giving us the new com­mandment to love one anotheras He 10,ves us, He also gare usHis authority, by our charity, tochange the vocations of. our fel­lowmen,'" Bishop Begin said.

"Every good deed we do inthought, word, act, or omission, I

prompted by true charity, is ac­tually a dispensation from suf­fering," he continued. "Our

, Blessed 'Lord; the~ef9re, has ac-',tually given us a formula forpractically removing the crossfrom th,~ backs of men."

NC!lme' ChCllRrmaru'Edward J. Coogan, North At­

tleboro, is Bristol and BarnstableCounties Chairm"an of the Par­ents' Division for the 100th An­niversary development of BostonCollege. A past president of ·theSerra Club, he is the father of

,eight children, one a senior atthe Jesuit institution.

Page 11: 05.03.62

.. ..

11

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Catholic librarians were toldhere by Bishop William G.Connare of Greensburg, Pa.,

'that theirs was "a sacred trust"and one to be exercised with the"greatest of caution and care."

Preaching at the Divine Litur­f,y (Mass) offered at the Cath­olic Library Association conven­tion by Bishop Nicholas T. Elkoof the Pittsburgl. Byzantine Ritediocese, Bishop Connare urgedlibrarians to use their powers todirect reading habits so as toresult "in progress intellectually,'1nd before all else spiritually."

"In these days, when the cli­.nate everywhere is hyper-sensi­tive to censorship, this presentsa clear challenge to all who dealwith books, not only those whowrIte them, but those who, likelibrarians, dispense them toothers," he declared.

lForm Clear §tandar~9

"This demands on the part ofpeople like librarians vigilancein the formation of very clearstandards," Bishop Connare con­tinued. "It means a carefulschooling in the art of criticism,which recognizes in every bookthe equal importance of its con­tent and its style. This results inan appraisal of every book in thelight of its total possible effectupon the reader."

However, "the resulting ap­praisal may not always be ac­ceptable in modern circles, whichso often confuse liberty withlicense, and freedom with theright to any experience irrespec­tive of its results to body orsoul," the Bishop warned.

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ing some 315,000 students.Taking exception with crItics

of Catholic higher education, hecommented: "With due respectto the great penitents of the as­cetical orders, I always believedthere is something unhealthyabout self-flagellation for itsown sake."

'Capsule Descriptions'He also said it is "difficult to

accept calmly the snap general­izations or capsule descriptionsof journalists attempting to de­scribe neatly any of our col­leges,"

Father Kelley said that tradi­tionally a university has threemajor functions: to be a "reser­voir" of knowledge; to "enrich

. and expand" knowledge; to"transmit" knowledge from gen­eration to generation.

"To my mind, in view of this,it is perfectly respectable andprofessionally 'honorable to con­centrate on what seems to bethe pl'imary mandates of the uni­versity, namely to protect thetremendous holdings of the pastand worthily to transmit these togenerations still unborn," he said.

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the physical growth of Catholichigher educ;:ttion as "sympto~

matic" of its expanding influ­ence.

He noted that there are cur­'rently 267 U. S. Catholic institu­tions of higher education enroll-

C@M!7'ft Do~mo~~~$

Ob~~etm oty Ap~~@ IWASHINGTON (NC) - For

the sixth time in its 1961-'62term, the U. S. Supreme Court.has dismissed an appeal froman obscenity conviction. .

The latest such action cameas the court refused to reviewthe conviction of Harold S.Kahm of Orlando, Fla., who hadbeen. found guilty of sending ob­scene material and advertise­ments through the mail.

The court did not comment onits action' in dismissing the ap­peal from Kahm, whom a U. S:District Court in Florida sen­tenced to five years in jail oneach of nine counts of mailingobscenity, the - sentences to runconcurrently. .

'Violated Right':Kahm had argued that the

.lower court .rulings against himviolated his rights to free speech,and; due process of law. .. .

While dismissing six appealsfrom obscenity convictions sincelast October,the' court hasagreed to rule on one such case,involving the mailing of alleged­ly obscene! material. The courtat present has that case u~der

advisement, and is expected tohand down a ruling shortly.

Mrs. Helen Donahue, district three president; Rev. ThomasF. Walsh, Diocesan moderator; Mrs. Gilbert NoonanDiocesan president: More than 500 women attended th;

.affair at Feehan High.

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The First Friday Club ofGreater New Bedford will meettomorrow at M-K restaurant.Speaker will be Carlin Lynch,director of athletics at BishopStang High School. Membersmay bring guests and businesswill include appointment of anominating committee to pre-'pare a slate of officers.

"The disservice lies in this:that their focus is so fixed on onefacet of higher education, name­ly what they call the 'productionof 'intellectuals,' that there isnever sufficient emphasis put onthe heroic, gigantic strides takenby Catholic higher education,particularly in the last 30 years,"he said.

!Expanding InfluenceAddressing the John Carroll

Society, an organization of Cath­olic business and professionalmen in the Washington archdio­cese, the Jesuit educator cited

~~~~~~t ~~ ~r@re~

PITTSBURGH (NC) - Morethan 21,000 Catholics filled Civic

·auditorium here to pray for theirpersecuted brethren around theworld. Called the "Pageant ofPrayer," the demonstration fea­tured 20 floats which movedacross the' auditorium floor de­picting 20 national Madonnas ofcommunist-enslaved countries.

"It was a pigmy elephanttrap," the missioner continued."If I had fallen into it no onewould have found me in a hun­dred years."

'So Few of Us'

Father Keefe has made severaltrips into pigmyland. He plansto make more when he returns tohis mission-this time with a'tape recorder to record the pig­my speech. He said he's going totry to learn their still unwritten:lan~age. '

"But I'd love more to' be tak­ing back a lay missionary or twowith me," Father Keefe said."That's our main trouble. Thereare so many Africans waiting toembrace the God of love in placeof their superstition and fear ofpagan gods, but there are so fewof us,"

M·g~~o@rro®[1' G[(@U'~~llJl~

~@[l $@'WO [[\)~r 11:00 §<e

WASHINGTON (NC)-Criticsof· U. S. Catholic higher educa~

tion overlook the achievement ofCatholic colleges and universi­ties "through the regular mass­production of solid, decent well­educated graduates," accordingto Father William F. Kelley,S.J., presiden of MarquetteUniversity in Milwaukee.

Father Kelley said here he is"angered by the disservice toCatholic higher education ofmany in our own ranks" whohave made unfair criticism ofCatholic schools.

M@~~ Crf(t7)~$

iT'@ '~o~[]1{i)Q®~CLEVELAND (NC) - They

shuddered 'when Father John P.Keefe, C.S.C., announced in hisUganda, Africa, mission he wasoff to visit the pigmies. Friendlynatives warned: "NobodY comesout of the pigmy forest alive.". When the Holy Cross missionerrelates ;the story he breaks. intoan ear-to-ear grin and com­ments: '''I'm still alive."

Father Keefe, a Clevelandnative,came home from his mis­sion post for treatment of a mys­rerious: kidney ailment, whichnow seems to have disappeared.He has been a missioner' inUganda for the last two years....:..he was ordaineq. less than threeyears ago--and has been giventile "green light" to return to hispost. ~.

,Elephant TrapThe pigmy forest, Father

Keefe related, is across the Con­go border from his Bwana mis­sion post. Despite the dire warn­ings, he set out on his first visitto pigmyland and soon found hewas followed from a distance bytwo of the little men.

Father Keefe related he keptgoing until hE' approached asquared clearing. Then the pig­mies rushed up and grabbed himby both arms. They led him offthe trail. One pigmy lifted sometwigs and' turf, revealing a hugeexcavation with pointed stakesat the bottom.

m:OCESAN WOMEN: At meeting of Diocesan Coun~

eil of Catholic Women, districts three and four, are, fromleft, Mrs. George' Bauza, toastmistress and chairman; Mrs.Edward Galligan, district four president; Bishop Connolly;

MClIryknoliers GoingTo Four CQntinents

MARYKNOLL (NC) - FQrty­seven missioners wil take partin Maryknoll's 45th annual de~

parture ceremony Sunday, June10. The priests and Brothershave been assigned to remotestations on four continents.

Thirty-eight seminarians willbe ordained Saturday, June 9as pries~s of the Catholic ForeignMission Society of America(Maryknoll) by Bishop John W.Comber, M.M., Superior Generalof Maryknoll.

Bishop Alphonse J. Schlad~weiler Qf New Ulm, Minn., willdeliver the departure ceremonyaddress. .

Page 12: 05.03.62

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Tears are generally more Oftelll shellll fOl? ~e flBlg'DilllliJ. GQ ~~esoul than for the pains of the body. The hoUese team OOlllll0 lIlloewhen 3 bone is broken, but when the heart is broken. S1llclln ~ll'!il

the tears of a young motheR' who has lost ~ child, eb0 beioveallwife who has ios~ h0R' husbancll ell Y0all'S; ~ moth011' who seeobel' sou live' and die outside the Cbmch, the penitellle whe~6 nmied life saved by the abfwUvinghand olf ~ Priest.

lIt is said that one's chanc~r Is de­termined by' what makes him weep. OurLord wept three times: once because of the death 01' a friend,once because of' tbe impending disaster of a city that knew Himnot, once because of the sins of the world. But for what Ib.aveyour tearS beeR shed?' Scripture tells us that God gathers allof our tears, as· it were, in a bottle, and they will in some waybe reckoned ilIl OWl' judgment. Will y,oul'l'l be used fOl? or againstyou'?

Many a' man who has never seen God In the sunlight 02prosperity has seen Him through the dewdrop of lit tear. In tb0light of a warm fire, Peter denied that heknew Our Blessed Lord; in his tears herediscovered Him. But there is also a cor­respondence between tears and joy, for thePsalmist tells US that those who cow intears shall reap in joy. The last mentionof tears in the Scriptures is this:

"He will wipe away every tear fromtheir eyes, and there will be no moredeath, or mourning, or cries of distress,no -more sorrow; those old things havepassed' away."

GOD LOVE YOtk:to R,j.B. for~nO "Thank yon for remindingme how fortunate :rr am In having a wonderful wife and eigMhappy, healthy children." ..• to' M..J.O'B. for $30 "Please usethis as you see fit." ••• to'Mrs. J.M. for $500 "This representopart of' an estate we inherited. We want to share it with thepoor of. the world." •.• to D.F.G. for $1 "Enclosed is a sliverdollar which should shine even more brightly in the hands oilThe Society for the Propagation of the Faith."

MISSIQN .combines the best features of all other magazines:stories, pictures, statistics and details, human interest. Take aninterest in the suffering humanity of the mission world and sendyour sacrifices along with a request' to be put on the mailing &tof this bi-monthly publication.

Cut out this collimn, pin your sacrjfice to It and mall it to theMost Rev -Fulton 'J. Sheen, National Director of the Society for~e Pr-opagation of the Fa!th, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y.,or your Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE368 North MaIn Street, Fall RIver, Mass.

- YOURS TO lOVE AND TO GIVEI. . Ibe life of 0 DAUGHTER OF ST. PAULLo". God

,more, and give to souls knowtedge GIld low ofGod by serving Him In a Mission which uses thePress, Radio. MotiOll Pictures and TV. 90 bringH"n Word to soufs everywhere. ZeoIOUll VOUBB .girls, '4-23 yoors Interested Ie litis uniqueApostolato IACIY write to:

~ '.REVEREND MOTHO SUPERIOR

DAUGHTERS Of; n. PAULSO Sf. PAUL'S AVE. BOSTON 30, MASS.

Are you ever sad for' those who leave the Church? Do' Y9Uever grieve because there are, not enough churches or missionariesto care for the peopies of Africa, Asia ap.d Latin America? Does

. it sadden' you to know that last year's per capita contribution of'United States Catholics to the Holy Father's Missions was only27 cents? More important; do you not .oniy weep but· act? Thensend the Pqntiff's own Society for the' Propagation of the Faiththe alms with which to dry' the tear-stained faces of 2 billionpagan poor. If we· weep not for them, we shall' truly weep forourselves and ou~ children! . -

JUN GLlE MISSIONER:Father Raoul J. Pronovost,M.S., who ser.ves a lepercolony at Akyab, Burma, istouring th~ U.S. to raisemoney for a GO-patientleper hospital' in the Bur-'mese jungles. NC Photo.

Seminary Opelrnin91DALLAS (NC) -A diocesan

junior seminary to train candi­dates for the priesthood will beopened here next September,Bishop Thomas K. Gorman·· ofDallas-Forth Worth has an­Dounc;ed. ,

Continued from Page Oneschools and 59 elementary

, schools of the Diocese were"told tc center their efforts

to further the reu.nion· afChristendom around an accurateknowledge of what the Churchholds; the recognition 'o'f' the. es­sential and non.;.es.sential ele­ments of the Faith, and the will­ingness to explain the 'truths ofreligion, to' lion-Catholics' withcharity and using a vocabularyacceptable to the non-Catholicmentality. '

"As Cardinal Bea, the head afthe Vatican Secretariat for Pro~

moting Christian Unity,. has ob­served, our s~parated' brotherssimply, do.'not understand our /terminology. They have be,enaway 'from it for centuries, andthey have. been thinking of Godand religion' against philosoph­ical systems and mentalities thatare,quite different from the tra­ditional Catholic vocabulariesand expressions and philoso­phies. It is not sacrificing orcompromising Catholic doctrineat all tc explain it in the lan­gUage thlJ,t: these 'present-daynori-Gatholics understand andwill accept," Father Driscoll said.

Five PointsAfter S11mmarizin'g current·

trends in the present 'efforts toreunite Christendom, FatherDriscoll proposed a five-stepprogram which Catholic teacherscould follow: . ,

First, Catholics must uniteinsbicere prayer that the Spiritwill touch their own efforts andthe minds and hearts of thoseoutside the' Church.

Second, Catholics must know­what the'Church teaches and'dis­tinguish the· essential from thenon"-essential elements.

Third, Catholics ·must strive tounderstarid what their non-Cath_ •.olie brothers believe and, with­out compromise; ~e in 'how manyareas there is agreement.

Thurth, the teachings of theC~urch must be· explained inlanguage that the' present-dayDon-Catholic understands; Manyproblems'in religion are prob­lems of semantics.

Fifth, 'the'abnosphere of reli­gious discussion must alway-s bethat of charity. Gone Ul the useof attack and counter-attack and

. gone must be acrimony -in any,discusSion aiming at greater loveand service of God. The mosteloquent proponent of unity isnot only the word but the livingof the Word of God in the lives.of Catholics; 'individually and asmembers ofa religious and civic

.community.

for Age~Continued from Page lOne

and registered nurses will beemployed.. It is' anticipatea thatthe lay personnel payroll willapproxima~ two h ti n d r e-dthousand dollars a y~.! . '.

The present Diocesan I polleyfor sueh Homes would prevail~

The minimum age for. adMiSsionwould be' 65 yeara, mate andfemale, reiardless of race, colorand' creed. Present .or orte timeresidence within the area 'ofthe Fall River Diocese w6uld bea. re qui rem en t. The ratescharged would be such that re­cipients of Old Age Assistanceand Medical Aid to the I Agedwould receive the same accom­modations as persons entering ,with their own financiat re-sources. I

This project would be fi­nanced by the Catholic C~arities .Appeal and would increase thetotal of Diocesan beds fOr theAged to' 808.. 1

: '1',~ .:. .• ": .... : ~." . . .~. ...~.-. ;

THE .ANr,-",,'" _I'\:"t",,~~ of Fall River-Thurs., May 3, 1962

~®[m@~@~ WOtf[}uOmJ ce~QB'[f@~ ~~

rns®~~ ~ff@~ McdJ® tf@!By lRt. Rev. Msgr. John S. lKelllllledy.

The election of Pope John XXIII was follow~d closelyby two epochal developments. The first was the ~ssurance

that, for·the first time ip almost a century, an efumenicalcouncil would be convoked, and soon. The secon~ was anastounding "change of! at-· and in others asserted; them withmosphere both inside and a one-sided stress which wasoutside the Church." The not only'polemical but actuallylast phras.e is quoted frOtn a heretical."remarkable book by Father Two DevelopJrientsHans Kueng, a German the- The challenge of the Refor-ologian. The mation led to two developmentsCouncil, ' Re- in the Church, as the author seesform and Re- it. One was along th.e lines ofunion (Sheed' authentic renewal, as! evidencedand War d . in the Council of Trent, a "uni-

. . Th versal expression of th~ Church's$3.95) . e'e ban g e # t 0 reform of herself from within,which Father .rooted in the central core of C~-Kueng refers. tholicism.",.has to do with The other had as its chief notelonging, striv- "reaction, in the serse of alng, and pray- restoration aimed' at maintaininglng for a re- what was established and re-union of a 11 storing according to the patternChristians. In these, he says, ofa superior past, with the con­there is presently "a totallr new stant danger of stur\.ting andpower and intensity." A mo- fossilizing the fullness lof Catho:"ment's reflection establishes the licism.". ;truth of the asSertion. The centuries between Trent

The council, scheduled to o~en and the pontificate' of ILeo XIIIin 0 c t 0 b e r, is indisSOlubly 'are seen to have been lsad tim.es.

'linked with the idea and pr~s- indeed. But with Leo~s advent,pects of reunion: One m.ay ea~l1.y "fresh'air blew thr~>ugh theexpect too much from It in thIS Church, and men breathed. moreregard. A realistic assessment' of freely... Leo XIII h~d a fUt,I­what it can in fact ,do, is mpst damentally positive re~ationshlpimportant. But such an assess- to (the) modern world." Since,ment as Father Kueng shows, his time the ecumenidal' moye­whil~ it discounts oversanguine ment has progressed, arid in thatexpectatior{s, still leaves ground of John XXIII we ate seeingfor hope of substantial acco~:- some of its fruits, although notplishmeht. . ' '. 'its final fruits. i.

The direct task of the council, What Can Be Done~ccording to Father Kueng,';is.. Hence what was, hot longa renewal within the Chu:ch, since, deemed out of the ques,.'which would be the best pOSSIble ,tion, is now consider~d to be

. prelude to reunion. The very attainable, but by ~ meansootion may offend some, who right away. Father Kueng listssuppose that the -Church, as. it the things which, in his judg­ia at the moment, is beyond ment, can be done to buildchange and improvemerit. But, toward that intensely desirablethe author reminds .us, the end. Some apply to p~otestantsChurch, is in St. Augustine's . to whom he speaks Ifrankly;

,words, the faithful P e 0 pIe most apply to Catholics.spread over all the I earth..-. Father Kueng lays !down a

This is not to say that, In h~r practical program for the Cath­innermost being, th~ Church olic who wants to knoW, "Whatcan be imperfect, sinful, and can I do?" He demonstrktes howeither in need of reforming o~ one can suffer, pray,; criticizereformable. For her innermost constructively and out of love,being is "Jesus Christ· himself, and act. . 1 'His Spirit, and His grace . •. . In our action, he insists, weher head, her life-principle, and must "give priority tol charityhence her Gospel and her sacr,,- and pastoral considerations,"ments, are holy." . take pains to "remain a part of

But the Church is in the the whole community," !both be,world is in the tumultuous patient and avoid delays; and re­main' coUrse of history, and turn to the sources of thingscomprises weak. and fallible and to tradition. Nor does hecreatures. slight the obligation of obedi-

Historical Review ence and its concrete fune-In an impressive historical re- tioning. !

view, Father Kuerigtraces the This Stimulating, stretching·process of renewal within the book had· an. imprimi I potest,Church all down the ages. It which evidently was granted themay validly be said to have be~ Germ.an original. The I r~adergun with the very first council, puts question marks h~re andthat of Jerusalem in Apostolic there in the margins: at :a point,times, and 'it has never' ceased. for example, where a wordThere have been' periods of might have ~een l!aid bf' Piuslamentable decline, each fol- XII's timely censure' of I"situa­lowed by a~ aw.akening, a tiOR ethics" or. at another pointstirring to' action, a vigorous, ""here the subject of apostoliccleansing. The crisis which' led succession. ~ight, for' p~ecision,.to, the sixteenth century schism have been more fully gone into.called the Reformation had, been !building up for a long time: HomeThere were those within ,theChurch who cl~arly saw til!!!urgency of reform and heroical­ly sought to effect it. It never:went far enough. :

Father Kueng discusses ob­jectively and candidly the Re­formation which Luther initi­ated; and. points out why, al­though it was occasioned by'real and grievous abuses, itwas, and had to be; rejected by;the C::hurch.

Luther, he says, "took cer­tain perfectly Catholic principles'and in some cases formulatedthem so as to give the maxi­mum risk of misunderstanding,disunity and sheer contradiction,

'C1!.!Iban Reh!l9]leesMIAMI (NC)-Resettlement of

35,000 Cuban refugees now quar- 'tered here in other parts of theUnited States is the 1962,goal of.the Nat\onal Catholic Resettie-'ment Council, according to·Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom.

-.-

Page 13: 05.03.62

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CHICAGO (NC)-Jane KrauS'(!of Falls Church, Va., has beennamed winner of a nationSlIshort story contest for Catholiecollege students.

Her story, "The MarriageFeast," was judged the best cf200 entries submitted to thlaThomas More Association SlIIlO!the McGeary Foundation.

Miss Krause, a junioi' at fueCollege of Notre Dame of Mal:'yoland in Baltimore, will also l'e-­

ceiv*, 'the McGeary FoundationGold Medal. The awards will bepresented at the association'o23rd annual celebration on Mall(I in Chicago.

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Sales & Service

Politoc«J1 FiguS'eSues N~ws~~p®r

NEW ORLEANS (NC) - Apolitical figure has filed a mil­lion-dollar suit foor damages hereagainst two news orgaftizations,charging that they had preparedn news release saying he hadbeen threatened with excom­munication by the CatholicChurch.

The suit was filed in civficourt by Ross Buckley, Republi­can candidate for mayor in therecent city election, against theTimes-Pi~ayune PUblishing Co.~nd the Associated Press Bureau.

Buckley is said to have at­tended a segregationists' meet­ing the time he was a candidatefor mayor.

The petition filed in Buckley'obehalf stated that the "defen­dants, through their agents anellemployees, did, acting in con­cert, prepare a news release tothe effect that the plaintiff hadbeen threatened with excom­fhunication by authorities of theRoman Cathoiic .Church."

Buckley claimed that as a re­sult of the news release he hadsUffer~d damage to his reputa­tion in the amount of $500.000,and had suffered mental anguishin the amount of $500,000.

THE ANCHOR- 13Thurs., May 3, 1962

Annou!Mlce GrrantFor Seminarian

Paul A. Duchaine, generalmanager, has announced that MyBread Baking Company of NewBedford will award 0 $500 schol­arship to a prospective semi­narian graduating this Junefrom a Greater New Bedfordhigh school.

The award, to be made at thediscretion of the Chancellor ofthe Diocese, will be granted' onthe basis of scholastic, intellec- .tual and moral qualities.Applicants should contact theirpastors, who will have fullinformation. .

To be called the Joseph P.Duchaine Scholarship in mem­ory of the late owner of thebaking company, the grant is thesecond given by My Bread.

will be guests Saturday, May 12. at the Diocesan Council of Cath­

olic Women's annual convention,slated to be 'held on the Attle­boro campus.

Wednesday, May 9 is the datefor the annual concert of Jesus­MarY Academy's Cecilian GleeClub. The varied program in­eludes' religious, folk and musi­cal comedy airs. Jeannine St.Laurent, Jeannette Robidouxand Vivianne Ouellette will besoloists.

o

STUDENT COUNCllL: Student counefi officers at Mt.St. Mary .Academy, Fall River, are, from left, ClaireOuellette, Carolyn. Murphy, Sharon Murphy, GeraldineMatthews.

3)w@Il1$@~ D(Wrrnl!:@~Bishop Cassidy Council, Swan­

sea Knights of Columbus, hasreslumed .its series of Fridaynight dances for teen-agers inthe Council Home. TheodoreAndrade, chairman of the youthactivities program of the coun­cil, is in charge of the weeklysessions.

Ready to entertain the, Catho_lic Teachers' Convention todayat the Attleboros' Bishop FeehanHigh, the Feehan Glee Club willdisplay a variety of vocal talentand musical numbers. Otherstudents will serve as ushers,cafeteria workers and guides forthe science fair. The newest highschool in the Diocese hasworked diligently and long tomake its share in the Conven­tion an outstanding success.

Science WinnersAmong winners in the 13th

ann u a I Massachusetts StateScience Fair are Paul Moreau,junior at Prevost High School,Fall River and Judith Bourgalt,junior at St. Mary's Taunton.

Paul, a first award .winner,showed an exhibit in the fieldof biology and Judith's thirdplace project was "PopulationExplosion in the MicroscopicWorld."·

May is a musit:al month furSlrea schools. The Feehan Chorw

M@Ii'~1h 11'@ M@!.%~LISBON (NC)-Five hundred

young people from Ajuda parishhere walked over five miles withtheir parish priests to the mas­sive monument to Christ theKing. There they had a vigilservice which terminated withmidnight Mass at which all re­ooived Ho~~ Communion.

South Africans See

Time Ilor Study

As the scholastic drive to theC.U. and June exams intensi­fies, extra-curricular aetivitiesare at a minimum. The Coyleband is practicing for its an­nual concert; a junior prom willbrighten the New Bedford Hoteltomorrow night when HolyP:amily's juniors gather for agala affair chairmaned byRichard Perras and Peter Sul­liv~n; and Bishop Stang. willsend III delegation of Sodalistsnext weekend to a two daySodality Institute at Roxbury'sNotre Dame ·Academy, directedby Rev. Frank Holland, S.J. ofCincinnati's Xavier University.

In Fall Riv~r, Jesus - MaryAcademy's glee club gives itsyearly songfest this Saturdayfor religious of the diocese andrepeats the performance forfriends and relatives n extWednesday night.

May is traditionally the monthof Our Lady. As usual, studentsof Holy Family observed thefirst day of May with appro­priate ceremonies. Susan'~ockhad the honor of crowningMary's statue with girl" class of­ficers as her court of honor. .

Bishop James J. Gerrard of­fered the opening Mass at whichthe student body received HolyCommunion.

Oratok"loll,ll AwardThe Bishop James J. Gerrard

Oratorical . Award given an­nually to a member of the Mon­signor McKeon Debating Societyfor the highest degree of ora­torical and foren!iic proficiencyhas been won for the secondconsecutive year b¥ SusanAguiar.

The Sister M. Ignatius O.P.Memorial trophy was presentedlast night to the Holy Family'High School Debating team,winner of the NarragansettLeague championship.

Fine Arts, the Fogg Museum atHarvard, the French Center, andthe Gardner Museum. The en­joyable day brought a greaterappreciation of French cultureto the Fall Riverites.

Tripping to Boston also werethree students of Msgr. PrevostHigh to attend the M.I.T. Day ofScience. Their moderator, Bro­ther Augustus, was a judge inthe physics contest. Tomorrowthe Vocation Club at Msgr.Prevost is sponsoriQg a week­end trip to Alfred, Me. toobserve life and activities ofse!J1inarians.

A junior first is claimed bythe class of 1963 at Fall River'sSacred Hearts Academy in beingthe first class at SHA privilegedto sponsor its own junior prom.Held Easter Monday, chaperonesincluded Dr. and Mrs. RaymondConnors, Mr. and Mrs. MonsourFerris and Mrs. Estelle Maclean.

..

VFW AWARID: Joan Reil­ly, magna cum laude seniorat St. Mary's High School,Taunton, is the recipient ofthe MsgI'. James Dolanscholarship awarded by theVeterans of Foreign Wars.She will attend Stonehill Col­lege, majoring im. medicaltechnologyo

Diocesan 'Schools Students FaceCatholic University Examina~ion

Challenge in Tw~ WeeksBy Clement Jf. Dowling ..

In just 11 days every Catholic student in the DiocesewiU be intent on conquering the Catholic University exams.Demanding in their challenge and indicative of the scho­lastic standards of the times, the C.U. exams will be heldin 0 every school on May 14,15, and 16. Needed will beextensive k now 1e d g e ofAmerican and world history,algebra I, geometry, freshmanscience, junior chemistry andsenior physics. Students withtwo years of Spanish, Frenchor Latin will be tested. Seniorswill be expected to measure upin comprehensive exams cover­ing four years of religion andEnglish.

Hardly is Easter vacation overwhen Diocesan scholars find itim"'£'rative to concentrate onpi'eparation for these exhaustivemeasurements of their know­ledge and fitness. Serious stuodents find the annual experiencea true test of their adaptabilityto school work. Teachers workwHh and pray constantly for thesuccess of their proteges. Lovingparents anxiously await the re­mJIt for the marks are usuallyo beacon light indicating thecapabilities of their children.

C.U. Affiliates .Additionally the C.U. exams

determine the level of accom­plishment in the various dioce­san high schools. Each school isi'ated according to the results.The experience aids in deter­mining if certain subjects havebeen fully covered.

Every worthwhile high schoolis affiliated with some college.High schools in the Fall RiverDiocese are affiliated with thehighly - esteemed CatholicUniversity in Washington. M­fili:::.1ion brings prestige anddirection. A student passing theC.U. exams for four years re­ceives an honorary diplomafrom the University. The awardis within the reach of many ofthis year's seniors.

lEaster TrApsL'Ji Ann Motta, first p1'lize

winner in the New BedfordRegional Science Fair and prideex Bishop Stang High, is en­joying her prize. She is now atthe Seattle World's Fair for aweck with her mother and twoof her teachers, - Sister Super­ior Anne Denise, S.N.D., princi­pal, and Sister BernadetteLouise, S.N.D., her science teach_er.

Lili Ann set up her scienceexhibit in the Display Hall ofthe Fair yesterday to competeagainst other U.S. area' winners.Winners will be announced to­morrow.

Easter vacation week sawoome 40 French-studying stu­dents of Mt. St. Mary's, FanRiver, traveling to Boston tovisit the Boston Museum of

Page 14: 05.03.62

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Father Stanton

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BOSTON (NC)-:Richard,Cardinal Cushing, critici~ed

by a Louisiana segregation­ist for his membership in theNAACP, has urged prayers forsegregationists "that' they maycorrect their sorry wayI'

The Archbishop of Boston alsopraised the "courageous stand",of Archbishop Joseph F, Rum­mel of New Orleans, who hasordered the integration' o~ N~w

Orleans Catholic schools.

Shares llIurdens, I

' ''If denunciation by r~cists isthe price to be paid for being'identifIed with Archbishop Rum­mel I am happy to snare hisburdens in whatever way I may,"Cardinal Cus1).ing assertefl·

He referred to ,criticism di-: .rected against h$m at a ~egrega- . 'tionist rally by Leander' H. PerezSr., 71-year-old south Louisianapolitical boss and an. ardentsegregationist.

Perez one of three Catholicsexcom~unicated by A;rchbishopRummel for efforts to block NewOrleans school integration, dis­played a picture which he saidshowed Cardinal Cushing pre:­senting a check for $500, to theNAACP' (National Assqciationfor Ad'vancement of ColoredPeople) at the time that he ac­«:epted life membership in the

, organization. "It was announced last Decem­

'ber that,the Cardinal had jQinedthe NAACP. '

"

Set NewmanC:lubCommunion D@lY

'The Newman Club at BradjordDurfee College of Technology,

, . Fall River, will hold its, thirdannual Communion Breakfast onSunday, May 6 at St: Ma~hieu's

Church, Fall River, with Rev.Robert L. Stanton, assistant atimm'aculate Conception as: guestspeaker. ' I

The group will attend the 9:00 ,o'clock Mass, after which·break­fast will be served in the base-ment of the church. "

Fa"ther Stanton's topic will -be, : .."Failure of the Young American 'to' Accept Individmil Respo~si-'

, bility for His Actions."Father Stanton attended' Bos:­

ton College, St. Bernard!s ,Sem- ­inary, Rochester, and St. Mary'sSeminary, Baltimore. In 1950, heentered the Chaplain Corps ofthe Navy and was Staff Chaplainof a Destroyer Squadron in theFar East.' In 1954, Father Stan­ton was released from activ.eduty and place( on inactive dutywith the' rank of LieutenantCommander. I

He is instructor at St. Anne's 'Hospital Scho!>l of Nursing al).dat the Novitiate of the Sisters ofCharity ,of the' Presen.tation ofMary in Dighton.

.......

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15

RIE5!IOIENClE FOR YOUNGWOMEN

196 Whipple St., Fall RiverConducted by Franciscan

Missionaries of MaryComfortable Furnished Rooms

With Meals

THE ANCHOR-Thurs.. May 3, 1962

He gave his support to a billwhich would amend the 1958National Defense~Edl,1cation Act,including a three-year, $375million program of constructionloans to non public grade andhigh schools. -

The loans, approved last yearby the Senate Labor and PublicWelfare Committee but nevertaken up on the floor, would bogiven for construction of class­rooms for science, mathematicllor modern foreign language in­struction, for physical fitneslJprograms or for teachingEnglish to students whose prin­cipal language is not English.

Loans would have to be repaidwithin 40 years at an interestrate sufficienT. to cover the gov­ernment's cost. Use of the loannfor any religIOUS purposes or forgeneral education would be for­bidden.

$M~~Cn't$ Fedelroll@@1Gl$ U'O SC~(Q)O~~

F©lrf C@n'jl$~D'Ucto<t)n

WASHINGTON (NC) ­The administration's topcampaigner for Federal aidsays he personally favorsFederal 'oans for certain typesof construction by parochial andother private schools.

Abraham Ribicoff, Secretaryof :1ealth, Education and Wel­fare, disclosed his opinion whiletestifying before the Senate edu­cation subcommittee.

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SACRED HEART,NO. ATTLEBORO

Mrs. Leo Piette has announcedthat a reception for new mem­bers of St. Anne's Sodality anda May party will be held Tues­day night in the parish hall.Prayers at 7:45 in the churchwill precede the meeting.

S p' E A K E R : Joseph A.Mullaney, Providence Col­lege basketball coach, will beguest speaker at the annualCommunion breakfast at At­tleboro PartIcular Council ofthe St. Vincent de Paul So­ciety to be held Sunday atSt. Mary's Parish Center,Norton.

ExpC!nsicll1 P~@~iJ'd!JmCLEVELAND (NC)-A TIulti­

million dollar development pro­gram to increase enrollment by1,000 at John Carroll Universitywhich now has 4,028 students.is planned. Construction of a$1.9 million dormitory for 400will begin next Fall. It will befollowed by a new sciencebuilding.

DelE C~fEAM

ILlEO If.'BEIRUBlE, MIg!l'.9lill §Rade St. .!leR. os 5-7886

ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL,FALL RIVER

,Mrs. Rene Lariviere heads anominating committee to presenta slate of new officers for theWomen's Guild. The guild plansa mystery ride Monday night,May 7. Cars will leave from theschoolyard at 6:15. A bus trip toCanada is set for July and willbe open to guild members andtheir friends.ST. JOSEPH,FALL RIVER

Junior CYO members will at..;'tend a roller skating party Sat­urday afternoon, May 5. A buswill leave the schoolyard at I,returning at 4.

The Women's Guild plans itsannual installation banquet forJune. Mrs. Henry Bernardo is'in charge of tickets. The unitplans a rummage sale from 9 to2 tomorrow in the parish hall,which will be open until 9tonight for donations.

Also planned for June is aparish penny sale.

A Boy ~cout troop is in processof organizatiop in the parish.ST. IDOMllNIC,SWA\.NSJEA

The Women's Guild haschosen Knights of ColumbusHall, Milford Road, Swansea, asthe locale for a Spring dance tobe held from 8 to 12 Saturdaynight, May 5., Tickets will beavailable at the door, accordingto Mrs. Thomas Hazel, chairman,who is aided by, Mrs. FrankOrmond as co-chairman.SS. JPETlER A\.NJI) PAUlL,FALL RIlVER

The Women's Club will meetat 8 Monday night, May 7. Mrs.John Markland and Mrs. JamesQuinn are chairmen for thesocial hour and Mrs. RaymondE. Dooley, program chairman,announces that a floral displayby John Bonner will be featured.

It is announced that reserva­tons for the unit's installationbanquet Tuesday. May 15 willclose Friday, May 11.ST. HYACINTH,NEW BEDFORD

A Maybasket whist to benefitthe church will be held in theparish hall, Rivet and CountyStreets, at 8 Saturday night,May 5. Door and table prizes winbe food baskets.

Mrs. Lucille Brassard is chaa-,man. Sponsoring organization isthe parish unit of the Ladies ofSt. Anne in addition to a com­mittee of other parishioners.

ST. ELIZABETH,FALL RIVER

A chicken supper is set for 6Saturday night, May 5 it! theparish haDST. MARlI.SOUTH ~ARTMOllJTll:l[

The Women's Guild will 'holdits annual Spring dance, Satur­day night, May 12, with Mrs.Frank Gracie in charge of ar­rangements. The unit's annualCommunion breakfast, sched­uled to follow 9 o'clock MassSunday morning, May 20, willhave as speaker Miss EileenLardner, reporter for the NewBedford Standard-Times.ST. PATIltICJK,WAlItlElHlA\.M. The Holy Name Society willsponsor the: film, "The Trium­phant Hour" at an open monthlymeeting Monday night" Parish­ioners may purchase tickets fromany Society member. '

A clamboil will be served inJune instead of the annualcookout.

The Rosary and Altar Societywill hold its annual dinner-atthe next meeting.

Mrs. Timothy Walsh, chair­man, with the aid of Mrs. Wil­liam LeFavor, has announcedthat St. Patrick's Circle willconduct a rummage sale tomor­row and Saturday for the Schol­arship Fund.

ST. MARY'S,NORTON- Judson Stafford is chairman of

a large committee of parishionersplanning the annual parish vari­ety show, to bE' presented at 2and 8 Sunday afternoon and eve­ning, May 6, in the new parishcenter.

A chorus of 57 plus eight fea­tured players and many specialtyacts will be directed by ManuelJ. Viera. Proceeds will benefitthe center and tickets will beavailable at the door.

SACRED HEART,FALL RJ[VEIlt

State Senator Mary L. Fon­seca will be commentator for afashion show to be sponsored at8 Monday night. May 7 at Venusde Milo restaurant by theWomen's Guild. Mrs. RobertNedderman and Mrs. NestorSilva, chairmen, request that allticket returns be made. by Sun­day, May 6. They will be ac­cepted following the 8:30 and allsubsequent Masses.

Members wishing transporta­tion to the even,: may leave theirnames with committee members,also on Sunday.

The Men's Club will 'hold itsfirst annual corporate Commun­ion and breakfast Sunday morn­mg, June 3.

ST. ANNE,NEW BEDFORD

Girl Scouts and Brownies ofthe parish will have their thirdannual parent and daughterCommunion breakfast following8:30 Mass Sunday morning, May6. Mrs. Robert Lambalo willpreside and Mrs Alphonse Spir­let will be guest speaker.

HOLY NAME,FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild plans apenny sale at 8 tonight in theschool hall.

HOLY NAME,NEW BEDlFORD

The Women's Guild plans adance Saturday night, May 12at the parish hall. The regularMay meeting of the unit will fea­ture a penny sale. Mrs. GeraldFrancis is chairman of a nomi­nating committee which. willpresent a slate of officers foraction by members. '

ST. JlOlHlN'S,AT'1l'LlEBORO. A Spring whist to be held at7:30 Saturday night, May 5 inthe school hall on Hodges Street,Attleboro, will be sponsored bythe Mothers' Club for -the bene­fits of its Bishop Feehan HighSchool scholarship fund.

OUR LADY OF ANGJELS,FALL RIVER

Parishioners planning for theFeast of Our Lady of Angels willmeet at the church hall at 7:30Sunday night, - May 6. JohnSouza, president, will name com­mittee chairmen. A planningmeeting for Confraternity ofChristian Doctrine June acth~i­

ties will be held Tuesday, !VJay 8.Members of the Holy Rosary

Sodality will hold a breakfastand meeting following 7 o'clockMass this Sunday morning andChildren of Mary will markMother's Day with a breakfastfollowing 9 o'clock "Mass. At 3the same afternoon May crown­ing ceremonies will be held. TheCouncil of Catholic Women willobserve Mother's Day at .,o'clock Mass the same morning.

The CYO will hold a Springhop from 7 to 11 tomorrow nightin the parish hall.

. ST. PATRIICK,FAlL'lL !!tRVEE

The Women's Guild will holdits annual Communion breakfastfollowing 9 o'clock Mass Sundaymorning, May 6. Members arerequested to meet in the lowerchurch at 8:45. Rev. John Delaneywill be breakfast speaker. Co­chairmen are Mrs. Edwin Jack­son and Mrs. Edmund Perreault.

The Monday, May 7 meetingof the unit will feature a pennysale under direction of Mrs.Frederick Hopkins and Mrs.Jerry Aubrey. A rummage saleis planned for Saturday, May 5in the school with Mrs. -LouisLePage as chairman. Donationsmay be left at the school tomor­row.

The'Parish Parade

ST. WILLIAM,FALL RIVER

New officers of the, Women'sGuild are Mrs. John Malgieri,president; Mrs. Donald Hinch­cliffe, vice-president; Mrs. Thom­as Booth Jr., secretary; Mrs.Raymond Gagnon, treasurer.

Annual Communion breakfastis set for Sunday, June 10 andthe next regular meeting will beWednesday, June 9. Films show­ing dedication ceremonies forthe new church w~ll be shown.

ST. ANTlHlONY OJF IDESJERT,FALL R!VER

A visit to Fall River by PaulPeter Meouchi, Maronite Patri­arch of Antioch, has been post­poned for about a month, due tothe Patriarch's illness, it hasbeen announced by Chor-BishopJoseph Eid. A welcoming pro­gram sponsored by the parishwill be held at that time.

ST. ANNE,FALL RIVER

A youth dance will be heldfrom 7:30 to 10:30 tomorrow,night in the school.

ST. MllCiiAEIL,FALL RJIVER '

The first Dominga of the Holy'Ghost will open Sunday at thehome of Alfred Andrews of 107Wellington Street. One of theparish clergy will lead in therecitation of the Rosary on Tues­day, Thursday and Saturdaynights at 8 o'clock and all pa­rishioners are invited to assist.

The last kl a series ci CanaConferences will be held at7:30, Sund8¥ evening, m tbeschoOl haP

ST. MARY'S,SOUTH DARTMOUTH

The Women's Guild will holdits annual dance Saturday, May12 at Stevenson's restaurant.Mrs. Frank S. Gracie and Mrs.Jerald J. Normandin are co­chairmen.

ST. JOHN'S,POCASSET /"

The Ladies' Guild will servea breakfast to first communi­cants of the parish Sunday, May13. Next regular meeting is setfor Tuesday, May 22. A trave­logue will be, shown.

ST. MARY'S,FAIRHAVEN

Mrs. Edmund Carreiro andMrs. Preston Bouchard are incharge of a cake sale plannedfor June by the Couples Club.A Summer outing has also beenscheduled. Mr. and Mrs. JohnRezendes are in charge of thesocial committee for this month.

ST. ROCH,FALL RIVER

A 6:30 supper will precedethe meeting of the Council ofCatholic Women Monday night,May 7. Mrs. Jos~ph Dechiara ischairman. A cake sale will alsobe held at the meeting.

ST. JOHN BAP'.ll'J[ST,NEW BEDFORD

To benefit the CYO, memberswill produce a' variety show at8 Saturday and Sunday nights,May 5 and 6, in St, John's Hall, ,Wing Street. Mrs. E. Cardoza isdirector. Tickets will be avail­able <it the door.

ST. GEORGE,WESTPORT

The Women's Guild will spon­sor a whist party Saturday night,May 5 in the school hall. Mrs.Rene Labonte is chairman.

Mrs. Louis Rego heads a nom­inating committee to submit aslate of new officers and Mrs.Ralph P. Souza is chairman for& June banquet.

llIOLY FAMILY,'lrAUNTON

The Women's Guild plans aMaybasketwhist at 8 Saturdaynight, May 5 in Caswell Schoolauditorium, Middleboro Avenue,East Taunton. It will include aclock contest sponsored 'by theparish Holy Name Society.

ST. MATIDEU,FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Womenplans its annual Maybasketwhist for 8 Saturday night, May5 in the church hall. Miss AnnaForcier and Mrs. Ernest Parentare co-chairmen.

Page 16: 05.03.62

NEW BEDFORD CYO: David Loveridge of HolyFamily and Ann Fortin -of St. Joseph, Fairhaven, displaythe first place' trophies won by their schools in annualBas~etball Tourney. '

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Pa'~~st Re~eiYes

~@ [(lfi)®® o® AA@<&@ ~PITTSBURGH (NC)-A priest

who risked his life in helpingsubdue a former mental patientarmed with an automatic rifle,was among 26 persons who re­ceived medals from the Car­negie Hero Fund Commission.

Father Gerard Griffiths, C.P.,of St. Michael's Passionist, Mon­astery in Union City, N. J., waccredited with preventing pos­sible tragedy on April 13, 1961,when a former mental patientwent berserk in the city,

The Passionist priest wascalled by neighbors when theman climbed to a rooftop andthieatened to shoot With his au­tomatic rifle anyone who ap­proached him.

Father Griffiths and a police­man ascended to the roof andtried to talk the gunman intosurrendering, but he leapedthree feet to an adjoining roof.

When Fa~her Griffiths and thepoliceman' followed, the crazedman struck the priest with hisrifle and then fired six bullets,all' of which missed the mark.A bullet from the policeman'srevolver hit the gunman In thethigh and he was then disarmed.. ,'all't;dpants PraisePre-C""'"1l1 te.fl:tMll'eS

YOUNGSTOWN (NC) - Atotal of 884 couples attended the10 hours of Pre-Cana lectures inthe You'ngstown diocese lastyear. Almost all were unanimousin their praise of the pre-maritalinstructions.

Msgr. Benedict Franzetta, di-,rector, distributed a ,question­naire to each couple, asked themto fill it out anonymously, andtell him frankly what they likedor didn't like about the lectures.The critics weren't at all critical.,A non-Catholic participant

wrote: "It'E too bad morechurches, don't require these im­portant preparations. It was edu­cational along with being fun."Among the other remarks: "Mar­

,riage has become more sacred.""The rea~m, they gave for thewife not to work were sound andare being considered fully." "Itgives the young couple a goodfeet-on-the-ground this-is-what­'we're-getting-into approach tomarriage."

INCORPORATED 1937

F~ L. COLLINS' & SONS

.DAMICS ColI. COIl.8.INS, !C.IE., Pr$5.

Registered CivU and Structural EngineerMember National Society Professional Engineero

IrRAIi\lCaS 11.., COUDN$, Jilt, fl1'ElClS.

'li'I-lIOMAS ct C:OWNS, $QltV.

~(;ADlEAA'\t' ~'~llm.~DN@ ;:l~lLl!. R6V~~, M~~~.

f~~;O~~~&Ol;~~-'~ INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIC 8

HEATING OD PIPING CJn& ,~AIR CONDOTIONING i

, CONrRACrO~S •t::~:::': St. wY 7:.,62 New Bedfo<d :

...~ <> ~ t

, 'Paul A. Ruggerio of St. Dom-

Inic's parish, Swansea, a studentat Rochester Institute of'Technol­ogy. has been named Historian

" of the Empire State Province ofNewman Clubs. The appoint­ment came at a provincial con­vention held in Rochester. Rug­gerio last year was namedMember of the Year of his local~ewman Club.

AS$efl'ts .Chrh)!'oon,Aim~ to

EdyCotion,Offset Om"iginal Sill'!

DETROIT (NC) - The true "Besides the love of wisdompurpose of Christian education there is ..Iso the wisdom of love.

.is to offset as far as possible It is not just that in the class­the effects of original sin, Msgr. room we sometimes talk aboutWilliam J. McDonald, rector of God, but that we must be con­the Catholic University of Amer- stantly affirming, even thoughica,' said here: not always explicitly, the pri-

"Our teachmg must be shot macy of the spiritual.through with a spiritual quality "W'th t dr .that pervades, permeates and 1 ?u. ~wmg ~ny moralpenetrates a,ll that we do," he !esso~s l~ IS stI~1 pOS§Ible, ~vensaid in the closing address to In. t e Impartmg of. subJectsthe annual meeting of the Jes- WhICh do not cal~ ~or dIrect ref­uit Educational Association. erence to. the J?Ivme, to stamp

The meeting, held; in ci:>nj unc-. our teach.mg" WIth the hallmarktion with the 59th annual con-' of our faIth.vention of the National Catholic Msgr. McDonald ,said thatEducational Association, brought wherever feasible there shouldtogether some 275 Jesuit edu- be even closer ,cooperation be....

. cators representing secondary tween Jesuit and other Catholicschools"colleges and universities, institutions and organizations.and ,seminaries. "This will be more and more

Msgr. 'McDonald spo~e on "The needed in certain areas as weJesuit Impact on American become increasingly conscious ofHigher Education as Seen by a the enormoUs task, with whichCatholic Co-Work~r." our whole Catholic system of ed­,"CathoFc edu'cation differseven on its intellectual side be": ucation is faced in the future,"

he said. 'cause we have a command to~ove God with our whole mind.This power of intellectual affec­tion is frequently forgotten," hesaid.

,Wedding} Bells PealWnt~ C@!PlIJ)@r Ril1lg$

, LIMA (NC)-The church herein Peru was decorated, the priestready. but the bridal couple had

, lost _ their rings. Confl.\sionreigned, until ,the young 'Amer­ican -mIssioner swung into ac­tion.

Not one to stand [n the wayof true love, Father James J.Madden, M.M., rushed to themission's tool shed and with apair of p~iers fashioned tworings from some heavy, copperwires. With profuse thanks tothe ingenious' Maryknoller, thebride and ,groom met at the altar

'on time. '

. ltOllYld!$ !f>1i'@;~{i'@

SACRAMENTO I (NC) - TheState AS$emblv has adopted aresolution commending BishopCharles. F. Buddy of San Diego

, in connection with his 25th an­niversary as' a bishop.. The reso­lution said Bishop ,Buddy has"performed' se.rvice of an out-

, standing character both for hisChurch and 'his community gen­erally."

· ~<><><><><X><><>~<><>"\).¢~ , A fAMllV YRIEA'Il' i· . lBA~-la-©) (C:~~«:c{IE~S

,~O)~rn:lL~W~ ,· 0' -1?fg\~M~, 8'~l45 Washington St., FairhavenO

gv ", Just off ~oute 6 . 8\

WY;7-9336 gWatch for Signs

o While out f~r a, Drive~ Stop at this Delightful SpotOb<><><><><><>'<><><><><><><>q'll. _. .

, I ,

.[P>[f@rw~®mru @~ ~QD[b@ lQ)®~@[(i)c&~

~@QDOlJ@] Amru~~g~@ITU: ~@~M~O@[(i)'By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D. Q.

Bishop of, Reno

Mr. Graham Green:e, 'avowed speciaIjst in the"psYcho­logical thriller, has his hosts of addicts and detractors.Which is reasonable enough, considering that His, purpose'is to entertain rather than to edify, and that entertainmentis always the most thankless "which we should jump in withof callings. But whatever force. .judgment be passed upon It is possible that we might,him as novelist or moralist, get away with, this without pre­it cannot be gainsaid that he pos- cipitating World W~r III. It is·sesses an uncanny faculty, for to be assumed that certain risksrealizi!lgagiven must be taken in the game ofsituation for power politics, and from manyseeing through points of view this is plausible.it, in the old- Only it' must be recognized forf ash' 0 ned what it is, a cosmic r'isk involv-phrase, by a sor~ ing the very real threat of a cos-of intuition. mic war, orie in which we should, So it was, con- have no assurance of' help from

,spicuously, in any source. I

'h i s Caribbean If we made a fearl'ul 'blunderpotboiler of a in helping Castro to ipower wefew years ago, would be wei! advi~ed not toOur Man in Ha- compound our blunder by mak-vana. The story , ing his ouster a worseltragedy,was thin the framework sardon- Revert to ColoniliIism?

, 'f - Iically rid~culous, and the ':ast 0 (, BuLlet us suppose, that the'characters a projection of :lay ,thing '..ould work. W:hat then?

, figures against the familiar What is our plan for Cuba? Shalltropical background, steamy :,tnd, we, place in power ohe of theoppressive, feverish and sinful. multitudinous politic~l groups"

Nevertheless, as a rehearsal of which are now' proliferating o~what actually took place in Cl,lba American soil in the !beatitudewithin months after its publica- of safe exile, and which rangetion it suddenly assumed ,~he from clerical through '¢onserva­stature of one of the Major tive to liberal and socialist?Prophets. . There are literally ~ozens of

For reading it you we're cTr- these groups, filling the air withtain 'that something dire ard their own contentions. IHave' wedrastic must happen, and happen sorted them out and yp,ade oursoon, in a country and a society choice, or are we to let eventsso fundamental,ly corrupt. What take their course, staftding byhappened, of course, was Fidel with an air of benevolrnce? OrCastro. are we to revert to a I form of

Total Political Vacuum colonialism in, C';lba, after wehave denounced It everywhere

Now history, so far as v:e else in the world in Africa andlmow it, did not go quite so far in the Far East?' i, 'as the building of a let~al plant How should we explain this toin the central Cuban ~Ighlands the Belgians and the Portuguese,after the pattern of a gIant vac- among others? :uum cleaner., .', McKinley's 'Gospel'~ut it did. i~volve fantas\es It is just over 60 ye~rs since

,qUIte as terrIfymg: a band of we "redeemed" Cuba from thethugs drafted into power be~ause nefarious depotismof Spain-ac­of a ~Qtal political vacuum;. good cording to the gospel 'of Wil-'men reduced to an exhaustIon. of liam McKinley, But it Idid notmoral stamina, down to the POI~t take us long to discover \that wewhere they no longer cared who, did not know' quite what to door wh!lt took over th~ country; with all these little bro~n peo­even me~ of superlatIv.e moral pIe, any more than the SpanishStature., lIke the ArchbIshop of before us. ' ISal'\tiago, led irito judgments so' , So it was that taking good carewildly erroneous as ',to' make us to protect our sugar invebtmentsgasp.' we left them to shift for them-

.Now: wit? a!l the garnere~ 'selves, in t~e' fond hope t~at theyWIsdom of hmdslght, we are pre-: would become model citizens ofpared to give the Cubans lectures a model republic. No sm~ll parton the, virtue of prudenc:" or of Castro's popularity haS stem­would If we w,ere ,not so uncom.., med fr:om his ability to Icarica­fortably conSCIOUS that our own ture this monumental folly,American .State Department and, Real Question Remainsour AmerIcan press ~oth swal-, , We have a monkey 'by the tanlowed ,C.~stro as readIly ~s the in CUba, a monkey which now,mostilliltera~e peon from the looks very much like an infuri­sugar 'plantatIons. So we were ated ape. It is' more thah pos:..all gl;llled by the Great Imper- sible that we may have Ito actsonatIon. again in the: case, in "~erlhemi_

'Castro Must Go' spheric self-protection. I

Today, especially after the, But' theOreal questio~' r~mainsfiasco of th~ Bay of Pigs, we 'are' have we a plan of actIon ,ready,screaming for revenge. We want' not only for the operationi itself,Castro out at any cost by any but for the day after, when the,means, No~e so resentful as he: guns are silent? Iwho has been gulled, and we in- . It i~ time for our State Depart­deed have been the cosmic, ment to advance beyond thechumps the suckers more con- thinking of a Baptist seminkry intemptlbie than .those who mer-' Topeka, Kansas. ~ited the raucous scorn of the late ' . IMiss Texas Guinan. U (to ,.. /!,lL n· e'.Jl

All of which is fine. We are .~. '!l..<\t!IulfllO~U:::S ~er(gJ

agreed, one and all, that C_~tro G!l'(lJOIl'\1 h» ,KGJi'econs imust go-if he has not already, SEOUL (NC) _ Almostl fourgone in substance if not in "million .,pounds of relief grk.in isshadOW. At best he is an insane

, , . 1 on its- way from U. S. Catholicsposturer, at worst a diabohca to 80,000 needy 'Korean f~rrliliesportent. to relieve the "Spring huhger"

Cosmic Risk ' that is a yearly problem irl. thisSQ, with that facility in offer- \ country. :

ing advice which is our endear- Catholic Relief Services-Na­ing American characteristic, tional Catholic Welfare Cohfer­there are those of us who would 'ence sent the grain to Catholicsuggest to President. Kennedy parishes around the country forthat he give Cuba one more , distributiofl ' to, the poor Iandmonth to .oust Castro, failin'g needy in the next three months.

Local priests, acting with theA"'k ~iI!l>""IRII!i1lT\lDli'B@li'il welfare officialll of local go~,ern-

.. \G''''''''''~ , ments, will supervise the distri-SAN JUAN (NC)-The Cath- bution. The list of needy petson's

olic-backed Christian Action .is prepared by the local weifare'party has, asked, the Puerto ,officials, so the distribution IWillRican Supreme Court to accord ,be-as always with CRS-NCWCit full legal reco<1nttion as a'·, s,upv.lies-::-on the basis of "ileedmajor political pany: not creed;" ," 1"

, , , . - , ' I

Page 17: 05.03.62

c

LB

lLB 27CLOAF

JANE PARKERREGULAR 30c

. zation, the Voluntary HostelsConference, whose launchingwas largely the responsibility ofthe Catholic Herald. The St.Vincent de Paul Society, theLegion of Mary and the Cath­olic Discharged Prisoners' AidSociety are among Catholic or­ganizations cooperating in thfl'project .

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Statler Towels JUMBO ROLL 27C

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(HE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 3, 1Q6217

drawing up lists of homes will­ing to take in some of the 12,000shelterless who wander throughthe city strets. The organizationis also making plans to helpyoungsters in trouble.

An Anglican, Capt. Noel Lys­ter-Binns, has been amed firstfUll-time director of the organi-

P,lets 'hoWl In lbl' ad g.....l"" thra Sat., Ma1 • & Ifftell..II ALL AlP Su.... M",keu Ia Illis _It, & .lclnllr T_

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Int@IT'fai~~LONDON (NC)...:-Catholics are

cooperating in a new interfaithorganization to help London'shomeless.

With Anglicans and otherProtestants they are cooperatingil' plans to open hostels, psychia­tric clinics and training centersfor the unemployable. They are

~xtremists

U.S. S9cn~tyOrder, ~s editor of the monthlymagazine, Social Order. In anarticle in the magazine, he saidthe anti-communist extremistsare working actively to institutean outmoded soci~l philosophy.

"More· probably consciouslythan innocently, they are exploit­ing the fears of communism tocover their attack on socialpolicy democratically arrived .atover the last three decades,'~ hesaid..

"They are beguiling their lis­teners that their target is com­munism while they strive toannul .one of the purposes andfunctions of our national govern­ment as declared in the Preambleof the Constitution-'in order to... provide for the common wel­fare.' "

Divide, DemoralizeHe predicted the anti-com­

munist extremists will continuetheir attacks against U. S.schools, newspa{lers, andchurches.

. "The result is to' divide anddemoralize .us," he said. ~"Theywill; predictably, call for drasticreduction of taxes needed to payfor our defenses, they will advo­cate economic policies .calculatedto destroy our alliimces, depriveua of access to raw materials,and leave us isolated, enfeebledand vulnerable.It

Villanova HOlJ1orsFather Nevirrns

VILLANOVA (NC) - FatherAlbert J. Nevins,·M.M., editor ofMaryknoll magazine and presi­dent of the Catholic Press Asso­ciation, received the St. Augus­tin Award of Villanova Univer-sity. .

The award is given annually·to 'a person who has achieved"distinction in the field of com­munications journalism." Thepresentation was made at adinner here before some 250stUdents; faculty members andformer award winners.

The award was established in1956 by thE' university to honoran outstanding person in thefield of communications arts andto encourage young people tofollow careers in this field.

Former ReporterFather Nevins, a native of

Yonkers, N. Y., was a reporteron the Yonkers Herald States­man, before' he attended Mary­knoll Seminary. He was ordainedto the priesthood in 1942, wasassigned to the staff of Maryknollmagazine and 10 years laterwas named editor.

He is alse director of Ma·ry­knoll publications and writer­producer of more than 20 ·docu­mentary films. He was electedpresident of the Catholic PressAssociation in May, 1960.

SPEAKER: U.S. Secre­tary of Health, Educationand Welfare, Abraham Ribi­coff, will deliver the annualconvocation add res Ii atChicago's De Paul Univer­sity and receive an honorarydoctorate of laws Wednes­day, June 6. NC Photo.

Anti-RedBases of

Wants Used BooksB rot h e'r Theod~re, C.S.C.,

Brothers of Holy Cross, ColumbaHall Mission Society, NotreDame, Ind. has issued an appealto Catholics for used missals,prayer books, catechisms andreligious books of all kinds foruse in mission lands. They canbe sent to him at the book rateof rime cents for the· first poundand five cents per pound there­after. clearly marked "Book-.It

Priest SaysUndermine

ST. LOUIS (NC) - Self-ap­pointed anti-communists, whoattack schools, churches andsources of public information,are actually wrecking the struc­tures of American society, FatherEdward Duff, S.J., said here.

Acknowledging the existenceof a real communist 'conspiracy,he said it is finding, its "strongestsupport" from the very peoplewho are working in an extrem.istway to fight it.

Father Duff said "self-ap­pointed anti-communists" are"the agents of anarchism, deter­mined to create a vacuum thatcan only be filled by history'stamer of chaos - tyranny."

Outmoded PhllOf!Ophy

Father Duff, of the St. LouisUniversity Institute of Social

Enduring SocietyNeeds PerennialSound Philosophy

SOUTH ORANCE (NC)­Bishop John J. Wright ofPittsburgh says any civiliz­ation that seeks to enduremust be anchored on a perenilialphilosophy and a transcendentalfaith.

The Bishop told the 19th an­nual symposium of the CatholieRenascence Society that a thou­sand . years hence our sciencewill be as dated and discreditedas is now the science of a thou-.sand years ago.

Transcendental FaithBut the values that devout

faith and sound art, includingliterature, find valid today willbe as valid a thousand yearsfrom now as they were two thou­sand years ago, he stated.

"Hence th~ importance of artand letters in a civilization some­times exclusively enamored ofthe changing sciences," he con­tinued. "Civilization needs a'perennial philosophy as well as atranscendental faith to providesubstance in the midst of theshifting emphases of technology.

"Such a philosophy: and such afaith were valid when our ma­chinery was limited to the wheel;they will still be valid whenscientific warfare has reducedus once again to the primitivesimplification of the wheel."

Presumptive Humanity"They are valid now," the

Bishop concluded, "and anycivilization that seeks to enduremust integrate its science withthe postulates of these testi­monies to reason and faith.'''

Msgr. John M. Oesterreicherof Seton Hall University told theSociety when science fails totake into consideration the"wonder" of humanity it be­comes too presumptive.

"What starts out as a humblequest often ends as the presump­tion that nothing is barred fromman's knowledge, that he cancontrol and .dominate nature'ssecrets," he stated. "The wonderof knowing remains a wonderonly as long as it keeps clo~ tothe wonder of being." .

Manipulator of ManMsgr. Oesterreicher warned of

so-called "bioengineers" w b 0dream of juggling an embryo'ssex or size, of transplanting afertilized egg from one uterus toanother or developing ail embryoin culture in a laboratory jar. .

"When man becomes themanipulator of man," he de­clared, "this is no 'longer a threatto the poetic imagination. Hereman's very humanity is 'at stake."

Page 18: 05.03.62

BLESSES AIR AMBULANCE: An amphibian aircraft,donated by Catholics in the U.S. to the Oblates of MaryImmaculate for their work.in the Sulu Archipelago, Philip­pines, was blessed in 'Manila by Father (Lt. Col.) CiprianoS. Arcilla, Chief Chaplain of the Philippine Air Force.F&ther James A. Holland, O.M.L, (behind chaplain) is thepilot. NC Photo.

Glorify MemoryOf Mexican Hero

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Sixtystudents· from St. Mary's Univer­sity, San Alltonio College andL. W. Fox Tech high school herewill cooperate with the Republicof Mexico by participating in amarathon in honor of the generalwho commanded the Mexicanforces which defeated the Frenchat Puebla on May 5, 1862.

He was Gen. Ignacio Zaragoza,a native of. Goliad, Tex., then al'art of Mexico. The students willrun with an urn of dirt fromGoliad to the internationalboundary at Laredo next Satur­day and Sunday. There the urnwill be turned over to studentsfrom Mexico to run it to Pueblain time for a Cinco de Mayocentennial celebration.

U. S. CooperatesThe distance from Goliad to

the border is 165 miles. Thp mar­athon is expected to require 22hours.

Two runners will cover eachsegment of the route, one with

'the container of dirt from Zara­goza's birthplace and the otherwith a lighted torch.

Also cooperating in the mara­thon are the U. S. Departmentof State and the U. S. Air Force.

o PALACE OF GOLD CLUB(Care' of the Aged)

.0 DAMIEN LEPER CLUB

o ORPHAN'S BREAD CLUB

MOTHER'S DAY GIFTSThree suggestions:

1. Mass for her special intentions If she Is living; rot' the toe­pose of her soul If she Is deceased.

2. Perpetual ($20) or Annual ($1) Me.nbershlp In the CatholleNear East Welfare Association.

i3. A years enrollment ($12) in one of our Miss~on Clubs.., ..

~~r&st01issioosFRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Preside,,'

Ml9r, JOI.'" T.R;"· 'Nai'l Sec',Setl4 011 ClOlllmIlOIJotI_ tol

CATHOLIC NI!AR EAST WeLFARB ASSO¢IATION480 lexington Ave.. at 46th St~ New York 17;~. Y.'

GethsemaneValley7An Oasis of Hope

"None of MY business"How often have we 'heard people use the above phrase? l'er­

haps we' have used it or have been tempted to use It ourselves,either in actual words or by our actions. The child In the posterasking for a foster home, the stranger who needs a blood trans­fusion, the elderly with no place to go, the poor of other lands .'who need food and clothing: these things, Indeed, are "none ofOUR business" unless following the command of Christ wewish to become neighbor to" everyone in need. For only ONEDOLLAR A MONTH-by joining one of our Mission Clubs-

. you can make .the aged, the sick, the orphan "YOUR business"and become neighbor to people truly in need. Will you join oneof these Clubs and send us a dollar today?

.In the midst of suffering, Is located In Southern India. Here,IIOme -few years ago, Monsignor Paul Chittilapilly founded the

Damien Institute for the care, ofLepers. Because of the difficulty offinding the qualified personnel nec­essary for the success of such anApostolate he was inspired in 1955to aitempt the foundation of a newReligious Community whose memberswould devoie their lives to the careof ·the Lepers of India. In 1960 theHoly See approved of his plans andon January 25, 1961, the 'feast of St.Paul's conversion, there came into

Tht Holy Palhtr's Mission Ai' being the SAMARITAN SISTERS. In, for Iht Orimtal OJurrb preparation for' the establishment or

this Community the' first three young Indian girls who. were, to be the pioneers began the study of nursing in England. Hav­

ing obtained their nursing degrees they entered the novitiateof an established Religious Order. Last month these three girlsmade their first vows as the charter members of the new Com­munity of SAMARITAN SISTERS. Of seventeen aspirants tothis new Community two are now studying nursing in Irelandand. four are studying medicine in England. The government ofIndia ~nd several European Congregations of Religious arehelping to pay for their studies. By 1964 Monsignor Chittilapillyhopes to launch his major program of Leprosy control with hisown doctors, nurses and technicians - all of .whom will beSAMARITAN SISTERS. JFor the stability, growth, and gooclladministration of this infant Congregation a Novitiate House ofits _own is needed. Can you help build this house and therebybe instrumental in building a new Community of Religious? Onthe day Monsignor Chittilapilly's appeal for help arrived thesame mail' brought a check for $1,500 from a generous bene­factor whose accompanying letter gave permission to use itwhere we thought it was most needed. This money was imme­diately sent to Monsignor Chittllapilly to begin wot'k on the::loviatiate now so essential for the SAMARITAN SISTERS.Much more money, of course, will be needed to provide a suit­able building. Many little gifts make a big gift like the $1,500.Could you send a little gift? Or maybe a big one?

©!b$<e'1'V@U'~ .Conu'nued from Page One

council are still under discus­sion."

Cardinal Bea said of the non­Catholic observers, however, that"normally except in exceptional

(cases they' will not assist atmeetings of the commissionsthemselves,· but will be kept in­formed on these matters via thesecretariat for unity ..."

Pass IdeasObservers will be able to pass

their ideas and suggestions to hissecretariat, which in turn cansend them on io the appropriatecommission. Thus they can pos­sibly take part' in the councildeliberations; even if only anindirect part, 'he sa~d.

Questioned whether there wasany news concerning a possible~eeting between Pope John andOrthodox Patriarch' Athenagoras'of Constantinople, Cardin-al Beasaid relations between the Patri­arch and the secretariat are ex"cellent. But any meeting betweenthe two spiritual leaders dependson their own negotiations ratherthan oil thesecretatiat, he said.

Cardinal Bea also was askedwhether there are any plans forconsidering clarification o.f re­lations between Catholicism andJudaism. He replied that his sec­retariat has already draw·n. upa proposal on this matter for dis­cU!jsion at. the next meeting ofthe' council's Central PreparatoryCommlssio'r.. Such matters areunder the seal of secrecy, andhe did not elaborate.

Church, CrimeRate on Ri$e

TORONTO (NC)-"Church at­tendance is excellent, yet thecrime and vice situation has

. worsened i~ the past two years"in Ontario. a' Protestant ministertold ~he Royal Commission 'onCrime.

"We have continued to deliverthe message, but· I suppose wecan be accused of having failedto get it across" said the Rev.James R. Mutchmor, secretaryof the United Church of Cana­da's Board of Evangelism andSocial Service. The UnitedChurch is the largest religiousdenomination in Ontario.

Rev. Mutchmor also said that"honesty and sobriety don·t seemto mean what'they used to."

The Royal Commission onCrime was set up by the Ontariogovernment on the insistence oflegislative members who feelthat crime in Ontario is a matterof immediate concern.

~ rFUli'sl!' VCh8ll'ilil"eerBEIRA (NC) .,.- Dr. 'Lucil\no

San Sebastian 'Artesga, 35-year­old pediatrician, has arrived

- here to work as a medical mis­sionary. He is the first doctor to

.volunteer for such work inMozambique. Portuguese' eastAfrican territory•

,

Ne:®d,

G@Ve[frrnmerufr

THE ANCHOR-Dioc~e of Fall River-Thurs., May 3, 1962. ,

Amero(@tJ1 FarmersS~P~@[fU' @~. By James L. Vizzard, s. J. I

Msgr. George G. Higgins is in Europe in conne(\tion withwork for the' forthcoming Vatican Council. In his abs~nce, this'column has' been written by JFather Vizzard, Director of theWashington Office of the' National Catholic Rural JL.ife Con­ference..

Even if it does not ],'ivaI our defense expenditures, sixbillion dollars is a lot of money. That is approximately thesize of the current budget of the U.S. Department ofAgricll1ture. Not a few non-farmers wonder whYi farmers'des~rve or need that kill(~ of for emergency gifts of food forsupport from gove.rnment. famine relief and surplus foodTo' city taxpayers It looks bartered for strategic defenselike' their pockets are being materials. . • : ." d to fill the jeans of their Thes.e pr~grams, 1:>e~ond b.em,gplcke . They divide the an expressiOn of our nation scountry COUSInS. . . f h Id'six billion by the less than four practIcal concern or tt.: e

lwort ~

'11' f s in the country hungry, are an essen ta par 0

.mld

IOn . ~rmthe average farm.er our foreign policy and' should be'an enV1SlOn . . t A' 'It b t

tUn a $1 500 check each year char¥ed no to gnc~ ure u;:rou:h th~ generosity of the to elther ,the State Of De~enseUSDA. And they don't like it. Department budget. :

They like it even less since Less Than Ha~fthey know the Government has Subtract, the cost of i a~l theseahout ,nine billion dollars of programs from the A~nC?Ituretheir tax dollars tied up in s.t~ck Departme.nt budget ary.d It be­piles of unused food and flber. comes eVldent that a great deal

Even if they have not actually less than one-half of that budgetseen them, they have heard of represents a subsidy to. farmers.·the countless barns, bins, caves But why should they get anyend warehouses, as well as sur- subsidies at all? . One farmerplus ships, that are bulging with answered that queStion color­wheat corn cheese, butter and fully, even if somewhat super­dried 'milk.' Just handling and , ficially: "It's no fun to be sober,"storing these sur p 1 use s is he said, "when everyorie else iscosting something like' a billion drunk". "dollars a year. What he meant, of course, was

Calm Analysis that in one way or ianotherThe city taxpayers' unhappi- ,every other major segmento~

ness is climaxed by the eviden?e our economy, is subsi?ized orthat despite years of effort aqd assisted by the Govern~eiJ.t andalm'lst .countless billions of dol- why should farmers alone be

. lars the farm problem seems no denied such aid.closer to solution today than it Enormous Productiyitywas five, 10, Qr 20 years ag\>o , On a more profound' level itThey are just abo'-!t fed up w~tp. can be pointed out th~t whenthe mess and close to the poul-t farmers have done a spectacu­of revolt. , larly successful job of providing

A few pertinent facts and a food and fiber for the A'mericanlittle calm analysis may reveal consumer and, indeed, Ifor thea different picture. and i~dic~t~ hungry and needy of th~ wholethat much of the dlstress IS mlS- world why should they, n9t beplaced and ~isinformed. A protedted by their Governmentbreakdown, for mstance, of the from a threatening disaster notUSDA's-.pudget makes ~t cl:ar of their own making? ,that farmers are ~ot gettIng rlch It is precisely the e'10rmousout of the pubhc treasury. A . efficiency and productiYity oflarge part of the budget never the American farmer that is theends up ~n farmers' pockets. major contributor 'to "th~" .farm

It . should be obvious o~ :e.:. problem. ,"No individual :farmer,flectIon that most .of the bI1hon no matter how big can have anydoll~r co.st for handling and significant effect' on th~ totalstormg surpluses goes not to volume of production or' on thethe. farmers but ~o tru~king and price received for his c~oPs.gram s~orage~ flrms, msurance One hold-out, or ~;ven acompames and brokerage houses. thousand of them, woulcj. make

Items in Budget a wholly imperceptible dent inThe hundreds of millions of the - supply and in the l price.

dollars which are spent for 'Without Government prpgramsschool lunch arid milk distribu-, of price support, surplus r¢moval"tion programs are primarily' a and production controls farmerssubsidy not to farmers but to the would go broke almost! over'" .children and their parents. The, night. Ithousands of meat and food in-:- 116 Million Jobs I

spectors carried. on the US~A Such a development wduld bepayroll are for the protection.. t 1 f" thl ff disastrous no on y or e ar-O' consumer.s. . h' elf but Iso for the

ConservatiOn payments are m~r. Ims . a I '

long-term investments, often ~rulhons whose l~vestmentlsand. h' d"d 1 Jobs depend on hnt!. Four out of

uneconomlC for t e m IVl ua 10 US' b 16 million offarmer but necessary fox: the every :. JO s'.. , ..protection of the nation's future. them,. are mvolved. m proYldmg

In the' USDA -annual budget matena~s and se;vlce~ ,for; farmIs found over a half billion dol- pro~uctlOn. a~d l~ stormg" pro­lars for 'rural electrification cessmg, dlstnbutmg and I mer­rural telepnone and Farmer'~ chan~ising farm products:. De­Home Administration interest-: press~on ~n. the fa.rm mea~s de­bearing loans on which the re- preSSIOn m t~e Clt,Y too. I • .

payment record has been close For somethmg hke on~~f1fthto 100 per cent. of ta~e-home pay, the. a~era.ge

Other items, such as the sugar ' Ame:lCan ~onsumer b.uyS f dletand. wool support programs, are that IS so nch an~ :raned t?a~ heself _ financing, though their has to s~end addltIonal ml~honslisting in the budget swells the for. welght-reducer.ll an~1 an­total by several 'hundred mil- taclds to countera~t overmdul-lion . gence. Food today IS by far the

. . Food for Peace gJ,'eatest bargain on the m~rket.

Even the. cost. of feeding' Boon to Consumer I

starving pheasants and other The very productivity of thewild life, presumably for hu-. ,farmer, which threatens' himmane reasons and for the benefit with disaster, has been a boonof the nation's avid sportsmen, to the consumer. The few billionis charged to the farm program. •dollars that are charged to the(It might surprise and shock consumer as taxpayer to keepsome people that more money is the farmer from going under isspent each year for pfeeding a small price to pay. Imigrant birds and animals than This is not, of course; anfor feeding mig r a'n t farm endorsement of limitless :sub- ...workers and their children). sidies to farmers, nor of farm

Informed observer- "ave -long :programs that simply willi notrecommended that another very work. But if social justice meanslar item in the USDA budget anything' it demands that ashould be transferred to. other nation in one way or andtherdepartments; that is, the two provi<ie adequate compens~tionbillion dollars artd more spent to those who serve the nationfO,r the ~ood for Peace program, welJ '

~.

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Page 19: 05.03.62

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IDEAL LAlINDRY373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

Being the recipient of a CircleK Club scholarehip at New Bed­fOi'd Tech is but one of manyhonors and awards that havecome Bruce's way. .

Bruce has tentative plans' toplay in the Twilight BaseballLeague again this Summer - a "loop loaded with more than itsshare of former professionalplayers - and he will morethan likely be playing in ldleast one other league.

While Bruce will be activein outside leagues, his return tocollege will not be soon enoughto suit the Whalers of New Bed­ford Tech.

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U<!!@ii1~ [D)D@lM@n IN!@rMlllu lli€lls~Ili):ro IN!CI1'~1l)1fil Ii'0J1l!J1fil~@WSpring Street Main Street W. Main Street, Main Street

AAem~ev IfIOi~ev0J~ ~e~@si~ ~Vi15l\Dl1'caJlfil~G «:@v~.rllJvcaJ~n@1fil

944 County St.New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-I);ocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 3, 1962 19

PASTORAL ENLIGHTENMENT: Rev. John J. Hayes,pastot/of Holy Name Church, New Bedford, explains thevalue of a college education to Bruce Violante.

squad last Fall.A communicant of Holy Name

, Church, Bruce has played base­ball since he was a LittleLeaguer. He played Pony Leagueball, he played for New BedfordPost 1, American Legion, andalso CYO baseball.

Accounting MajorAn a CYO hoopman, Bruce

was named most valuable playerof the annual Easter Tourna­ment in 1960. At New BedfordHig·h, the same year, he wasvoted most underrated player Qnthe Crimson basketball squad,when much of his vital play­making went unnoticed.

Await ReturnMajoring in accounting at

Tech, Bruce would like to be-,come a teacher-coach followinghis college days. His subjects lastsemester were accounting, his­tory, marketing, economics,communications and French.

[ID~~~rg~(Qt~

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€lei'vice On IP'21U@

Southeastern Massachusetts'Largest Independent Chain

.10 BIG STORES'We Give Gold Bond Stamps'

/Bruce V:ItJ)!anfe Takes Year 011

Ree~ters N. B. Tech Next JanuaryAccoun~ingMajor Star Performer in Two SportsBy Frank' Trond

. An athlete who plays twoof, the leading collegiatesports and excels at both,Bruce Violante of New· Bed­ford compiled an impressive .340batting average last Spring overthe course of his first baseballseason at New Bedford Instituteof Technology and he finishedthe .recent basketball campaignwith an average of 20 points agame for the Whalers.

Bruce, who is presently takinga year off from college, will bereturning to NB Tech next Jan­uary: But the fine all-aroundathlete, who also played soccerfor' the Whalers, will definitelybe playing the diamond sportduring the Summer months.

Active in SummerHis last Summer vacatIon

Bruce' starred as a third sackerfor the Smiths batting .390 ashe spent a good part of the timein the cleanup slot, for the teamwhich clinched the New BedfordTwilight Baseball League cham­pionship.

When not in the lineup forSmiths, Bruce played for thePerfections in the CYO Subui'­ban Uagu~ last Summer. Hisaverage for the Oilers was alsowell up in the .300s and his posi­tion was again the hot corner.

Crimson Stall'The son of Mr.' and Mrs.

Manuel N. Violante of 14 Ban­nister Street, Bruce is presentlyemployed as a tree surgeon. Hehopes to keep the job, which hefinds interesting, until he i'e­turns to Tech after anothei'semester.

A 1960 graduate of New Bed­ford High School, Bruce starredduring his three years on thehardwood and as a baseballerfoi' the Crimson. He played twoyears of varsity basketball andput in a season as a jayvee hoop­man,. while he recorded threesuccessful years of baseball atNB High. ,

As a schoolboy the 20-year­old Whaling City athlete sawmostly leftfield action and his·batting average ranged aroundthe .320 mark. Bruce, who stands5-11 and goes a solid 180 pounds,left little to be desired as ahoopman at NBH, where he aJsoplayed soccer during his senioryear.

Shifts to InfieldThe Whalers of New Bedford

Tech will miss Bruce over thefirst half of the next hoop cam­paign. The loss of any playerwho can average 20 points agame over the course of twoseasons - and his first twoyears of college, at that - is notto. be taken lightly.

In baseball at Tech, Brucestarted in the left field positionlast season, .but was 'thenswitched to the infield at theshortstop slot. He was a half­back on the Whalers' soccer

the Catholic Young Adult Clubof the Buffalo diocese.

The winners competed hereagainst other finalists from dio­ceses throughout the country.

Miss Deckert received a' $400college scholarship donated bythe Catholic War Veterans and apersonal trophy. Norelli also i'e­ceived a personal trophy.

O'Connell received a $25 gov-ernment bond, and both 'he andBach were given personal tro­phies. The awards were pre­sented at a luncheon by CatholicWar Veterans national com­mander Albert J. Schwind.

Each contestant in the ~ompe­

tition was required to give aformal address OD the 1961 U. S.Bishops' statement "UnchangingDuty in a Changing World," fol­lowed by an extempoi'an~us

talk on a designated section ofDis Holiness Pope John's' enq­dkaJ, Mater et Magistra.

<G". __....---------~

Parochials took a 4-1 record intoplay this week. 'Coach Jack No­brega's club put a four gamewin streak on the .line againstApjxmequet on Tuesday.

Judging 'by their run produc­tion last week, Holy Family ap­pears to be in high gear. TheBlue ran themselves into the

. ground in a 23-7 triumph overDim~ on Tuesday, then cameback with 18 more two dayslater against Apponequet.

First baseman Richie Frechetteand pitcher-outfielder Tom Mer­edith have been giving the Bluethe long ball consistently' andeach of the starters had at leastone hit in the Apporiequet game.The loss of Leo Paradis whopitched Holy Family to thefinals of Class B last Spring wasindeed severe but apparently farfrom crippling. Paradis now at­tends Stonehill College where heis playing centerfield and lead­ing off.

Case-Holy FamilyThe Case game could be a

hummer, especially in the eventof a Santos - Meredith dueI.Whether Coach McCarthy holdshis ace for the Parochials re­mains to be seen. Prevost, thepre-season choice, cannot belightly i'egarded. Santos, inci-

WASHINGTON (NC) - A st.Louis girl and a New York youthwere named winners· in theeighth annual oratorical contestsponsored by the National Cath­olic Youth Organization Fedei'a-tion. '

Betty J. Deckert of St. Louiswas named winner in the con­test's teenage section, while Rob-·ert J. O'Connell of New Yorktook first place in the you,ngadult division.

Runnerup in the teenage~tion was Michael Norelli of NewYOi'k. The second place in theyoung adult section went to Rob­ert Bach--of Buffalo, N. Y.

Miss Deckert represented tbeteenage section of the st. Louis.ArcluUocesan Councl1 of Cath­olic Youth. O'Connell and Norelli:reprelleDted the CathoUe YouthOrganbattoD of a.e Jfew York

~~_..~~~

Weekend Baseball Proves'Popular for School Teams

, By Jaek KineavyAnymore of that kind of unusually fine Spring

weather of last week will be making softies of those whoparticipate and supervise Spring sports programs: Aveteran baseball coach, Howie' Ferguson of Newton High,for years contended that thefirst two weeks of Apnlprovided bet t e r playingweather than did the latterpart of the month. And he hadstatistics to prove his point. Thisyear proved anexception.

A good sizeturnout was onhand at AlumniFi~ld, FallRiver last Sat··urday for theDurfee _ NewBedford gam ewhich thehemesters tookby a 4-1 margin.mgh schoolbaseball might well profit fromincreased weekend schedulingwhich would give ~terested

adults an opportunity otherwisedenied them to see various clubsin action. From a player's pointo~ view, a crowd lends atmos­phere and 11ft to a ball game.

Coach Don MonUe's unde­feated HiUtoppers have anotherhome date this Saturday whenthey are scheduled to meetRogers' High of Newport in mnexhibition tilt. The Rhode Island­ers have a solid ball club bujltaround veterans Caswell andSwistak, both of whom' havebeen named to tlie All R.I. . dentally, currently leads the loopSchoolboy unit that may make a ' in strikeouts with 44. His only

loss was-an opening day 7-2 set­post season tour of Panama. On back at the hands of Somerset;the mound for the Newport clubis Charley Kaull who last year Frank Sullivan, Cardinal short­was named to the All-America stop in his third year of varsitybasketball squad. 'competition, is getting the good

Belting Berube wood on the ball. Sully hasI:apped out 7 extra base blows,

The shift to first base duty has including three home runs, andcertainly agreed with Woody at this writing is third in battingBeru·be who has blossomed into in Narry with a .477 average.a long distance clouter this Frechette and Meredith lead theSpring. Always a good hitter, parade with marks of .534 andWoody is off to a great start in .529, respectively.the extra-base department. Hisfifth inning triple against New Biber stOryBedford was his fourth of the A humorous incident whichstill young season. In his pre- might have proved disastrousvious trip to the plate, Woody occurred in the Somerset-Dimanbelted a Davenport serve down- game last Thursday. Veteran ar­town, the ball rolling to the dis- biter Ray Biber gave the playtant clubhouse in left centerfield. ball signal, stepped in behind the

Getting back to thIs Saturday Raider catcher and· called twoball bit, we applaud the efforts pitches before it was noticedof Coaches MonUe and Charley that he had forgotten to don hisLuchettl of New Bedford to pro_ mask. Commented the startledmote high school ball. Both have BIber, "I thought I was seeinglong been exponents of weekend the ball better than ever." Coachplay. We realize, of course, that Jim Sullivan hastily 'fetched anthere are certain limitations in- extra mask and the game wasvolved whIch make it virtually resumed.Impossible for some schools to The quip was typical of theplay Saturday ball but for many quick Irish wit for which Rayit's simply a question of going is noted. This is his seventh yearalong on a traditional five day behind the plate for the Raidersweek. and during this time he lias

This week proposes to be a earned the respect of all withtelling one in Narry League whom he has been associated. Hecompetition. Coach Jack McCar- has a new partner on the basesthy's league leading Cardinals this year in Ray Billington whohave the toughest ,row to hoe. needs no intrOduction on theOn Tuesday they were at home local sports scene. Hanging up00 fourth place Prevost. today the serge after long and merl­they have a date with Holy torious umpiring careers areFamily in New Bedford.. The Waltei' White and Tom Burns.

~tl'. l,@uis Gir!", New York Y~ODthW5~ cvo @!f@U'@U)J CC@mm[p->®\f~fro©lru

Page 20: 05.03.62

ClassDiocese

T~fee: Leading, Scholars in Each GraduatingIn·· 10 High:· Schools·of·Fali. . River

THE ,...~ .. ,..." ,",!"ce~p. ('If Fa" River-Thurs., May 3,1962I20