02.04.65

20
OrdinarY.Launches Subscription Drive Pope Paul Stresses, Catholic· Press-Is Necess.ity· Sunday, Feb. 14 is St. Valentine's Day. ,. Sunday, Feb. 14 is The Anchor subscription ;JaY. , . " .. The heart of lovers is symbolic with St. Y-alentine's Day. . . The Anchor is the heart of ChrisHan adult 'education in the Diocese of Fall River. ,_ ' THe Anchor has been the gTeatest innova. }ion during the reign of Most Rev. James L. Bishop of Fall River, in reaching all ,the faithful simultaneously. And it aids them to live mature Catholic lives in a complex and Changing world. : The Anchor has served to 'tie-in' the entire «JJooese from· Provincetown to Mansfield in the _ght years it has been in circulation. It is the most ardent wish of Bish9P Con- that this newspaper be delivered to every The ANCHOR Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Feb. 4, 1965 :fanu1y in every parish in the diocese. The Anchor has shown a steady and consistent growth since it started publication on April 11, 1957. But, there is still room for improvement, circulation-wise, in a number of paris-has. The Anchor, in each and every year, has achieved more quotas parishes. This class today represents a substantial block of the 110 par- ishes which form this Southeastern Massachu- setts diocese. Several parishes today are within a rela- tively few subscriptions of accomplishing com- plete family coverage. It is noteworthy, too, that several smaller parishes are selling more weekly copies of The Anchor than a few of the large parishes. The Anchor has attempted to present a well-balanced. and newsy journal that is enjoyed by every member of every family. We naturany offer Catholic news and varying views on a multiplicity of subjects where Oatholics are en- . titled to differing opinions, except for matters of faith and morals. We offer special features for women and a sports page for the young. Humbly, we say our editorials are the envy of many of our other Catholic papers and mag- azines. The Catholic press is not a luxury but a necessity, Pope Paul has declared .. His prede- cessors, too, have sought to persuade Cardinals, Bishops, priests and the laity of the import of Catholic journalism. (See editori'al on Page Six). Bishop Connolly hopes that The Anchor this year will,achieve its greatest circulation, a copy every week in every home in every parish itl the diocese. EXTENSION LAY VOLUNTEER: Mike Lombardo of Auburn, N.Y., a graduate of Holy Cross College, Worcester, leads a congregation in song after Mass in auto trailer chapel while in Spur, Texas. Mike is now interviewing students in Catholic Colleges ill his drive to increase the number of lay volunteers. NC Photo. , ., Liturgical Commission Secretary Says More Mass Changes Due After March 7 Rev. Annibale Bugnini, C.M., secretary of the Postoonciliar Liturgy Commission fa Rome, has revealed that further liturgical reforms will be published after the March '1 changes are effected. In line with these further changes the Liturgy of the Word-the first part of the Mass-would be celebrated M; the lectern or pulpit and not at the altar. New liturgical books. ' . .. speakmg of the Canon and the with heart *•• to harmonize the are bemg WhICh Ordinary) will be the first re- rite with the wise and precise rect the prIest to preSIde vised book published. The revi- norms laid down by the council'. over the first part of the sions "have changed nothing document/' Mass from his chair and not substantially," explained the Voice Tones ascend to the altar until the priest. "The tone has changed Pointing to ,the March , Offertory, i.e., the beginning of but the melody remains as be- changes, Father Bugnini men- the Liturgy of the Eucharist. fore, as always. Even in its re- tioned that the Papal Instruction Other details direct that the touching, everything was deli- requires that some Mass prayem altar missal will remain on the cately and attentively examined Tum to Page Four Gospel side of the altar through- out the Mass; there will be no genuflection during the Creed except on Christmas; a general Urges Officials of Curia outline for the Prayer of the Faithful. To Prepare for Reform No Great Changes Father Bugnini said that the ' . VATICAN CITY (NC)-In a special circular letter Ordo Missae (Section of Missal sent to· alI Cordinals heading the varioliS offices of the Roman Curia, Amleto Cardinal Cicognani, Papal Secretary ,School Exams of State, exhorted the Roman officials to prepare them- selves for coming of docility. Entrance and placement exams for all Diocesan High Schoola The letter was not prIvate The letter mentions that intern- win be held Saturday morning in nature but the Cardinals perate and sometimes unjust at 8:30 at the school of the stu- were told to make it known criticism had been leveled dent's choice. Fall River's Pre- to an persons within the Curia. against the Curia by some bish- YOst High School examinatioNl In it, the Pope's Secreta17 urged ops during their speeches ,$lr- are for, English speaking as well the prelates to accept the future iDe the Vatican Council' ..... J'rencl1 speaking boy .. lIltforlWi of Uleir offices ill a apirK TW'Il 10 Pllie Two PRICE tOe Vol. 9, No. 5 © 1965 The Anchor $4.00 per Year Panamanian Bishop Voices Optimism for So. America , CHICAGO (NC) - Optimism about the increasing Rrength and influence of the Churoh in, America, eoupled with acute awareness Of the !!leriousness of social .rest there set the tone for deliberations at the second animal conference of the . Despite recognition that much Catholic Inter-American .Co- must be done to make the cur- operation ProgTaIn (CICOP) rent social revolution successful Iaere. .. Turn to Page' Four Lynch to Join Varsity Grid Staff at Holy Cross College (Special to The Anchor) , , WORCESTER-Announcement of the appointment of "arlin Lynch of Somerset to the Holy CroSiS College varsity football staff will be made within the next week, a reliable source at the Jesuit-conducted institution reported today. Lynch, a former All-East end at Holy' Cross, is cur- head football coach and athletic director at Bish- Stang High School in Dart- where he bas achieved probably the best won-and-Iost in Massachusetts during the past four years. The Purple Crusader wbo IIChieved stardom on the colle- liate gridiron as a pass receiver lIlso coached at Pueblo, Colorado and Somerset High School be- lore he took over the Diocesan . ltehool reins. He played at Mon- llignor Coyle High School Ia "aunton before be matriculated Holy Cross. Lynch will work under Coach JIIel Massucco, who was named leCently to succeed Coach Eddie whea tbe 1a«el' .. ..... ecL -.ulAN LYNCH

description

outline for the Prayer of the Faithful. selves for coming ref~rms. of docility. Sunday, Feb. 14 is St. Valentine's Day. ,. Sunday, Feb. 14 is The Anchor subscription No Great Changes Father Bugnini said that the ' . EXTENSION LAY VOLUNTEER: Mike Lombardo of Auburn, N.Y., a graduate of Holy Cross College, Worcester, leads a congregation in song after Mass in auto trailer chapel while in Spur, Texas. Mike is now interviewing students in Catholic Colleges ill .. -.ulAN LYNCH Turn to Page'Four

Transcript of 02.04.65

Page 1: 02.04.65

OrdinarYLaunches Subscription Drive Pope Paul Stresses Catholicmiddot Press-Is Necessitymiddot

Sunday Feb 14 is St Valentines Day Sunday Feb 14 is The Anchor subscription

JaY The heart of lovers is symbolic with St

Y-alentines Day The Anchor is the heart of ChrisHan adult

education in the Diocese of Fall River _ THe Anchor has been the gTeatest innova ion during the reign of Most Rev James L ~nnolly Bishop of Fall River in reaching all the faithful simultaneously And it aids them to live mature Catholic lives in a complex and Changing world The Anchor has served to tie-in the entire laquoJJooese frommiddot Provincetown to Mansfield in the _ght years it has been in circulation

It is the most ardent wish of Bish9P Conshy~ny that this newspaper be delivered to every

The ANCHOR

Fall River Mass Thursday Feb 4 1965

fanu1y in every parish in the diocese The Anchor has shown a steady and consistent growth since it started publication on April 11 1957 But there is still room for improvement circulation-wise in a number of paris-has

The Anchor in each and every year has achieved more quotas parishes This class today represents a substantial block of the 110 parshyishes which form this Southeastern Massachushysetts diocese

Several parishes today are within a relashytively few subscriptions of accomplishing comshyplete family coverage It is noteworthy too that several smaller parishes are selling more weekly copies of The Anchor than a few of the large parishes

The Anchor has attempted to present a well-balanced and newsy journal that is enjoyed

by every member of every family We naturany offer Catholic news and varying views on a multiplicity of subjects where Oatholics are en- titled to differing opinions except for matters of faith and morals We offer special features for women and a sports page for the young Humbly we say our editorials are the envy of many of our other Catholic papers and magshyazines

The Catholic press is not a luxury but a necessity Pope Paul has declared His predeshycessors too have sought to persuade Cardinals Bishops priests and the laity of the import of Catholic journalism (See editorial on Page Six)

Bishop Connolly hopes that The Anchor this year willachieve its greatest circulation a copy every week in every home in every parish itl the diocese

EXTENSION LAY VOLUNTEER Mike Lombardo of Auburn NY a graduate of Holy Cross College Worcester leads a congregation in song after Mass in auto trailer chapel while in Spur Texas Mike is now interviewing students in Catholic Colleges ill his drive to increase the number of lay volunteers NC Photo

Liturgical Commission Secretary Says More Mass Changes Due After March 7

Rev Annibale Bugnini CM secretary of the Postoonciliar Liturgy Commission fa Rome has revealed that further liturgical reforms will be published after the March 1 changes are effected In line with these further changes the Liturgy of the Word-the first part of the Mass-would be celebrated M the lectern or pulpit and not at the altar New liturgical books

bull speakmg of the Canon and the with heart bull bull to harmonize the are bemg pr~nted WhICh ~I- Ordinary) will be the first re- rite with the wise and precise rect the prIest to preSIde vised book published The revi- norms laid down by the council over the first part of the sions have changed nothing document Mass from his chair and not substantially explained the Voice Tones ascend to the altar until the priest The tone has changed Pointing to the March Offertory ie the beginning of but the melody remains as be- changes Father Bugnini menshythe Liturgy of the Eucharist fore as always Even in its re- tioned that the Papal Instruction

Other details direct that the touching everything was deli- requires that some Mass prayem altar missal will remain on the cately and attentively examined Tum to Page Four Gospel side of the altar throughshyout the Mass there will be no genuflection during the Creed except on Christmas a general Urges Officials of Curia outline for the Prayer of the Faithful To Prepare for Reform No Great Changes

Father Bugnini said that the VATICAN CITY (NC)-In a special circular letter Ordo Missae (Section of Missal sent tomiddot alI Cordinals heading the varioliS offices of the

Roman Curia Amleto Cardinal Cicognani Papal Secretary School Exams of State exhorted the Roman officials to prepare themshy

selves for coming ref~rms of docilityEntrance and placement exams for all Diocesan High Schoola The letter was not prIvate The letter mentions that internshywin be held Saturday morning in nature but the Cardinals perate and sometimes unjust at 830 at the school of the stushy were told to make it known criticism had been leveled dents choice Fall Rivers Preshy to an persons within the Curia against the Curia by some bishshyYOst High School examinatioNl In it the Popes Secreta17 urged ops during their speeches $lr shyare for English speaking as well the prelates to accept the future iDe the Vatican Council bull Jrencl1 speaking boy lIltforlWi of Uleir offices ill a apirK TWIl 10 Pllie Two

PRICE tOeVol 9 No 5 copy 1965 The Anchor $400 per Year

Panamanian Bishop Voices Optimism for So America

CHICAGO (NC) - Optimism about the increasing Rrength and influence of the Churoh in ~atin America eoupled with acute awareness Of the leriousness of social rest there set the tone for deliberations at the second animal conference of the Despite recognition that much Catholic Inter-American Co- must be done to make the curshyoperation ProgTaIn (CICOP) rent social revolution successful Iaere

Turn to PageFour

Lynch to Join Varsity Grid Staff at Holy Cross College

(Special to The Anchor) WORCESTER-Announcement of the appointment of

arlin Lynch of Somerset to the Holy CroSiS College varsity football staff will be made within the next week a reliable source at the Jesuit-conducted institution reported today

Lynch a former All-East end at Holy Cross is curshy~ntly head football coach and athletic director at Bishshy~ Stang High School in Dartshy~outh where he bas achieved probably the best won-and-Iost ~cord in Massachusetts during the past four years

The Purple Crusader wbo IIChieved stardom on the colleshyliate gridiron as a pass receiver lIlso coached at Pueblo Colorado and Somerset High School beshylore he took over the Diocesan ltehool reins He played at Monshyllignor Coyle High School Ia aunton before be matriculated bull Holy Cross

Lynch will work under Coach JIIel Massucco who was named leCently to succeed Coach Eddie ~derson whea tbe 1alaquoel ecL -ulAN LYNCH

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

English Nuns Give Views On Moderniing Habit

LONDON (NC)_uIts better to be 1200 years out of date than 10 years That is the comment of an English nun about the new look in religious habits now being lP-ven a trial in the United States Its chilly tone is representative of the feeling of Sisters here about modernizing the i r dress In addition to beingsubject to the whims of changing fashions habits that follow current stylfS disturb the public image of Sisters said an English Ursuline

Wed never do a thing like that she said of the experimenshytal change initiated by two Urshy

sulines in the U S I think if were Religious we should look like Religious People expect us to

Public Witness Another Sister responding to

a survey by the weekly Catho- lic Herald said of her traditional habit People respect you for it Amon~t the poor you can go places where no one else could

It sets you apart symbolizes the fact you have been consecrated It means you have to bear public Witness and you know you do ~ A Sister of Our Lady of Sion bull And English youthseenfto want

you to look like a nun For the MtJ~ll Ordo moment here the habit iii useshy

ful JnUDAY-St Agatha Yirginand

Martyr III Class Red Mass Proper Gloria no Creed Common Preface Two Votive Masses in honor of the Sacred

Heart of Jesus permitted Gloshyria 2nd CoIl St Agatha Virshygin and Martyr no Creed

Preface of Sacred Heart Toshymorrow is the first Saturday0 this month

SATURDAY-St Titus Bishop and Confessor III Class White Mass proper Gloria 2nd CoIl St Dorothy Virgin and Marshytyr no Creed Common Prefshyace

SUNDAY - V Sunday fter Epiphany II Class Green Mass Proper Gloria Creed Preface of Trinity

MONDAY-St John of Matha Confessor III Class White Mass Proper Gloria no Creed Common Preface

TUESDAY-St Cyril of Alexanshydria Bishop Confessor and Doctor of the Church Mass Proper Gloria 2nd CoIl St Apollonia Virgin and Martyr no Creed Common Preface

WEDNESDAY - St Scholastics Virgin ill Class White Mass

Proper Gloria no Creed Common Preface

THURSDAY-Apparition of the Blessed Virgin M a r y at Lourdes III Class White Mass Proper Gloria no _ Creed Preface of Blessed Virgin

- Worthwhile Books New Bedford Curia of the

Legion of Mary has issued its seasonal listing of worthwhile books including 20 titles of parshyticular Catholic interest Among selections are Unfinished Busishyness by Maisie War4i A Galshylery of Sisters by Kathleen Elgin Jacqueline KennedY by Gardon Hall and Ann Pinchoti and Feast for a W~ek by Solange Hertz Also included are several other biographies novels and books of spiritual reading

FORTY HOURS middotDEvnTION

Feb 7-our Lady of Fatima Swansea

St Mary No Attleboro Our Ladys Haven Fairshy

haven

THE ANCHOR second Class Postage Paid at Fall River

Mass Publlslled even Thursday at 410 ItlgIllaIKl venue Fall River Mass by tile catholic Press of tile Diocese of Fall RIIer Subscrilltion Drlce lIy mall JQStpa- $400 Gel yell

Curia Continued from Page OJi~

bates However the eminent prelate did agree that defects I

and weaknesses were boUnd to develop in such an ancient insti shytution as the Curia Such a fact had been stated publicly by the Pope himself the Cardinal comshymented

Regarding the Council Cardishynal Cicognani urged those workshying in the Curia to cease all polemics about the Council This does more harm than good to the Curia he observed Prudence must govern all contacts with bishops and others connected with the Council He also urged exact observance of the Curias

office hours and an adamant re- Intermiddot~ailh Service Attacfs 2500fusalto accept offers of money ALBUQUERQUE (NC)-Nearshyeven for charitable purposes ly 2500 persons crowded Albushy

The issuance of the letter only qlerques civic auditorium andstrengthened rumors that Pope heard Catholic Protestant andPaul is about to announce reshy Jewish speakers can for common

forms for the Curia at the Feb 22 effort in the area of racial jusshyConsistory tice during the first statewide

interfaith worship service Necrology

FEB 10 Rt Rev John J Kelly 1963

Pastor 5S Peter amp Paul Fall River

FEB 11 Rev John OConnell 1910

Founder St John Evangelist Attleboro

Rev John JSullivan STL 1961 lately Pastor Holy Rosary Fall River

CORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP

SHOPPING CENTER

bull Television bull Furniture Appliances bull Grocery

104 Allen St New Bedford WYman 7-9354

MEN 17 -25

JOIN THE NEW Society 9f Brothers of OurLadyofProvidence

For information write to FATHER MASTER

St Joseph the Worker Novitiate

Warwick Neck R I

declared The religious habit protects you but it also demands a lot more In our particular work making contacts between Christians and Jews we are a sign of the Church Whatever you do the man in the street thinks you are the Church

The same Sister continued But you shouldnt look like a witch We all know religious habits now our changing Our congregation is changing soon

Ordinary Dress A prioress of Olivetan Beneshy

dictine nuns said her community wears ordinary dress in public on the European continent where people stare at the big habit and young people have no respect for nuns

She said further But the whole attitude of English people is different They are more disshycreet Nobody botherS ilbout what anyone else is wearing

It was also the first such sershyvice since Archbistlop James P Davis of Santa -Fe announced last month that his archdiocese

GERALD E

~~cNALLY ~

CONS1rRUCTION CO INC

454 MAIN STR~ET bull SOMERSET MASS

TELEPHONE 675-7992

SHELL Premiu Heating Oils DADSON Oil BURNERS

24-Hou O 8ume SoN Famous Reading HARD COAL

NEW ENGLAND COKE

GLEN OAL amp OIL CO Inc 640 Pleasant Street el WY 6-8271

Bishop Advise~

College Stud~nts CLEVELAND (NC) - Arcti shy

bishop Edward F Hoban Cleveland leminded CatholiC8 planning +) attend non-Cathol11l colleges of their obligation bull safeguard and continue study~ religious and moral principles

Archbishop Hoban said at t~ time of the year many higJa school seniors are applying tit colleges for admission next ~an He said the ideal way of contiampshyuing religious education is ~ attending a Catholic college OR university When for valid reasons a

Catholic student attends a secushylar non-Catholli institution the Qbligation of religious educati~

is more weighty he said ~W

Permit attendance at non-Catboo olic colleges only under the conshyditions of enrollment in the Newman Apojtolate its religioUli a~vities and especially bull

classes in religion Parents as well as students

should ascertain before enro~

ment that a Newman Apostolate program exists on the campua Such information can be obshytained from the dean of tbII

school or from the diocesan ltIishy ~tor of the Newman Apci~ ate he said

) -

DISPLAYS PAPAL GIFTS Father Guy Ferrari OSB of St Meinrad Archabbey St Meinrad Ind is curator of the Vatican Librarys copy of the Princeton Index of Christian Art Here Father Guy displays three gifts given to Pope Paul during his 1964 pilgrimage to the Holy Land

~~a~e~hi~t1o~n~~cc~v~~eo~t~a~~~cr i=~i~ the milennial coin-cross commemorating foundation of the Greek Orthodox monastery of Mount Athos presented by the Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras of Constantinople and Jordanian King Husseins gift of two ancient clay lamps the larger of which was used inJerusalem 1900 - years before Chtist NC Photo r~T

~ews was joining the New Mexico Council of Churches Archbishop Davis and New Mexico Gov Jack M Campbell attended the service

Described as a Scripture sershyvice on the dignity of all men the gathering was sponsored by the Archbishops Interracial Council and by the Christian Social Action Commission of the New Mexico Council of Churches

~ ~

~~ Cii~ ~~ eissect $~D ~Il bull f~ ~~~

~ ~ ~

The - ~ Third ~~DlmiddotmenSlmiddotO-n~ _

0f the

The third dimension 01 the Ne1oI Is the depth and fullness this new paper adds to the dally aM weekIJ news of the world-judging tshy~

week events againsamp the eterllll Uuths of the Calholic lailh I Your daily newspapers presetd

fleWS with one faco-a bare oCte unexplained facade 01 facts ancl ligures-usually relieved only by Wi cularized opinions and ossipyfeashy Cures i Weekly newsmagazines give somt height and widlh to the worlds newt i -adding more information to tilt ~ daily development 01 the news gj

log some coloralion CO the world weekly hislory

But only your Catholic newspapef -hl8 ntwspaper and 119 others like

Iii across the U S A and Canadashylive fullness richness and deplh

die weekly history ot-the world Icaslins the news of the week againtl tlte true hlstol) of the world and the CbUrlh

This is the perfect time - durl~etlthollc Press Month-to urge )toilt~ I flelghbors to read dlel dioc~

paper II you need more infor~ lIoa or sample coplu just conilt1 ~ ai he address belOW oj

SUBSCRIBE to

_ The ANCHOR

Sunday Feb 14

IPMEMBER CATHOLIC PRESS ASSOCIATION

f) pend on hibull bullmllot IIln 01 0 0( 4mon

ltCohCllic pvblicolJonsl _

IRUARY bull 1u

6IHOLIC PRIJ~_ MO=shy

I

3 Justice and Love Motivate Whites In Racial Work

PATERSON (NC) - An interracial cause worker has summed up the Negro atti shy

tude toward the civil rights situation like this-you asked my grandmother to wait You asked my mother to wait And Im afraid that If I wait youll be asking my daughter to wait

Arthur D Wright executive director of the New York Cathshyolic Interracial Council told the organizational meeting of the Paterson Cat hoi i c Interracial Council here in New Jersey there is a great need to enlist Catholics to promote a more

positive social climate regarding race relations He also said it is necessary for whites to reevalshy

nate their role as the Negro makes progress

He observed that now whites participating in the civil rights struggle are motivated more highly than Negroes The Negro he emphasized is compelled to work something out of his sysshytem to realize that his status as a second-claSs citizens is not acshyceptable WhIte men active in the movement he pointed out

are motivated by principles of justice and love

Wright expressed particular admiration for the zeal of the Tounglr generation

Bishop to Offer Brothers Mass

Most Rev James L Connolly Bishop of the Diocese of Fall River win offer a Pontifical Mass of Requiem Friday morRshying at 10 oclock in Holy Name Church Fan River for the reshypose of the soul of his brother John E Connolly who died Tuesday monrlng

Mr Connolly the husband of Mrs Jennie Lowney Connolly was born in FallRiver the son of the late Francis and the late Agnes McBride Connolly He was a member of St Patricks Parish until 12 years ago when he moved to the Holy Name Parish

He was the brother of the late Rev Bernard Connolly SS

Mr Connolly held membership In the Serra and Clover Clubs of Fall River

Burial win be in St Patricks eemetery Fall River

Bishop Wri9ht Asks Renl Peace Effort

NEW YORK (NC) - Bishop John J Wright of Pittsburgh has called for efforts to re-spark the relation of religion to world ctrder and to peace

We must seek the moral inshygredient needed to put the blueshyprint for peace into action This Is the will to peace Bishop Wright told Catholics Jews and Protestants attending a peaee conference at the Church Center tor the United Nations

The Bishop emphasized it is necessary to distinguish between bull realistic peace and wishful thinkinb about it

He said people today must be content to live in a world that eontains many things we can do nothing about We must learn the merit of buying time

To Give Blood Fall River Council of the

Knights of Columbus will be host to the Red Cross Bloodmoshybile from 1245 to 645 Tuesday afternoon and evening Feb 9 at the council headquarters 209 Franklin Street in Fall River Members and their friends are vrged to contribute blood

THE ANCHOR-Father Clark Describes Clothing Distribution Thurs Feb 4 1965

In Santo Domingo Dominican Republi~ CCD To Conduct Methods Course Rev James A Clarke of the Fall River Diocese is presently attached to the Latin

America Bureau of the National Catholic Welfare Conference with headquarters in For Grade School Washington He has been in Santo Domingo Dominican Republic making plans for a The Diocesan Office ofMarian Congress to be held there next month and the following report is sent from that

the Confraternity of Christshycity children wet their feet in order ian Doctrine has announcedEver wonder what happens to make tight shoes fit as I that the second section ofto the clothes you give to the watched mothers try frilly this years course for CCDThanksgiving Clothing Colshy dresses several sizes too small teachers will take place thislection Today I found out In or large on their small children monththe past I had seen how clothes as I watched their deep quesshy This will be an eight-weekwere received and steam-packed tioning eyes look at me with course in methods of teachingat a warehouse in New York wonderment at my obvious Christian Doctrine on the eleshyFrom there Catholic Relief Sershy wealth of clothing as I saw tiny mentary school level The course vices ships them overseas Today children drag large bundles You will be given in five areas of thein Santo Domingo the people could only wonder at the happishy Diocese at the following times received their annual shipment ness in their homes on this eveshy and locationsThe clothes arrive here sepshy ningYou could lt1nly wonder New Bedford Bishop Stangarated into mens womens and what their homes must be like High School Tuesday Feb 9 at childrens shoes bedding misshy n made one want to kiss the 730 PMcellaneous Nuns here at the Kansas farmer who had grown Taunton Bishop Cassidy Highorphanage repack the clothes in the surplus food or embrace the School Tuesday Feb 9 at 730variety packets with some of Montana mother who put an PMeach type Then they distribute extra press into the trousers she Fall River Mtmiddot St Marythroughout the neighborhood donated Simple solutions to the Academy Wednesday Feb 19tickets for the most needy population problem could no at 730 PMToday the people arrived and longer satisfy me as I watched West Harwich Holy Trinitymassed against the ga~es It was these illiterate people wander School Thursday Feb 11 at soon obvious that the amount of off with innumerable chiidren 730 PMclothes was woefully insuffi shy trailing behind I assisted one Attleboro Bishop Feehan Highcient These people cannot read boy with oversize overshoes he School Thursday Feb 11 at 730and thus cannot understand the tramped off heedless of the giarshy PMsimplest sign of the least comshy for a free cache of clothes But ing sun and baked streets His The tuition and book fee paidplicated directions For a while there is something haunting feet finally hada covering Some for the doctrine course last FaRthings were chaotic about seeing old people robbed pressed twigs into the heels of witl also take cate of thilIThe Spanish nUns labored with of all personal achievement and shoes to makidhem fit methods coursemaginificent grace to move the dignity by being born in an

people through the gates First These people didnt know theunderdeveloped country come the People received their monthshy food was from the United- States More Communions with ghastly clothes on their ly allotment of surplus food But A sign was plastered across theback to receive a new years NEWARK (NC)-New Jerseythis month the clothes were the food packet but they couldntsupply Today was Christmas in pastors agree that the numberattraction for new clothes come read it Others havent been toSanto Domingo receiving Communion has risenonly once a year Hunger can be Mass for years No one quesshyOnce they received the clothes since fasting rul~s were relaxedhidden and a sense of personal tioned them on anything butthe people sat outside the exit dignity remain even witl a their need And that was obviousgate and displayed their wardshygnawing stomach But nakedness robe Guilt seeped through my Tomorrow I must preach tocannot be hidden soul as I watched with well shy these people As I stand before

Today Was Chfistmas HUTCHINSONSfitting clothes on my back peoshy them in a pressed clean tailored There is something sad about ple combine garments of the cassock I am sure my words will

seeing naked children reach out most garish colors as I watched sound hollow ART SHOPPE

REV JAMES A CLARK

135 FRANKLIN STREETRevise Ceremonies of Four Sacraments FALL RIVER OS 2-0211

PapaI Instruction Simplifies Rites bull Picture Framing The Instruction which puts (Therefore accursed devil) No casion this shall be given imshy bull Art Supplies

much of the Constitution on the 25 (Therefore accursed devil) Tum to Page Six Liturgy into practice besides No 27 (I exorcise you unclean devoting much to the Mass spirit) and (Therefore accursed seminary training legislative devil) No 33 (The threats of bodies and church architecture punishments) and No37 (Go also speaks concerning the Sashy forth unclean spirit) (63)

craments Confirmation Much of what is here containshy If Confirmation is conferred

ed especially concerning the at Mass it is fitting that the Bisshyvernacular in the administration hop be the celebrant and he of the Sacraments is already thus confers the Sacrament in part of the Dioceses normal Mas s vestments The Mas s ministry since Sept 14 1964 would be that of the Holy Spirit On Sept 10th the Most Revershy Votive 2nd Cl end Bishop-by mandate--estabshy After the homily of the Mass lished that the new American but before Confirmation it is Ritual was to be used regularly praiseworthy that the candishythroughout the Diocese dates renew the promises 01

However Pope Paul has furshy Baptism ther simplified the rites and If another celebratfs the Mass brought clear meaning to the the Bishop shall wear the vestshyadministration of the Sacrashy ments for the conferral of the ments by extending the reform Sacrament-white or the color demanded by the Council of the Mass The Bishop shall

Following are changes to be give the homily and the Mass made in the new Arneri8an Ritshy shall resume only after the Sacshy AI Deposits 0 ual rament has been administered INSURED Fri Nights

Anointing of SickBaptism Full Til bull OClock If the Anointing and the VitshyIn the rite for supplying omisshy

ticum are to be administeredsions in the case of a baptised at the same time the continuousinfant (Collectio Rituum 1964 rite should be followed (CollecshyXII and I) the following exorshytio Rituum 1964 VI)cisms are suppressed No 3

If however the Apopstolie(Depart from him (herraquo No Blessing with a plenary indulshy7 (I exorcise you unclean spirshygence at the hour of death isit) and (Therefore accursed to be imparted on the same ocshydevil) No 12 (I exorcise you

every unclean spirit) (62) In the rite fo) supplying omisshy WEAR ~ GreaterfaD RiVU Isions in the case of a baptized Shoes That Fitadult (Collectio Rituum 1964

THE FAMILY SHOE STOREOrdo Baptismi Adultoroum) the 1 Family Banking Center ~~ following exorcisms are supshy Johns rpressed No8 (Depart from him (herraquo No 17 (Therefore acshy ~i ISAVINGS bull HOME LOANS Shoe Storecursed devil) No 19 (Hear acshy l~l lHOME FIX-UP LOANS bull AUTO LOANScursed devil) No 21 (I exorcise 43 FOURTH STREET you uncean spirit) and (Thereshy r PERSONAL LOANS bull 15c MONEY ORDER CHECKS Fall River OS 8-5811fore accursed devil) No 23 i_~~~--~h~~t~m~f~-braquoraquo--raquo~4~~~~~)iraquoJmJ$)A~~J~r~2~11iimiddot~(~~raquoJi

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

yeW Movement Assists Million Young Workers

By ~fsgr George G Higgins Canon Joseph Cardijns elevation to the College of

Cardinals which was unexpectedly announced by Pope Paul VI Monday Jan 25 was a richly deserved tribute to a great pioneer in the social apostolate of the Church and to the worldwide movement which he established a genshyeration ago - the Young Christian Workers (JOC)

What is this movement which has merited such a welcome tribute fro m His Holiness middotT heY 0 u n g ChristianWorkshyers is a moveshyment of the Church which r e c r u i t sand trains you n g working men and women Its aim is to educate young workers so as to enable them to re-Christianize their lives and surroundings

The YCW is a school of life Through the inquiry method the genius of the movement young workers discover the problems of their work life of their neighshyhorhood and iamily and of their leisure life

Last and most importaIt a concrete action is taken to bring their life close to the ideal of Christ and His Church This is -the school through which have passed thousands of youngworkers the world over

Christian Lines By meeting weekly with other

young workers the Young Christian Workers develop charshyacter The YCW shows its memshybers how unChristian their enshyvironment is in many respects Realizing gradually that they themselves are affected by it young workers are stimulated to think and act personally on Christian lines It is a school which combines knowledge spirshyitual formation and action

The spirit of service shows itself on the most simple occashysions of the daily life of the Young Christian Worker The kinds of service are as numerous as the many needs created by the various circumstances of everyday life i e making friends with new workers visit shying a sick friend helping a young worker to get a job passshying out leaflets in a union camshypaign and the like

All service in the YCW must rest entirely on the Christian conception of love of others This is the soul of the movement

In Daily Life Through the actions and sershy

vices of its members the Young Christian Workers Movement is constantly in touch with the young workers daily life in factories and offices home and leisure ip short with the needs and desires of working youth

The YCW is a permanent reshysponse to the problems of all young workers The Church gives us the doctrine of Christ and communicates His life to us The YCW has been charged With the responsibility of helping to bring the Divine Life to all young workers and to change

First Fridians If Members of the Fall River First Friday Club will have John J Gallagher president of the Fall River Mental Health Assoshy1iation as their speaker at their montlily dinner meeting tomorshyrow night The gathering will follow 6 oclock Mass at Sacred Reart Church and will be held in the parochial school All Cathshyolic men in the Fall River area are invited to join the club

things which stand in the way of their living this new life

Established by Canon Cardijn in Belgium in 1912 the Young Christian Workers was officially recognized as a national organshyization in Belgium in 1925 by the Church Today the movement exists in 40-odd countries and is in the process of formation in 25 others Over one million ~oung

vvorkers throughout the world make up its membership

Produces Vocations Today the YCW has taken its

place as a small but important youth movement in the United States It has trained worker leaders who have set their shoulders to the wheel in ecoshynomic and political life It has produced many vocations to the priesthood and religious life and hundreds of Catholic marriages

Much has been tione But the task has just begun God willing the elevation of Canon Cardijn to the College of Cardinals in the evening of his inspiring life will serve as a stimulus to the movement not only in the United States but in every other part of the world as well

S h A middot out merlca Continued from Page Ten

through combating such probshylems as poverty illiteracy reli shygious ignorance and communism a consensus seemed to emerge from the discussions that the Church has started to come to grips with the realities of the situation and will continue to gather strength in the struggle of the Latin American peoples to overcome their crippling problems

Assessing the help which has already come from North Amershyica and the role the Church in Latin America must play in helping its people Bishop Marshycos G McGrath CSC of Sanshytiago de Veraguas Panamasaid in a private interview the inshycreased impact of the Church in Latin American life is enough reason for optimism

Give Impetus

The material and spiritual aid which has begun to flow into Latin America is of great imporshytance bee a use cooperation brings forth cooperation He expressed the hope that before long the programs of education and material aid would give Latin Americans the impetus they need to help themselves

Defining what he believes should be the role of the Church he said much of the materialmiddot help needed is really the funcshytion of the civil governments but it has to be done by someshyone and sometimes the Church is the only one willing or able to do the job But the real place of the Church he believes is as a teacher and former of attitudes

ANDERSON amp OLSIEN INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIC

HEATING-PIPING and AIR CONDITIONING

CONTRACTORS 312 Hillman Street WY 7-9162 New Bedford ~

W IS E INVEST~IENT

Every pastor should make it his business to see to it that every family in his parish gets a copy of his diocesan newspaper said Msgr Robert G Peters of Peoria The lllshyinois prelate is president of the Catholic Press Associashytion NC Photo

Minister AddJresses Catholic Conention

HOBART (NC)-An Anglican minister has addressed the 23m convention of the Catholic Unishyversity Federation of Australia which is being held at the Unishyversity of Tasmania

The Rev B Marshall chapshylain of Trinity College Univershysity of Melbourne delivered a speech on the liturgy as the road to Christian unity

M-KRestaurant featuring

liThe Gaslight Roomll

Ideal far Communion Breakfasts

crganization Banquets

386 Acushnet twenue New Bedford

Can WYman 2-1703

HATHAAY OIL CO INC

NEW BEDF10RD

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OilS

TIMKENI

Oll BURNIERS

Sales amp Servce

501 COUNTY STREET NEW BEDFIgtRD

WY 3-1751

Mor~ Mass Changes After March 7 Continued from Page One The Roman edition will contain

hitherto recited in a low voice seven or eight samples simply be sung or recited aloud Among to demonstrate the spirit of the such prayers are the Secret the format to be approved by the Doxology at the end of the various episcopal conferencesshyCanon the prayer of peace fol- Eventually the Prayer of the lowmg the Our Father Faithful-being offered immedi-

Holy Coinmunion ately after the Creed during The reception of Holy Com- Mass - will vary from week to

munion at Mass by the faithful week at the discretion of the celshyis an essential part of the Mass ebrant but within the format apshyTheir abstinence from the Eu- proved by the national body of charist would make the Mass bishops It will be in the vernaeshysomething abnormal Fat her ular and is intended to express Bugnini asserted A Mass with- the special concerns of the comshyout the communion of the faith- munity in which the Mass is beshyful is like a ring without its ing celebrated precious stone Besides the revisions for the

Prayer of Faithful Iass a Kyriale is also being Individual bishops may com-printed which will contain the

pose a temporary Prayer of the chant for the Ordinary of the Faithful to be a normal part of liass and Chants Called For in Mass as of March 7 The Vatican the Roman Missal This book compositions will be guidelines Will contain a small selection of for the National Bishops Con- melodies for the newer rites of ferences to use to establish their the Mass for roncelebration own prayer in their territories prayer of the faithful etc

FR JOSEPH WORKERS PRIEST COMMUNISTS IN SOUTH INDIA WOULD LIKE TO GET RID OF FATHER JOSEPH CHAKIAK Because be isthe worker

priest Communism lulampan uphill figh1 in the factory towD of Eioor bull bull 20000 workers ba1f of them Catholics put lDloq hours for less than $1 a du Families have eight and ten children the cost of Uving goes lIP and up and the Communists make false promlses

Father Joseph fights vigo ously for social iustice Does be worry about the outcome David

The Hoi Pilshers Missi_ Ail hadonJy one sman stone when be Of Ih Orienslll ChINch wem out to fight Goliath be says

bull bull For the church and parisb censhyter Fatber Josepb needs Archbishop Parecattil 53 asks our readers help The workers stand in the rain ~en Father Josepb offers Mass be reports u we eanbuild a parish center and a church we ean guarantee for generations to come Iheextraordinary work Father Joseph is doing The ebureh will cost only $2900-the parish-eenter $3600 WU1 you put a stone in Fatber Josepbs sling Name tbe ehureh (or the parish center) in honor of your favorite saini (Si middotIoseph the Worker) in memory of your 1000ed ones if you build it aU b3

yourself Send at leasi a smaller cift-$lOO SSG $10 $5 $2shy

Youll be helping Father Josepb fight for tbe poor Christ lov~

FEBRUARY FOLLOWTHROUGH o BRIGHTEN BIRTHDAYS AND ANNIVERSARIES (your own

as well of course) byenrolling your friends and relatives (and their -familiesgt in this Association Theyll benefit In the Masses and sacrifices of our priests and Sisters and youll be helping bring souls to Ctrist MembershJp dues are only $l-a~year for an individual ($20 fot life) $5-a-year for a Family ($100 for life) Ask us to send the person you enroll a gift card with the certificate

o FEED A FAMILY FOR A MONTH It costs only $10 Well send you an Olive Wood Rosary from the Holy Land

o LET THE HOLY FATHER DECIDE Hell use your no strings attached stringless gift (in any amount) where its needed most

o CATHOLIC BOOK WEEK begins Feb 21 $5 will make one more Catholic book available to Pontifical Mission Library users in Jerusalem

fAKING A NEW WILL Tbe good you can do by remembershyIng tbe missions goes to your credit eternally Our legal title

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION

Dear Monsignor Ryan

Enclosed please find bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullfor bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Name bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Street City u bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullState bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullZip Code bull

dnl2earSstOlissioosrill FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President

Msgr Jose T ICIII Nat Sec Seed aU coMlllnleatioM to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION 330 Madlsoll Ave at 4211d St N_ York N Y 10017

-5

Center said here it found an overwhelming lack of evishydence to support the theory that Catholic schools are divisive

In a report in the FebruaryshyMarch issue of the Critic magashyzine three officials of the Unishyversity of Chicagos center cited bull survey made on the effects of Catholic education

Persons who went to Catholic scbools they said were just as likely to have Protestant friends in adulthood to be involved in civic activities tomiddot respect civil liberties to be open-minded to be tolerant of others and to be If anything more upwardly moshybile

Authors of the report are Dr Peter Rossi head of the research eenter Father Andrew Greeley director of the study and Leonshyard J Pinto assoc~ate director

They concluded Even though the measures

ased in this study are not as soshyphisticated as might be desired the overwhelming lack of evishydence for the divisiveness theshyory at least calls it into serious question

Indeed the general similarshyity of Protestants and Catholics and of the various Catholic subshygroups suggests that the attishytudes we attempted to measure are formed by general cultural forces rather than the kind of school attended and that the dishyvisiveness that exists springs rather from the influence of reshyligion itself than from religious education

Baltimore Gets ETV Station Approval

BALTIMORE (NC)-The Balshytimore archdiocese said the Fedshyeral Communications Commisshysion has approved its plan for eonstruction of an educational TV station to serve parochial schools here

Msgr James C Donohue su- perintendent of the archdioceses department of Catholic educashytion said the station will be ealIed KRM-67 and will be reshyeeived on television sets which have a special adaptor

In addition to programs for schools MsgrDonohue said the station may be used for Confrashyternity of Christian Doctrine training courses adult education liturgical instruction and pershyhaps clergy conferences

30 Priests Serve Southern Sudan

VATICAN CITY (NC)-There are now only one bishop and one apostolic administrator and 28 other priests to look after the Catholics of the southern Sudan the mission news agency Fides reported here

The agency said that they would normally have to min- ister to some 440000 Catholics but that thousands of their people are now refugees in neighboring countries

The total of 30 all Sudanese is all that remains following the expulsion a year ago of all forshyeign missionaries from the southshyern part of the country

Homowners Course A course in minor home reshy

pairs for homeowners and those dealing in real estate will be ofshyfered by Everett W Ericson as P3rt of the Spring program of the Continuing Education Divishysion of Stonehill College First RSSion will be held Tuesday night Feb 16 and the class win eoutinue for 10 weeka

THE ANCHORshyReport Questions Brother Michael Misses Warmth of Africa Thurs Feb 4 1965

Divisive School As He Shivers in New England Winter Church Council Assertion I wish I were back in Africa shivered Brother Michael E Barnaby home from To Open Talks

CHICAGO (NC) - The Tanzania East Africa where the thermometer is more or less permanently fixed in the National Opinion Research 90s to ~isit his pare~ts in chill Fall River The Brother of Christian Instruction son of With Catholics

Mrand Mrs Ernest J Barnaby of Notre Dame parish Fall River has been on home leave since the end of Noshyvember He will return to the land that doesnt need furshynaces on Valentines Day

Brother Michael has been a missionary in various parts of Africa for the past 11 years His present assignment is at St Marys Secondary School in Mwanza Tanzania Tanzania he explainer is the former Tanganshyyika renamed Tanzania a matter of weeks ago when Tanganyika and the island of Zanaibar formed an alliance

There are 283 boarders boys of 16 to 24 at St Marys School said Brother Michael Classes are in English but the government requires all teachers to learn Swahili and gives them about two years to do so Brother Michael hasnt as yet fulfilled this requirement since other languages were spoken in the parts of Africa where he was previously stationed but its high on his list of priority things to do

New School Year The teacher will be a little

late for school said Brother noting that the new school year began in Tanzania on Tuesday Jan 19 Why Tuesday Well the steamer that plies Lake Victoria on whose shores Mwanza is loshycated arrives on Tuesday bringshying most of St Marys students with it

Tbree and a half week vacashytions come every three months for students said Brother Mishychael and there are six free weeks in December when the school year ends Students work hard towards the Cambridge Overseas Examinations adminshyistered by Cambridge University from England

They are tough exams deshyclared Brother Michael If a boy passes them he is able to go on to higher studies Some stushydents he said are sent to the United States and some go to England Regrettably however

PrefatetoBless Center for Deaf

LAFAYETTE (NC)~First dishyocesan center here for work with the deaf will be blessed Sunday by Bishop Maurice Schexnayder of Lafayette

A former residence which for several years was a diocesan building has been converted to a center where the deaf can come to relax play bingo toshygether and we can also have edshyucational and spiritual proshygrams according to Father Carroll Dupuis diocesan chapshylain for the deaf

Bishop Preaches PROVIDENCE (NC)-Auxilshy

iary Bishop Bernard M Kelly of Providence preached at an ecushymenical prayer service in Beneshyficent Congregational c h u r c h attended by Catholics and memshybers of the Beneficent congregashytion It was the first time amiddot Catholic bishop has preached in a Protestant church in Rhode Island

Michael Ce Austin Inc

FUNERAL SEPVICE

NEW BEDfORD MASS

549 COUNTY STREET

BROTHER MICHAEL

hard for students to advance Closed all day SundayThe school day at St Marys

begins at 830 running until Macleans1245 and then from 230 to 4 with time out for a midday UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN siesta Students then have a

Continuing Education

EVENING CLASSES CLASSES ON TUESDAY EVENINGS 730 TO 930 PM

Liberal Arts TIt ABC Of Cime Th Artist At Work Comporative Religions Contemporary Novel In America Conversational French- in Conversational Spani Cr-m Writing Draw Anct Effecti Engliolo Laltor Law Effecti Public Rmtt- Sociology You And Society Reading Improvement For Adults (Oth Reading Clasbullbullbull

Weolltly For Primary C Secondary ~)

TIM above Ctur non-credi ood withoul prerequisitesbull

bull

Business Accounting For N~ Accountants Elementary Shaltthand (Gregg) Insurance Part II Investing ht Stocb Real Estate Training Cou Pew

Supervisors To Revie Co

Attomeys

Special Interest InteriM Decoration Th Houbullbull yetu LiYe In Personality Improvementmiddot Fee

Women Updating Efficiency In

Tomorrows Food Service

Spring Session FeIJ 16-Apr 27

58ftd Brochur wi1ft application form or

pho local-CE 8-2Oft or am- Ii -OK 6-9050 Ot apply puan Monday rough Friday Adminshyistration Building from

730 PM to 830 PM

NEW YORK (NC)-The World Council of Churches has approved laquoexploratory talks with Catholic represenshytatives a World Council official said here

The Rev Dr Franklin Clark Fry president of the Lutheran Church in America and chairshyman of the World Councils 100shymember central committee said procedures for the talks were outlined at a meeting of the committee in Enugu Nigeria

Dr Fry spoke at a news conshyference after returning from 10 days at the Nigeria meeting

He predicted that talks beshytween Catholic and World Counshycil representatives would begin in a few months He called such talks the next logical step in improving relations between Roman Catholics andmiddot other Christians

Step While the talks would be a

momentous step Dr Fry said nevertheless they would be a step not a leap

He said the initial discussions would concern matters that are not too complicated and apshypear 1ikeiy to produce progress in interreligious cooperation

The World Council of Churches includes 214 Protestants Orthoshydox Anglican and Old Catholic denominations with some 350 million members throughout the world

lARIVIERES Pharmacy

Prescriptions carted for and Delivered

HEADQUARTERS FOR DIETETIC SUPPLIES

600 Cottage St WY 4-7439 New Bedford

~

manual work period for three quarters of an hour during which said Brother all the heavy work of the school is taken care of Its quite an efshyficient system he noted A sports period follows

Brother Michael teaches biolshyogy math and sociology at St Marys He says his students are highly motivated Few boys can go to school so those who can want to stay and they study hard They know their futures depend upon it Most St Marys graduates go into government or business and Brother Michael noted that Julius Nyerere Tanshyzanias president is himself a graduate of a Catholic school He is a good Catholic he said

Native Vocations The Brothers of Christian Inshy

struction operate a Jlostulate and juniorate in connection with St Marys Some 40 boys are enshyrolled in the two institutions and will go to Uganda for their noshyvitiate

The area around Mwanza is hilly and rocky and vegetation is sparse said Brother Michael Nearby are gold and diamond mines but security is very up to date We ca~t take field trips to the mines

A native of Notre Dame parshyish Brother Michael has a brothshyer and sister still residing in the parish in addition to his parshyents He attended Prevost High School leaving in his senior year to enter the brotherhood and complete his education at the communitys school in Alfred Me He has been a religious since 1947

Brother Michael expects to visit Fall River again in three years under a government polshyicy which prescribes that all foreign teachers take home leave for six months every three years

very few educated youngsters become teachers

The good students get bettershypaying jobs and its the less able ones who turn to teaching Thus teachers are mediocre and its

STORE HOURS

MON TUES WED 900 AM to 500 PM

THURS FRI SAT 830 AM to 600 PM

-6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965 lVlission for Journalists SacrDments

Necessary Instrument The Catholic newspaper is not a superficial luxuty

or an optional devotion it is an instrument necessary for the circulation of those ideas which feed our faith

These words of Pope Paul spoken less than a year ago need no additional commentary to explain his view of the Catholic press and the importance that a Catholic newsshypaper plays and should play in the life of the Catholic

In the mind of th~ Pope the Catholic newspaper is necessary

The faith of the individual Catholic and the events of the life that he daily lives are inextricably interwinetl The faith must influence and give meaning to daily life and the events of the day must be viewed in the light of God and their impact for eternal life Where is the Catholic to receive information that will guide him in making these judgements and applications

This is the function of the Catholic newspapershyagain in Pope Pauls words-to present a fund of thought aligned along Christian principles Thlt Catholic newsshypaper the Pope points out must not only inform but form the reader And it must let the reader see in how many areas there is unity of belief among Catholics and with their non-Catholic friends and in how many areas there is complete freedom within the bounds of charity for discussion and disagreement

During February Catholic Press Month the Popes insistence on the Catholic newspaper as necessary should find response in the minds and lives of every Catholic family

This means that Catholic reading material must be in every home A Catholic weekly newspaper magazines books and pamphlets-these are instruments of Cathoshylic thought aids to the Catholic in his evaluation of the events in which he participates and these enable him to continue his education and to mature in the faith that is his

Responsible Press The announcement by the Holy Father of his creation

of new Cardinals was given excellent coverage in the daily press and many of the outstanding newspapers of the country saw fit to make it the subject of editorials

This in itself 3hould be proof if proof is needed that the daily press is willing and anxious to cooperate with the Church and with every other responsible group in the featuring of newsworthy releases It shows that there is concern in the higher e-chelons of newspaper administration over what the Church does and its influence in and on the world

Occasionally the cry is heard from some Catholics that this or that newspaper is prejudiced against the Church This is the ghetto-voice crying out the self-styled secondshyclass citizen speaking the inferiority complex-ridden Cathshyolic making protest serve instead of presentation and proshymotion This attitude happily is all but gone but it is still discouraging to see and hear it on occasion

When a newspaper presents a view that is deemed hostile to the Church the explanation is that the editor sincerely thought this to be a newsworthy item or else he was met with so many no comments from Catholic officials or was given such a run-around in his efforts to seek the other viewpoint that he met his deadline with what he had at hand

The press in the United States is a responsible one Exceptions to this are so few as to be easily and quickly recognizable Catholics would do well to take an active role in applauding and assisting the press in its presentation of news and viewpoints instead of carping and sniping from the sidelines

rhe tNCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diqcese of Fali River 410 Highland Avenue

Fall River Mass 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAqER It Rev Daniel F ShallooMA Rev John P Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR ~ Hugh J GoldeJ)

~

y

FEBRUARY

OATHoLa PRESS MONTH

ThnolACJh the Week With the Chunch By REV ROBERT W HOVDA Catholic University

TODAY-St Andrew Corsini Bishop What have we sinners done that God should trust us so Yet he assures us again and again in scripture as He does in the lessons of this Mass that He not only loves us but entrusts to us the salvation of our world

Sirachs tribute to the great priest and the Gospel parable of the industrious and reliable slaves-both come to the Chrisshytian people to t14e assembled church as messages of trust and confidencemiddot and hope Gods hope if we may so speak

TOMORROW - St Agatha Virgin Martyr Those who have made themselves thus for the sake of the kingdom of heaven (Gospel) are the Religious among us whose vows of reshynouncement establish a way of life that points to heaven

Whatever they do whatever concrete form their mission takes this is their common sershyvice to the whole Church - to remind us all that the worid moves toward a goal beyond it shyself not only in words but in the daily fabric of their lives

SATURDAY-St Titus Bishshyop The bishop of course but also every Christian must be a person who knows where he is going (Gospel) Jesus is teachshying here a simple directness in accomplishing the mission He entrusts to us Success is not the measure but the will the intent the steadfastness and purposeshyfulness To say The kingdom of God has approached you is not to brag nor to herald triumph It is only to announce the fact that one is here is present who is animated by faith and is therefore a vessel of the Holy Spirit

FIFTH SUNDA~ AFTER EPIPHANY You must bear with one anothers faults (first reading) or perhaps while you are gathering the tares you will root up the wheat with them (Gospel) These are great days of belated reformation in many areas of the Churchs Hfe in its worship in its conception of it shyself and of its mission

The movement of the Holy Spirit in the Church and in the times we live in has brought fresh air to us breaking a crust hardened by the defensiveness and fear of centuries With the Offertory hymn we can sing ~Gone is the threat of death

now I shall live aind proclaim to the world what the Lord hail done for me Now we shall live

with the constant reform and reshynewal that life demands

Yet our aims must be reasonshyable and we must be strengthshyened against the vain hope that because the structures and patshyterns of our Church life are imshyproved we shall be perfect First and last we deal in the Church with humans and with those faults the readings speak of Our reform is successful if those structures and patterns begin again to beckon and challenge and inspire us where we are and as we are

MONDAY-St John of Matha Confessor Hymning the praises of the good man the man who confesses his faith in the Father by dealing with every person as his brother the entrance psalm begins Be not envious of the wicked nor jealous of evil shydoers

Sometimes we pretend that a real envy a true jealousy is purely a desire to see (and help) virtue triumph But the saints too like the man we honor toshyday are fields in which tares are present They differ from us perhaps only in that they do not covet them nor envy the tares in other lives

TUESDAY-St Cyril of Alexshyandria Doctor Do not think that I have come to set aside the law and the prophets I have not come to set them aside but to bring them to perfection (Gospel) (I hope the new and improved text of scripture readings at Mass is soon avail shyable in books smaller than the altar missal)

Christ announces thatmiddot the job of His teacher of the man or woman who teaches in His name is not to set aside the law and the prophets nor isii to repeat them It is to bring them to perfection So the Christian teacher must heed the Spirit here and now as well as in tradition

WEDNESDAY - St Scholasshytica Virgin The maidens love of and openness to her groom with all her hope of fulfillment and completion is the model of the Churchs stance toward Christ Even as the Church the community of salvation we are not a finished product

We are always reformable al shyways perfectible always pil shygrims on the march It is this virgin spirit submissive to the L()td thatenables the Church to welCome such a period as thV time of change and progress

Continued from Page Three mediately before the annointinlf omitting the sprinkling with itS formula and the Confiteor and absolution Conselration

All bishops present may imshypose hands on the new bishop However only the consecrator and two co-consecrating bishopS are to pronounce the words Acshycipe Spiritum Sanctum Matrimony

Matrimony shall be ce)~brated

within the Mass unless a just cause excuses this It sl-jall be done after the Gospel and the homily Th~ latter is nevpr omitshyted

Within Mass The Votive Mass shall always be celebrted or a commemoration of it made according to the rubri(~ even during the prohibited tine

The pastor or his dnJegate who assists at the marri~O~ shan celebrate the Mass if it is anshyother Mn~s shall not (~ltinue

untn the MarrlageRite hls been completed The non-c~l~brant

who assists at Marriage ~lall be vested in surplice and white stole (and cope if it is the cusshytom) and he shall give tln homshyily The celebrant shall pve the blessing after the Lord Prayer and before the Placeat

The Nuotial Rlessing hlll al shyways be imparted even f it is one of the partys seconrl marshyriage or the marriage is rluring the prohibited season

Without Mass Accorrng ta the Apostolic Letter ~acram

Liturgiam (Jan 1964) rgt brief admonition shall be given before the rite Tis is not a homily but only a simple imtuction before the celebration of Marshyriage After the reading of the Epistle and Gospel of the Mass for Spouses there shall then be given a homily Thlllt the order shall be brief admrgtnition Epistle and Gospel in the vershynacular homily celebr2tonof marriage nuptial blessing

If no vernacular text is avail shyable for the Epistle and nos~l

it is lawful to use for the inshyterim a text approved by the local Ordinary~ bull

A chant may be sung bntweea the Epistle and Gospel The Prayer of the Faithful is highly recommended after the compleshytion of the Mariage Rite accordshying to the formula of the local Ordinary and in which petitions for the spouses are also to be included

At the end of the rite the nuptial blessing shall always be given as within Mass The formshyula shall be the one designated for this occasion (Collectio Hishytuum 1964 Rite of Matrimony Without Mass Nuptial Pessing Outside Mass Sacristy Manual p 283

If marriage is celebrated duJ shying the prohibited season the pastor shall advise the spouses to~take into account the special character of this liturgical seashyson Sacramentals

A single prayer from among the prayers which are found in the Roman Mis$al for Feb Z and for Ash Wednesday mashybe said on the occasion of the blessing of candles or ashes

Blessings which have been reshyserved up to the present time and which are contained in the Roman Ritual tit IX cap 9 10 11 _may be given by any

- priest with the exception of the following Blessing of a bell for the use of a blessed church or oratory Blessing of the first stone for the building of a

church B I e s sin g of a new church or public oratory Blessshy

ing of an antimimsiori Blessing of a new cemetery the Papal Blessings (cap 10 n 1-3) and the Blessings and erection of the

Stations of the Way of the Cr~ inasmuch asthis reserved to tbe JUahop

ACRES Of FREE

PARICNG

OOIJfIlElftENI BUDGETmiddot Finance

f 1It_ 10 Pay

1

Meeting to Plan CathQlic Press i

World Congress NEW YORK (NC)-The

Seventh World Congress of the Catholic Press to be held here May 18 to 22 will be the first subject for discussion at a meeting of officials of the Inshyternational Union of the Cathoshylic Press Saturday in Stuttgart Germany

Two representatives of the Catholic Press of the United States and Canada will attend the Stuttgart meeting They are Tames A Doyle executive secreshytary of the Catholic Press Assoshyciation and Father Hugh Morley

OFM Cap who represents the international union at the United Nations

Father Albert J Nevins MM editor of Maryknoll magazine is general chairman of the world congress and of the 55th annual convention of the Catholic Press Association which includes Catholic newspaper magazine and general publisher members in the United States and Canshyada

Modern Society The Stuttgart meeting will be

held under the direction of Raishymondo Manzini editor of the Vatican City newspaper LOsshyservatore Romano and president of the IUCP and Father Emile Gabel AA secretary general

Meetings at the world congress will be organized around the overall theme of Truth in the Pursuit of Liberty and will Inshyelude a number of special sesshysions relating the theme to modshyem society

There Will be conferences on the press and political liberty liberty and international order liberty and eivil rights con science and religious liberty freedom and the creative arts and liberty in the Catholic press

Three Missioners Martyred in Congo

ROME (NC) - The deaths of three more Catholic missionarIes and an African priest at the hands of Congolese rebels have been reported by the Pious Soshyciety of St Francis Xavier for the Foreign Missions of Parma

Italy The three Xaverian missionets

were Fathers Giovanni Didone 35 and Luigi Carrara 32 and Brother Vittorio Faccin 31

Patron of Rio RIO DE JANEffiO (NC-An

altar dedicated to St Sebastian has been blessed here to comshymemorate the fourth centenary of the founding of the Portushyguese settlement of St Sebastian of Rio de Janeiro

DUEtFEE- FALL RIVER

On Our Stage IN PERSON

Arthur Fiedler and

60 Members of the Boston Pops

an evening of enchanted music

ALL New Program Special Attention to evo ~nd Church Groups

FRIDAY FEBRUA~Y 12 830 PM

TEL 6fT-93S1

fHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965 1 Press Association Head Evaluates Press Month Theme

BY MSGR ROBERT G PETERS perfect setting up distortions in world but with every walk of proper interpretation of the

its reflection A mirror can be life every slightest concern of question itself The theme of this years Cathshy too small to tell the full story morality Anything else is not things as

olic Press Month gives everyone A mirror can be faithful to the they are or things in truth -readers and writers-reason to Christian Principlessurfacemiddotof things and miss what Anything else is not the Catholic consider the task of the Catholic A mirror that tells things as press that the popes have adshylies behind the obvious facade press They are the words of they really are must reflect not vised to place itself in the world Pope Paul VI Your Catholic A mirror that tells all things only the object in question but and interpret that world for press mirror of the world as they are must be a mirror that the surrounding world that afshy readers in the light of Christianbull bull telling things as they are seldom limits its area of reflecshy fects what must be told The principlesbullbullbull In truth tion And the press that attempts publication that mirrors the famshy Catholic readers should be

To mirror the world is not the to be such a mirror must concern ily the factory the field and the happy to have at hand a press simple task it first appears For itself not only with the obvious forum must include the Chrisshy that dedicates itself to so imporshyone thing a mirror can be im- ecclesiastical aspects of the tian principles needed for a tant a task

The Fumlture Wonderland Open Daily 9 AM to 10 PMe

_ the East Including Saturdays

Hew Englands Greatest Furniture (Iearance is Now in Full SwinQ

FREE DELIVERY

8

l

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall liver-Thurs Feb W85

Catholic Press Bears Witness 10 Churchs Spirit of Renewal

By Mary Tinley Daly -Reading habits must be changing in my parish

Mid a priest of our acquaintance Few years ago he ruminated Id go into a horne to make a sick call put my hat on the coffee table on the top of the New Yorker Vogue Look Life and the daily newspaper When Id come downstairs again my hat would be on top of a flock of Catholic m iss ion magazines and the diocesan newspaper The others were all chucked for the time being I was to be imshypressed quite obviously he laughedWhats the change now Father we asked Are the magazines more lurid where you park your hator

And Nowmiddotmiddotmiddot Just the opposite our priest

friend chuckled Theyre not ashamed of the Catholic press any more In the line-up among the popular publiclltions on those living room tables-and usually on top of the heap--are well shythumbed copies of Commonweal America The Sign and others Even the Diocesan paper is out in full view right beside toshynights edition of the city newsshypaper

This priests observation Is D~ all unusual

The Catholic press has made giant strides within the past few years strides which should be noted during this the month of February Catholic Pre s bull Month Why February We dont know Perhaps from the very name of the month derived from Februarius month of exshypiation and purification since en the 15th the Roman festival of expiation and purifi~ation was beld

To our way of thinking this iii appropriate since we believe that the Catholie press should take its place as a gOOd influshyence in the currentmiddot world of journalism To quote the present Pontiff Pope Paul VI Your CatholiC Press is a mirror of toshydays world telling things shythey are-in truth

And how is the Catholie predoing Better thank you

Todays Renewal Reflecting the Catholic layshy

mans view is the sophisticatedCommonweal edited by dedishycated Cafllolic laymen America edited by the Jesuits The Sign magazine of the Passionists and SO many others mirroring mod-middot ern Catholic thinking in our aggiornamento of today enunshyciated first by Pope John XXIII

Fresh air is not only seeping in it is sweeping int9 Catholic journalism

Notre Dame Superior Heads New- Cornmittee

WASHINGTON (NC)-5ister Mary Daniel provincial superior of the Maryland province of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur has been elected chairmaflof the newly formed National Sister Formation Committee

New vice chairman is Mother Mary Borromeo mother general of the Sisters of St Francis Joliet Ill the Sister Formation Conference announced from it headquarters here

Sister Mary Daniel heads a 12-member unit which guides activities of the formation conshyference a 12-year-old cooperashytive movement of U S Sistershyhoods to bolster the spiritual academic and professional trainshying of Sisters

Time was and in the memory of even young readers when a great many Catholic newsshypapers were pretty ho-hum a picture of the bishop on every page notices of sodality meetshyings ham or turkey dinners items which could and should be carried in parish bulletins edishytorials wildly denouncing thisshyand-that-a generally negative and boring experience for readshyers of which there were few

Catholic magazines were only slightly better mediocre articles namby-pamby fiction

Those were the days when out of a sense of loyalty or obedishyence Catholics supported their Catholic press with their subshyscription dollars but not with their attention

Catholic periodicals found their way from the mail slot to the magazine rack for a while then out into the trash Seldom did they appear on a living room table to be picked up for intershyest or enjoyment along with the mass media publications EVeJl less rarely was a Catholic peri shyodical quoted ill the secular press or discussed among intelli shygent Catholics

Fortunately times h a changed The Catholiepress is abreast of world news local news features book film and play r~views entertainment and famshyily pages And nowhere else of course can one get more authorshyitative information on the vital changes within themiddot Church itshyself Vatican Council liturgieal reforms ecumenism -eally alive issues

The change has been long _ coming hindered ~ maD7 r0adshyblocks but its here

Alumae Style Shaw Alumnae and parents of Jesusshy

Mary Academy Fall River wiD sponsor a supper style show at 630 Tuesday night March 2 at Whites restaurant

Sto Francis Resodence

FOR YOUNG WOMEN 196 Whipple St Fall River Conduded by Franciscan

Missionaries of Mary ROOMS - MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALtill Inquire OS 3-2892

bull bull bull bull bull bullbull bull bullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Williams Funeral Home

EST 1870 I Washington Square

NEW BEDFORD Reg Funeral Director CIftd

Embalmer PRIVATE middotPARKING AREA

TEL WY 6-8098

AT RED MASS Luci Baines Johnson daughter of the President attended the annual Red Mass in St Matthew Cathedral Washin~~ton last Sunday in the company of her escort Paul Betz of Washington left President Johnson preeeded the COUplEI into the Oathedral NC Photo

Protestants Must Change Attitude BONN (NC)-German Protesshy the Orthodox Church which

tants have been asked to meet takes a similar stand the spirit of change at the Vatshy He also pointed to the diffi shy

ican council with changes ill culty of solving problems in this their own attitudes area because the Catholic

Lutheran theologian Dr Hanl Church cannot find anyone aushyAsmussen wove his appeal thorized to negotiate for Protesshyaround a strong criticism of tants He said We have no Protestant impatienCE with the branch with which questions of Catholic position on mixed marshy this kind can be regulated in a riages He pointed out that Protshy binding way and we do not waDi estants who are angrr with the to create one either Catholic stand do not criticize

your OVENFRESH

NEIGHBORHOOD~ DAILY STORE

Asks End of Fee In Teaching

PADERBORN (NC)-Dao ligious training should _be more positive at all age levels and the element of all shyxiety and fear should be elimoo inated ill teaching children bull German Catholic churchman aeshyserted here

Archbishop Lorenz Jaeger ell Paderborn in Germany said bull more positive stress requires IEo vision not only of the catechism but also of the rite of confessioDo In line with this approach m said parents in the rearing of their children should stress the dignity of the human person iQoo stead of harping on duties

The prelate a member of 12ie ecumenical councils Secretarial for Promoting Christian Unit was addressing the annual cooshyvention of representatives 01 German Catholic womens ganizations He said that to tain awareness of the dignity all the Christian vocation Chri9shytians must first realize natural virtues and true humanity bull Pope John showed by his exa pIe

Defines ApoStolate Of Catholic Nurse

WICHITA (NC)-Bishop L8 C Byrne defined the CathoHe nurse-one who combines proshyfessional excellence with spa itual excellence to sanctify hetlo self and Christianize society

SpeaKing before the DioeeSRII Counell of Catholic Nurses here Wichitas apostolic administ

tor told 200 nurses Your laP apostolate is nursing Specifi shycally in our age which histolF will describe as the age of tile laity the Catholic nurse must be a shining symbol of both tbe Church and the nursing prof~

sion

~ DEBROSS OIL ( ~ COo

) Heating Oils ( ~ and Burners ~

365 NORTH FRONT STREET ~ NEW BEDFORD ~

~ WYman 2-5534 ~

VinesWill HaveTenderGrapes f Pruned Now Says Gardener

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

One of the few jobs in the garden middotwhich should be done in Winter is that of pruning grape vines By pruning vines now while they are dormant you will avoid a drippy vine when the sap begins to flow Actually the pruning should take place in two steps once now and again in never to be awakened again

late March or April Maybe this is how TV dinnersbegan

Too often grape produc- Now Im as guilty as any other Clon suffers from too little prunshy mother of not wanting four exshyIng As a result vines become tra elbows around me when I am overcrowded and produce small trying to cook and I often have stunted bunches of fruit or at to suppress a scream of anguish best production of fruit is when my last egg hits the floor limited Then I remember my early ef

In pruning a vine the first forts offer a prayer to the thing to do is to remove all Blessed Mother for an extra Winter-killed growth (this is dose of patience and find someshysimple to determine since dead thing for those little hands to eliDes are dry and brittle) These help me with canes should be cut back to the One day last week when my main stem The second step is to patience was at an unusually eut aU thin straggly growth at high peak we had a dolls birthshyleast half way back to the main day party cake mixed and baked stem or until the cane is at least by Meryl and Melissa instrucshythe thickness of a finger The tions read by mother The utter shape of the vine is of no conshy delight on their faces when the eern now since it will be shaped finished cake turned out so well after the second pruning more than paid for any extra

The first pruning should thin effort on my part the vine to approxima~ely twoshy A very young friend of ours thirds of its original bulk Do Christine McGowan of St JoshyDot make the mistake of being sephs parish Fall River was cautious about cutting Rememshy nice enough to give us one of her ber new growth will appear off recipes to pass on to the younger the old growth and unless you set Miss McGowan with the aid are thOrough the vine will be of an understanding mother has overcrowded been baking since a very tender

In late March or April the age ~e shouidbe pruned again duiped and tied First remove

Chrissies Cookies 1 Ie white sugar

any canes which were missed atmiddot 1 C brown sugar packed the fiist pruning or any recently C soft shortening (this III killed canes Other canes to be equal to lb butter or margarshy~moved are those which are old ine) IUld overuown since theywiU 1 t vanilla produce littleif any fruit 3 C flour

Once the thinning out process 1 t baking soda comple~ the canes which t salt are to be kept should be ~ nuts andor raisins to taste back to five or six buds and tied Heat oven to 375 Mix sugars During the tying process the shortening eggs vanilla Sift toshyme can be shaped so that no -gether flour soda salt and stir __0 canes are closer than a foot in Add raisins andor nuts ~d a half apart This is a time- Fo~ balls of about 1 t middotof dough eonsuming job which is very apiece flatten on ungreased ~y to do sloppily with a poor baking sheetallowing room far ~p resulting so t~e a few ~ys to do it properly Above an JIrUlle heavily In the Kitchen On of my older daughters reshy~ests last Christmas was for an electric oven that baked just like monunys I felt that this was a little too grown up for five year old because the temshyperature went up as high as 400 degrees so needless to say this particular item didnt find a place under our ~ris~as tree However I still feel quite guilty about this as I intend to try very hard to encourage any cooking tendencies in my daughters Speaking from personal expeshy

dence I remember the years I ipent getting shoo~d out 9f my mothers kitchen until finally ~y interest in that direction iemained dormant until mar ~age forced me to face squareshy~ the prospect of preparing three meals a day Fortunately hen I did solve this problem liided by many cookbooks I did discover how much I loved to eook but I still wonder how any other girls have had their love of cooking equally squelchshytid by a well-meaning mother

Dorries Patronesses Dames Patronesses of Sacred

Beart Home New Bedford will hold a Valentine party for hOJIle residents at 130 Tuesday aftershynoon Feb 9 Mrs Jean Boutin-is m charge of arrangements The lInits annual meeting is planned for Sunday April 25 and the -tOth anniversary of the group Will be marked with a banquet and dance Wednesday May 5 in New Bedford Hotel Next board meeting will be held at 30 luesday niIht March 11

cookies to spread (Wetting the handS with Cold water keeps dOUgh from sticking to them)

Bake 8middot to 10 miuutes Makes about 60 cookies

Notre Dame Nun Joins Inter-Radal Staff

CHICAGO (NC)-Sister Mary Peter (Traxle~r) of the School Sisters of Notre Dame has joined the staff of the educational -sershyvices department of the National Catholic Conference for Intershyracial Justice here

Raymond M Hilliard confershyence chairman said rapid growth of the agencys services necessi-_ tated staff expansion While doshying graduate work in political

science at Georgetown Univershysity in Washington Sister Mary Peter organized a tutorial proshygram for under-privileged youth

NO JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main OHice and Plant 95 Bridge St Lowell Mass

Tel 458-6333

Auxiliary Plants

BOSTON CAMDEN N J OCEANPORT N J MIAMI PAWTUCKET R L PHILADELPHIA

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ c 9 j

REPRESENT Us CATHOLIC WOMEN The Board of Direct-ors of the National Council of Catholi~ Women is received by Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi Apostolic Delshyegate in the US at the annual meeting in ~ashington Mrs Mar~us Kilch ~oungsto~ Ohio left front is NCCW president and Miss Margaret Mealey nght front 18 executIve director NC Photo

Vatican Pavilion Second Most Popular in Fair NEW YORK(NG) --At

most half of the visitors at the New York World~sFair~

last year stopped off at the Vatican Pavilion making it the second most popular of the Fairs 151 pavilions Average daily attendance was over 75000 giving the pavilion a total at- tendance figure of more than 138 million

The Good Shepherd Chapel was the scene of 1204 Masses

SAVE MONEY ON YOUR OILHEATI bull CfJH n

CHARLES F VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE NEW BEDFORD MASS

IwflkltdeliNlyK

~SS~ HEATING OIL

at whichCo~union was dis- The most popular item at the tributed to ~ie th8ll- 42000 pavilions sales counters was a people POStcard featuring P~pe Paul

gt 1 1

- ~- ~

-_

_ ~~ f y

~ I

NO NONOt

Piggy banks dont pay dividends Put your money in a Fail River Trust Savings Account where generous divishydends are compounded semi-annually Its much safer too 1

FALL RIVER ~~h TRUST CO- V

64J U1t4 ~~ bull~ Fatt ~

-

THE ANCHORshy10 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Prelate Stresses Ecumenism on Spiritual Level

MADEIRA (NC) - Auxshyiliary Bishop Paul F Leishybold of Cincinnati called for a spiritual ecumenism shyprayer and holiness - as the soul of the ecumenical moveshyment

He preached at a special low Mass which he offered at St middotGertrudes church here in Ohio for some 300 Protestants many escorted by Catholic neighbors Many Protestant visitors were guests in homes of Catholic pashyrishioners after the evening Mass which was (lffered at an altar facing the congregation

Bishop Leibold cited five ways in which those who profess Christ can work for Christian unity

1 We must make every effort to avoid expressions judgments

and action~hich do not represhysent the condition of our sepashyrated brethren with truth and faimess

2 DIalogue must be carried on between competent experts from different churches and communities

3 Cooperation among differshyent churches for the common good of humanity

4 A spiritual ecumenismmiddot which he said involves a change of heart holiness of life and public and private prayer for unity

5 All must examine their own faithfulness to Gods will for the Church and accordingly undertake with vigor the task of renewal arid reform

Scores FCC Stand On Religious Test

WASHINGTON (N C) - A middotmember of the Federal Commushynications Commission charged here that the FCC is violating constitutional limits marked out by the Supreme Court by makshy

ing religious broadcasting one test of a broadcasters public service performance

Commissioner Lee Loevinger addressing the National Reli shygious Broadcasters convention said the FCC has gone far beshyyond the limits that have been marked by the Supreme Court as permissible govertiment acshytion in the field of religion

Loevinger noted that the FCC includes religious pro g ram I

among the types of programs considered to be in the public interest on its license application forms He said it made the broadcasting of such programs one of the FCCs tests for detershymining whether a broadcaster operates in the public interest

Pope Paul Thanks Italian Policemen

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI greeted the Italian poshylicemen whose beat is the Vatican and saidit was a great consolation to know they were around

Answering an address of homshyage by Inspector General Oreste Correti who was accompaniel by other officials and members of the force the Pope said he is grateful for the zealous expert generous and selfless work in which you display your integrity as distinguished state officials and your dedication as faithful IOns of the Church

Though members of the Italian force the groups are assigned ~ special guard duties and ~

directing traffic in St Peters iquare and the area surropndinl Vatic~ City

BOSTON (NC)-Richard Card~ inal Cushing touched off a cheershying demonstration by 1300 Jews here when he predicte9 the Secshyond Vatican Council will apshyprove a declaration absolving Jcws of direct blame in the death of Christ

If we dont Im wasting my time talking of brotherhood said the Archbishop of Boston after he was presented withmiddot the annual Good Will Award of Temple Ohabei Shalom Brothershyhood oldest and largest Jewish organization of its kind in the

country He was selected for the award because of his compasshysion generosity love and broth- erhood

Reds Fear Religion The prelate said Ill never forget the Second

Vatican Council I didnt know What they were talking about I had never heard a lecture in Latin and it was all Greek to me I dont know how many others were in the same boat

CEF Head Praises Johnson Proposals

TRAVERSE CITY (NC)-The national president of Citizens for Educational Freedom had praise here in Michigan for Presshyident Johnsons statements in his State-of-the-Union address

Stuart D Hubbell a lawyer lauded the President for his wilshylingness to tr~at all school chil shydren equally He said he sent Mr Johnson a telegram which said in part

While your proposals have not as yet been made specific to the extent that they follow the principle of equality that you outlined in your message you will have made a signifi shycant beginning in developing broad support for educational achievement

bull SEQUIN Truck Body Builders Aluminum or Steel 944 County Street

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2middot6618

DISCUSS PROBLEMS CONFRONTING HOSPITALS Meeting at the 20th annual conclave of Bishops representatives for Catholic hospitals in Scottsdale Ariz are left to right Msgr Harold A Murray director of thE NCWC Bureau of Health and Hospital Hospitals Bishop Francis J t Green of Tucson Bishop Joseph B Brunini episCOgtal burshyeau chairman and Auxiliary of Natchez-Jackson Miss and Father John J Flanagan SJ~ executive director of the Oatholic Hospital Association NC Photo

We Have Come Long ~Way in Short Time Hub Cardinal Sees Church Gains Continuing

~

but I sat between two very ven- around religion He added For crable Italian cardinals They that reason they try to eliminate

knew no English and I knew no Italian All the time they kept calling me Cardinal Spellman or Cardinal Mindzen1y or even Cardinal OConnell (The late William Cardinal OCgtnnell was Cardinal Cushings predecessor as Archbishop of Boston)

In a more serious mood Cardshyinal Cushing said the one great fear communists have centers

Interfaith Service For Church UII1ity

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Byzanshytine Rite Catholics joined with Orthodox and Protestants in a common prayer service for

Christian unity Sunday in Holy Spirit Byzantine rite c hu r c h here

Participants in the vespershytype service includE)d Father Andrew Resetar of Erie Pa Very Rev A Dixon Etollit dean of Trinity Episcopal cathedral here Father GeorgE) Scoulas dean of St Nicholas Greek Orshythodox cathedral in Oakland and Dr Harold R Alert former president of the Pittsburgh Council of Churches

The service was arranged by the Pittsburgh C 0 tI n c i I of Churches and the Pittsburgh Byzantine rite diocesE~

Where A

GOOD NAME

Means A

GREAT DAL

GEO OHARA CHEVROLET

565 MILL 5JREET

HEW BEDFIORD

Open Evenings

it from the lives of their peoplemiddot He revealed he has 25 engageshy

ments to talk to groups of other religious faiths including a lodge of Masons before Easter The Cardinal inquired Who would have thought even five years ago that a Catholic archbislfop would be preaching good will in a Protestant church or in a synshyagogue Or that a rabbi would be addressing other faiths We sure have come a long way in a short time-and its going to get better

Preaching Brotherhood The cardinal also observed I

am not trying to convert Protesshytants to Catholics or Jews to Catholics I never made a conshyvert in my life My only messhysage is one of brotherhood

Sturtevant 6shyHook Est 1897

Builders Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New Bedford WY 6-5661

Deny Dispatch About Ca rdinaI

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Sta_ Departm~nt spokesman her categorically denied a recent press story that there are ~

obstacles to Jozsef Cardinal Mindszentys leaving his refuge in the U S legation in Budapest but that the Primate of HungaI7 ~wants to die a prisoner there

The story (which was released by NANA and published in t~

daily press Jan 20) credited its source a State Deparme~ source in Bonn German~

who has taken part in recent U S-Hungarian negotiations

The State Department spokesshyman here described the story bull completely incorrect

We dont have any Americali official in Bonn who has had anything to do with the Hungar-o ian negotiations he said in an swer to inquiries It doesn1 represent anything that an American official would hold

New Orleans Plans New High Schools

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Arch-t bishop John P CodY of New Orleans has announced plansfOS construction of seven new hip schools in several parts of the archdiocese

Declaring that Catholic educashytion never was so flourishin nor were our Catholic people bull desirous of increasing the num bel of schools and improving t~

methods of teaching The Loushyisiana prelate said we must build so that all the children oil our area may have the blessin of a thorough Catholic educashytion

SERVING FINE ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4-8754bull

TIte Falmoufh NatiOnal Sanlc Falmouth Mass

tilt Villale Ir Sian 1121

WM T MANNING (0 WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE

AND

INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES bull GENERAL TIRES bull DELCOBATTERIES

bull PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS

FALL RIVER - NEW BEDFO~D - HYANNIS - NEWPORT

First Federal Savings AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF ATlLEBORO

4 on ali $avings Accouni

1 Extra on Systematic Bonus~vings

bull bull bull bull bull

11 bull

Portugal Bishops Plan University For Country

LISBON (NO) - Portushygals bishops have announcshyed plans to found this nashytions first Catholic Univershysity

They said in a joint pastoral letter issued after their meeting here that there is an imperative need for a Catholic university for the nations conscience They said the university win have greater freedom greater dynamism and greater flexibil shyity than the present state uni versities

The letter said that the govshyernment will help the bishops in founding the new Catholic university

Last Summer Manuel Cardishynal Goncalves Cerejeira of Lisshybon told a meeting studying the foundation of the Catholic Unishyversity that it would be open to both laymen and the clergy and located in Lisbon instead of the older university town of Coimshybra Earlier efforts were made to restore a theological faculty at Coimbra University The facshyultY was closed following the revolution which made Port~gal a republic in1910

Several years agothe cardinal noted that a Church-sponsored university has been a hope of 1Ihe VI has called on individual Cathshy one part of the Mystical Body of many Latill American counshy~oI1uguese bishops for a long olies to become more aware of Christ to another tries and CICOP itself whichtime ~ut that priorities for the world-wide dimensions and seminanes new churche~ pri- needs of the Church mary schools and Catholic Acshytion organization had delayed Today bull bull bull it is absolutely eoncrete plans indispensable that each pers~n

become aware of the true dishymensions of the Church the

Sees Greater Church Pope declared adding Greater awareness will iead to wideningNeed for Laity Role

LAKE CHARLES (NC) - A Louisiana editor predicts the time will come in the 20th censhytury when laymen wi~ domishynate the clergy in many fields

Msgr Alexander O Sigur edshyitor of the Southwest Louisiana Register diocesan newspaper feels in the present age of scishyence and technology Catholic laymen with specialized knowl- edge of law science and other fiElds must of necessity advise the clergy on the many facets of todays society

He pointed out that the layshymens role has made more progshyress since the opening of the Second Vatican Council than in the previous 10 centuries

But because of centuries of tradition there will be problems for some time connected with evolution of the laymans role in the Church he asserted

British Conversions Continue to Decline

LONDON (NC)-The number of converts to Catholicism in England and Wales continues to decline but the Catholic popushylation shows a steady increase according to the 1965 Catholic Directory published here

The known number of adult conversions for 1963 the most recent year for which statistics are available was 12778 This was a decrease of 552 from the previous year which also showed a considerably lower figure than that for 1961

But the Catholic population increased in 1963 by 129500 to 3956500 and the Catholic popshyulation in Scotland rose by 13shy310 to 812460

Foundation Member NEW YORK (NC) - William

G Ryan presidentmiddot of Seton Htn College Greensburg Pa haa been named a corporate member of the FoundationfOr the arts Religion and culture which win hold its fim meetina laue tomonow

THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

HIGH HONOR FOR K of C HEAD Supreme Knight John W McDevitt of the Knights of Columbus invested as a Knigh t Commander of St Gregory at a testimonial banquet in Boston is with left to right AuxiHary Bishop John F Hackett of H~rtford Archbishop Henry J OBrien of Hartford Bishop Charles P GreltfO Qf Ale~andna La Supreme K of C Chaplain and Bishop William J Smith of Pembroke OntarIO NO Photo

Pope Hail~ US Church Mission Work Says Transfe~ of Energies I Most ~onsoling

CHICAGO (NC)-Pope Paul this transfer of energies from unteers who are serving la

of vitality and fuller realization of the meaning of the name Catholic

Nature of Church Pope Paul made his plea in a

message to the second annual conference of the Catholic Inshyter-American Cooperation Proshygram (CICOP)

The Holy Father coupled his appeal for greater awareness of the worldwide nature vf the

Church with high praise for aid rendered in recent years by US Catholics to the Church in Latin America Prellently he said there are 4091 US priests reshyligious and laymen serving there

Greater Understanding I He called us Catholic proshygrams for Latin America a proshyvidential apostolic ~ovement and said they make up one of the most beautiful pages in the history of the Church in the United States

Particularly in light of the Ecumenical Councils constitushytion on the Church he said it iamost consoling to witness

BEFORE YOU BUY-TRY

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault 67 Middle Street Fairhaven

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICE

lJe singled out for praise US seeks by educational means to promote greater understandingdioceses which have sent 178 of Latin Americas problemsdiocesan priests to mission work

in Latin America US religious among the Catholic millions of the United Statescommunities of men and women

which he said are fulfilling the Urllent Demands engagement they have undershy Pope Paul voiced hope that thetaken of sending a tithe of meeting here would producetheir total memership to Latin many practical results parshyAmerica by 1970 US lay vol~ ticularly a wider and more soshy

licitous collaboration of the Refugee Children United States of America with

the Church in Latin AmericaHONG KONG (NC) - Archshy such as urgent needs dem~ndbishop Joseph Caprio apostolic

internuncio to China opened here for refugee children a new $100000 primary school built by Norris H Trippthe Franciscan Missionary Sisshyters of Our Lady of Sorrows SHEET METAL Mother Leola superior of the J TESER Proporder which has its headquarshy RESIDENTIALters in Beaverton Ore attended

INDUSTRIALthe ceremony COMMERCIAL

253 Cedar St New Bedford WY 3-3222 Montie Plumbing amp

Heating Co Inc

Counci~s Effects Years Away

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The universal effects of the Second Vatican Council will not be recshyognized completely for years to come James Francis Cardinal McIntyre told 2200 Holy Name men here in California

It is entirely impossible to estimate at the present time the effects of the council on the thinking of the world the carshydinal said

These effects have penetrated deeply into the spiritual life of all people not only of the Church alone he told a Holy Name Union Communion breakshy

fast One index of its effects is the

attention the council has comshymanded in the press of the world the cardinal said

Names Two Priests To Federal Board

NEW YOItK (NC) - T w bull priests are on the 30-niember board of directors of the new Sex Information and Education Council of the United Stat~

(SIECUS) formed to foster im- proved study and education oa the role of sex

TheYlre Father George Hag- maier CSP of the Paulist In- stitute for Religious Researc~ and Father John L Thomas SJ St Louis (Mo) University soci ologist

The executive director of the council is Dr Mary Steichen Calderone former medical dishyrector of the Planned Parentshyhood Federationand its presishyident is Wallace C Fulton formshyer presidtDt of the National Coundl on Family Relations

Whites Farm Dairy SPECIAL MilK

From Our Own Tested Herd

Acushnet Mass WY 3-4457 bull Special Milk bull Homogenized Vito 0 Milk bull Buttermilk bull Tropicana Orange Juice bull Coffee and Choc Milk bull Eggs - Butter

FIVE CONVENIENT OFFICES- -TOSERVE YOUReg Master Plumber 2930

GEORGE M MONTlE ONE-STOP BANKING Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET FIRSTmiddotMACHImiddotNISTS Fall ~River OS 5-7497 NATIONAL BAN Ilt

OF TAUNTON Norton W MaIn St-Raynham Rte 44-Taunton Main St

North Dighton Spring St-North Easton Main St_ w H RILEY amp SO~J Inc Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

CITIES SERVICE bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnmbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullDISTRIBUTORS

Gasoline i F L COLLINS amp SONS i Fuel and Range INCORPORATED 1937

OILS bull

GENERAL (ONTRAOORS5bullOIL BURNERS

For prompt delivery 5 and ENGINEERS 5amp Day amp Night Service

bull JAMES H COLLINS CE Pres G E BOILER BURNER UNITS bull Registered Civil and Structural Engineer bull

Rural Bottled Gas Se~ Member National Society Professional Engineers

61 COHANNET ST FRANCIS L COLLINS JR Treas = TAUNTON bull THOMAS Ie COLLINS Secy bull

Attteboro - No Attlebor~ middot =ACADEMY BUILDING FALL RIVER MASS Taunto1

-bullbull

bull 12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Humphreymiddot Becker Write Novels of Reminiscence

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Both William Humphreys The Ordways (Knopf

$595) and Stephen Beckers A Covenant with Death (Athshyeneum $450) are novels of reminiscence Both are laid in the Southwest the former in Texas the latter in an unshyidentified state The narrashytor in the Ordway book is for the most part telling what happened to his greatshygrandparents and his grandparshyents in the Civil War period and at the tum of the century In the Becker book the narrator is in his seventies recalling Ii decisive expeshyrience in his oWn life when he was 29 back in 1923 If there are similarities between the works there are also differences and they are very great

Mr Beckers novel is a Book of-the-Month Club middotselection has already been bought by a movie company for a vast sum and unshydoubtedly will be a roaring popshyular success Mr Humphreys novel will probably have far fewer readers and will bring its author far less money But it is by all odds and in every reshyIJPect the better book

Long-Winded It has one fault that of being

long-winded and at times meandering I just wanted to hear the same old things over and over again the narrator -of The Qrdways says at one point It is evidently presumed that the reader has the same desire and that he will not object to lengthy digressions But repetition and extended parenthetical exercises do become tiring even if as in ~is instance the writing is of a high order

1$ The Ordways really a novel in the Strict sense The pook cOritillns a notice reading A portion of Part One in some- what different form first apshypeared in The Saturday Evening Post

It is quite true that the first seetion could stand alone that the second and third sections could form a story by themshyselves and that only the fourth section depends for intelligibility on what has gone before Noneshytheless there is unity here if not the tight construction of the most effective novel

Family Lore Mr Ordway begins by describshy

ing graveyard working days in the hamlet of Mabry near the town of Clarksville in eastern Texas On that day occurring once a year the descendants or suniivors of those burled in the Mabry cemetery come together to set the place to rights

middotAs they do so they rec~ the histories of the dead and thus the family lore is passed on from generation to generation But it is more than family lore which is conveyed the countrys past is reconstructed and the making of the present

The narrator a boy in the 1930s learns of two decisive episodes in his own family One has to do with Thomas and Ella Ordway who were Tennessee people until 1863 Thomas was an infantryman was horribly wounded and disabled in the batshytle of Shiloh and would have died or at least have been lost to his famIly had it not been for his wifes valor The narrative of her recovering him ann bringshying him back to a ~blance of life is harrowing

Journey to Texas But somethinamp more harrowshy

ing is still to come the account of their six months journey in a wagon drawn by oxen from Tennessee to Texas in the hope of beginning a new and better life The reader not only follows this arduous exodus but makes and suffers it and is haunted by it thereafter

This portion of the book is a storY complete in itself dramatshyic pathetic comic packed with lively incidents and colorful characters some heroic some corrupt some rascally all disshytinctive and engaging

Occasionally the side excurshysions pall a bit as in the depicshytion of stump speaking by polit shyical candidates or of life with a small shabby traveling circus Yet each of these sideshows has something to contribute to the pictUre of emerging Texas

Acute Observations

Mr Humphrey writes extremeshyly well a little less fancily as the book progresses but always vivshyidly and with plentymiddot of power for the high moments His peoshyple are nicely differentiated and come memorably to life He has many acute observations and even authentic wisdom to disshypense and this he does neatly His book rings with truth about human nature and is the work of a highly gifted and skillful artist

Mr Beekers A Covenant with Death on the other hand strikes me as contrJved empty and often obnoxiousmiddot Its nub is a legal stickler What is to be dQne with a man who is convicted of m~rger bought +c the gallows there Gki1ls~e hangman and then is cleareu of the first kill shying ~is poser ismiddot put to the 29shy

year~old judge Ben Lewis He solyes Wby niakiIig law and when confronted with this puzshyzler solves as well a key probshylent in his personal life At one and the same time he becomes at last a real judge and a real man

Precise 3udgment

Or so we are asked to believe Lewis says of himself I passed the crisis of adolescence at the ludicrous age of 29 bull bull bull I was swollen with garbage and bittershyness My own ego was monshystrous mainly because I had never done anything for anyone and could justify my own useshylessness only by assuming that the world was not worth my energies This is a precise judgment

The trouble is that the book is swollen with garbage and bitterness as well as sophistry

Young Lewis conversations with his mother for example They irk by their pretentiousness and they disgust with their obscenishyties The youngmiddot judge is thorshyoughly sophomQric and we are asked to credit his sudden leap into maturity We are asked too much

It is with ill grace that the author scorns small town folk for their prurience It is just this to which most of his book apshypeals When he sneers that Soledad City our wholesome middle-class American town would be lined up three deep for good seats at a murder trial with sensational sexual aspects he apparently forgets that the predictably huge sales of his novel will be in large part to people attracted by itligamineaa

3AMES OGARA

PauiSft CElnter Lists Spe(d~er

James OGara editor of Comshyrronweai magazinEl will be guest speaker in the Christian Culture Series at the Paulist Ce-nter in Boston on Wednesday evening Feb 17 on the topic The Role and Future of Cathshyolic Education

Mr OGara has written numshyerous articles for leading Cathshyolic magazines in middotthis country end Europe and has appeared on many religiow television programs of the National Counshycil Of Catholic Men

Rev Andrew Greeley sociolshyogist and author of many books on social subjects will join Mr O-Gara in the discussion

Monsignor Francis 3 Lally editor of the Pilot will be pr0shy

gram moderator

Deplores Agtncies Poverty Appoach

CHICAGO (NC) -- Catholic charity and welfareillgencies and institutions must drop thebusishyness as usual appreach and get into the actual aIl~na of povshyerty a National Conference of Catholic Charities Dleeting here in Illinois was told

The surge of natilmal concern about poverty is one of the most dramatic and compelling moveshyments in our day rather Robshyert Monticello of DEltroit chairshyman of the conferences program committee told assembled social work executives

His views were echoed by Msgr Raymond 3 Gallagher secretary of the comerence who said that personal service to families and individuals among the poor must be a coriunitment each of us makes dailly

CENTIER Paint and Wldlpaper

Dupont PClint

iiP cor Middle St

422 6lcush Ave

~Qc=t~ New Bedford ~ARKING

Rear of Store

ProtEct What You Hav~

McGO~VAN Insurance J~gency

TEL MYrtle ~1middot8231

188 NORTH MAIN $TREET NORTH ATTU8ORO

Beggars for All the Missions

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen DO

rn the mail last week a package arrived containing several hundred printed and self-addressed envelopes from various begshyging organizations in the United States The good woman who sent the package admitted being neither rich nor comfortable and yet she was flooded with appeals She wanted to know how she became a victim of this deluge The answer is that she is on a mailing list There are hundreds of mailing lists for sale in the United States These can be bought for various amounts depending on the number and quality of the names listed The good woman who wrote us was on at least one of these lists

Never before has it been brought home to us with Such impact how swamped our faithful are with appeals It grieves DB

that we too are beggars but we find some consolation in the fact that the Holy Fathers Society for the Propagation of the Faith has never used such mailing lists

This incident highlightsmiddot an urgent need that the Vatican Council must recognize that of co-ordinating appeals for all these really worthwhile causes especially those of misshysionaries Pius XI said that the method by which each missionary group solicited only for itself did not provide an even distribution of help Some can barely survive others have investments in Wall Street How to know who out of the hundreds who beg are most deservng is not only difficult but almost impossible

We have never liked begging In fact there is too much inshysistence on money in the Church tOday We would like to be unshackled from our tin cup and not add to this confusion But this is our duty Why 1 Because the Holy Father has asked us to be his beggars in the United States for -all the missions of tlie world 2 Becanse it is the glory of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith not to helf) one order or society of the world but the entire world (As a matter of fact 88middot per cent of the appeals in the above-mentioned package received soDie aid from The Society for the Propagation of the Faith) 3 Because being under the direction of the Holy Father The Society for the Propagation of the Faith does not invest any of yoUrmiddot alms Every eent Is distributed by the Holy Father each year The world Is too poor So fOldve us

Oh yes the lady who sent us the package wrote I could not keep 240 missionary appeals because I have not the money Since The -Society for the Propagation of the Faith aids all I send the Holy Father my $100 to be divi4ed as he sees fit

GOD LOVE YOU to Anoafor $5 Here Is Diy poeen valeiI- Une for the poor bullbullbull toMLA for $78 This is whist l diel Ilot spend on eigarettes Somehow I cannot enjoy them auYmore knowing that today 10000 people riD die of ~rntionmiddot

-

Think ahead to Valentines day and order a GOD LOVE YOU medal In classic Florentine gold finish or pure sterling silver this lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of the World is one you would be proud to give or delighted to receive Designed by the world-renouned jeweler Harry Winston and blessed by Bishop Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal may be obtained by sending your request and corresponding offering to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001

$ 2 small sterling silyershy $ 3 small 10k gold filled $ 5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut 01lt ft1Is colUIDn pin your sacrifice to it and maD It te Most Rev Fulton 3 Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York New York 10001 or to your Diocesan Director

Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 368 North Main Street

Fall River Massachusetts

791 PurcIaase Street Betweea

WIUIam bull UnI_ S_

NEW BEDFORD

FIVE CENTS SAVINGS BANK

WE HAVE PLENTY OF MONEY FOR HOME LOANS

If youre buying or building -Ioolc to us CONVENTIONAL GI - FH~ FINANCING

Ca on us anytime aDd talk over your plans

Fathers andmiddot Daughters Will Twirl At Annual Sucordium-Sponsored Hop at SHA Fan River

Dads and daughters win twirl at the annual fathep daughter dance at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River Its scheduled fltgtr 8 tomorrow night in the academy gymshynatorium and is sponsored by the moms and dads and daughters-members of the

SHA Fall River and her team very active Sucordium Club marked its first league debateHomemaker of the year at this season by defeating Case

Holy Family High in New Dartmouth Taunton and PreshyBedford as a result of the annushy vost al Homemaker of Tomorrow test Coyle High was host for a taken by thousands of girls novice tournament of two rounds across the nation is Christian with nine schools competing last Saulnier Shes National Honor weekend and the varsity team Society treasurer and copy edshy last week won three of four iJtor of By Fy Spy the school matches over Bishop Stang paper Bishop Stang was host to Narshy

At Dominican Academy in Fan ragansett League debate last River the top homemaker is week with 12 schools representshyJulia Melvin Senior A president ed each by four man teams Repshysodality vice-prefect and student resenting Stang were John council vice-president Another Golenski Michael Hogan Thomshyfeather in Julias cap is that as Keary and Myles Tillotson shes to represent her school at At the same meeting Bishop the state capitol on Student Feehan was represented by Government Day Francis Detellis Kateri Detellis

Christine Julia and an other Roger Watts and Raymond StafshyDiocesan school winners in the ford They won one debate out homemaker contest are now eli shy of four gible for consideration as state Current Affairs Contest winners Themiddot states highestshy Many Diocesan schools partici shyranking girl will receive a $1500 pated in a current affairs conshyscholarship and will tour Washshy test sponsored by a weekly news ington and New York City this magazine and among top scorers Spring From the state finalists were Janet Gendreau Moniquewill be chosen national winners Boulay and Muriel Raiche at in the homemaking contest and Jesus-Mary and Paula Powersthese girls will have their scholshy Susan Penrose and Mary Kellyarship grants substantially illshy at SIlA Fall River creased Also in the spotlight is 1anice

Benoit of SHA Fall River whosGrac1aatlOIl GOWIl8

received honorable mention for rrs snowy outside but thoughts the Bishop Connolly award preshy

of the seniors at Mt St Mary sented annually to the DioceseAcademy in Fall River are Oft outstanding girl athletethe days of June Theyre curshy Yearbook pictures for Coylerently selecting g r a d u at i 0 Il juniors sophomores and freshshygowns and are making a critical men have been safely taken so survey of ofterings from several another milestone is passed OIl area stores the road to publication

And National Bonot- Society Dominican Academy juniopsmembers have been busy at Sashy and seniors will make a closedcred Hearts Fall River Theyve retreat at the Cenacle Conventwritten to all accredited colleges ill Brighton during their Februshyin the US requesting inforshy ary vacation while the annualmation on admission requireshy school retreat is in progressments and availability of finanshy hOW at Bishop Stangcial aid The gathered informashy The program includes dallytion will augment the guidanee Mass Benediction and confershyfile in the school library ences and retreat masters are

Sevenmiddot new clubs have beeR Rev John OBrien SSCCmiddot andorganized at Tauntons Coyle Rev Andrew Jahn SSCCHigh School They are French An unusual auction was a feashySpanish Stamp and Coin Pep ture of a dance sponsored lastEnglish Literature Chess and weekend by Feehan seniors forPhotography Something theremiddot all their fellow students Eachfor everyone faculty member donated a prize

Four Dominican Academy stushy for the auction including suchdents have passed 120 word tests valuable items as a pass excusingin Gregg shorthand and two a student from detention pershyhave passed 100 word tests On mission to omit a book from anthe bowling scene at DA high outside reading list and a driy scorers include Susan Pacheco ing passAnne Marie FoIster Colleen Auctionmiddot proceeds benefited bullDesrosiers and Patricia Od) shy performance of Leave It tonecky Jane to be produced by the

The junior prom at Bishop Feehan Dramatics Club SundayFeehan High in Attleboro has and Monday Feb 14 and 15been set for Tuesday night April Jeannine Dumont senior class20 In charge ofmiddot arrangements secretary and middotlssistant editor of are Robert Bedard and Carol the school paper at Holy FamilyMiller while committees are al shy High has been accepted at Bosshyready at work on decorations ton College as have classmates e n t e r t a i n men t refreshshy Maureen OBrien Christine Ponshyments tickets and that unher ichtera and John AylwardaIded but all-important chore of Mother McAuley Guild at Mtclean-up St Mary Academy will hold its

annual calendar party WednesshyDebaiioi- Prcmt day night Feb 10 EntertainshyIn the indoor days of Winter ment will reprelC~t each monthdebating holds an honored spot of the year and the decoratedamong extra-curricular activishycakes willbe ~oor prizesties at Diocesan schools At Preshy Class -laeement vost in Fall River the debate

THE ANCHOR-- 13 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Churchmen Favor Johnson School Aid Program

WASHINGTON (NC) shyCatholic and Protestant spokesmen applauded Presishydent Johnsons school aid proposal in a placid Congresshysional bearing where the on~ disagreement came over mi~

technical questions The release from the charged

atmosphere of past hearings w noted all around

A Catholic spokesman smilin~

ly commented that it was a relief not to fear getting out of the

Vour nearescmall box i$ Q Firsf Ilfderal branch office that open 24 hours $ day to make $(lving easy for you No traffic nO parking no leather problem~

Withdrawals ate just as implt taY~ngs paymencS

bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull r fRlE o~middottymiddotmiddot ~ ubullbullh coupon 7bullbull~ trti 0middot

team was victorious over Mt St Marys and Bishop Stang in Narshyragansett League debate but lost to SHA Fall River The varisity also met Coyle during the past week

Mt st Marys debate record stands at 2-2 with Anne Browshynell Linda Mello Susan Jenkinshyson and Nancy Curran defending their school in Narragansett

Tomorrows the day of reckonshying at SHA Fall River Not only will report cards be distributed but a list of all seniorsand their placement in middottheir class for the past four years will be published

Fifteen seniors It DA partici shypated in a French Listening Comprehension Test on Tuesday This supplementary test is ofshyfered by the eollege entrance

PREVOST SCHOLARS High scorers in National Merit Scholarship Examinations at Prevost High School Fall River are Gerard Gltgtu~et left and Paul Nowak

tests in addition to the French Written exams come in March

Also at Feehan where report cards will come tomorrow high honors will be achieved by those with an average of 90 or better honors by those earning 85 or better and honorable mention by those with grades of 80 01 better

Bishop Stang mathematiciana placed first ill the Notre Dame Math Meet held last week at Cardinal Cushing High in South Boston Eighteen schools com~

peted and Stang won by n points Responsible for the vieshytory were John Keavy Paul Roy John De Ciccio Raymond Desrosiers and Alan Roskiewiez Top individual scorer was John DeCiccio

Best Girl Athlete Senior Nancy Vogel of Bishop Stang High School received the Bishop Connolly Award for the best girl athlete of Fall River area Diocesan high schools at a ceremony held last night at Whites restaurant Nancy as shining a star schoshylastically as athletically plays hockey basketball and volley~ ball at the North Dartmouth school She will be the first reshycipient of what is to become an

Influence Declining MADRID (NC)-Castroist inshy

fluence among young people in Latin Ameriea has declined the past two years Luis Garcia Arishyas professor of international law at the University of Saragossa here in Spain said on his return from a tour of Latin America Thursday Feb 1amp

SCHOOL Mainte~ance suppr~

SWEEPERS SOAPS DISINFECTANTS

FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

DAHILL CO 1886 PURCHASE STREET

annual award made by the FaD River Clover Club Also honored at last nights dinner-dance WBI Coach Carlin Lynch of 11M Stang Spartans

Forty Hours devotion was celshyebrated for the first time at Bishop Feehan high scbool starting Sunday and ending Tuesday Seniors Eileen Pashyquette Mary Duffy Nancy Clegg and Susall Ouelle~te aided Sister Mary Kateri of Feehan home economics department III making a cope and humeral veil used for the first time at the ceremonies

And Feehanites celebrated terms end by viewing A Raisin in the Sun

bullbullbullbullbullbull

hearing room alive The major Protestant spokesmen described the bill as an instrument of recshyonciliation Con g res smiddotm e a praised the compromises they saw being made by all sid~

church groups and educators -The President has proposed bull

$12 billion program to improve elementary and secondary schooling from poverty-strickea families

A total of $1 billion wouldge to public school districts in lowshyincome areas Additionally the proposal would spend $100 milshylion for textbooks for all school children and school libraries and another $100 million to create bull system of public-priva~commushynity educational centers to offer cultural enrichment and specitl eourses to all school ehildren

Pittsburgh School Enroll~ent Down

PITSBURGH (NC) - Enroll shyment in the Pittsburgh diocellMl Catholic school system has dro~ ped by 40 pupils Msgr John B McDowell superintendent ball reported

The monsignor said the sliglll drop has been preceded by fo_ years of leveling oft in enrol) ment figures because of enforeet gradual cuts in class size

Since 1960 he said there _ been an increase of only 24 pushypils in the total number of stushydents Elementary and seconda schools last June tallied 129531 pupils a drop of 40 he said

bullbullbullFREEKI _forbullbull~to bull ~-~----- shy _ StampMo _ middot----1

City_middot bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbulliibullbullbullbullbullbullbull WE pAY POSTAGa

(tree po5t-pald~Clddd i-velop ady to mall

FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND lOAN ASSOCIATION

OF FALL RIVER Home OHice 1 North Main St Fall River

Somerset OHice 149 GAR Highway Rte 6 League bouts The team meets exam board and consists of Both Offices Open Friday Evenings until INEW BEDFORDBishop Cassidy of TauntOn Wedshy questions and answers concernshy Sonterset Drive-In Window Open Mon-Thurs til 4 nesday Feb 10 ing subject matter on tape At WY 3-3786 Susan Nunes heads debate 111amp Feeha aiYdentll 1ook Germaa

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Stresses ilroad beep Gulf Between Two Generafions

By John J Kane Ph D What is your opinion of secretive sons and daughters

()f today Our married son and daughter never tell us anyshything Friends and strangers knew they bought a new home before we did My daughters husband knows all the ansshywers and wants no advice from anyone My son is afraid of his wife and she makes all decisions They ask us to visit but hurt our feelshyings when we do by what they say We were raised to reshyspect our elders and ask their advice

You r letter Jean does pose some justifiable complaints But it also seems to make some unshyreasonable deshy

mands Furthershymore amusingshy1y enough you conclude that you were reared to respect your elders and intimate your chil shydren werent If so whom can you blame

I dont know the reason why your children failed to inform you of their intentions to purshyehase a home But I do have some suspicions Do you have a tendency to be critical about what they buy Sometimes parshyents do

Tremendous Inflation Y-oungsters and parents both

make a certain type of mistake when it comes to purchasing of such things as homes cars or expensive appliances So m e young marrieds try to begin at a level their parents only achieved after 10 or 15 years of married life

But some parents do not seem to realize that inflation has been tremendous in the last 20 years When they hear a son or daughshyter is about to buy it home for 20 or 25 thousand dollars they are horrified They remember they paid perhaps 6 8 or 10

thousand dollars when they bought

They also forget credit is a bit easier than in the past that F BA and even the GI Bill help young people today and they may not even have existed when they were shopping for a house Longer te~ mortgages are possible today and lower down payments These of course do mean more interest

Coinmon CourteSY In other words parents should

Dot use the yardstick of economshyic conditions when they were young for the youth of today When they state perhaps with heated emphasis Why your father and I paid 10 thousand for a home the children are understandably irritated

But once having made their decisions com m 0 n courtesy would seem to demand tpat parshyents be told before strangers or at least as soon as friends Your sense -of hurt feelings here is quite understandable

Your complaint that your sons wife makes all the decisions may be true If so I agree that you have reared a Milquetoast But

is it true Are you actually cershytain or are you imagining someshything Are you really sayingshyand I frankly fear youare-that your son listens to his wife more than he listens to you

Mother-in-Law Role Being a mother-in-law is not

an easy role in Anierican soClshyety and many of the stupid

at least not if you wish to be a successful parent

Because most parents do love their children they are eager to help them They feel that their years of experience give them an advantage and this advantage they would extend to their chil shydren

At times this is true At times it is not The gulf between genshyerations is broad and deep Life has changed greatly in the space of one generation and the bench marks of the past may be unshysuitable today There are certain areas of living in which children may have better ideas than their parents Be prepared to admit as much

But within those areas where the maturity and experience of parents can be helpful advice can be given when not reshyquested only indirectly and cautiously Young marrieds misshyconstrue it as an effort to domshyinate which they reject Pershyhaps you can recall when you too felt this way

But it is indeed sad if they hurt your feelings when you do visit them You have not enshylarged on this so it is impossible to determine just what is said or done that annoys you Assuming you are making a correct judgshyment it is at the very least a breach of hospitality

Many of the inter-generational and in-laws problems of today are the result of social changes As one grows older it is less and less easy to change to adopt ways of doing and thinkshying After all if one succeeded under one system there is little motivation to alter it

Life Easier But conditions have changed

and to paraphrase a commercial this is the Pepsi generationbull Today boys and girls get married even wher the boy is unemshyployed This is scarcely advisable but somemake it Boys marry while still in college and their wives work to help put them through This would have been unthinkable 40 years ago

One of the really amazing changes is the use of long term credit The proud boast of years ago was that one didnt owe any money If you said this today youngsters would view you with open amazement and quietly conclude your credit was no good

No doubt some of this is overshydone and can bring about tragic results But if used intelligently it can make life somewhat easier perhaps more pleasant than in the past

These are only a few of the changes that could be listed a complete litany of them would be impossible Now this doesnt mean that parents are old fogeys that their counsel is useshyless It does mean that they must try tomiddot understand their married children better than some do

And incidentally because of these sweeping changes it is more difficult than it was But it isnt impossible an4 when donepays off in much better relationships

Anti-Smut Effort NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Loushy

isiana Knights of Columbus have jokes ]lake it even more diffi- launched a public information cult But parents after having campaign to combat what one reared their children to the best official t e r m e d indifference of their ability must let them go stemming from lack of knowlshyon their own You cannot keep edge about the growing traffic them tied to your apron strings in obscene literature

PRINCE OF THE CHURCH Americas new cardin~l recelyes congratulations from an old friend as Archbishop Patrlck A OBoyle of Washington felicitatesmiddot Lawrence Cardmal Shehan Archbishop of Baltimore on his elevation to the College of Cardinals by Pope Paul vi NC Photo

~Glassand Wire Tiny Foulr-Bell Chime in Bay State Church

Producing Soundof Big Heavy Metal WALTHAM (N C) - The string-shaped length of glass

church-bell of the future may which may be up to a foot i~ bE a ht~le thing of glass and length and a tiny hammer to Wire weighm~ about two grams produce the proper vibrations but reproducmg the sound of These vibrations are converted cast-metal constructions weigh- into an electronic signal which ing more than a ton ~asses through an amplifier is

j Pope Emphasizes Import of Hymns

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul in an audience for more han 1000 priests participating in a convention on pastoral lit shyurgy emphasized the key role of hymn-singing in the liturgy

We are not in a hurry he said

We must raise up a new peoshyple who learn to pray as the Church now prescribes

One of the prescriptions which I believe to be most influshyential and most necessary is singing

The Pope said that hymns inshycluding popular ones lift the soul and nourish it with religious sentiments

Illinois School Joins Expanding ETV Plan

MORTON (NC)-A parochial school here in Dlinois has served as pilot school in a historic edushyeational television experiment

Blessed Sacrament School reshyceived the first experimental transmission of v ide 0 tap e d courses in color from a high freshyquency monidirectional terminal

A 120-foot tower atop the school received signals from a tower on the Bradley University campus 10 miles away Bradley Coordinator Philip Weinburg said he expects an ETV program to be operational in the 1965-66 school year

The Catholic school tower will remain as a permanent inshystallation to serve both as an ETV booster station with a 15shymile radius and a receiver for educational programs in the school next Fall

Changes in Mass EDINBURGH (NC) - Scots

Catholics are busily preparing for the introduction of English and Gaelic into the Mass on March 1 the first Sunday in Lent

bull HYANNIS bull HARWICH PORT bull ~olri YAAMOUTH

--- shy

funeral Service

DoANmiddotSpoundALmiddotAMtS INCOIlPOItATtiD

Glassblower Gerhard B Finkshybeiner of Brandeis University here in Mass lpoundlas installed for the first time in the United States a set of the tiny bells in St Susanna church in Dedham named for the t~tula church in ~ome of ~ostOIl s Richardmiddot Carshydinal Cushmg

Finkbeiner whose small glass bells already al~e making kingshysiZed sounds in 10 churches in Germany and ]~rance has proshyduced a four-bell chime for the Dedham church encased in a metal cabinet only two feet long and weighing a mere 40 pounds In cast metal equivalent sotmdshyproducers would occupy a goodshysized belfry and weigh aboUt 10000 pounds Finbeiner envishysions his discovery as destined for churches which cannot afford regular bells

The new-style bells look like nothing so much as the fa~iliar vacuum tubes found in any nonshytransistor radio but they proshyduce a never-changing high quality sound which is fully comparable to the metallic clang

of the old-fashioned bell shy

Inside each vacuum tube in Finkbeiners system there is a

MON~~GHAN

ACCEF-TANCE CQIRP

JHOMAS F MONAGHAN JR

Trecisurer

142 SECOND STREET

OSborne 5-7856

FALL RIVER

Increased 100000 times and comes out through a ~pecial speaker whose sound most exshyperts cannot tell from a metallic ben

The sound of a heavy metallic bell is one of the most complex of all musical sounds according to Finbeiner but he has been able to dUJlicat~ it through parshyallel ~Udi~ in glassblowing electronics and ~acuum techshyniques

BARDAHL MAKES YOUR

CAR RUN BEnER tAt New Car Dealers and Service Stations

Everywhere -I

With Safety at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK

115 WILLIAM sr NEW BEDFORD MASS

WEBB OIL (OMPANY TEXACO FUEL ()IL$

DOMESTIC amp HFAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS

Sales~SetYce-lnstaDtjon MAINO~FICE~JO ~RFEEmiddot sTREETmiddotfAll ~IVER

Phone OS 5-7484

11

1S --

Views of New Ho~Y TrinitYmiddotmiddot-C-h-~-rc-h-I-W-e-s-t-~-I-a-li-i-ac-h-middotmiddotmiddotI

-

I I

16 THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

Says Pope John Left Cha lIenge To Catholicsmiddot

NORTH PALM BEACH (NC) - Pope John XXIII left Catholics with a chalshylenge to meet the world Bishop Coleman F Carroll of Miami said here

Bishop Carroll said Pope John dared Catholics to meet other Christians and non-Christians and to discuss our common problems and seek by discussion a solution to these problems

This challenge cannot be met by the pope alone or by the bishops and priests alone he said It must be met by all inshycluding-indeed especially-the laymen

-He said laymen must be propshy

erly prepared for this task through study training and spirshyitual preparation In this conshynection he called a closed spirshyitual retreat an absolute must for the lay person

Bishop Carroll spoke to memshybers of the Our Lady of Florida Retreat League at a dinner in his honor at the Passionist Retreat House here

PrelWtes Sc~~dlJ(e

US~ ~f VeCrulall ROME (NC)-The Italian lanshy

guage will be used in Mass throughout I t a I y beginning March 7 the first Sunday of Lent

The Italian Bishops Commitshytee on the Liturgy in announcshying the change specified that the Italian language would be used in Masses on Sundays and holy days and at all Masses attended by a substantial number of the faithful

The parts of the Mass to be said in Italian are the following the Epistle Gospel acclamations salutations and dialogues (inshycluding the prayers at the foot of the altar and the dialogue preshyceding the Preface) the Kyrie Gloria Creed Sanctus-Benedicshytus and Agnus Dei themiddot Patermiddot Noster with its introduction and the formula for the Communion

Peloquin Chorale Televises Hymns

NEW YORK (NC)-Hymns -Yesterday and Today featurshyipg C Alexander Peloquin and members of his popular Peloquin Chorale will be telecast Feb 14 from 1 to 130 PM EST over the ABC-TV network

The latest program in the seshyries Directions 65 - a Catholic Perspective produced by the National Council of Catholic Men and the ABC public affairs department was written by Peloquin and traces the develshyopment of hymnody from the Te Deum of the 4th century to the works of contemporary composers

Stresses Doctrines Substance Remains

DAVENPORT (NC) -Bishop Ralph L Hayes of Davenport adshymonished an interfaith meeting here in Iowa against expecting changes in Catholic doctrine

The (Second Vatican) Counshycil may change the manner of presentation of doctrines but not their substance he said pointing to the liturgy as an exshyample of such a change

We must admit bigotry and misunderstanding on both sides But followers of Christ have Scripture devotion to the Holy Spirit and devotion to Christ in common Why not talk about the things on which we agree he asked

Sisters of Mercy General Asks Personal ST LOUIS (NC)-Weve got

to develop the Sister in depth Thats what the times call for said the mother general of the 7300 American nuns of the Sisshyters of Mercy of the Union

Mother Mary Regina Cunningshyham ending her first six-year term as the head of the widely known teaching social work and hospital nuns was talking about what the Sisters of Mercy are doing to bring themselves fully up to the times

In St Louis Mo to meet with the superiors of the nine Mercy provinces Mother Regina talked about the main vehicle she and her colleagues hope will achieve the transformation

This is the year in the commu- nity for chapter meetings and general meetings of the nuns in

each of the provinces climaxed by a meeting of the general chapter at the orders mothershyhoupse in Bethesda Md she said

Changing Church Results will be ~olnown in Aushy

gust and Mother Regina hopes that they will show her commushynity to be in line with the mind of a rapidly changing Church in the midst of an even faster movshying world

She predicted tlat the chapshyters would have some surprises not only in the deisions but in the way they are organized to give a more representative view of all the Sisters in the order

If one overall phrase had to sum up what Mother Regina and the other planners are looking for in the Mere chapters it

would be personal responsibil shyity she said

A Sister has to have the reshysponsibility to make judgments for herself said the mother general Her superiors have to give her the responsibility to achieve her own role She has to make the decision to take the risks

~And then of course be ready to pay the price for her decishysion said Mother Regina

In Updated Sense Weve gone beyond the day

Papal Count BALTIMORE (NC) - Thomas

W Pangborn a Hagerstown (Md) industrialist and philanshythropist has been named a papal count by Pope Paul

Responsibility of always being safe Some peoshyple want to be sure to have the answer before they move But sometimes that meant they never moved at all she observed

Developing a Sister in depth will mean a lot of things espeshycially an updated sense of her apostolate and the way she works at it For the Mercy nuns in the U S Central and Latin America and in the West Indies it will mean a lot of littie things Mother Regina hinted

Changes might relax regulashytions about home visits dining with others attending night meetings and cultural affairs or traveling with companions

Mother Regina said that we have to plan for more contact with the laity and for more edushycation to understand each other shy

a

lYonderful Meatsbullbullbull Anoth~r Big Reasll Why zltI ~III I bull STAYING ~c~ Z ~

with FIRST NATIONAL it

l~middotmiddotsowll ItmiddotI

IIIIr-All vlu

FACE RUMIP Fine Grained Texture shy

Heavy Steer Beef for Hearty Eating LB

The Perfect Roast for large Families

ROASTL854CAITCHBONE Same [ow Self-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vidnily rNe Reserve Iie Right to Limit Quantitietl

-

I The Parish Parade I SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO bull

Holy Name Society members will receive corporate Communshyion at 7 oclock Mass Sunday morning Feb 14 The unit plans a Valentine dance and supper from 7 to 12 Saturday night Feb 13 in the Elks auditorium on Church Street SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs John DeBettenshycourt president Mrs Arnold Muckerheid vice-president Mrs Nelson J DeBettencourt Jr treasurer Mrs Charles Davis secretary

For the Holy Name SOGiety James Ferreira is president supshyported by Freeman Willoughby vice-president Alfred Metell treasurer Anthony Rebello secshyretary The units next meeting will be Sunday Feb 14 at the parish hall OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a Masquerade Ball Friday night Feb 26 at Wimpys resshytaurantr Osterville Mrs James E Murphy is chairman ST JOSEPH ATTLEBORO

The CYO will sponsor a dance Saturday night Feb 20 with enshytertainment by Mickey Chagnon and the Rivieras Chairmen for the unit include Carolee Desshyrochers membership Judy Roy spiritual Claudette Ouimet culshytural Sue Reynolds publicity Claire Piette social Don Fisher recreational BLESSED SACRAMENT FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will present a fashion fair at an open meeting to be held Wedshynesday Feb 17 in the church basement Planned for April are a rummage sale and a whist party ST JEAN BAPTISTE FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women announces a ham and basket whist party for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 in the lower church hall In charge will be Mrs Napoleon Picard and Mrs Eugene Gagnon aided by a large committee ST STANISLAUS FALL RIVER

Civics Club members of the parochial school will deliver pastry to nursing home patients for Valentines Day Other projshyects include collecting Christmas cards for missionaries and shovshyelling snow to augment the club treasury OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION OSTERVILLE

Mr and Mrs William Dacey will be co-chairmen of a preshyLenten dance to be held Friday night Feb 19 at Wimpys restaushyrant in Osterville under sponsorshyship of the Womens Guild The program will include a buffef and dancing from 9 to to ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

Mrs Lionel J Dulude presishydent of the Sacred Hearts Assoshyciation requests all ladies of the unit who have First Friday Adoration to check their asshysigned times in order that the full quota will be present at all hours

Corporate Communion for members will be held on Sunday at the 815 Mass and the regushylar meeting will be held the same evening at 730 in the Church Hall

The Penny Sale scheduled for Feb 20 will be discussed atthis meeting ST JOSEPH FALLRIVER

The annual mid-Winter Gala is set for Saturday night at Venus de Milo restaurant A buffet supper from 630 to 830 will be followed by dancing a parish reunion and awarding of prizes

ST JOAN OF ARC ORLEANS

Forthcoming events for the Womens Guild include penny sales this month April and next November socials in March and June and Summer fairs in July and August A ham and bean supper is ~cheduled for May ST JAMES NEW BEDFORD

middotMsgr Noon Circle plans a potluck supper for members and their guests Saturday night Feb 20 OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION NEW BEDFORD

Holy Name Society officers inshyclude Severo G Alfama presishydent James P Gonsalves and John Monteiro vice-president Antonio Rocha treasurer John Soares secretary ST GEORGE WESTPORT

Womens Guild members will form the congregation at the TV Mass to be broadcast on channel 6 at 10 Sunday morning Feb 7 Participants will meet at the parish school hall at 9 to travel to New Bedford ST JOHN BAPTIST NEW BEDFORD

Parishioners will hold their annual filhoz supper and penny sale at 530 Sunday evening Feb 21 in the cllurch hall Tickshyets are available from officers of church organizations or at the rectory In charge are Gilbert Brazil and George Ladino ST PIUS X SOUTH YARMOUTH

The WQmens Guild will hold a past presidents dinner Monshyday night March 1 at Armands restaurant_ Hyannis NOTRE DAME FALL RIVER

Cubs and Boy Scouts will at shytend a Communion breakfast Sunday Feb 7 following 815 Mass A blue and gold banquet for the Cubs is set for Sunday Feb 28 in the parish hall with Roger Labonte in charge of arshyrangements

The Council of Catholic Women will hold its installation banquet Monday Feb 22 at Whites resshytaurant under the chairmanship of Mrs Paul Ilmais To be seated are Miss Helena Dumont president Mrs Cecile Barnabe frst vice-president Mrs Gershyard DextTaze second vice-presishydent Mrs Richard Perry treasshyurer Mrs Romeo Parent reshycording secretary Mrs Roger Langlois corresponding secreshytary

The third in a series of cake sales will follow all Masses this Sunday in the lower church Mrs Ferdnand Letendre chairman will be aided by Mrs Robert Phenixco-chairman Cakes can be brought to the lower church from 4 to 5 and 630 to s Saturshyday afternoon and evening SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a potluck supper for members at 630 Tuesday night Feb 16 in the parish hall A silent auction will follow the slipper In charge of arrangeshyments is Mrs Mary Pereira chairman aided by Mrs Mary Gagne The council announces a malassada supper and penny sale open to the public from 530 to 7 Sunday night Feb 21 also in the hall Tickets will be available at the door and chairshymen are Mrs Mary Cabeceiras and Mrs Albina Quintill

A regular meeting is set for 730 Friday night Feb 12 in the hall Installation of officers is planned for later in the month ST MATIDEU FALL RIVER 4

A Valentine whist is planned by the Council of Catholic Womshyen for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 at the parish hall Mrs Raymond Antaya is chairman

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan RIver-Thurs Feb 1l96I rr

GIVE VIEWS ON AID Presenting views on federal aid to education to the House Education sub-committee was this panel representing the Catholic school system left to right Msgr William E McManus Chicago superintendent of the largest Ctholic school system in the country Mr Edward McArdle Washington DC who focussed on the parents view of the childs needs as the father of seven children Msgr Freclerck G Hochwalt Director Education Department NCWC and Msgr John B McDowell sushyperintendent of the Pittsburgh diocesan school system NC Photo

bullSays Church Must Live In Wide World~ Cardinal Hits Ignorance of Our Neighbor

CHICAGO (NC)-An Amerishycan prelate prominent in the Churchs work for Latin Amershyica has told US Catholics there is no excuse for our ignorance of our neighbors the nations of Central and South America

Archbishop Paul L Hallinan of Atlanta chairman of the subshycommittee for inter-American cooperation of the US Bishops Committee for Latin America in a message to the second annual conference of the Catholic IntershyAmerican Cooperation Program SClid the Church today lives in a new world but it must preshypare to live in a wide world

Miles Are Nothing Catholics in tpe United States

with a strong cultural and comshymercial bridge to Europe find Africa a puzzle and Asia an Orshyiental mystery Strangest of all is our ignorance of our own neighbors the nations of Central

E~ual Treatment JERSEY CITY (NC)-Hudson

County parishes here in New Jersey are joining in a countyshywide interfaith appeal seeking pledges of fair housing practices

~T FRANCIS XAVIER IIYANNIS

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a penny sale at 8 Tuesday right Feb 9 in the parish hall A Communion breakfast and fashion show are on the units Spring schedule

ST JOHN BAPTIST CENTRAL VILLAGE

A housewares demonstraticm will follow an open meeting scheduled by the Womens Guild for 8 Thursday night Feb 11 in the church hall In charge of refreshments will be Mrs Matil shyda Shelter Miss Margaret Shay and Miss May Taggart The unit plans a Valentine whist for 3 Saturday night Feb 13 also in the church hall on Main Road Miss Edith Kirby and Mrs Louise Vieira are chairmen ST JOHN POCASSET

The Womens Guild announces a penny sale for Friday Feb 12 Mrs Sprague Spooner will be chairman The units next meetshying will feature slides and a talk by Col Eugene S Clark on the early history of Marthas Vineshyyard It will be held Tuesd~

Feb 16

and South America he deshyclared

The ~rchbishop said 60 years ago there was an excuse-travel communications and cultural knowledge were in their inshylancy But now miles are nothshying since Pope John XXIII brought his message of unity to the world he averred adding

Real Import The CICOP meeting brings

bishops priests and laymen of both hemispheres together for a remarkable in-service training period a healthy learn while you work program We know much of Latin American needs both religious economic and culshytural We are helping in our way to repair these shortcomings But we need even more to share

in this Christian fraternity fIIf background common resources and future hopes Only by free easy association with the repshyresentatives of Latin America can we get the real import

ELECTRICAL Contractors~

~ ~ ~ ~

944 County St ~ New Bedford

ecec~c~ccccee~o

C) LOUlUl~S iiffii~ ~ i middotbull EWrIMA ~- shyg l~

ROMEamp I~-

I SHmNES imiddot ~ OF EUROPE iiI bull ampHOLY LAND ~) C~ 1 bull CATBOLIC PROGRAJ 1965 ~)

ALI~~16 ~I CachoIlcTeI Orrlce ~) c~ WASHINGTON CHICAGOIOMI LONDONI CATHOLtC TRAVEL OFFICE FRM ~------------II -~ Dupont Circle Building WashIngton D C 20036 fali ~ ~ j1ii Please send me your free Illustrated booklet describing in ~ iJl detail the wOrldmiddotcovering pilgrimages

C~ Name iI ~IJ Address ~ C_~ CityIloneState 11 =~~~~~_~_~~_~_ft~ftVw ijrv _ii~middotV

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Teen-agers Outstanding For Prodigal Generosity

By Rev Joseph T McGloin S J Several times in this column Ive had some glowing

words to say about our Mexican neighbors to the south about their friendliness and hospitality- and general likeshyableness And certainly its all true These people busy as they are will go out of their of other peoples is that you canway give you their precious easily give the idea you are sell shytime and attention to see ing all your own countrymen that you enjoy your visit to short And this would be the their country When a Mexican furthest thing from my own says Mi casa es su casa My thoughts house is your Because there is great friendli shyhouse - which ness in our country too - in he invariably varying degrees and manifested

middot does-he means in various ways The Mexican is it F r i end s in general more spontaneous strangers even than we and most of us have to shopkeepshy be approached before we give ers youve never our friendship since an initial II e e n before shyness seems to hold us back will introduce Often enough however this

middotyou to the whole shyness is caused by a national family and inshy superiority complex by a fear vite you to hav~ of not being accepted and by

middotdinner wit h the fear of making fools of ourshymiddot them To put it mildly hospital shy selves in a language we dont ity like this would be impossible know In other words humility to forget or to overlook is an esseatial to friendliness and _ Sometimes you wonder as you hospitality Sometimes we have walk the downtown- streets of it Often we dont CHle of our own cities and as you Hospitable People see pe~ple going their own inshy We Americans are sometimessulated ways if it isnt true that afraid to show our real feelingsas a country we have only a -afraid to show for inst~nce

-head while Mexico has a head our sympathy forthe underdogand a heart We usually make up for t~is

Superiority Complex psychologically by cheering on - This feeling grows on - you the hiss favored side at spe~tator when you visit Mexico and have sports when we should be doingthe misfortunE to encounter the it in the causes of racial justiceAmerican tourist who is bent on and equality of opportunity inshyacting like one It is a crying stead shame that so many Americans We are afraid others usuallyhave to show a superiority com- those very loud others will look

middotplex to those they encounter in down on us if we give public middot other countries seeming to feel support to those who need our that no matter where they go it support the little -people the is not they who are the foreignshy least of Christs and our brethshyers but those they encounter ren

All too often these types seem The fact is though that we to despise the customs and lanshy Americans do have a- heart and guage and even the currency of that once we put aside our sillythe countries they visit apparshy ideas that we are too busy to be ently thinking that anyone can hospitable or that others will understand English if you only look on us as soft and foolish if speak louder and that real we are or that we must not goAmerican money will buy anyshy out of way forour foreign~rs thing even respect because we might make a misshy

Worst of all are those wbo take in speaking their languagebring their aura of racial supeshy -then we can be and are just as riority along with them and hospitable and friendly as anymake little effort to hide it It is peoplein the world undoubtedly true that some of Ideals of Youththis patronizing attitude is partly There are many Americansresponsible (along with Castro~ and fortunately there are gettingeternal vigilance for American to be more who are willing tomistakes and seeming mistakes) stand up publicly and be countedfor the affection with which on the side of right instead ofAmericans are held in some parts - merely clucking in quiet privateof Latin America such as in sympathy There are lots ofPanama Americans who are not jqst

Race Prejudice friendly and hospitable to forshyAnd its tragic that have eigners but who do heroic workwe

to expoFt the most shameful of with the poor and downtrodden our national sins the stupidity and handicapped of their own which is race prejudice We country and their own city as might as well forget in fact well about any good neighbor polshy - Now there are lots of adult icy until we ourselves become Americans of this type But good neighbors when it comes to out-and-out

But even when we are not prodigal generosity it is the snobbish at home we are seldom teens as a rule whohave to be as spontaneous in our friendli shy given first prize ness other peoples The forshy A teen-agel who has not yetas eign students who come to stuay outgrown the honest ideals of at our universities often get youth will give his time and enshylonely and discouraged because ergy unstintingly and with little they have seemingly no friends thought of consequences This

author has instanceThe Negro in his fight for for seen equality (a fight which should kids doing heroic work with the never have been necessary in the very poor and the orphans-notfirst place) very often feels just throwing money into a colshyalone (though decreasingly so) lection box for them but givingwhen even those who know he is them their time and their love getting a raw deal do nothing working with them face to face at least publicly to help him even as Christ did set things right America has a great heart

Which may be one reason the and many Americans are just as Negro American often makes a spontaneous and natural at better ambassador abroad than showing it as any people anyshyother Americans where As a country however

Friendliness Here we still have some distance to But the trouble with extolling go before this sort of generosity

the hospitality and friendlin~ becomes our national image

CHECK COMPARE SAVE

Turkeys 10to11 LIS

Ready-to-Cook 39~ FIR S T Nancy Vogel

daughter of Mr and Mrs SAVE CASH bullbullbull SHOP AampPLeonard J Vogel of Sacred Heart Parish Fall River and a senior at Starg High last night became the first recishypient of the Bishop Connolly award for the outstanding

girl athlete n a Catholic High School The Clover Club of Fall River sponsored the award

Thomas ~Vhalen

In Noviticlte Brother Thomas Whalen son

of Mr and Mrs Thomas Whalen -8 General Cobb St Taunton and a member of the Sacred Heart Parish has received the religshyious habit of the Erothers of the

SMOKED P()RK SHOUlDERS

SUPER-RIGHT SHORT SHANK 6 TO 8 lBS

PICNICS 1829c

CHICKEN LEe or BREAST 33c

QUARTERS l8

SAVE CASH ON THESEHoly Cross at ceremonies conshyducted at St Joseph Novitiate

Valatie NY 6 POUNDS ofi BREAD ONLY 99c Brother John Donoghue CSC

Provincial Superior of the Broshy Whitl Breadp~~~E~ 4 ~6~~~z99c thers of the Holy Cross of the SAVI 20e - REGULAR 59c - 8 INCHEastern Province announced I p 118 8 OZ 39CJANEthat Brother Thomas was one of App I II PARKER IACHthe 14 candidates who is now starting a canonical year of proshy JANI PARKER - SAVlOe REGULAR 9c

bation for the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross bull hB Ck 1 lB 3 OZ 3ftCSpaRIS ar a e EACH i

Following the reception the parents and friends of Brother Thomas were guests at a lunchshyeon at the novitiate

Total Now 430 NEW YORK (NC)-With the

opening of two more parish schools the number of Catholic elementary schools in the New York archdiocese now totals 430

ATWC)OD OIL CO~~PANY

SHEILL HEATIN4 OILS South SeC] Streets Hyannis Tel HY 81

COMPLleTE

Mortgage Service anywhere on Cape Cod

bull RESIDENTIAL bull COMMEI~CIAL

bull CONSTRUCTION bull SEASONAL

Call EX 8-2266

Bass ~iver Savings Bank

SOUTH YARMOUTH Hyannis - Dennis Port

Yarmouth Plaza

Special Donut and Coffee SoleI All THIS weEKI

PLAIN SUGARED CJlNNAMON OR COMBINATION

2 PKGS 4ftltJane Parker Donuts 29cR~~ Of 12

I E 5 ON ON SAVE 4c B~~S SAV 1 c B3~S MILO AND MRLOW COFfil

Eight OClock ~A~ 69c-3 IJ~G 198 RICH FULLmiddotBOOleo

Red Circle CoHee ~A~ 71 c-3 B~G204 VIGOROUS ANO WINEY

lokar Coffe ~A~ 73c-3 B~G210 rice shown In thl ud guiltnteed tlltu Sat Feb

Tobacco products and Items prohibIted by Iaw eKempt from Plaid Stamp Offbullbull amp effective at ALL Aamp Sup Matlcotn thl communll1 and lclnll1

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 2: 02.04.65

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

English Nuns Give Views On Moderniing Habit

LONDON (NC)_uIts better to be 1200 years out of date than 10 years That is the comment of an English nun about the new look in religious habits now being lP-ven a trial in the United States Its chilly tone is representative of the feeling of Sisters here about modernizing the i r dress In addition to beingsubject to the whims of changing fashions habits that follow current stylfS disturb the public image of Sisters said an English Ursuline

Wed never do a thing like that she said of the experimenshytal change initiated by two Urshy

sulines in the U S I think if were Religious we should look like Religious People expect us to

Public Witness Another Sister responding to

a survey by the weekly Catho- lic Herald said of her traditional habit People respect you for it Amon~t the poor you can go places where no one else could

It sets you apart symbolizes the fact you have been consecrated It means you have to bear public Witness and you know you do ~ A Sister of Our Lady of Sion bull And English youthseenfto want

you to look like a nun For the MtJ~ll Ordo moment here the habit iii useshy

ful JnUDAY-St Agatha Yirginand

Martyr III Class Red Mass Proper Gloria no Creed Common Preface Two Votive Masses in honor of the Sacred

Heart of Jesus permitted Gloshyria 2nd CoIl St Agatha Virshygin and Martyr no Creed

Preface of Sacred Heart Toshymorrow is the first Saturday0 this month

SATURDAY-St Titus Bishop and Confessor III Class White Mass proper Gloria 2nd CoIl St Dorothy Virgin and Marshytyr no Creed Common Prefshyace

SUNDAY - V Sunday fter Epiphany II Class Green Mass Proper Gloria Creed Preface of Trinity

MONDAY-St John of Matha Confessor III Class White Mass Proper Gloria no Creed Common Preface

TUESDAY-St Cyril of Alexanshydria Bishop Confessor and Doctor of the Church Mass Proper Gloria 2nd CoIl St Apollonia Virgin and Martyr no Creed Common Preface

WEDNESDAY - St Scholastics Virgin ill Class White Mass

Proper Gloria no Creed Common Preface

THURSDAY-Apparition of the Blessed Virgin M a r y at Lourdes III Class White Mass Proper Gloria no _ Creed Preface of Blessed Virgin

- Worthwhile Books New Bedford Curia of the

Legion of Mary has issued its seasonal listing of worthwhile books including 20 titles of parshyticular Catholic interest Among selections are Unfinished Busishyness by Maisie War4i A Galshylery of Sisters by Kathleen Elgin Jacqueline KennedY by Gardon Hall and Ann Pinchoti and Feast for a W~ek by Solange Hertz Also included are several other biographies novels and books of spiritual reading

FORTY HOURS middotDEvnTION

Feb 7-our Lady of Fatima Swansea

St Mary No Attleboro Our Ladys Haven Fairshy

haven

THE ANCHOR second Class Postage Paid at Fall River

Mass Publlslled even Thursday at 410 ItlgIllaIKl venue Fall River Mass by tile catholic Press of tile Diocese of Fall RIIer Subscrilltion Drlce lIy mall JQStpa- $400 Gel yell

Curia Continued from Page OJi~

bates However the eminent prelate did agree that defects I

and weaknesses were boUnd to develop in such an ancient insti shytution as the Curia Such a fact had been stated publicly by the Pope himself the Cardinal comshymented

Regarding the Council Cardishynal Cicognani urged those workshying in the Curia to cease all polemics about the Council This does more harm than good to the Curia he observed Prudence must govern all contacts with bishops and others connected with the Council He also urged exact observance of the Curias

office hours and an adamant re- Intermiddot~ailh Service Attacfs 2500fusalto accept offers of money ALBUQUERQUE (NC)-Nearshyeven for charitable purposes ly 2500 persons crowded Albushy

The issuance of the letter only qlerques civic auditorium andstrengthened rumors that Pope heard Catholic Protestant andPaul is about to announce reshy Jewish speakers can for common

forms for the Curia at the Feb 22 effort in the area of racial jusshyConsistory tice during the first statewide

interfaith worship service Necrology

FEB 10 Rt Rev John J Kelly 1963

Pastor 5S Peter amp Paul Fall River

FEB 11 Rev John OConnell 1910

Founder St John Evangelist Attleboro

Rev John JSullivan STL 1961 lately Pastor Holy Rosary Fall River

CORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP

SHOPPING CENTER

bull Television bull Furniture Appliances bull Grocery

104 Allen St New Bedford WYman 7-9354

MEN 17 -25

JOIN THE NEW Society 9f Brothers of OurLadyofProvidence

For information write to FATHER MASTER

St Joseph the Worker Novitiate

Warwick Neck R I

declared The religious habit protects you but it also demands a lot more In our particular work making contacts between Christians and Jews we are a sign of the Church Whatever you do the man in the street thinks you are the Church

The same Sister continued But you shouldnt look like a witch We all know religious habits now our changing Our congregation is changing soon

Ordinary Dress A prioress of Olivetan Beneshy

dictine nuns said her community wears ordinary dress in public on the European continent where people stare at the big habit and young people have no respect for nuns

She said further But the whole attitude of English people is different They are more disshycreet Nobody botherS ilbout what anyone else is wearing

It was also the first such sershyvice since Archbistlop James P Davis of Santa -Fe announced last month that his archdiocese

GERALD E

~~cNALLY ~

CONS1rRUCTION CO INC

454 MAIN STR~ET bull SOMERSET MASS

TELEPHONE 675-7992

SHELL Premiu Heating Oils DADSON Oil BURNERS

24-Hou O 8ume SoN Famous Reading HARD COAL

NEW ENGLAND COKE

GLEN OAL amp OIL CO Inc 640 Pleasant Street el WY 6-8271

Bishop Advise~

College Stud~nts CLEVELAND (NC) - Arcti shy

bishop Edward F Hoban Cleveland leminded CatholiC8 planning +) attend non-Cathol11l colleges of their obligation bull safeguard and continue study~ religious and moral principles

Archbishop Hoban said at t~ time of the year many higJa school seniors are applying tit colleges for admission next ~an He said the ideal way of contiampshyuing religious education is ~ attending a Catholic college OR university When for valid reasons a

Catholic student attends a secushylar non-Catholli institution the Qbligation of religious educati~

is more weighty he said ~W

Permit attendance at non-Catboo olic colleges only under the conshyditions of enrollment in the Newman Apojtolate its religioUli a~vities and especially bull

classes in religion Parents as well as students

should ascertain before enro~

ment that a Newman Apostolate program exists on the campua Such information can be obshytained from the dean of tbII

school or from the diocesan ltIishy ~tor of the Newman Apci~ ate he said

) -

DISPLAYS PAPAL GIFTS Father Guy Ferrari OSB of St Meinrad Archabbey St Meinrad Ind is curator of the Vatican Librarys copy of the Princeton Index of Christian Art Here Father Guy displays three gifts given to Pope Paul during his 1964 pilgrimage to the Holy Land

~~a~e~hi~t1o~n~~cc~v~~eo~t~a~~~cr i=~i~ the milennial coin-cross commemorating foundation of the Greek Orthodox monastery of Mount Athos presented by the Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras of Constantinople and Jordanian King Husseins gift of two ancient clay lamps the larger of which was used inJerusalem 1900 - years before Chtist NC Photo r~T

~ews was joining the New Mexico Council of Churches Archbishop Davis and New Mexico Gov Jack M Campbell attended the service

Described as a Scripture sershyvice on the dignity of all men the gathering was sponsored by the Archbishops Interracial Council and by the Christian Social Action Commission of the New Mexico Council of Churches

~ ~

~~ Cii~ ~~ eissect $~D ~Il bull f~ ~~~

~ ~ ~

The - ~ Third ~~DlmiddotmenSlmiddotO-n~ _

0f the

The third dimension 01 the Ne1oI Is the depth and fullness this new paper adds to the dally aM weekIJ news of the world-judging tshy~

week events againsamp the eterllll Uuths of the Calholic lailh I Your daily newspapers presetd

fleWS with one faco-a bare oCte unexplained facade 01 facts ancl ligures-usually relieved only by Wi cularized opinions and ossipyfeashy Cures i Weekly newsmagazines give somt height and widlh to the worlds newt i -adding more information to tilt ~ daily development 01 the news gj

log some coloralion CO the world weekly hislory

But only your Catholic newspapef -hl8 ntwspaper and 119 others like

Iii across the U S A and Canadashylive fullness richness and deplh

die weekly history ot-the world Icaslins the news of the week againtl tlte true hlstol) of the world and the CbUrlh

This is the perfect time - durl~etlthollc Press Month-to urge )toilt~ I flelghbors to read dlel dioc~

paper II you need more infor~ lIoa or sample coplu just conilt1 ~ ai he address belOW oj

SUBSCRIBE to

_ The ANCHOR

Sunday Feb 14

IPMEMBER CATHOLIC PRESS ASSOCIATION

f) pend on hibull bullmllot IIln 01 0 0( 4mon

ltCohCllic pvblicolJonsl _

IRUARY bull 1u

6IHOLIC PRIJ~_ MO=shy

I

3 Justice and Love Motivate Whites In Racial Work

PATERSON (NC) - An interracial cause worker has summed up the Negro atti shy

tude toward the civil rights situation like this-you asked my grandmother to wait You asked my mother to wait And Im afraid that If I wait youll be asking my daughter to wait

Arthur D Wright executive director of the New York Cathshyolic Interracial Council told the organizational meeting of the Paterson Cat hoi i c Interracial Council here in New Jersey there is a great need to enlist Catholics to promote a more

positive social climate regarding race relations He also said it is necessary for whites to reevalshy

nate their role as the Negro makes progress

He observed that now whites participating in the civil rights struggle are motivated more highly than Negroes The Negro he emphasized is compelled to work something out of his sysshytem to realize that his status as a second-claSs citizens is not acshyceptable WhIte men active in the movement he pointed out

are motivated by principles of justice and love

Wright expressed particular admiration for the zeal of the Tounglr generation

Bishop to Offer Brothers Mass

Most Rev James L Connolly Bishop of the Diocese of Fall River win offer a Pontifical Mass of Requiem Friday morRshying at 10 oclock in Holy Name Church Fan River for the reshypose of the soul of his brother John E Connolly who died Tuesday monrlng

Mr Connolly the husband of Mrs Jennie Lowney Connolly was born in FallRiver the son of the late Francis and the late Agnes McBride Connolly He was a member of St Patricks Parish until 12 years ago when he moved to the Holy Name Parish

He was the brother of the late Rev Bernard Connolly SS

Mr Connolly held membership In the Serra and Clover Clubs of Fall River

Burial win be in St Patricks eemetery Fall River

Bishop Wri9ht Asks Renl Peace Effort

NEW YORK (NC) - Bishop John J Wright of Pittsburgh has called for efforts to re-spark the relation of religion to world ctrder and to peace

We must seek the moral inshygredient needed to put the blueshyprint for peace into action This Is the will to peace Bishop Wright told Catholics Jews and Protestants attending a peaee conference at the Church Center tor the United Nations

The Bishop emphasized it is necessary to distinguish between bull realistic peace and wishful thinkinb about it

He said people today must be content to live in a world that eontains many things we can do nothing about We must learn the merit of buying time

To Give Blood Fall River Council of the

Knights of Columbus will be host to the Red Cross Bloodmoshybile from 1245 to 645 Tuesday afternoon and evening Feb 9 at the council headquarters 209 Franklin Street in Fall River Members and their friends are vrged to contribute blood

THE ANCHOR-Father Clark Describes Clothing Distribution Thurs Feb 4 1965

In Santo Domingo Dominican Republi~ CCD To Conduct Methods Course Rev James A Clarke of the Fall River Diocese is presently attached to the Latin

America Bureau of the National Catholic Welfare Conference with headquarters in For Grade School Washington He has been in Santo Domingo Dominican Republic making plans for a The Diocesan Office ofMarian Congress to be held there next month and the following report is sent from that

the Confraternity of Christshycity children wet their feet in order ian Doctrine has announcedEver wonder what happens to make tight shoes fit as I that the second section ofto the clothes you give to the watched mothers try frilly this years course for CCDThanksgiving Clothing Colshy dresses several sizes too small teachers will take place thislection Today I found out In or large on their small children monththe past I had seen how clothes as I watched their deep quesshy This will be an eight-weekwere received and steam-packed tioning eyes look at me with course in methods of teachingat a warehouse in New York wonderment at my obvious Christian Doctrine on the eleshyFrom there Catholic Relief Sershy wealth of clothing as I saw tiny mentary school level The course vices ships them overseas Today children drag large bundles You will be given in five areas of thein Santo Domingo the people could only wonder at the happishy Diocese at the following times received their annual shipment ness in their homes on this eveshy and locationsThe clothes arrive here sepshy ningYou could lt1nly wonder New Bedford Bishop Stangarated into mens womens and what their homes must be like High School Tuesday Feb 9 at childrens shoes bedding misshy n made one want to kiss the 730 PMcellaneous Nuns here at the Kansas farmer who had grown Taunton Bishop Cassidy Highorphanage repack the clothes in the surplus food or embrace the School Tuesday Feb 9 at 730variety packets with some of Montana mother who put an PMeach type Then they distribute extra press into the trousers she Fall River Mtmiddot St Marythroughout the neighborhood donated Simple solutions to the Academy Wednesday Feb 19tickets for the most needy population problem could no at 730 PMToday the people arrived and longer satisfy me as I watched West Harwich Holy Trinitymassed against the ga~es It was these illiterate people wander School Thursday Feb 11 at soon obvious that the amount of off with innumerable chiidren 730 PMclothes was woefully insuffi shy trailing behind I assisted one Attleboro Bishop Feehan Highcient These people cannot read boy with oversize overshoes he School Thursday Feb 11 at 730and thus cannot understand the tramped off heedless of the giarshy PMsimplest sign of the least comshy for a free cache of clothes But ing sun and baked streets His The tuition and book fee paidplicated directions For a while there is something haunting feet finally hada covering Some for the doctrine course last FaRthings were chaotic about seeing old people robbed pressed twigs into the heels of witl also take cate of thilIThe Spanish nUns labored with of all personal achievement and shoes to makidhem fit methods coursemaginificent grace to move the dignity by being born in an

people through the gates First These people didnt know theunderdeveloped country come the People received their monthshy food was from the United- States More Communions with ghastly clothes on their ly allotment of surplus food But A sign was plastered across theback to receive a new years NEWARK (NC)-New Jerseythis month the clothes were the food packet but they couldntsupply Today was Christmas in pastors agree that the numberattraction for new clothes come read it Others havent been toSanto Domingo receiving Communion has risenonly once a year Hunger can be Mass for years No one quesshyOnce they received the clothes since fasting rul~s were relaxedhidden and a sense of personal tioned them on anything butthe people sat outside the exit dignity remain even witl a their need And that was obviousgate and displayed their wardshygnawing stomach But nakedness robe Guilt seeped through my Tomorrow I must preach tocannot be hidden soul as I watched with well shy these people As I stand before

Today Was Chfistmas HUTCHINSONSfitting clothes on my back peoshy them in a pressed clean tailored There is something sad about ple combine garments of the cassock I am sure my words will

seeing naked children reach out most garish colors as I watched sound hollow ART SHOPPE

REV JAMES A CLARK

135 FRANKLIN STREETRevise Ceremonies of Four Sacraments FALL RIVER OS 2-0211

PapaI Instruction Simplifies Rites bull Picture Framing The Instruction which puts (Therefore accursed devil) No casion this shall be given imshy bull Art Supplies

much of the Constitution on the 25 (Therefore accursed devil) Tum to Page Six Liturgy into practice besides No 27 (I exorcise you unclean devoting much to the Mass spirit) and (Therefore accursed seminary training legislative devil) No 33 (The threats of bodies and church architecture punishments) and No37 (Go also speaks concerning the Sashy forth unclean spirit) (63)

craments Confirmation Much of what is here containshy If Confirmation is conferred

ed especially concerning the at Mass it is fitting that the Bisshyvernacular in the administration hop be the celebrant and he of the Sacraments is already thus confers the Sacrament in part of the Dioceses normal Mas s vestments The Mas s ministry since Sept 14 1964 would be that of the Holy Spirit On Sept 10th the Most Revershy Votive 2nd Cl end Bishop-by mandate--estabshy After the homily of the Mass lished that the new American but before Confirmation it is Ritual was to be used regularly praiseworthy that the candishythroughout the Diocese dates renew the promises 01

However Pope Paul has furshy Baptism ther simplified the rites and If another celebratfs the Mass brought clear meaning to the the Bishop shall wear the vestshyadministration of the Sacrashy ments for the conferral of the ments by extending the reform Sacrament-white or the color demanded by the Council of the Mass The Bishop shall

Following are changes to be give the homily and the Mass made in the new Arneri8an Ritshy shall resume only after the Sacshy AI Deposits 0 ual rament has been administered INSURED Fri Nights

Anointing of SickBaptism Full Til bull OClock If the Anointing and the VitshyIn the rite for supplying omisshy

ticum are to be administeredsions in the case of a baptised at the same time the continuousinfant (Collectio Rituum 1964 rite should be followed (CollecshyXII and I) the following exorshytio Rituum 1964 VI)cisms are suppressed No 3

If however the Apopstolie(Depart from him (herraquo No Blessing with a plenary indulshy7 (I exorcise you unclean spirshygence at the hour of death isit) and (Therefore accursed to be imparted on the same ocshydevil) No 12 (I exorcise you

every unclean spirit) (62) In the rite fo) supplying omisshy WEAR ~ GreaterfaD RiVU Isions in the case of a baptized Shoes That Fitadult (Collectio Rituum 1964

THE FAMILY SHOE STOREOrdo Baptismi Adultoroum) the 1 Family Banking Center ~~ following exorcisms are supshy Johns rpressed No8 (Depart from him (herraquo No 17 (Therefore acshy ~i ISAVINGS bull HOME LOANS Shoe Storecursed devil) No 19 (Hear acshy l~l lHOME FIX-UP LOANS bull AUTO LOANScursed devil) No 21 (I exorcise 43 FOURTH STREET you uncean spirit) and (Thereshy r PERSONAL LOANS bull 15c MONEY ORDER CHECKS Fall River OS 8-5811fore accursed devil) No 23 i_~~~--~h~~t~m~f~-braquoraquo--raquo~4~~~~~)iraquoJmJ$)A~~J~r~2~11iimiddot~(~~raquoJi

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

yeW Movement Assists Million Young Workers

By ~fsgr George G Higgins Canon Joseph Cardijns elevation to the College of

Cardinals which was unexpectedly announced by Pope Paul VI Monday Jan 25 was a richly deserved tribute to a great pioneer in the social apostolate of the Church and to the worldwide movement which he established a genshyeration ago - the Young Christian Workers (JOC)

What is this movement which has merited such a welcome tribute fro m His Holiness middotT heY 0 u n g ChristianWorkshyers is a moveshyment of the Church which r e c r u i t sand trains you n g working men and women Its aim is to educate young workers so as to enable them to re-Christianize their lives and surroundings

The YCW is a school of life Through the inquiry method the genius of the movement young workers discover the problems of their work life of their neighshyhorhood and iamily and of their leisure life

Last and most importaIt a concrete action is taken to bring their life close to the ideal of Christ and His Church This is -the school through which have passed thousands of youngworkers the world over

Christian Lines By meeting weekly with other

young workers the Young Christian Workers develop charshyacter The YCW shows its memshybers how unChristian their enshyvironment is in many respects Realizing gradually that they themselves are affected by it young workers are stimulated to think and act personally on Christian lines It is a school which combines knowledge spirshyitual formation and action

The spirit of service shows itself on the most simple occashysions of the daily life of the Young Christian Worker The kinds of service are as numerous as the many needs created by the various circumstances of everyday life i e making friends with new workers visit shying a sick friend helping a young worker to get a job passshying out leaflets in a union camshypaign and the like

All service in the YCW must rest entirely on the Christian conception of love of others This is the soul of the movement

In Daily Life Through the actions and sershy

vices of its members the Young Christian Workers Movement is constantly in touch with the young workers daily life in factories and offices home and leisure ip short with the needs and desires of working youth

The YCW is a permanent reshysponse to the problems of all young workers The Church gives us the doctrine of Christ and communicates His life to us The YCW has been charged With the responsibility of helping to bring the Divine Life to all young workers and to change

First Fridians If Members of the Fall River First Friday Club will have John J Gallagher president of the Fall River Mental Health Assoshy1iation as their speaker at their montlily dinner meeting tomorshyrow night The gathering will follow 6 oclock Mass at Sacred Reart Church and will be held in the parochial school All Cathshyolic men in the Fall River area are invited to join the club

things which stand in the way of their living this new life

Established by Canon Cardijn in Belgium in 1912 the Young Christian Workers was officially recognized as a national organshyization in Belgium in 1925 by the Church Today the movement exists in 40-odd countries and is in the process of formation in 25 others Over one million ~oung

vvorkers throughout the world make up its membership

Produces Vocations Today the YCW has taken its

place as a small but important youth movement in the United States It has trained worker leaders who have set their shoulders to the wheel in ecoshynomic and political life It has produced many vocations to the priesthood and religious life and hundreds of Catholic marriages

Much has been tione But the task has just begun God willing the elevation of Canon Cardijn to the College of Cardinals in the evening of his inspiring life will serve as a stimulus to the movement not only in the United States but in every other part of the world as well

S h A middot out merlca Continued from Page Ten

through combating such probshylems as poverty illiteracy reli shygious ignorance and communism a consensus seemed to emerge from the discussions that the Church has started to come to grips with the realities of the situation and will continue to gather strength in the struggle of the Latin American peoples to overcome their crippling problems

Assessing the help which has already come from North Amershyica and the role the Church in Latin America must play in helping its people Bishop Marshycos G McGrath CSC of Sanshytiago de Veraguas Panamasaid in a private interview the inshycreased impact of the Church in Latin American life is enough reason for optimism

Give Impetus

The material and spiritual aid which has begun to flow into Latin America is of great imporshytance bee a use cooperation brings forth cooperation He expressed the hope that before long the programs of education and material aid would give Latin Americans the impetus they need to help themselves

Defining what he believes should be the role of the Church he said much of the materialmiddot help needed is really the funcshytion of the civil governments but it has to be done by someshyone and sometimes the Church is the only one willing or able to do the job But the real place of the Church he believes is as a teacher and former of attitudes

ANDERSON amp OLSIEN INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIC

HEATING-PIPING and AIR CONDITIONING

CONTRACTORS 312 Hillman Street WY 7-9162 New Bedford ~

W IS E INVEST~IENT

Every pastor should make it his business to see to it that every family in his parish gets a copy of his diocesan newspaper said Msgr Robert G Peters of Peoria The lllshyinois prelate is president of the Catholic Press Associashytion NC Photo

Minister AddJresses Catholic Conention

HOBART (NC)-An Anglican minister has addressed the 23m convention of the Catholic Unishyversity Federation of Australia which is being held at the Unishyversity of Tasmania

The Rev B Marshall chapshylain of Trinity College Univershysity of Melbourne delivered a speech on the liturgy as the road to Christian unity

M-KRestaurant featuring

liThe Gaslight Roomll

Ideal far Communion Breakfasts

crganization Banquets

386 Acushnet twenue New Bedford

Can WYman 2-1703

HATHAAY OIL CO INC

NEW BEDF10RD

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OilS

TIMKENI

Oll BURNIERS

Sales amp Servce

501 COUNTY STREET NEW BEDFIgtRD

WY 3-1751

Mor~ Mass Changes After March 7 Continued from Page One The Roman edition will contain

hitherto recited in a low voice seven or eight samples simply be sung or recited aloud Among to demonstrate the spirit of the such prayers are the Secret the format to be approved by the Doxology at the end of the various episcopal conferencesshyCanon the prayer of peace fol- Eventually the Prayer of the lowmg the Our Father Faithful-being offered immedi-

Holy Coinmunion ately after the Creed during The reception of Holy Com- Mass - will vary from week to

munion at Mass by the faithful week at the discretion of the celshyis an essential part of the Mass ebrant but within the format apshyTheir abstinence from the Eu- proved by the national body of charist would make the Mass bishops It will be in the vernaeshysomething abnormal Fat her ular and is intended to express Bugnini asserted A Mass with- the special concerns of the comshyout the communion of the faith- munity in which the Mass is beshyful is like a ring without its ing celebrated precious stone Besides the revisions for the

Prayer of Faithful Iass a Kyriale is also being Individual bishops may com-printed which will contain the

pose a temporary Prayer of the chant for the Ordinary of the Faithful to be a normal part of liass and Chants Called For in Mass as of March 7 The Vatican the Roman Missal This book compositions will be guidelines Will contain a small selection of for the National Bishops Con- melodies for the newer rites of ferences to use to establish their the Mass for roncelebration own prayer in their territories prayer of the faithful etc

FR JOSEPH WORKERS PRIEST COMMUNISTS IN SOUTH INDIA WOULD LIKE TO GET RID OF FATHER JOSEPH CHAKIAK Because be isthe worker

priest Communism lulampan uphill figh1 in the factory towD of Eioor bull bull 20000 workers ba1f of them Catholics put lDloq hours for less than $1 a du Families have eight and ten children the cost of Uving goes lIP and up and the Communists make false promlses

Father Joseph fights vigo ously for social iustice Does be worry about the outcome David

The Hoi Pilshers Missi_ Ail hadonJy one sman stone when be Of Ih Orienslll ChINch wem out to fight Goliath be says

bull bull For the church and parisb censhyter Fatber Josepb needs Archbishop Parecattil 53 asks our readers help The workers stand in the rain ~en Father Josepb offers Mass be reports u we eanbuild a parish center and a church we ean guarantee for generations to come Iheextraordinary work Father Joseph is doing The ebureh will cost only $2900-the parish-eenter $3600 WU1 you put a stone in Fatber Josepbs sling Name tbe ehureh (or the parish center) in honor of your favorite saini (Si middotIoseph the Worker) in memory of your 1000ed ones if you build it aU b3

yourself Send at leasi a smaller cift-$lOO SSG $10 $5 $2shy

Youll be helping Father Josepb fight for tbe poor Christ lov~

FEBRUARY FOLLOWTHROUGH o BRIGHTEN BIRTHDAYS AND ANNIVERSARIES (your own

as well of course) byenrolling your friends and relatives (and their -familiesgt in this Association Theyll benefit In the Masses and sacrifices of our priests and Sisters and youll be helping bring souls to Ctrist MembershJp dues are only $l-a~year for an individual ($20 fot life) $5-a-year for a Family ($100 for life) Ask us to send the person you enroll a gift card with the certificate

o FEED A FAMILY FOR A MONTH It costs only $10 Well send you an Olive Wood Rosary from the Holy Land

o LET THE HOLY FATHER DECIDE Hell use your no strings attached stringless gift (in any amount) where its needed most

o CATHOLIC BOOK WEEK begins Feb 21 $5 will make one more Catholic book available to Pontifical Mission Library users in Jerusalem

fAKING A NEW WILL Tbe good you can do by remembershyIng tbe missions goes to your credit eternally Our legal title

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION

Dear Monsignor Ryan

Enclosed please find bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullfor bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Name bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Street City u bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullState bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullZip Code bull

dnl2earSstOlissioosrill FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President

Msgr Jose T ICIII Nat Sec Seed aU coMlllnleatioM to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION 330 Madlsoll Ave at 4211d St N_ York N Y 10017

-5

Center said here it found an overwhelming lack of evishydence to support the theory that Catholic schools are divisive

In a report in the FebruaryshyMarch issue of the Critic magashyzine three officials of the Unishyversity of Chicagos center cited bull survey made on the effects of Catholic education

Persons who went to Catholic scbools they said were just as likely to have Protestant friends in adulthood to be involved in civic activities tomiddot respect civil liberties to be open-minded to be tolerant of others and to be If anything more upwardly moshybile

Authors of the report are Dr Peter Rossi head of the research eenter Father Andrew Greeley director of the study and Leonshyard J Pinto assoc~ate director

They concluded Even though the measures

ased in this study are not as soshyphisticated as might be desired the overwhelming lack of evishydence for the divisiveness theshyory at least calls it into serious question

Indeed the general similarshyity of Protestants and Catholics and of the various Catholic subshygroups suggests that the attishytudes we attempted to measure are formed by general cultural forces rather than the kind of school attended and that the dishyvisiveness that exists springs rather from the influence of reshyligion itself than from religious education

Baltimore Gets ETV Station Approval

BALTIMORE (NC)-The Balshytimore archdiocese said the Fedshyeral Communications Commisshysion has approved its plan for eonstruction of an educational TV station to serve parochial schools here

Msgr James C Donohue su- perintendent of the archdioceses department of Catholic educashytion said the station will be ealIed KRM-67 and will be reshyeeived on television sets which have a special adaptor

In addition to programs for schools MsgrDonohue said the station may be used for Confrashyternity of Christian Doctrine training courses adult education liturgical instruction and pershyhaps clergy conferences

30 Priests Serve Southern Sudan

VATICAN CITY (NC)-There are now only one bishop and one apostolic administrator and 28 other priests to look after the Catholics of the southern Sudan the mission news agency Fides reported here

The agency said that they would normally have to min- ister to some 440000 Catholics but that thousands of their people are now refugees in neighboring countries

The total of 30 all Sudanese is all that remains following the expulsion a year ago of all forshyeign missionaries from the southshyern part of the country

Homowners Course A course in minor home reshy

pairs for homeowners and those dealing in real estate will be ofshyfered by Everett W Ericson as P3rt of the Spring program of the Continuing Education Divishysion of Stonehill College First RSSion will be held Tuesday night Feb 16 and the class win eoutinue for 10 weeka

THE ANCHORshyReport Questions Brother Michael Misses Warmth of Africa Thurs Feb 4 1965

Divisive School As He Shivers in New England Winter Church Council Assertion I wish I were back in Africa shivered Brother Michael E Barnaby home from To Open Talks

CHICAGO (NC) - The Tanzania East Africa where the thermometer is more or less permanently fixed in the National Opinion Research 90s to ~isit his pare~ts in chill Fall River The Brother of Christian Instruction son of With Catholics

Mrand Mrs Ernest J Barnaby of Notre Dame parish Fall River has been on home leave since the end of Noshyvember He will return to the land that doesnt need furshynaces on Valentines Day

Brother Michael has been a missionary in various parts of Africa for the past 11 years His present assignment is at St Marys Secondary School in Mwanza Tanzania Tanzania he explainer is the former Tanganshyyika renamed Tanzania a matter of weeks ago when Tanganyika and the island of Zanaibar formed an alliance

There are 283 boarders boys of 16 to 24 at St Marys School said Brother Michael Classes are in English but the government requires all teachers to learn Swahili and gives them about two years to do so Brother Michael hasnt as yet fulfilled this requirement since other languages were spoken in the parts of Africa where he was previously stationed but its high on his list of priority things to do

New School Year The teacher will be a little

late for school said Brother noting that the new school year began in Tanzania on Tuesday Jan 19 Why Tuesday Well the steamer that plies Lake Victoria on whose shores Mwanza is loshycated arrives on Tuesday bringshying most of St Marys students with it

Tbree and a half week vacashytions come every three months for students said Brother Mishychael and there are six free weeks in December when the school year ends Students work hard towards the Cambridge Overseas Examinations adminshyistered by Cambridge University from England

They are tough exams deshyclared Brother Michael If a boy passes them he is able to go on to higher studies Some stushydents he said are sent to the United States and some go to England Regrettably however

PrefatetoBless Center for Deaf

LAFAYETTE (NC)~First dishyocesan center here for work with the deaf will be blessed Sunday by Bishop Maurice Schexnayder of Lafayette

A former residence which for several years was a diocesan building has been converted to a center where the deaf can come to relax play bingo toshygether and we can also have edshyucational and spiritual proshygrams according to Father Carroll Dupuis diocesan chapshylain for the deaf

Bishop Preaches PROVIDENCE (NC)-Auxilshy

iary Bishop Bernard M Kelly of Providence preached at an ecushymenical prayer service in Beneshyficent Congregational c h u r c h attended by Catholics and memshybers of the Beneficent congregashytion It was the first time amiddot Catholic bishop has preached in a Protestant church in Rhode Island

Michael Ce Austin Inc

FUNERAL SEPVICE

NEW BEDfORD MASS

549 COUNTY STREET

BROTHER MICHAEL

hard for students to advance Closed all day SundayThe school day at St Marys

begins at 830 running until Macleans1245 and then from 230 to 4 with time out for a midday UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN siesta Students then have a

Continuing Education

EVENING CLASSES CLASSES ON TUESDAY EVENINGS 730 TO 930 PM

Liberal Arts TIt ABC Of Cime Th Artist At Work Comporative Religions Contemporary Novel In America Conversational French- in Conversational Spani Cr-m Writing Draw Anct Effecti Engliolo Laltor Law Effecti Public Rmtt- Sociology You And Society Reading Improvement For Adults (Oth Reading Clasbullbullbull

Weolltly For Primary C Secondary ~)

TIM above Ctur non-credi ood withoul prerequisitesbull

bull

Business Accounting For N~ Accountants Elementary Shaltthand (Gregg) Insurance Part II Investing ht Stocb Real Estate Training Cou Pew

Supervisors To Revie Co

Attomeys

Special Interest InteriM Decoration Th Houbullbull yetu LiYe In Personality Improvementmiddot Fee

Women Updating Efficiency In

Tomorrows Food Service

Spring Session FeIJ 16-Apr 27

58ftd Brochur wi1ft application form or

pho local-CE 8-2Oft or am- Ii -OK 6-9050 Ot apply puan Monday rough Friday Adminshyistration Building from

730 PM to 830 PM

NEW YORK (NC)-The World Council of Churches has approved laquoexploratory talks with Catholic represenshytatives a World Council official said here

The Rev Dr Franklin Clark Fry president of the Lutheran Church in America and chairshyman of the World Councils 100shymember central committee said procedures for the talks were outlined at a meeting of the committee in Enugu Nigeria

Dr Fry spoke at a news conshyference after returning from 10 days at the Nigeria meeting

He predicted that talks beshytween Catholic and World Counshycil representatives would begin in a few months He called such talks the next logical step in improving relations between Roman Catholics andmiddot other Christians

Step While the talks would be a

momentous step Dr Fry said nevertheless they would be a step not a leap

He said the initial discussions would concern matters that are not too complicated and apshypear 1ikeiy to produce progress in interreligious cooperation

The World Council of Churches includes 214 Protestants Orthoshydox Anglican and Old Catholic denominations with some 350 million members throughout the world

lARIVIERES Pharmacy

Prescriptions carted for and Delivered

HEADQUARTERS FOR DIETETIC SUPPLIES

600 Cottage St WY 4-7439 New Bedford

~

manual work period for three quarters of an hour during which said Brother all the heavy work of the school is taken care of Its quite an efshyficient system he noted A sports period follows

Brother Michael teaches biolshyogy math and sociology at St Marys He says his students are highly motivated Few boys can go to school so those who can want to stay and they study hard They know their futures depend upon it Most St Marys graduates go into government or business and Brother Michael noted that Julius Nyerere Tanshyzanias president is himself a graduate of a Catholic school He is a good Catholic he said

Native Vocations The Brothers of Christian Inshy

struction operate a Jlostulate and juniorate in connection with St Marys Some 40 boys are enshyrolled in the two institutions and will go to Uganda for their noshyvitiate

The area around Mwanza is hilly and rocky and vegetation is sparse said Brother Michael Nearby are gold and diamond mines but security is very up to date We ca~t take field trips to the mines

A native of Notre Dame parshyish Brother Michael has a brothshyer and sister still residing in the parish in addition to his parshyents He attended Prevost High School leaving in his senior year to enter the brotherhood and complete his education at the communitys school in Alfred Me He has been a religious since 1947

Brother Michael expects to visit Fall River again in three years under a government polshyicy which prescribes that all foreign teachers take home leave for six months every three years

very few educated youngsters become teachers

The good students get bettershypaying jobs and its the less able ones who turn to teaching Thus teachers are mediocre and its

STORE HOURS

MON TUES WED 900 AM to 500 PM

THURS FRI SAT 830 AM to 600 PM

-6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965 lVlission for Journalists SacrDments

Necessary Instrument The Catholic newspaper is not a superficial luxuty

or an optional devotion it is an instrument necessary for the circulation of those ideas which feed our faith

These words of Pope Paul spoken less than a year ago need no additional commentary to explain his view of the Catholic press and the importance that a Catholic newsshypaper plays and should play in the life of the Catholic

In the mind of th~ Pope the Catholic newspaper is necessary

The faith of the individual Catholic and the events of the life that he daily lives are inextricably interwinetl The faith must influence and give meaning to daily life and the events of the day must be viewed in the light of God and their impact for eternal life Where is the Catholic to receive information that will guide him in making these judgements and applications

This is the function of the Catholic newspapershyagain in Pope Pauls words-to present a fund of thought aligned along Christian principles Thlt Catholic newsshypaper the Pope points out must not only inform but form the reader And it must let the reader see in how many areas there is unity of belief among Catholics and with their non-Catholic friends and in how many areas there is complete freedom within the bounds of charity for discussion and disagreement

During February Catholic Press Month the Popes insistence on the Catholic newspaper as necessary should find response in the minds and lives of every Catholic family

This means that Catholic reading material must be in every home A Catholic weekly newspaper magazines books and pamphlets-these are instruments of Cathoshylic thought aids to the Catholic in his evaluation of the events in which he participates and these enable him to continue his education and to mature in the faith that is his

Responsible Press The announcement by the Holy Father of his creation

of new Cardinals was given excellent coverage in the daily press and many of the outstanding newspapers of the country saw fit to make it the subject of editorials

This in itself 3hould be proof if proof is needed that the daily press is willing and anxious to cooperate with the Church and with every other responsible group in the featuring of newsworthy releases It shows that there is concern in the higher e-chelons of newspaper administration over what the Church does and its influence in and on the world

Occasionally the cry is heard from some Catholics that this or that newspaper is prejudiced against the Church This is the ghetto-voice crying out the self-styled secondshyclass citizen speaking the inferiority complex-ridden Cathshyolic making protest serve instead of presentation and proshymotion This attitude happily is all but gone but it is still discouraging to see and hear it on occasion

When a newspaper presents a view that is deemed hostile to the Church the explanation is that the editor sincerely thought this to be a newsworthy item or else he was met with so many no comments from Catholic officials or was given such a run-around in his efforts to seek the other viewpoint that he met his deadline with what he had at hand

The press in the United States is a responsible one Exceptions to this are so few as to be easily and quickly recognizable Catholics would do well to take an active role in applauding and assisting the press in its presentation of news and viewpoints instead of carping and sniping from the sidelines

rhe tNCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diqcese of Fali River 410 Highland Avenue

Fall River Mass 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAqER It Rev Daniel F ShallooMA Rev John P Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR ~ Hugh J GoldeJ)

~

y

FEBRUARY

OATHoLa PRESS MONTH

ThnolACJh the Week With the Chunch By REV ROBERT W HOVDA Catholic University

TODAY-St Andrew Corsini Bishop What have we sinners done that God should trust us so Yet he assures us again and again in scripture as He does in the lessons of this Mass that He not only loves us but entrusts to us the salvation of our world

Sirachs tribute to the great priest and the Gospel parable of the industrious and reliable slaves-both come to the Chrisshytian people to t14e assembled church as messages of trust and confidencemiddot and hope Gods hope if we may so speak

TOMORROW - St Agatha Virgin Martyr Those who have made themselves thus for the sake of the kingdom of heaven (Gospel) are the Religious among us whose vows of reshynouncement establish a way of life that points to heaven

Whatever they do whatever concrete form their mission takes this is their common sershyvice to the whole Church - to remind us all that the worid moves toward a goal beyond it shyself not only in words but in the daily fabric of their lives

SATURDAY-St Titus Bishshyop The bishop of course but also every Christian must be a person who knows where he is going (Gospel) Jesus is teachshying here a simple directness in accomplishing the mission He entrusts to us Success is not the measure but the will the intent the steadfastness and purposeshyfulness To say The kingdom of God has approached you is not to brag nor to herald triumph It is only to announce the fact that one is here is present who is animated by faith and is therefore a vessel of the Holy Spirit

FIFTH SUNDA~ AFTER EPIPHANY You must bear with one anothers faults (first reading) or perhaps while you are gathering the tares you will root up the wheat with them (Gospel) These are great days of belated reformation in many areas of the Churchs Hfe in its worship in its conception of it shyself and of its mission

The movement of the Holy Spirit in the Church and in the times we live in has brought fresh air to us breaking a crust hardened by the defensiveness and fear of centuries With the Offertory hymn we can sing ~Gone is the threat of death

now I shall live aind proclaim to the world what the Lord hail done for me Now we shall live

with the constant reform and reshynewal that life demands

Yet our aims must be reasonshyable and we must be strengthshyened against the vain hope that because the structures and patshyterns of our Church life are imshyproved we shall be perfect First and last we deal in the Church with humans and with those faults the readings speak of Our reform is successful if those structures and patterns begin again to beckon and challenge and inspire us where we are and as we are

MONDAY-St John of Matha Confessor Hymning the praises of the good man the man who confesses his faith in the Father by dealing with every person as his brother the entrance psalm begins Be not envious of the wicked nor jealous of evil shydoers

Sometimes we pretend that a real envy a true jealousy is purely a desire to see (and help) virtue triumph But the saints too like the man we honor toshyday are fields in which tares are present They differ from us perhaps only in that they do not covet them nor envy the tares in other lives

TUESDAY-St Cyril of Alexshyandria Doctor Do not think that I have come to set aside the law and the prophets I have not come to set them aside but to bring them to perfection (Gospel) (I hope the new and improved text of scripture readings at Mass is soon avail shyable in books smaller than the altar missal)

Christ announces thatmiddot the job of His teacher of the man or woman who teaches in His name is not to set aside the law and the prophets nor isii to repeat them It is to bring them to perfection So the Christian teacher must heed the Spirit here and now as well as in tradition

WEDNESDAY - St Scholasshytica Virgin The maidens love of and openness to her groom with all her hope of fulfillment and completion is the model of the Churchs stance toward Christ Even as the Church the community of salvation we are not a finished product

We are always reformable al shyways perfectible always pil shygrims on the march It is this virgin spirit submissive to the L()td thatenables the Church to welCome such a period as thV time of change and progress

Continued from Page Three mediately before the annointinlf omitting the sprinkling with itS formula and the Confiteor and absolution Conselration

All bishops present may imshypose hands on the new bishop However only the consecrator and two co-consecrating bishopS are to pronounce the words Acshycipe Spiritum Sanctum Matrimony

Matrimony shall be ce)~brated

within the Mass unless a just cause excuses this It sl-jall be done after the Gospel and the homily Th~ latter is nevpr omitshyted

Within Mass The Votive Mass shall always be celebrted or a commemoration of it made according to the rubri(~ even during the prohibited tine

The pastor or his dnJegate who assists at the marri~O~ shan celebrate the Mass if it is anshyother Mn~s shall not (~ltinue

untn the MarrlageRite hls been completed The non-c~l~brant

who assists at Marriage ~lall be vested in surplice and white stole (and cope if it is the cusshytom) and he shall give tln homshyily The celebrant shall pve the blessing after the Lord Prayer and before the Placeat

The Nuotial Rlessing hlll al shyways be imparted even f it is one of the partys seconrl marshyriage or the marriage is rluring the prohibited season

Without Mass Accorrng ta the Apostolic Letter ~acram

Liturgiam (Jan 1964) rgt brief admonition shall be given before the rite Tis is not a homily but only a simple imtuction before the celebration of Marshyriage After the reading of the Epistle and Gospel of the Mass for Spouses there shall then be given a homily Thlllt the order shall be brief admrgtnition Epistle and Gospel in the vershynacular homily celebr2tonof marriage nuptial blessing

If no vernacular text is avail shyable for the Epistle and nos~l

it is lawful to use for the inshyterim a text approved by the local Ordinary~ bull

A chant may be sung bntweea the Epistle and Gospel The Prayer of the Faithful is highly recommended after the compleshytion of the Mariage Rite accordshying to the formula of the local Ordinary and in which petitions for the spouses are also to be included

At the end of the rite the nuptial blessing shall always be given as within Mass The formshyula shall be the one designated for this occasion (Collectio Hishytuum 1964 Rite of Matrimony Without Mass Nuptial Pessing Outside Mass Sacristy Manual p 283

If marriage is celebrated duJ shying the prohibited season the pastor shall advise the spouses to~take into account the special character of this liturgical seashyson Sacramentals

A single prayer from among the prayers which are found in the Roman Mis$al for Feb Z and for Ash Wednesday mashybe said on the occasion of the blessing of candles or ashes

Blessings which have been reshyserved up to the present time and which are contained in the Roman Ritual tit IX cap 9 10 11 _may be given by any

- priest with the exception of the following Blessing of a bell for the use of a blessed church or oratory Blessing of the first stone for the building of a

church B I e s sin g of a new church or public oratory Blessshy

ing of an antimimsiori Blessing of a new cemetery the Papal Blessings (cap 10 n 1-3) and the Blessings and erection of the

Stations of the Way of the Cr~ inasmuch asthis reserved to tbe JUahop

ACRES Of FREE

PARICNG

OOIJfIlElftENI BUDGETmiddot Finance

f 1It_ 10 Pay

1

Meeting to Plan CathQlic Press i

World Congress NEW YORK (NC)-The

Seventh World Congress of the Catholic Press to be held here May 18 to 22 will be the first subject for discussion at a meeting of officials of the Inshyternational Union of the Cathoshylic Press Saturday in Stuttgart Germany

Two representatives of the Catholic Press of the United States and Canada will attend the Stuttgart meeting They are Tames A Doyle executive secreshytary of the Catholic Press Assoshyciation and Father Hugh Morley

OFM Cap who represents the international union at the United Nations

Father Albert J Nevins MM editor of Maryknoll magazine is general chairman of the world congress and of the 55th annual convention of the Catholic Press Association which includes Catholic newspaper magazine and general publisher members in the United States and Canshyada

Modern Society The Stuttgart meeting will be

held under the direction of Raishymondo Manzini editor of the Vatican City newspaper LOsshyservatore Romano and president of the IUCP and Father Emile Gabel AA secretary general

Meetings at the world congress will be organized around the overall theme of Truth in the Pursuit of Liberty and will Inshyelude a number of special sesshysions relating the theme to modshyem society

There Will be conferences on the press and political liberty liberty and international order liberty and eivil rights con science and religious liberty freedom and the creative arts and liberty in the Catholic press

Three Missioners Martyred in Congo

ROME (NC) - The deaths of three more Catholic missionarIes and an African priest at the hands of Congolese rebels have been reported by the Pious Soshyciety of St Francis Xavier for the Foreign Missions of Parma

Italy The three Xaverian missionets

were Fathers Giovanni Didone 35 and Luigi Carrara 32 and Brother Vittorio Faccin 31

Patron of Rio RIO DE JANEffiO (NC-An

altar dedicated to St Sebastian has been blessed here to comshymemorate the fourth centenary of the founding of the Portushyguese settlement of St Sebastian of Rio de Janeiro

DUEtFEE- FALL RIVER

On Our Stage IN PERSON

Arthur Fiedler and

60 Members of the Boston Pops

an evening of enchanted music

ALL New Program Special Attention to evo ~nd Church Groups

FRIDAY FEBRUA~Y 12 830 PM

TEL 6fT-93S1

fHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965 1 Press Association Head Evaluates Press Month Theme

BY MSGR ROBERT G PETERS perfect setting up distortions in world but with every walk of proper interpretation of the

its reflection A mirror can be life every slightest concern of question itself The theme of this years Cathshy too small to tell the full story morality Anything else is not things as

olic Press Month gives everyone A mirror can be faithful to the they are or things in truth -readers and writers-reason to Christian Principlessurfacemiddotof things and miss what Anything else is not the Catholic consider the task of the Catholic A mirror that tells things as press that the popes have adshylies behind the obvious facade press They are the words of they really are must reflect not vised to place itself in the world Pope Paul VI Your Catholic A mirror that tells all things only the object in question but and interpret that world for press mirror of the world as they are must be a mirror that the surrounding world that afshy readers in the light of Christianbull bull telling things as they are seldom limits its area of reflecshy fects what must be told The principlesbullbullbull In truth tion And the press that attempts publication that mirrors the famshy Catholic readers should be

To mirror the world is not the to be such a mirror must concern ily the factory the field and the happy to have at hand a press simple task it first appears For itself not only with the obvious forum must include the Chrisshy that dedicates itself to so imporshyone thing a mirror can be im- ecclesiastical aspects of the tian principles needed for a tant a task

The Fumlture Wonderland Open Daily 9 AM to 10 PMe

_ the East Including Saturdays

Hew Englands Greatest Furniture (Iearance is Now in Full SwinQ

FREE DELIVERY

8

l

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall liver-Thurs Feb W85

Catholic Press Bears Witness 10 Churchs Spirit of Renewal

By Mary Tinley Daly -Reading habits must be changing in my parish

Mid a priest of our acquaintance Few years ago he ruminated Id go into a horne to make a sick call put my hat on the coffee table on the top of the New Yorker Vogue Look Life and the daily newspaper When Id come downstairs again my hat would be on top of a flock of Catholic m iss ion magazines and the diocesan newspaper The others were all chucked for the time being I was to be imshypressed quite obviously he laughedWhats the change now Father we asked Are the magazines more lurid where you park your hator

And Nowmiddotmiddotmiddot Just the opposite our priest

friend chuckled Theyre not ashamed of the Catholic press any more In the line-up among the popular publiclltions on those living room tables-and usually on top of the heap--are well shythumbed copies of Commonweal America The Sign and others Even the Diocesan paper is out in full view right beside toshynights edition of the city newsshypaper

This priests observation Is D~ all unusual

The Catholic press has made giant strides within the past few years strides which should be noted during this the month of February Catholic Pre s bull Month Why February We dont know Perhaps from the very name of the month derived from Februarius month of exshypiation and purification since en the 15th the Roman festival of expiation and purifi~ation was beld

To our way of thinking this iii appropriate since we believe that the Catholie press should take its place as a gOOd influshyence in the currentmiddot world of journalism To quote the present Pontiff Pope Paul VI Your CatholiC Press is a mirror of toshydays world telling things shythey are-in truth

And how is the Catholie predoing Better thank you

Todays Renewal Reflecting the Catholic layshy

mans view is the sophisticatedCommonweal edited by dedishycated Cafllolic laymen America edited by the Jesuits The Sign magazine of the Passionists and SO many others mirroring mod-middot ern Catholic thinking in our aggiornamento of today enunshyciated first by Pope John XXIII

Fresh air is not only seeping in it is sweeping int9 Catholic journalism

Notre Dame Superior Heads New- Cornmittee

WASHINGTON (NC)-5ister Mary Daniel provincial superior of the Maryland province of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur has been elected chairmaflof the newly formed National Sister Formation Committee

New vice chairman is Mother Mary Borromeo mother general of the Sisters of St Francis Joliet Ill the Sister Formation Conference announced from it headquarters here

Sister Mary Daniel heads a 12-member unit which guides activities of the formation conshyference a 12-year-old cooperashytive movement of U S Sistershyhoods to bolster the spiritual academic and professional trainshying of Sisters

Time was and in the memory of even young readers when a great many Catholic newsshypapers were pretty ho-hum a picture of the bishop on every page notices of sodality meetshyings ham or turkey dinners items which could and should be carried in parish bulletins edishytorials wildly denouncing thisshyand-that-a generally negative and boring experience for readshyers of which there were few

Catholic magazines were only slightly better mediocre articles namby-pamby fiction

Those were the days when out of a sense of loyalty or obedishyence Catholics supported their Catholic press with their subshyscription dollars but not with their attention

Catholic periodicals found their way from the mail slot to the magazine rack for a while then out into the trash Seldom did they appear on a living room table to be picked up for intershyest or enjoyment along with the mass media publications EVeJl less rarely was a Catholic peri shyodical quoted ill the secular press or discussed among intelli shygent Catholics

Fortunately times h a changed The Catholiepress is abreast of world news local news features book film and play r~views entertainment and famshyily pages And nowhere else of course can one get more authorshyitative information on the vital changes within themiddot Church itshyself Vatican Council liturgieal reforms ecumenism -eally alive issues

The change has been long _ coming hindered ~ maD7 r0adshyblocks but its here

Alumae Style Shaw Alumnae and parents of Jesusshy

Mary Academy Fall River wiD sponsor a supper style show at 630 Tuesday night March 2 at Whites restaurant

Sto Francis Resodence

FOR YOUNG WOMEN 196 Whipple St Fall River Conduded by Franciscan

Missionaries of Mary ROOMS - MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALtill Inquire OS 3-2892

bull bull bull bull bull bullbull bull bullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Williams Funeral Home

EST 1870 I Washington Square

NEW BEDFORD Reg Funeral Director CIftd

Embalmer PRIVATE middotPARKING AREA

TEL WY 6-8098

AT RED MASS Luci Baines Johnson daughter of the President attended the annual Red Mass in St Matthew Cathedral Washin~~ton last Sunday in the company of her escort Paul Betz of Washington left President Johnson preeeded the COUplEI into the Oathedral NC Photo

Protestants Must Change Attitude BONN (NC)-German Protesshy the Orthodox Church which

tants have been asked to meet takes a similar stand the spirit of change at the Vatshy He also pointed to the diffi shy

ican council with changes ill culty of solving problems in this their own attitudes area because the Catholic

Lutheran theologian Dr Hanl Church cannot find anyone aushyAsmussen wove his appeal thorized to negotiate for Protesshyaround a strong criticism of tants He said We have no Protestant impatienCE with the branch with which questions of Catholic position on mixed marshy this kind can be regulated in a riages He pointed out that Protshy binding way and we do not waDi estants who are angrr with the to create one either Catholic stand do not criticize

your OVENFRESH

NEIGHBORHOOD~ DAILY STORE

Asks End of Fee In Teaching

PADERBORN (NC)-Dao ligious training should _be more positive at all age levels and the element of all shyxiety and fear should be elimoo inated ill teaching children bull German Catholic churchman aeshyserted here

Archbishop Lorenz Jaeger ell Paderborn in Germany said bull more positive stress requires IEo vision not only of the catechism but also of the rite of confessioDo In line with this approach m said parents in the rearing of their children should stress the dignity of the human person iQoo stead of harping on duties

The prelate a member of 12ie ecumenical councils Secretarial for Promoting Christian Unit was addressing the annual cooshyvention of representatives 01 German Catholic womens ganizations He said that to tain awareness of the dignity all the Christian vocation Chri9shytians must first realize natural virtues and true humanity bull Pope John showed by his exa pIe

Defines ApoStolate Of Catholic Nurse

WICHITA (NC)-Bishop L8 C Byrne defined the CathoHe nurse-one who combines proshyfessional excellence with spa itual excellence to sanctify hetlo self and Christianize society

SpeaKing before the DioeeSRII Counell of Catholic Nurses here Wichitas apostolic administ

tor told 200 nurses Your laP apostolate is nursing Specifi shycally in our age which histolF will describe as the age of tile laity the Catholic nurse must be a shining symbol of both tbe Church and the nursing prof~

sion

~ DEBROSS OIL ( ~ COo

) Heating Oils ( ~ and Burners ~

365 NORTH FRONT STREET ~ NEW BEDFORD ~

~ WYman 2-5534 ~

VinesWill HaveTenderGrapes f Pruned Now Says Gardener

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

One of the few jobs in the garden middotwhich should be done in Winter is that of pruning grape vines By pruning vines now while they are dormant you will avoid a drippy vine when the sap begins to flow Actually the pruning should take place in two steps once now and again in never to be awakened again

late March or April Maybe this is how TV dinnersbegan

Too often grape produc- Now Im as guilty as any other Clon suffers from too little prunshy mother of not wanting four exshyIng As a result vines become tra elbows around me when I am overcrowded and produce small trying to cook and I often have stunted bunches of fruit or at to suppress a scream of anguish best production of fruit is when my last egg hits the floor limited Then I remember my early ef

In pruning a vine the first forts offer a prayer to the thing to do is to remove all Blessed Mother for an extra Winter-killed growth (this is dose of patience and find someshysimple to determine since dead thing for those little hands to eliDes are dry and brittle) These help me with canes should be cut back to the One day last week when my main stem The second step is to patience was at an unusually eut aU thin straggly growth at high peak we had a dolls birthshyleast half way back to the main day party cake mixed and baked stem or until the cane is at least by Meryl and Melissa instrucshythe thickness of a finger The tions read by mother The utter shape of the vine is of no conshy delight on their faces when the eern now since it will be shaped finished cake turned out so well after the second pruning more than paid for any extra

The first pruning should thin effort on my part the vine to approxima~ely twoshy A very young friend of ours thirds of its original bulk Do Christine McGowan of St JoshyDot make the mistake of being sephs parish Fall River was cautious about cutting Rememshy nice enough to give us one of her ber new growth will appear off recipes to pass on to the younger the old growth and unless you set Miss McGowan with the aid are thOrough the vine will be of an understanding mother has overcrowded been baking since a very tender

In late March or April the age ~e shouidbe pruned again duiped and tied First remove

Chrissies Cookies 1 Ie white sugar

any canes which were missed atmiddot 1 C brown sugar packed the fiist pruning or any recently C soft shortening (this III killed canes Other canes to be equal to lb butter or margarshy~moved are those which are old ine) IUld overuown since theywiU 1 t vanilla produce littleif any fruit 3 C flour

Once the thinning out process 1 t baking soda comple~ the canes which t salt are to be kept should be ~ nuts andor raisins to taste back to five or six buds and tied Heat oven to 375 Mix sugars During the tying process the shortening eggs vanilla Sift toshyme can be shaped so that no -gether flour soda salt and stir __0 canes are closer than a foot in Add raisins andor nuts ~d a half apart This is a time- Fo~ balls of about 1 t middotof dough eonsuming job which is very apiece flatten on ungreased ~y to do sloppily with a poor baking sheetallowing room far ~p resulting so t~e a few ~ys to do it properly Above an JIrUlle heavily In the Kitchen On of my older daughters reshy~ests last Christmas was for an electric oven that baked just like monunys I felt that this was a little too grown up for five year old because the temshyperature went up as high as 400 degrees so needless to say this particular item didnt find a place under our ~ris~as tree However I still feel quite guilty about this as I intend to try very hard to encourage any cooking tendencies in my daughters Speaking from personal expeshy

dence I remember the years I ipent getting shoo~d out 9f my mothers kitchen until finally ~y interest in that direction iemained dormant until mar ~age forced me to face squareshy~ the prospect of preparing three meals a day Fortunately hen I did solve this problem liided by many cookbooks I did discover how much I loved to eook but I still wonder how any other girls have had their love of cooking equally squelchshytid by a well-meaning mother

Dorries Patronesses Dames Patronesses of Sacred

Beart Home New Bedford will hold a Valentine party for hOJIle residents at 130 Tuesday aftershynoon Feb 9 Mrs Jean Boutin-is m charge of arrangements The lInits annual meeting is planned for Sunday April 25 and the -tOth anniversary of the group Will be marked with a banquet and dance Wednesday May 5 in New Bedford Hotel Next board meeting will be held at 30 luesday niIht March 11

cookies to spread (Wetting the handS with Cold water keeps dOUgh from sticking to them)

Bake 8middot to 10 miuutes Makes about 60 cookies

Notre Dame Nun Joins Inter-Radal Staff

CHICAGO (NC)-Sister Mary Peter (Traxle~r) of the School Sisters of Notre Dame has joined the staff of the educational -sershyvices department of the National Catholic Conference for Intershyracial Justice here

Raymond M Hilliard confershyence chairman said rapid growth of the agencys services necessi-_ tated staff expansion While doshying graduate work in political

science at Georgetown Univershysity in Washington Sister Mary Peter organized a tutorial proshygram for under-privileged youth

NO JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main OHice and Plant 95 Bridge St Lowell Mass

Tel 458-6333

Auxiliary Plants

BOSTON CAMDEN N J OCEANPORT N J MIAMI PAWTUCKET R L PHILADELPHIA

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ c 9 j

REPRESENT Us CATHOLIC WOMEN The Board of Direct-ors of the National Council of Catholi~ Women is received by Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi Apostolic Delshyegate in the US at the annual meeting in ~ashington Mrs Mar~us Kilch ~oungsto~ Ohio left front is NCCW president and Miss Margaret Mealey nght front 18 executIve director NC Photo

Vatican Pavilion Second Most Popular in Fair NEW YORK(NG) --At

most half of the visitors at the New York World~sFair~

last year stopped off at the Vatican Pavilion making it the second most popular of the Fairs 151 pavilions Average daily attendance was over 75000 giving the pavilion a total at- tendance figure of more than 138 million

The Good Shepherd Chapel was the scene of 1204 Masses

SAVE MONEY ON YOUR OILHEATI bull CfJH n

CHARLES F VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE NEW BEDFORD MASS

IwflkltdeliNlyK

~SS~ HEATING OIL

at whichCo~union was dis- The most popular item at the tributed to ~ie th8ll- 42000 pavilions sales counters was a people POStcard featuring P~pe Paul

gt 1 1

- ~- ~

-_

_ ~~ f y

~ I

NO NONOt

Piggy banks dont pay dividends Put your money in a Fail River Trust Savings Account where generous divishydends are compounded semi-annually Its much safer too 1

FALL RIVER ~~h TRUST CO- V

64J U1t4 ~~ bull~ Fatt ~

-

THE ANCHORshy10 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Prelate Stresses Ecumenism on Spiritual Level

MADEIRA (NC) - Auxshyiliary Bishop Paul F Leishybold of Cincinnati called for a spiritual ecumenism shyprayer and holiness - as the soul of the ecumenical moveshyment

He preached at a special low Mass which he offered at St middotGertrudes church here in Ohio for some 300 Protestants many escorted by Catholic neighbors Many Protestant visitors were guests in homes of Catholic pashyrishioners after the evening Mass which was (lffered at an altar facing the congregation

Bishop Leibold cited five ways in which those who profess Christ can work for Christian unity

1 We must make every effort to avoid expressions judgments

and action~hich do not represhysent the condition of our sepashyrated brethren with truth and faimess

2 DIalogue must be carried on between competent experts from different churches and communities

3 Cooperation among differshyent churches for the common good of humanity

4 A spiritual ecumenismmiddot which he said involves a change of heart holiness of life and public and private prayer for unity

5 All must examine their own faithfulness to Gods will for the Church and accordingly undertake with vigor the task of renewal arid reform

Scores FCC Stand On Religious Test

WASHINGTON (N C) - A middotmember of the Federal Commushynications Commission charged here that the FCC is violating constitutional limits marked out by the Supreme Court by makshy

ing religious broadcasting one test of a broadcasters public service performance

Commissioner Lee Loevinger addressing the National Reli shygious Broadcasters convention said the FCC has gone far beshyyond the limits that have been marked by the Supreme Court as permissible govertiment acshytion in the field of religion

Loevinger noted that the FCC includes religious pro g ram I

among the types of programs considered to be in the public interest on its license application forms He said it made the broadcasting of such programs one of the FCCs tests for detershymining whether a broadcaster operates in the public interest

Pope Paul Thanks Italian Policemen

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI greeted the Italian poshylicemen whose beat is the Vatican and saidit was a great consolation to know they were around

Answering an address of homshyage by Inspector General Oreste Correti who was accompaniel by other officials and members of the force the Pope said he is grateful for the zealous expert generous and selfless work in which you display your integrity as distinguished state officials and your dedication as faithful IOns of the Church

Though members of the Italian force the groups are assigned ~ special guard duties and ~

directing traffic in St Peters iquare and the area surropndinl Vatic~ City

BOSTON (NC)-Richard Card~ inal Cushing touched off a cheershying demonstration by 1300 Jews here when he predicte9 the Secshyond Vatican Council will apshyprove a declaration absolving Jcws of direct blame in the death of Christ

If we dont Im wasting my time talking of brotherhood said the Archbishop of Boston after he was presented withmiddot the annual Good Will Award of Temple Ohabei Shalom Brothershyhood oldest and largest Jewish organization of its kind in the

country He was selected for the award because of his compasshysion generosity love and broth- erhood

Reds Fear Religion The prelate said Ill never forget the Second

Vatican Council I didnt know What they were talking about I had never heard a lecture in Latin and it was all Greek to me I dont know how many others were in the same boat

CEF Head Praises Johnson Proposals

TRAVERSE CITY (NC)-The national president of Citizens for Educational Freedom had praise here in Michigan for Presshyident Johnsons statements in his State-of-the-Union address

Stuart D Hubbell a lawyer lauded the President for his wilshylingness to tr~at all school chil shydren equally He said he sent Mr Johnson a telegram which said in part

While your proposals have not as yet been made specific to the extent that they follow the principle of equality that you outlined in your message you will have made a signifi shycant beginning in developing broad support for educational achievement

bull SEQUIN Truck Body Builders Aluminum or Steel 944 County Street

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2middot6618

DISCUSS PROBLEMS CONFRONTING HOSPITALS Meeting at the 20th annual conclave of Bishops representatives for Catholic hospitals in Scottsdale Ariz are left to right Msgr Harold A Murray director of thE NCWC Bureau of Health and Hospital Hospitals Bishop Francis J t Green of Tucson Bishop Joseph B Brunini episCOgtal burshyeau chairman and Auxiliary of Natchez-Jackson Miss and Father John J Flanagan SJ~ executive director of the Oatholic Hospital Association NC Photo

We Have Come Long ~Way in Short Time Hub Cardinal Sees Church Gains Continuing

~

but I sat between two very ven- around religion He added For crable Italian cardinals They that reason they try to eliminate

knew no English and I knew no Italian All the time they kept calling me Cardinal Spellman or Cardinal Mindzen1y or even Cardinal OConnell (The late William Cardinal OCgtnnell was Cardinal Cushings predecessor as Archbishop of Boston)

In a more serious mood Cardshyinal Cushing said the one great fear communists have centers

Interfaith Service For Church UII1ity

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Byzanshytine Rite Catholics joined with Orthodox and Protestants in a common prayer service for

Christian unity Sunday in Holy Spirit Byzantine rite c hu r c h here

Participants in the vespershytype service includE)d Father Andrew Resetar of Erie Pa Very Rev A Dixon Etollit dean of Trinity Episcopal cathedral here Father GeorgE) Scoulas dean of St Nicholas Greek Orshythodox cathedral in Oakland and Dr Harold R Alert former president of the Pittsburgh Council of Churches

The service was arranged by the Pittsburgh C 0 tI n c i I of Churches and the Pittsburgh Byzantine rite diocesE~

Where A

GOOD NAME

Means A

GREAT DAL

GEO OHARA CHEVROLET

565 MILL 5JREET

HEW BEDFIORD

Open Evenings

it from the lives of their peoplemiddot He revealed he has 25 engageshy

ments to talk to groups of other religious faiths including a lodge of Masons before Easter The Cardinal inquired Who would have thought even five years ago that a Catholic archbislfop would be preaching good will in a Protestant church or in a synshyagogue Or that a rabbi would be addressing other faiths We sure have come a long way in a short time-and its going to get better

Preaching Brotherhood The cardinal also observed I

am not trying to convert Protesshytants to Catholics or Jews to Catholics I never made a conshyvert in my life My only messhysage is one of brotherhood

Sturtevant 6shyHook Est 1897

Builders Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New Bedford WY 6-5661

Deny Dispatch About Ca rdinaI

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Sta_ Departm~nt spokesman her categorically denied a recent press story that there are ~

obstacles to Jozsef Cardinal Mindszentys leaving his refuge in the U S legation in Budapest but that the Primate of HungaI7 ~wants to die a prisoner there

The story (which was released by NANA and published in t~

daily press Jan 20) credited its source a State Deparme~ source in Bonn German~

who has taken part in recent U S-Hungarian negotiations

The State Department spokesshyman here described the story bull completely incorrect

We dont have any Americali official in Bonn who has had anything to do with the Hungar-o ian negotiations he said in an swer to inquiries It doesn1 represent anything that an American official would hold

New Orleans Plans New High Schools

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Arch-t bishop John P CodY of New Orleans has announced plansfOS construction of seven new hip schools in several parts of the archdiocese

Declaring that Catholic educashytion never was so flourishin nor were our Catholic people bull desirous of increasing the num bel of schools and improving t~

methods of teaching The Loushyisiana prelate said we must build so that all the children oil our area may have the blessin of a thorough Catholic educashytion

SERVING FINE ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4-8754bull

TIte Falmoufh NatiOnal Sanlc Falmouth Mass

tilt Villale Ir Sian 1121

WM T MANNING (0 WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE

AND

INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES bull GENERAL TIRES bull DELCOBATTERIES

bull PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS

FALL RIVER - NEW BEDFO~D - HYANNIS - NEWPORT

First Federal Savings AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF ATlLEBORO

4 on ali $avings Accouni

1 Extra on Systematic Bonus~vings

bull bull bull bull bull

11 bull

Portugal Bishops Plan University For Country

LISBON (NO) - Portushygals bishops have announcshyed plans to found this nashytions first Catholic Univershysity

They said in a joint pastoral letter issued after their meeting here that there is an imperative need for a Catholic university for the nations conscience They said the university win have greater freedom greater dynamism and greater flexibil shyity than the present state uni versities

The letter said that the govshyernment will help the bishops in founding the new Catholic university

Last Summer Manuel Cardishynal Goncalves Cerejeira of Lisshybon told a meeting studying the foundation of the Catholic Unishyversity that it would be open to both laymen and the clergy and located in Lisbon instead of the older university town of Coimshybra Earlier efforts were made to restore a theological faculty at Coimbra University The facshyultY was closed following the revolution which made Port~gal a republic in1910

Several years agothe cardinal noted that a Church-sponsored university has been a hope of 1Ihe VI has called on individual Cathshy one part of the Mystical Body of many Latill American counshy~oI1uguese bishops for a long olies to become more aware of Christ to another tries and CICOP itself whichtime ~ut that priorities for the world-wide dimensions and seminanes new churche~ pri- needs of the Church mary schools and Catholic Acshytion organization had delayed Today bull bull bull it is absolutely eoncrete plans indispensable that each pers~n

become aware of the true dishymensions of the Church the

Sees Greater Church Pope declared adding Greater awareness will iead to wideningNeed for Laity Role

LAKE CHARLES (NC) - A Louisiana editor predicts the time will come in the 20th censhytury when laymen wi~ domishynate the clergy in many fields

Msgr Alexander O Sigur edshyitor of the Southwest Louisiana Register diocesan newspaper feels in the present age of scishyence and technology Catholic laymen with specialized knowl- edge of law science and other fiElds must of necessity advise the clergy on the many facets of todays society

He pointed out that the layshymens role has made more progshyress since the opening of the Second Vatican Council than in the previous 10 centuries

But because of centuries of tradition there will be problems for some time connected with evolution of the laymans role in the Church he asserted

British Conversions Continue to Decline

LONDON (NC)-The number of converts to Catholicism in England and Wales continues to decline but the Catholic popushylation shows a steady increase according to the 1965 Catholic Directory published here

The known number of adult conversions for 1963 the most recent year for which statistics are available was 12778 This was a decrease of 552 from the previous year which also showed a considerably lower figure than that for 1961

But the Catholic population increased in 1963 by 129500 to 3956500 and the Catholic popshyulation in Scotland rose by 13shy310 to 812460

Foundation Member NEW YORK (NC) - William

G Ryan presidentmiddot of Seton Htn College Greensburg Pa haa been named a corporate member of the FoundationfOr the arts Religion and culture which win hold its fim meetina laue tomonow

THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

HIGH HONOR FOR K of C HEAD Supreme Knight John W McDevitt of the Knights of Columbus invested as a Knigh t Commander of St Gregory at a testimonial banquet in Boston is with left to right AuxiHary Bishop John F Hackett of H~rtford Archbishop Henry J OBrien of Hartford Bishop Charles P GreltfO Qf Ale~andna La Supreme K of C Chaplain and Bishop William J Smith of Pembroke OntarIO NO Photo

Pope Hail~ US Church Mission Work Says Transfe~ of Energies I Most ~onsoling

CHICAGO (NC)-Pope Paul this transfer of energies from unteers who are serving la

of vitality and fuller realization of the meaning of the name Catholic

Nature of Church Pope Paul made his plea in a

message to the second annual conference of the Catholic Inshyter-American Cooperation Proshygram (CICOP)

The Holy Father coupled his appeal for greater awareness of the worldwide nature vf the

Church with high praise for aid rendered in recent years by US Catholics to the Church in Latin America Prellently he said there are 4091 US priests reshyligious and laymen serving there

Greater Understanding I He called us Catholic proshygrams for Latin America a proshyvidential apostolic ~ovement and said they make up one of the most beautiful pages in the history of the Church in the United States

Particularly in light of the Ecumenical Councils constitushytion on the Church he said it iamost consoling to witness

BEFORE YOU BUY-TRY

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault 67 Middle Street Fairhaven

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICE

lJe singled out for praise US seeks by educational means to promote greater understandingdioceses which have sent 178 of Latin Americas problemsdiocesan priests to mission work

in Latin America US religious among the Catholic millions of the United Statescommunities of men and women

which he said are fulfilling the Urllent Demands engagement they have undershy Pope Paul voiced hope that thetaken of sending a tithe of meeting here would producetheir total memership to Latin many practical results parshyAmerica by 1970 US lay vol~ ticularly a wider and more soshy

licitous collaboration of the Refugee Children United States of America with

the Church in Latin AmericaHONG KONG (NC) - Archshy such as urgent needs dem~ndbishop Joseph Caprio apostolic

internuncio to China opened here for refugee children a new $100000 primary school built by Norris H Trippthe Franciscan Missionary Sisshyters of Our Lady of Sorrows SHEET METAL Mother Leola superior of the J TESER Proporder which has its headquarshy RESIDENTIALters in Beaverton Ore attended

INDUSTRIALthe ceremony COMMERCIAL

253 Cedar St New Bedford WY 3-3222 Montie Plumbing amp

Heating Co Inc

Counci~s Effects Years Away

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The universal effects of the Second Vatican Council will not be recshyognized completely for years to come James Francis Cardinal McIntyre told 2200 Holy Name men here in California

It is entirely impossible to estimate at the present time the effects of the council on the thinking of the world the carshydinal said

These effects have penetrated deeply into the spiritual life of all people not only of the Church alone he told a Holy Name Union Communion breakshy

fast One index of its effects is the

attention the council has comshymanded in the press of the world the cardinal said

Names Two Priests To Federal Board

NEW YOItK (NC) - T w bull priests are on the 30-niember board of directors of the new Sex Information and Education Council of the United Stat~

(SIECUS) formed to foster im- proved study and education oa the role of sex

TheYlre Father George Hag- maier CSP of the Paulist In- stitute for Religious Researc~ and Father John L Thomas SJ St Louis (Mo) University soci ologist

The executive director of the council is Dr Mary Steichen Calderone former medical dishyrector of the Planned Parentshyhood Federationand its presishyident is Wallace C Fulton formshyer presidtDt of the National Coundl on Family Relations

Whites Farm Dairy SPECIAL MilK

From Our Own Tested Herd

Acushnet Mass WY 3-4457 bull Special Milk bull Homogenized Vito 0 Milk bull Buttermilk bull Tropicana Orange Juice bull Coffee and Choc Milk bull Eggs - Butter

FIVE CONVENIENT OFFICES- -TOSERVE YOUReg Master Plumber 2930

GEORGE M MONTlE ONE-STOP BANKING Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET FIRSTmiddotMACHImiddotNISTS Fall ~River OS 5-7497 NATIONAL BAN Ilt

OF TAUNTON Norton W MaIn St-Raynham Rte 44-Taunton Main St

North Dighton Spring St-North Easton Main St_ w H RILEY amp SO~J Inc Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

CITIES SERVICE bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnmbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullDISTRIBUTORS

Gasoline i F L COLLINS amp SONS i Fuel and Range INCORPORATED 1937

OILS bull

GENERAL (ONTRAOORS5bullOIL BURNERS

For prompt delivery 5 and ENGINEERS 5amp Day amp Night Service

bull JAMES H COLLINS CE Pres G E BOILER BURNER UNITS bull Registered Civil and Structural Engineer bull

Rural Bottled Gas Se~ Member National Society Professional Engineers

61 COHANNET ST FRANCIS L COLLINS JR Treas = TAUNTON bull THOMAS Ie COLLINS Secy bull

Attteboro - No Attlebor~ middot =ACADEMY BUILDING FALL RIVER MASS Taunto1

-bullbull

bull 12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Humphreymiddot Becker Write Novels of Reminiscence

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Both William Humphreys The Ordways (Knopf

$595) and Stephen Beckers A Covenant with Death (Athshyeneum $450) are novels of reminiscence Both are laid in the Southwest the former in Texas the latter in an unshyidentified state The narrashytor in the Ordway book is for the most part telling what happened to his greatshygrandparents and his grandparshyents in the Civil War period and at the tum of the century In the Becker book the narrator is in his seventies recalling Ii decisive expeshyrience in his oWn life when he was 29 back in 1923 If there are similarities between the works there are also differences and they are very great

Mr Beckers novel is a Book of-the-Month Club middotselection has already been bought by a movie company for a vast sum and unshydoubtedly will be a roaring popshyular success Mr Humphreys novel will probably have far fewer readers and will bring its author far less money But it is by all odds and in every reshyIJPect the better book

Long-Winded It has one fault that of being

long-winded and at times meandering I just wanted to hear the same old things over and over again the narrator -of The Qrdways says at one point It is evidently presumed that the reader has the same desire and that he will not object to lengthy digressions But repetition and extended parenthetical exercises do become tiring even if as in ~is instance the writing is of a high order

1$ The Ordways really a novel in the Strict sense The pook cOritillns a notice reading A portion of Part One in some- what different form first apshypeared in The Saturday Evening Post

It is quite true that the first seetion could stand alone that the second and third sections could form a story by themshyselves and that only the fourth section depends for intelligibility on what has gone before Noneshytheless there is unity here if not the tight construction of the most effective novel

Family Lore Mr Ordway begins by describshy

ing graveyard working days in the hamlet of Mabry near the town of Clarksville in eastern Texas On that day occurring once a year the descendants or suniivors of those burled in the Mabry cemetery come together to set the place to rights

middotAs they do so they rec~ the histories of the dead and thus the family lore is passed on from generation to generation But it is more than family lore which is conveyed the countrys past is reconstructed and the making of the present

The narrator a boy in the 1930s learns of two decisive episodes in his own family One has to do with Thomas and Ella Ordway who were Tennessee people until 1863 Thomas was an infantryman was horribly wounded and disabled in the batshytle of Shiloh and would have died or at least have been lost to his famIly had it not been for his wifes valor The narrative of her recovering him ann bringshying him back to a ~blance of life is harrowing

Journey to Texas But somethinamp more harrowshy

ing is still to come the account of their six months journey in a wagon drawn by oxen from Tennessee to Texas in the hope of beginning a new and better life The reader not only follows this arduous exodus but makes and suffers it and is haunted by it thereafter

This portion of the book is a storY complete in itself dramatshyic pathetic comic packed with lively incidents and colorful characters some heroic some corrupt some rascally all disshytinctive and engaging

Occasionally the side excurshysions pall a bit as in the depicshytion of stump speaking by polit shyical candidates or of life with a small shabby traveling circus Yet each of these sideshows has something to contribute to the pictUre of emerging Texas

Acute Observations

Mr Humphrey writes extremeshyly well a little less fancily as the book progresses but always vivshyidly and with plentymiddot of power for the high moments His peoshyple are nicely differentiated and come memorably to life He has many acute observations and even authentic wisdom to disshypense and this he does neatly His book rings with truth about human nature and is the work of a highly gifted and skillful artist

Mr Beekers A Covenant with Death on the other hand strikes me as contrJved empty and often obnoxiousmiddot Its nub is a legal stickler What is to be dQne with a man who is convicted of m~rger bought +c the gallows there Gki1ls~e hangman and then is cleareu of the first kill shying ~is poser ismiddot put to the 29shy

year~old judge Ben Lewis He solyes Wby niakiIig law and when confronted with this puzshyzler solves as well a key probshylent in his personal life At one and the same time he becomes at last a real judge and a real man

Precise 3udgment

Or so we are asked to believe Lewis says of himself I passed the crisis of adolescence at the ludicrous age of 29 bull bull bull I was swollen with garbage and bittershyness My own ego was monshystrous mainly because I had never done anything for anyone and could justify my own useshylessness only by assuming that the world was not worth my energies This is a precise judgment

The trouble is that the book is swollen with garbage and bitterness as well as sophistry

Young Lewis conversations with his mother for example They irk by their pretentiousness and they disgust with their obscenishyties The youngmiddot judge is thorshyoughly sophomQric and we are asked to credit his sudden leap into maturity We are asked too much

It is with ill grace that the author scorns small town folk for their prurience It is just this to which most of his book apshypeals When he sneers that Soledad City our wholesome middle-class American town would be lined up three deep for good seats at a murder trial with sensational sexual aspects he apparently forgets that the predictably huge sales of his novel will be in large part to people attracted by itligamineaa

3AMES OGARA

PauiSft CElnter Lists Spe(d~er

James OGara editor of Comshyrronweai magazinEl will be guest speaker in the Christian Culture Series at the Paulist Ce-nter in Boston on Wednesday evening Feb 17 on the topic The Role and Future of Cathshyolic Education

Mr OGara has written numshyerous articles for leading Cathshyolic magazines in middotthis country end Europe and has appeared on many religiow television programs of the National Counshycil Of Catholic Men

Rev Andrew Greeley sociolshyogist and author of many books on social subjects will join Mr O-Gara in the discussion

Monsignor Francis 3 Lally editor of the Pilot will be pr0shy

gram moderator

Deplores Agtncies Poverty Appoach

CHICAGO (NC) -- Catholic charity and welfareillgencies and institutions must drop thebusishyness as usual appreach and get into the actual aIl~na of povshyerty a National Conference of Catholic Charities Dleeting here in Illinois was told

The surge of natilmal concern about poverty is one of the most dramatic and compelling moveshyments in our day rather Robshyert Monticello of DEltroit chairshyman of the conferences program committee told assembled social work executives

His views were echoed by Msgr Raymond 3 Gallagher secretary of the comerence who said that personal service to families and individuals among the poor must be a coriunitment each of us makes dailly

CENTIER Paint and Wldlpaper

Dupont PClint

iiP cor Middle St

422 6lcush Ave

~Qc=t~ New Bedford ~ARKING

Rear of Store

ProtEct What You Hav~

McGO~VAN Insurance J~gency

TEL MYrtle ~1middot8231

188 NORTH MAIN $TREET NORTH ATTU8ORO

Beggars for All the Missions

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen DO

rn the mail last week a package arrived containing several hundred printed and self-addressed envelopes from various begshyging organizations in the United States The good woman who sent the package admitted being neither rich nor comfortable and yet she was flooded with appeals She wanted to know how she became a victim of this deluge The answer is that she is on a mailing list There are hundreds of mailing lists for sale in the United States These can be bought for various amounts depending on the number and quality of the names listed The good woman who wrote us was on at least one of these lists

Never before has it been brought home to us with Such impact how swamped our faithful are with appeals It grieves DB

that we too are beggars but we find some consolation in the fact that the Holy Fathers Society for the Propagation of the Faith has never used such mailing lists

This incident highlightsmiddot an urgent need that the Vatican Council must recognize that of co-ordinating appeals for all these really worthwhile causes especially those of misshysionaries Pius XI said that the method by which each missionary group solicited only for itself did not provide an even distribution of help Some can barely survive others have investments in Wall Street How to know who out of the hundreds who beg are most deservng is not only difficult but almost impossible

We have never liked begging In fact there is too much inshysistence on money in the Church tOday We would like to be unshackled from our tin cup and not add to this confusion But this is our duty Why 1 Because the Holy Father has asked us to be his beggars in the United States for -all the missions of tlie world 2 Becanse it is the glory of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith not to helf) one order or society of the world but the entire world (As a matter of fact 88middot per cent of the appeals in the above-mentioned package received soDie aid from The Society for the Propagation of the Faith) 3 Because being under the direction of the Holy Father The Society for the Propagation of the Faith does not invest any of yoUrmiddot alms Every eent Is distributed by the Holy Father each year The world Is too poor So fOldve us

Oh yes the lady who sent us the package wrote I could not keep 240 missionary appeals because I have not the money Since The -Society for the Propagation of the Faith aids all I send the Holy Father my $100 to be divi4ed as he sees fit

GOD LOVE YOU to Anoafor $5 Here Is Diy poeen valeiI- Une for the poor bullbullbull toMLA for $78 This is whist l diel Ilot spend on eigarettes Somehow I cannot enjoy them auYmore knowing that today 10000 people riD die of ~rntionmiddot

-

Think ahead to Valentines day and order a GOD LOVE YOU medal In classic Florentine gold finish or pure sterling silver this lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of the World is one you would be proud to give or delighted to receive Designed by the world-renouned jeweler Harry Winston and blessed by Bishop Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal may be obtained by sending your request and corresponding offering to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001

$ 2 small sterling silyershy $ 3 small 10k gold filled $ 5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut 01lt ft1Is colUIDn pin your sacrifice to it and maD It te Most Rev Fulton 3 Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York New York 10001 or to your Diocesan Director

Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 368 North Main Street

Fall River Massachusetts

791 PurcIaase Street Betweea

WIUIam bull UnI_ S_

NEW BEDFORD

FIVE CENTS SAVINGS BANK

WE HAVE PLENTY OF MONEY FOR HOME LOANS

If youre buying or building -Ioolc to us CONVENTIONAL GI - FH~ FINANCING

Ca on us anytime aDd talk over your plans

Fathers andmiddot Daughters Will Twirl At Annual Sucordium-Sponsored Hop at SHA Fan River

Dads and daughters win twirl at the annual fathep daughter dance at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River Its scheduled fltgtr 8 tomorrow night in the academy gymshynatorium and is sponsored by the moms and dads and daughters-members of the

SHA Fall River and her team very active Sucordium Club marked its first league debateHomemaker of the year at this season by defeating Case

Holy Family High in New Dartmouth Taunton and PreshyBedford as a result of the annushy vost al Homemaker of Tomorrow test Coyle High was host for a taken by thousands of girls novice tournament of two rounds across the nation is Christian with nine schools competing last Saulnier Shes National Honor weekend and the varsity team Society treasurer and copy edshy last week won three of four iJtor of By Fy Spy the school matches over Bishop Stang paper Bishop Stang was host to Narshy

At Dominican Academy in Fan ragansett League debate last River the top homemaker is week with 12 schools representshyJulia Melvin Senior A president ed each by four man teams Repshysodality vice-prefect and student resenting Stang were John council vice-president Another Golenski Michael Hogan Thomshyfeather in Julias cap is that as Keary and Myles Tillotson shes to represent her school at At the same meeting Bishop the state capitol on Student Feehan was represented by Government Day Francis Detellis Kateri Detellis

Christine Julia and an other Roger Watts and Raymond StafshyDiocesan school winners in the ford They won one debate out homemaker contest are now eli shy of four gible for consideration as state Current Affairs Contest winners Themiddot states highestshy Many Diocesan schools partici shyranking girl will receive a $1500 pated in a current affairs conshyscholarship and will tour Washshy test sponsored by a weekly news ington and New York City this magazine and among top scorers Spring From the state finalists were Janet Gendreau Moniquewill be chosen national winners Boulay and Muriel Raiche at in the homemaking contest and Jesus-Mary and Paula Powersthese girls will have their scholshy Susan Penrose and Mary Kellyarship grants substantially illshy at SIlA Fall River creased Also in the spotlight is 1anice

Benoit of SHA Fall River whosGrac1aatlOIl GOWIl8

received honorable mention for rrs snowy outside but thoughts the Bishop Connolly award preshy

of the seniors at Mt St Mary sented annually to the DioceseAcademy in Fall River are Oft outstanding girl athletethe days of June Theyre curshy Yearbook pictures for Coylerently selecting g r a d u at i 0 Il juniors sophomores and freshshygowns and are making a critical men have been safely taken so survey of ofterings from several another milestone is passed OIl area stores the road to publication

And National Bonot- Society Dominican Academy juniopsmembers have been busy at Sashy and seniors will make a closedcred Hearts Fall River Theyve retreat at the Cenacle Conventwritten to all accredited colleges ill Brighton during their Februshyin the US requesting inforshy ary vacation while the annualmation on admission requireshy school retreat is in progressments and availability of finanshy hOW at Bishop Stangcial aid The gathered informashy The program includes dallytion will augment the guidanee Mass Benediction and confershyfile in the school library ences and retreat masters are

Sevenmiddot new clubs have beeR Rev John OBrien SSCCmiddot andorganized at Tauntons Coyle Rev Andrew Jahn SSCCHigh School They are French An unusual auction was a feashySpanish Stamp and Coin Pep ture of a dance sponsored lastEnglish Literature Chess and weekend by Feehan seniors forPhotography Something theremiddot all their fellow students Eachfor everyone faculty member donated a prize

Four Dominican Academy stushy for the auction including suchdents have passed 120 word tests valuable items as a pass excusingin Gregg shorthand and two a student from detention pershyhave passed 100 word tests On mission to omit a book from anthe bowling scene at DA high outside reading list and a driy scorers include Susan Pacheco ing passAnne Marie FoIster Colleen Auctionmiddot proceeds benefited bullDesrosiers and Patricia Od) shy performance of Leave It tonecky Jane to be produced by the

The junior prom at Bishop Feehan Dramatics Club SundayFeehan High in Attleboro has and Monday Feb 14 and 15been set for Tuesday night April Jeannine Dumont senior class20 In charge ofmiddot arrangements secretary and middotlssistant editor of are Robert Bedard and Carol the school paper at Holy FamilyMiller while committees are al shy High has been accepted at Bosshyready at work on decorations ton College as have classmates e n t e r t a i n men t refreshshy Maureen OBrien Christine Ponshyments tickets and that unher ichtera and John AylwardaIded but all-important chore of Mother McAuley Guild at Mtclean-up St Mary Academy will hold its

annual calendar party WednesshyDebaiioi- Prcmt day night Feb 10 EntertainshyIn the indoor days of Winter ment will reprelC~t each monthdebating holds an honored spot of the year and the decoratedamong extra-curricular activishycakes willbe ~oor prizesties at Diocesan schools At Preshy Class -laeement vost in Fall River the debate

THE ANCHOR-- 13 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Churchmen Favor Johnson School Aid Program

WASHINGTON (NC) shyCatholic and Protestant spokesmen applauded Presishydent Johnsons school aid proposal in a placid Congresshysional bearing where the on~ disagreement came over mi~

technical questions The release from the charged

atmosphere of past hearings w noted all around

A Catholic spokesman smilin~

ly commented that it was a relief not to fear getting out of the

Vour nearescmall box i$ Q Firsf Ilfderal branch office that open 24 hours $ day to make $(lving easy for you No traffic nO parking no leather problem~

Withdrawals ate just as implt taY~ngs paymencS

bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull r fRlE o~middottymiddotmiddot ~ ubullbullh coupon 7bullbull~ trti 0middot

team was victorious over Mt St Marys and Bishop Stang in Narshyragansett League debate but lost to SHA Fall River The varisity also met Coyle during the past week

Mt st Marys debate record stands at 2-2 with Anne Browshynell Linda Mello Susan Jenkinshyson and Nancy Curran defending their school in Narragansett

Tomorrows the day of reckonshying at SHA Fall River Not only will report cards be distributed but a list of all seniorsand their placement in middottheir class for the past four years will be published

Fifteen seniors It DA partici shypated in a French Listening Comprehension Test on Tuesday This supplementary test is ofshyfered by the eollege entrance

PREVOST SCHOLARS High scorers in National Merit Scholarship Examinations at Prevost High School Fall River are Gerard Gltgtu~et left and Paul Nowak

tests in addition to the French Written exams come in March

Also at Feehan where report cards will come tomorrow high honors will be achieved by those with an average of 90 or better honors by those earning 85 or better and honorable mention by those with grades of 80 01 better

Bishop Stang mathematiciana placed first ill the Notre Dame Math Meet held last week at Cardinal Cushing High in South Boston Eighteen schools com~

peted and Stang won by n points Responsible for the vieshytory were John Keavy Paul Roy John De Ciccio Raymond Desrosiers and Alan Roskiewiez Top individual scorer was John DeCiccio

Best Girl Athlete Senior Nancy Vogel of Bishop Stang High School received the Bishop Connolly Award for the best girl athlete of Fall River area Diocesan high schools at a ceremony held last night at Whites restaurant Nancy as shining a star schoshylastically as athletically plays hockey basketball and volley~ ball at the North Dartmouth school She will be the first reshycipient of what is to become an

Influence Declining MADRID (NC)-Castroist inshy

fluence among young people in Latin Ameriea has declined the past two years Luis Garcia Arishyas professor of international law at the University of Saragossa here in Spain said on his return from a tour of Latin America Thursday Feb 1amp

SCHOOL Mainte~ance suppr~

SWEEPERS SOAPS DISINFECTANTS

FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

DAHILL CO 1886 PURCHASE STREET

annual award made by the FaD River Clover Club Also honored at last nights dinner-dance WBI Coach Carlin Lynch of 11M Stang Spartans

Forty Hours devotion was celshyebrated for the first time at Bishop Feehan high scbool starting Sunday and ending Tuesday Seniors Eileen Pashyquette Mary Duffy Nancy Clegg and Susall Ouelle~te aided Sister Mary Kateri of Feehan home economics department III making a cope and humeral veil used for the first time at the ceremonies

And Feehanites celebrated terms end by viewing A Raisin in the Sun

bullbullbullbullbullbull

hearing room alive The major Protestant spokesmen described the bill as an instrument of recshyonciliation Con g res smiddotm e a praised the compromises they saw being made by all sid~

church groups and educators -The President has proposed bull

$12 billion program to improve elementary and secondary schooling from poverty-strickea families

A total of $1 billion wouldge to public school districts in lowshyincome areas Additionally the proposal would spend $100 milshylion for textbooks for all school children and school libraries and another $100 million to create bull system of public-priva~commushynity educational centers to offer cultural enrichment and specitl eourses to all school ehildren

Pittsburgh School Enroll~ent Down

PITSBURGH (NC) - Enroll shyment in the Pittsburgh diocellMl Catholic school system has dro~ ped by 40 pupils Msgr John B McDowell superintendent ball reported

The monsignor said the sliglll drop has been preceded by fo_ years of leveling oft in enrol) ment figures because of enforeet gradual cuts in class size

Since 1960 he said there _ been an increase of only 24 pushypils in the total number of stushydents Elementary and seconda schools last June tallied 129531 pupils a drop of 40 he said

bullbullbullFREEKI _forbullbull~to bull ~-~----- shy _ StampMo _ middot----1

City_middot bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbulliibullbullbullbullbullbullbull WE pAY POSTAGa

(tree po5t-pald~Clddd i-velop ady to mall

FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND lOAN ASSOCIATION

OF FALL RIVER Home OHice 1 North Main St Fall River

Somerset OHice 149 GAR Highway Rte 6 League bouts The team meets exam board and consists of Both Offices Open Friday Evenings until INEW BEDFORDBishop Cassidy of TauntOn Wedshy questions and answers concernshy Sonterset Drive-In Window Open Mon-Thurs til 4 nesday Feb 10 ing subject matter on tape At WY 3-3786 Susan Nunes heads debate 111amp Feeha aiYdentll 1ook Germaa

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Stresses ilroad beep Gulf Between Two Generafions

By John J Kane Ph D What is your opinion of secretive sons and daughters

()f today Our married son and daughter never tell us anyshything Friends and strangers knew they bought a new home before we did My daughters husband knows all the ansshywers and wants no advice from anyone My son is afraid of his wife and she makes all decisions They ask us to visit but hurt our feelshyings when we do by what they say We were raised to reshyspect our elders and ask their advice

You r letter Jean does pose some justifiable complaints But it also seems to make some unshyreasonable deshy

mands Furthershymore amusingshy1y enough you conclude that you were reared to respect your elders and intimate your chil shydren werent If so whom can you blame

I dont know the reason why your children failed to inform you of their intentions to purshyehase a home But I do have some suspicions Do you have a tendency to be critical about what they buy Sometimes parshyents do

Tremendous Inflation Y-oungsters and parents both

make a certain type of mistake when it comes to purchasing of such things as homes cars or expensive appliances So m e young marrieds try to begin at a level their parents only achieved after 10 or 15 years of married life

But some parents do not seem to realize that inflation has been tremendous in the last 20 years When they hear a son or daughshyter is about to buy it home for 20 or 25 thousand dollars they are horrified They remember they paid perhaps 6 8 or 10

thousand dollars when they bought

They also forget credit is a bit easier than in the past that F BA and even the GI Bill help young people today and they may not even have existed when they were shopping for a house Longer te~ mortgages are possible today and lower down payments These of course do mean more interest

Coinmon CourteSY In other words parents should

Dot use the yardstick of economshyic conditions when they were young for the youth of today When they state perhaps with heated emphasis Why your father and I paid 10 thousand for a home the children are understandably irritated

But once having made their decisions com m 0 n courtesy would seem to demand tpat parshyents be told before strangers or at least as soon as friends Your sense -of hurt feelings here is quite understandable

Your complaint that your sons wife makes all the decisions may be true If so I agree that you have reared a Milquetoast But

is it true Are you actually cershytain or are you imagining someshything Are you really sayingshyand I frankly fear youare-that your son listens to his wife more than he listens to you

Mother-in-Law Role Being a mother-in-law is not

an easy role in Anierican soClshyety and many of the stupid

at least not if you wish to be a successful parent

Because most parents do love their children they are eager to help them They feel that their years of experience give them an advantage and this advantage they would extend to their chil shydren

At times this is true At times it is not The gulf between genshyerations is broad and deep Life has changed greatly in the space of one generation and the bench marks of the past may be unshysuitable today There are certain areas of living in which children may have better ideas than their parents Be prepared to admit as much

But within those areas where the maturity and experience of parents can be helpful advice can be given when not reshyquested only indirectly and cautiously Young marrieds misshyconstrue it as an effort to domshyinate which they reject Pershyhaps you can recall when you too felt this way

But it is indeed sad if they hurt your feelings when you do visit them You have not enshylarged on this so it is impossible to determine just what is said or done that annoys you Assuming you are making a correct judgshyment it is at the very least a breach of hospitality

Many of the inter-generational and in-laws problems of today are the result of social changes As one grows older it is less and less easy to change to adopt ways of doing and thinkshying After all if one succeeded under one system there is little motivation to alter it

Life Easier But conditions have changed

and to paraphrase a commercial this is the Pepsi generationbull Today boys and girls get married even wher the boy is unemshyployed This is scarcely advisable but somemake it Boys marry while still in college and their wives work to help put them through This would have been unthinkable 40 years ago

One of the really amazing changes is the use of long term credit The proud boast of years ago was that one didnt owe any money If you said this today youngsters would view you with open amazement and quietly conclude your credit was no good

No doubt some of this is overshydone and can bring about tragic results But if used intelligently it can make life somewhat easier perhaps more pleasant than in the past

These are only a few of the changes that could be listed a complete litany of them would be impossible Now this doesnt mean that parents are old fogeys that their counsel is useshyless It does mean that they must try tomiddot understand their married children better than some do

And incidentally because of these sweeping changes it is more difficult than it was But it isnt impossible an4 when donepays off in much better relationships

Anti-Smut Effort NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Loushy

isiana Knights of Columbus have jokes ]lake it even more diffi- launched a public information cult But parents after having campaign to combat what one reared their children to the best official t e r m e d indifference of their ability must let them go stemming from lack of knowlshyon their own You cannot keep edge about the growing traffic them tied to your apron strings in obscene literature

PRINCE OF THE CHURCH Americas new cardin~l recelyes congratulations from an old friend as Archbishop Patrlck A OBoyle of Washington felicitatesmiddot Lawrence Cardmal Shehan Archbishop of Baltimore on his elevation to the College of Cardinals by Pope Paul vi NC Photo

~Glassand Wire Tiny Foulr-Bell Chime in Bay State Church

Producing Soundof Big Heavy Metal WALTHAM (N C) - The string-shaped length of glass

church-bell of the future may which may be up to a foot i~ bE a ht~le thing of glass and length and a tiny hammer to Wire weighm~ about two grams produce the proper vibrations but reproducmg the sound of These vibrations are converted cast-metal constructions weigh- into an electronic signal which ing more than a ton ~asses through an amplifier is

j Pope Emphasizes Import of Hymns

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul in an audience for more han 1000 priests participating in a convention on pastoral lit shyurgy emphasized the key role of hymn-singing in the liturgy

We are not in a hurry he said

We must raise up a new peoshyple who learn to pray as the Church now prescribes

One of the prescriptions which I believe to be most influshyential and most necessary is singing

The Pope said that hymns inshycluding popular ones lift the soul and nourish it with religious sentiments

Illinois School Joins Expanding ETV Plan

MORTON (NC)-A parochial school here in Dlinois has served as pilot school in a historic edushyeational television experiment

Blessed Sacrament School reshyceived the first experimental transmission of v ide 0 tap e d courses in color from a high freshyquency monidirectional terminal

A 120-foot tower atop the school received signals from a tower on the Bradley University campus 10 miles away Bradley Coordinator Philip Weinburg said he expects an ETV program to be operational in the 1965-66 school year

The Catholic school tower will remain as a permanent inshystallation to serve both as an ETV booster station with a 15shymile radius and a receiver for educational programs in the school next Fall

Changes in Mass EDINBURGH (NC) - Scots

Catholics are busily preparing for the introduction of English and Gaelic into the Mass on March 1 the first Sunday in Lent

bull HYANNIS bull HARWICH PORT bull ~olri YAAMOUTH

--- shy

funeral Service

DoANmiddotSpoundALmiddotAMtS INCOIlPOItATtiD

Glassblower Gerhard B Finkshybeiner of Brandeis University here in Mass lpoundlas installed for the first time in the United States a set of the tiny bells in St Susanna church in Dedham named for the t~tula church in ~ome of ~ostOIl s Richardmiddot Carshydinal Cushmg

Finkbeiner whose small glass bells already al~e making kingshysiZed sounds in 10 churches in Germany and ]~rance has proshyduced a four-bell chime for the Dedham church encased in a metal cabinet only two feet long and weighing a mere 40 pounds In cast metal equivalent sotmdshyproducers would occupy a goodshysized belfry and weigh aboUt 10000 pounds Finbeiner envishysions his discovery as destined for churches which cannot afford regular bells

The new-style bells look like nothing so much as the fa~iliar vacuum tubes found in any nonshytransistor radio but they proshyduce a never-changing high quality sound which is fully comparable to the metallic clang

of the old-fashioned bell shy

Inside each vacuum tube in Finkbeiners system there is a

MON~~GHAN

ACCEF-TANCE CQIRP

JHOMAS F MONAGHAN JR

Trecisurer

142 SECOND STREET

OSborne 5-7856

FALL RIVER

Increased 100000 times and comes out through a ~pecial speaker whose sound most exshyperts cannot tell from a metallic ben

The sound of a heavy metallic bell is one of the most complex of all musical sounds according to Finbeiner but he has been able to dUJlicat~ it through parshyallel ~Udi~ in glassblowing electronics and ~acuum techshyniques

BARDAHL MAKES YOUR

CAR RUN BEnER tAt New Car Dealers and Service Stations

Everywhere -I

With Safety at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK

115 WILLIAM sr NEW BEDFORD MASS

WEBB OIL (OMPANY TEXACO FUEL ()IL$

DOMESTIC amp HFAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS

Sales~SetYce-lnstaDtjon MAINO~FICE~JO ~RFEEmiddot sTREETmiddotfAll ~IVER

Phone OS 5-7484

11

1S --

Views of New Ho~Y TrinitYmiddotmiddot-C-h-~-rc-h-I-W-e-s-t-~-I-a-li-i-ac-h-middotmiddotmiddotI

-

I I

16 THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

Says Pope John Left Cha lIenge To Catholicsmiddot

NORTH PALM BEACH (NC) - Pope John XXIII left Catholics with a chalshylenge to meet the world Bishop Coleman F Carroll of Miami said here

Bishop Carroll said Pope John dared Catholics to meet other Christians and non-Christians and to discuss our common problems and seek by discussion a solution to these problems

This challenge cannot be met by the pope alone or by the bishops and priests alone he said It must be met by all inshycluding-indeed especially-the laymen

-He said laymen must be propshy

erly prepared for this task through study training and spirshyitual preparation In this conshynection he called a closed spirshyitual retreat an absolute must for the lay person

Bishop Carroll spoke to memshybers of the Our Lady of Florida Retreat League at a dinner in his honor at the Passionist Retreat House here

PrelWtes Sc~~dlJ(e

US~ ~f VeCrulall ROME (NC)-The Italian lanshy

guage will be used in Mass throughout I t a I y beginning March 7 the first Sunday of Lent

The Italian Bishops Commitshytee on the Liturgy in announcshying the change specified that the Italian language would be used in Masses on Sundays and holy days and at all Masses attended by a substantial number of the faithful

The parts of the Mass to be said in Italian are the following the Epistle Gospel acclamations salutations and dialogues (inshycluding the prayers at the foot of the altar and the dialogue preshyceding the Preface) the Kyrie Gloria Creed Sanctus-Benedicshytus and Agnus Dei themiddot Patermiddot Noster with its introduction and the formula for the Communion

Peloquin Chorale Televises Hymns

NEW YORK (NC)-Hymns -Yesterday and Today featurshyipg C Alexander Peloquin and members of his popular Peloquin Chorale will be telecast Feb 14 from 1 to 130 PM EST over the ABC-TV network

The latest program in the seshyries Directions 65 - a Catholic Perspective produced by the National Council of Catholic Men and the ABC public affairs department was written by Peloquin and traces the develshyopment of hymnody from the Te Deum of the 4th century to the works of contemporary composers

Stresses Doctrines Substance Remains

DAVENPORT (NC) -Bishop Ralph L Hayes of Davenport adshymonished an interfaith meeting here in Iowa against expecting changes in Catholic doctrine

The (Second Vatican) Counshycil may change the manner of presentation of doctrines but not their substance he said pointing to the liturgy as an exshyample of such a change

We must admit bigotry and misunderstanding on both sides But followers of Christ have Scripture devotion to the Holy Spirit and devotion to Christ in common Why not talk about the things on which we agree he asked

Sisters of Mercy General Asks Personal ST LOUIS (NC)-Weve got

to develop the Sister in depth Thats what the times call for said the mother general of the 7300 American nuns of the Sisshyters of Mercy of the Union

Mother Mary Regina Cunningshyham ending her first six-year term as the head of the widely known teaching social work and hospital nuns was talking about what the Sisters of Mercy are doing to bring themselves fully up to the times

In St Louis Mo to meet with the superiors of the nine Mercy provinces Mother Regina talked about the main vehicle she and her colleagues hope will achieve the transformation

This is the year in the commu- nity for chapter meetings and general meetings of the nuns in

each of the provinces climaxed by a meeting of the general chapter at the orders mothershyhoupse in Bethesda Md she said

Changing Church Results will be ~olnown in Aushy

gust and Mother Regina hopes that they will show her commushynity to be in line with the mind of a rapidly changing Church in the midst of an even faster movshying world

She predicted tlat the chapshyters would have some surprises not only in the deisions but in the way they are organized to give a more representative view of all the Sisters in the order

If one overall phrase had to sum up what Mother Regina and the other planners are looking for in the Mere chapters it

would be personal responsibil shyity she said

A Sister has to have the reshysponsibility to make judgments for herself said the mother general Her superiors have to give her the responsibility to achieve her own role She has to make the decision to take the risks

~And then of course be ready to pay the price for her decishysion said Mother Regina

In Updated Sense Weve gone beyond the day

Papal Count BALTIMORE (NC) - Thomas

W Pangborn a Hagerstown (Md) industrialist and philanshythropist has been named a papal count by Pope Paul

Responsibility of always being safe Some peoshyple want to be sure to have the answer before they move But sometimes that meant they never moved at all she observed

Developing a Sister in depth will mean a lot of things espeshycially an updated sense of her apostolate and the way she works at it For the Mercy nuns in the U S Central and Latin America and in the West Indies it will mean a lot of littie things Mother Regina hinted

Changes might relax regulashytions about home visits dining with others attending night meetings and cultural affairs or traveling with companions

Mother Regina said that we have to plan for more contact with the laity and for more edushycation to understand each other shy

a

lYonderful Meatsbullbullbull Anoth~r Big Reasll Why zltI ~III I bull STAYING ~c~ Z ~

with FIRST NATIONAL it

l~middotmiddotsowll ItmiddotI

IIIIr-All vlu

FACE RUMIP Fine Grained Texture shy

Heavy Steer Beef for Hearty Eating LB

The Perfect Roast for large Families

ROASTL854CAITCHBONE Same [ow Self-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vidnily rNe Reserve Iie Right to Limit Quantitietl

-

I The Parish Parade I SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO bull

Holy Name Society members will receive corporate Communshyion at 7 oclock Mass Sunday morning Feb 14 The unit plans a Valentine dance and supper from 7 to 12 Saturday night Feb 13 in the Elks auditorium on Church Street SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs John DeBettenshycourt president Mrs Arnold Muckerheid vice-president Mrs Nelson J DeBettencourt Jr treasurer Mrs Charles Davis secretary

For the Holy Name SOGiety James Ferreira is president supshyported by Freeman Willoughby vice-president Alfred Metell treasurer Anthony Rebello secshyretary The units next meeting will be Sunday Feb 14 at the parish hall OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a Masquerade Ball Friday night Feb 26 at Wimpys resshytaurantr Osterville Mrs James E Murphy is chairman ST JOSEPH ATTLEBORO

The CYO will sponsor a dance Saturday night Feb 20 with enshytertainment by Mickey Chagnon and the Rivieras Chairmen for the unit include Carolee Desshyrochers membership Judy Roy spiritual Claudette Ouimet culshytural Sue Reynolds publicity Claire Piette social Don Fisher recreational BLESSED SACRAMENT FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will present a fashion fair at an open meeting to be held Wedshynesday Feb 17 in the church basement Planned for April are a rummage sale and a whist party ST JEAN BAPTISTE FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women announces a ham and basket whist party for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 in the lower church hall In charge will be Mrs Napoleon Picard and Mrs Eugene Gagnon aided by a large committee ST STANISLAUS FALL RIVER

Civics Club members of the parochial school will deliver pastry to nursing home patients for Valentines Day Other projshyects include collecting Christmas cards for missionaries and shovshyelling snow to augment the club treasury OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION OSTERVILLE

Mr and Mrs William Dacey will be co-chairmen of a preshyLenten dance to be held Friday night Feb 19 at Wimpys restaushyrant in Osterville under sponsorshyship of the Womens Guild The program will include a buffef and dancing from 9 to to ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

Mrs Lionel J Dulude presishydent of the Sacred Hearts Assoshyciation requests all ladies of the unit who have First Friday Adoration to check their asshysigned times in order that the full quota will be present at all hours

Corporate Communion for members will be held on Sunday at the 815 Mass and the regushylar meeting will be held the same evening at 730 in the Church Hall

The Penny Sale scheduled for Feb 20 will be discussed atthis meeting ST JOSEPH FALLRIVER

The annual mid-Winter Gala is set for Saturday night at Venus de Milo restaurant A buffet supper from 630 to 830 will be followed by dancing a parish reunion and awarding of prizes

ST JOAN OF ARC ORLEANS

Forthcoming events for the Womens Guild include penny sales this month April and next November socials in March and June and Summer fairs in July and August A ham and bean supper is ~cheduled for May ST JAMES NEW BEDFORD

middotMsgr Noon Circle plans a potluck supper for members and their guests Saturday night Feb 20 OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION NEW BEDFORD

Holy Name Society officers inshyclude Severo G Alfama presishydent James P Gonsalves and John Monteiro vice-president Antonio Rocha treasurer John Soares secretary ST GEORGE WESTPORT

Womens Guild members will form the congregation at the TV Mass to be broadcast on channel 6 at 10 Sunday morning Feb 7 Participants will meet at the parish school hall at 9 to travel to New Bedford ST JOHN BAPTIST NEW BEDFORD

Parishioners will hold their annual filhoz supper and penny sale at 530 Sunday evening Feb 21 in the cllurch hall Tickshyets are available from officers of church organizations or at the rectory In charge are Gilbert Brazil and George Ladino ST PIUS X SOUTH YARMOUTH

The WQmens Guild will hold a past presidents dinner Monshyday night March 1 at Armands restaurant_ Hyannis NOTRE DAME FALL RIVER

Cubs and Boy Scouts will at shytend a Communion breakfast Sunday Feb 7 following 815 Mass A blue and gold banquet for the Cubs is set for Sunday Feb 28 in the parish hall with Roger Labonte in charge of arshyrangements

The Council of Catholic Women will hold its installation banquet Monday Feb 22 at Whites resshytaurant under the chairmanship of Mrs Paul Ilmais To be seated are Miss Helena Dumont president Mrs Cecile Barnabe frst vice-president Mrs Gershyard DextTaze second vice-presishydent Mrs Richard Perry treasshyurer Mrs Romeo Parent reshycording secretary Mrs Roger Langlois corresponding secreshytary

The third in a series of cake sales will follow all Masses this Sunday in the lower church Mrs Ferdnand Letendre chairman will be aided by Mrs Robert Phenixco-chairman Cakes can be brought to the lower church from 4 to 5 and 630 to s Saturshyday afternoon and evening SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a potluck supper for members at 630 Tuesday night Feb 16 in the parish hall A silent auction will follow the slipper In charge of arrangeshyments is Mrs Mary Pereira chairman aided by Mrs Mary Gagne The council announces a malassada supper and penny sale open to the public from 530 to 7 Sunday night Feb 21 also in the hall Tickets will be available at the door and chairshymen are Mrs Mary Cabeceiras and Mrs Albina Quintill

A regular meeting is set for 730 Friday night Feb 12 in the hall Installation of officers is planned for later in the month ST MATIDEU FALL RIVER 4

A Valentine whist is planned by the Council of Catholic Womshyen for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 at the parish hall Mrs Raymond Antaya is chairman

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan RIver-Thurs Feb 1l96I rr

GIVE VIEWS ON AID Presenting views on federal aid to education to the House Education sub-committee was this panel representing the Catholic school system left to right Msgr William E McManus Chicago superintendent of the largest Ctholic school system in the country Mr Edward McArdle Washington DC who focussed on the parents view of the childs needs as the father of seven children Msgr Freclerck G Hochwalt Director Education Department NCWC and Msgr John B McDowell sushyperintendent of the Pittsburgh diocesan school system NC Photo

bullSays Church Must Live In Wide World~ Cardinal Hits Ignorance of Our Neighbor

CHICAGO (NC)-An Amerishycan prelate prominent in the Churchs work for Latin Amershyica has told US Catholics there is no excuse for our ignorance of our neighbors the nations of Central and South America

Archbishop Paul L Hallinan of Atlanta chairman of the subshycommittee for inter-American cooperation of the US Bishops Committee for Latin America in a message to the second annual conference of the Catholic IntershyAmerican Cooperation Program SClid the Church today lives in a new world but it must preshypare to live in a wide world

Miles Are Nothing Catholics in tpe United States

with a strong cultural and comshymercial bridge to Europe find Africa a puzzle and Asia an Orshyiental mystery Strangest of all is our ignorance of our own neighbors the nations of Central

E~ual Treatment JERSEY CITY (NC)-Hudson

County parishes here in New Jersey are joining in a countyshywide interfaith appeal seeking pledges of fair housing practices

~T FRANCIS XAVIER IIYANNIS

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a penny sale at 8 Tuesday right Feb 9 in the parish hall A Communion breakfast and fashion show are on the units Spring schedule

ST JOHN BAPTIST CENTRAL VILLAGE

A housewares demonstraticm will follow an open meeting scheduled by the Womens Guild for 8 Thursday night Feb 11 in the church hall In charge of refreshments will be Mrs Matil shyda Shelter Miss Margaret Shay and Miss May Taggart The unit plans a Valentine whist for 3 Saturday night Feb 13 also in the church hall on Main Road Miss Edith Kirby and Mrs Louise Vieira are chairmen ST JOHN POCASSET

The Womens Guild announces a penny sale for Friday Feb 12 Mrs Sprague Spooner will be chairman The units next meetshying will feature slides and a talk by Col Eugene S Clark on the early history of Marthas Vineshyyard It will be held Tuesd~

Feb 16

and South America he deshyclared

The ~rchbishop said 60 years ago there was an excuse-travel communications and cultural knowledge were in their inshylancy But now miles are nothshying since Pope John XXIII brought his message of unity to the world he averred adding

Real Import The CICOP meeting brings

bishops priests and laymen of both hemispheres together for a remarkable in-service training period a healthy learn while you work program We know much of Latin American needs both religious economic and culshytural We are helping in our way to repair these shortcomings But we need even more to share

in this Christian fraternity fIIf background common resources and future hopes Only by free easy association with the repshyresentatives of Latin America can we get the real import

ELECTRICAL Contractors~

~ ~ ~ ~

944 County St ~ New Bedford

ecec~c~ccccee~o

C) LOUlUl~S iiffii~ ~ i middotbull EWrIMA ~- shyg l~

ROMEamp I~-

I SHmNES imiddot ~ OF EUROPE iiI bull ampHOLY LAND ~) C~ 1 bull CATBOLIC PROGRAJ 1965 ~)

ALI~~16 ~I CachoIlcTeI Orrlce ~) c~ WASHINGTON CHICAGOIOMI LONDONI CATHOLtC TRAVEL OFFICE FRM ~------------II -~ Dupont Circle Building WashIngton D C 20036 fali ~ ~ j1ii Please send me your free Illustrated booklet describing in ~ iJl detail the wOrldmiddotcovering pilgrimages

C~ Name iI ~IJ Address ~ C_~ CityIloneState 11 =~~~~~_~_~~_~_ft~ftVw ijrv _ii~middotV

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Teen-agers Outstanding For Prodigal Generosity

By Rev Joseph T McGloin S J Several times in this column Ive had some glowing

words to say about our Mexican neighbors to the south about their friendliness and hospitality- and general likeshyableness And certainly its all true These people busy as they are will go out of their of other peoples is that you canway give you their precious easily give the idea you are sell shytime and attention to see ing all your own countrymen that you enjoy your visit to short And this would be the their country When a Mexican furthest thing from my own says Mi casa es su casa My thoughts house is your Because there is great friendli shyhouse - which ness in our country too - in he invariably varying degrees and manifested

middot does-he means in various ways The Mexican is it F r i end s in general more spontaneous strangers even than we and most of us have to shopkeepshy be approached before we give ers youve never our friendship since an initial II e e n before shyness seems to hold us back will introduce Often enough however this

middotyou to the whole shyness is caused by a national family and inshy superiority complex by a fear vite you to hav~ of not being accepted and by

middotdinner wit h the fear of making fools of ourshymiddot them To put it mildly hospital shy selves in a language we dont ity like this would be impossible know In other words humility to forget or to overlook is an esseatial to friendliness and _ Sometimes you wonder as you hospitality Sometimes we have walk the downtown- streets of it Often we dont CHle of our own cities and as you Hospitable People see pe~ple going their own inshy We Americans are sometimessulated ways if it isnt true that afraid to show our real feelingsas a country we have only a -afraid to show for inst~nce

-head while Mexico has a head our sympathy forthe underdogand a heart We usually make up for t~is

Superiority Complex psychologically by cheering on - This feeling grows on - you the hiss favored side at spe~tator when you visit Mexico and have sports when we should be doingthe misfortunE to encounter the it in the causes of racial justiceAmerican tourist who is bent on and equality of opportunity inshyacting like one It is a crying stead shame that so many Americans We are afraid others usuallyhave to show a superiority com- those very loud others will look

middotplex to those they encounter in down on us if we give public middot other countries seeming to feel support to those who need our that no matter where they go it support the little -people the is not they who are the foreignshy least of Christs and our brethshyers but those they encounter ren

All too often these types seem The fact is though that we to despise the customs and lanshy Americans do have a- heart and guage and even the currency of that once we put aside our sillythe countries they visit apparshy ideas that we are too busy to be ently thinking that anyone can hospitable or that others will understand English if you only look on us as soft and foolish if speak louder and that real we are or that we must not goAmerican money will buy anyshy out of way forour foreign~rs thing even respect because we might make a misshy

Worst of all are those wbo take in speaking their languagebring their aura of racial supeshy -then we can be and are just as riority along with them and hospitable and friendly as anymake little effort to hide it It is peoplein the world undoubtedly true that some of Ideals of Youththis patronizing attitude is partly There are many Americansresponsible (along with Castro~ and fortunately there are gettingeternal vigilance for American to be more who are willing tomistakes and seeming mistakes) stand up publicly and be countedfor the affection with which on the side of right instead ofAmericans are held in some parts - merely clucking in quiet privateof Latin America such as in sympathy There are lots ofPanama Americans who are not jqst

Race Prejudice friendly and hospitable to forshyAnd its tragic that have eigners but who do heroic workwe

to expoFt the most shameful of with the poor and downtrodden our national sins the stupidity and handicapped of their own which is race prejudice We country and their own city as might as well forget in fact well about any good neighbor polshy - Now there are lots of adult icy until we ourselves become Americans of this type But good neighbors when it comes to out-and-out

But even when we are not prodigal generosity it is the snobbish at home we are seldom teens as a rule whohave to be as spontaneous in our friendli shy given first prize ness other peoples The forshy A teen-agel who has not yetas eign students who come to stuay outgrown the honest ideals of at our universities often get youth will give his time and enshylonely and discouraged because ergy unstintingly and with little they have seemingly no friends thought of consequences This

author has instanceThe Negro in his fight for for seen equality (a fight which should kids doing heroic work with the never have been necessary in the very poor and the orphans-notfirst place) very often feels just throwing money into a colshyalone (though decreasingly so) lection box for them but givingwhen even those who know he is them their time and their love getting a raw deal do nothing working with them face to face at least publicly to help him even as Christ did set things right America has a great heart

Which may be one reason the and many Americans are just as Negro American often makes a spontaneous and natural at better ambassador abroad than showing it as any people anyshyother Americans where As a country however

Friendliness Here we still have some distance to But the trouble with extolling go before this sort of generosity

the hospitality and friendlin~ becomes our national image

CHECK COMPARE SAVE

Turkeys 10to11 LIS

Ready-to-Cook 39~ FIR S T Nancy Vogel

daughter of Mr and Mrs SAVE CASH bullbullbull SHOP AampPLeonard J Vogel of Sacred Heart Parish Fall River and a senior at Starg High last night became the first recishypient of the Bishop Connolly award for the outstanding

girl athlete n a Catholic High School The Clover Club of Fall River sponsored the award

Thomas ~Vhalen

In Noviticlte Brother Thomas Whalen son

of Mr and Mrs Thomas Whalen -8 General Cobb St Taunton and a member of the Sacred Heart Parish has received the religshyious habit of the Erothers of the

SMOKED P()RK SHOUlDERS

SUPER-RIGHT SHORT SHANK 6 TO 8 lBS

PICNICS 1829c

CHICKEN LEe or BREAST 33c

QUARTERS l8

SAVE CASH ON THESEHoly Cross at ceremonies conshyducted at St Joseph Novitiate

Valatie NY 6 POUNDS ofi BREAD ONLY 99c Brother John Donoghue CSC

Provincial Superior of the Broshy Whitl Breadp~~~E~ 4 ~6~~~z99c thers of the Holy Cross of the SAVI 20e - REGULAR 59c - 8 INCHEastern Province announced I p 118 8 OZ 39CJANEthat Brother Thomas was one of App I II PARKER IACHthe 14 candidates who is now starting a canonical year of proshy JANI PARKER - SAVlOe REGULAR 9c

bation for the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross bull hB Ck 1 lB 3 OZ 3ftCSpaRIS ar a e EACH i

Following the reception the parents and friends of Brother Thomas were guests at a lunchshyeon at the novitiate

Total Now 430 NEW YORK (NC)-With the

opening of two more parish schools the number of Catholic elementary schools in the New York archdiocese now totals 430

ATWC)OD OIL CO~~PANY

SHEILL HEATIN4 OILS South SeC] Streets Hyannis Tel HY 81

COMPLleTE

Mortgage Service anywhere on Cape Cod

bull RESIDENTIAL bull COMMEI~CIAL

bull CONSTRUCTION bull SEASONAL

Call EX 8-2266

Bass ~iver Savings Bank

SOUTH YARMOUTH Hyannis - Dennis Port

Yarmouth Plaza

Special Donut and Coffee SoleI All THIS weEKI

PLAIN SUGARED CJlNNAMON OR COMBINATION

2 PKGS 4ftltJane Parker Donuts 29cR~~ Of 12

I E 5 ON ON SAVE 4c B~~S SAV 1 c B3~S MILO AND MRLOW COFfil

Eight OClock ~A~ 69c-3 IJ~G 198 RICH FULLmiddotBOOleo

Red Circle CoHee ~A~ 71 c-3 B~G204 VIGOROUS ANO WINEY

lokar Coffe ~A~ 73c-3 B~G210 rice shown In thl ud guiltnteed tlltu Sat Feb

Tobacco products and Items prohibIted by Iaw eKempt from Plaid Stamp Offbullbull amp effective at ALL Aamp Sup Matlcotn thl communll1 and lclnll1

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 3: 02.04.65

3 Justice and Love Motivate Whites In Racial Work

PATERSON (NC) - An interracial cause worker has summed up the Negro atti shy

tude toward the civil rights situation like this-you asked my grandmother to wait You asked my mother to wait And Im afraid that If I wait youll be asking my daughter to wait

Arthur D Wright executive director of the New York Cathshyolic Interracial Council told the organizational meeting of the Paterson Cat hoi i c Interracial Council here in New Jersey there is a great need to enlist Catholics to promote a more

positive social climate regarding race relations He also said it is necessary for whites to reevalshy

nate their role as the Negro makes progress

He observed that now whites participating in the civil rights struggle are motivated more highly than Negroes The Negro he emphasized is compelled to work something out of his sysshytem to realize that his status as a second-claSs citizens is not acshyceptable WhIte men active in the movement he pointed out

are motivated by principles of justice and love

Wright expressed particular admiration for the zeal of the Tounglr generation

Bishop to Offer Brothers Mass

Most Rev James L Connolly Bishop of the Diocese of Fall River win offer a Pontifical Mass of Requiem Friday morRshying at 10 oclock in Holy Name Church Fan River for the reshypose of the soul of his brother John E Connolly who died Tuesday monrlng

Mr Connolly the husband of Mrs Jennie Lowney Connolly was born in FallRiver the son of the late Francis and the late Agnes McBride Connolly He was a member of St Patricks Parish until 12 years ago when he moved to the Holy Name Parish

He was the brother of the late Rev Bernard Connolly SS

Mr Connolly held membership In the Serra and Clover Clubs of Fall River

Burial win be in St Patricks eemetery Fall River

Bishop Wri9ht Asks Renl Peace Effort

NEW YORK (NC) - Bishop John J Wright of Pittsburgh has called for efforts to re-spark the relation of religion to world ctrder and to peace

We must seek the moral inshygredient needed to put the blueshyprint for peace into action This Is the will to peace Bishop Wright told Catholics Jews and Protestants attending a peaee conference at the Church Center tor the United Nations

The Bishop emphasized it is necessary to distinguish between bull realistic peace and wishful thinkinb about it

He said people today must be content to live in a world that eontains many things we can do nothing about We must learn the merit of buying time

To Give Blood Fall River Council of the

Knights of Columbus will be host to the Red Cross Bloodmoshybile from 1245 to 645 Tuesday afternoon and evening Feb 9 at the council headquarters 209 Franklin Street in Fall River Members and their friends are vrged to contribute blood

THE ANCHOR-Father Clark Describes Clothing Distribution Thurs Feb 4 1965

In Santo Domingo Dominican Republi~ CCD To Conduct Methods Course Rev James A Clarke of the Fall River Diocese is presently attached to the Latin

America Bureau of the National Catholic Welfare Conference with headquarters in For Grade School Washington He has been in Santo Domingo Dominican Republic making plans for a The Diocesan Office ofMarian Congress to be held there next month and the following report is sent from that

the Confraternity of Christshycity children wet their feet in order ian Doctrine has announcedEver wonder what happens to make tight shoes fit as I that the second section ofto the clothes you give to the watched mothers try frilly this years course for CCDThanksgiving Clothing Colshy dresses several sizes too small teachers will take place thislection Today I found out In or large on their small children monththe past I had seen how clothes as I watched their deep quesshy This will be an eight-weekwere received and steam-packed tioning eyes look at me with course in methods of teachingat a warehouse in New York wonderment at my obvious Christian Doctrine on the eleshyFrom there Catholic Relief Sershy wealth of clothing as I saw tiny mentary school level The course vices ships them overseas Today children drag large bundles You will be given in five areas of thein Santo Domingo the people could only wonder at the happishy Diocese at the following times received their annual shipment ness in their homes on this eveshy and locationsThe clothes arrive here sepshy ningYou could lt1nly wonder New Bedford Bishop Stangarated into mens womens and what their homes must be like High School Tuesday Feb 9 at childrens shoes bedding misshy n made one want to kiss the 730 PMcellaneous Nuns here at the Kansas farmer who had grown Taunton Bishop Cassidy Highorphanage repack the clothes in the surplus food or embrace the School Tuesday Feb 9 at 730variety packets with some of Montana mother who put an PMeach type Then they distribute extra press into the trousers she Fall River Mtmiddot St Marythroughout the neighborhood donated Simple solutions to the Academy Wednesday Feb 19tickets for the most needy population problem could no at 730 PMToday the people arrived and longer satisfy me as I watched West Harwich Holy Trinitymassed against the ga~es It was these illiterate people wander School Thursday Feb 11 at soon obvious that the amount of off with innumerable chiidren 730 PMclothes was woefully insuffi shy trailing behind I assisted one Attleboro Bishop Feehan Highcient These people cannot read boy with oversize overshoes he School Thursday Feb 11 at 730and thus cannot understand the tramped off heedless of the giarshy PMsimplest sign of the least comshy for a free cache of clothes But ing sun and baked streets His The tuition and book fee paidplicated directions For a while there is something haunting feet finally hada covering Some for the doctrine course last FaRthings were chaotic about seeing old people robbed pressed twigs into the heels of witl also take cate of thilIThe Spanish nUns labored with of all personal achievement and shoes to makidhem fit methods coursemaginificent grace to move the dignity by being born in an

people through the gates First These people didnt know theunderdeveloped country come the People received their monthshy food was from the United- States More Communions with ghastly clothes on their ly allotment of surplus food But A sign was plastered across theback to receive a new years NEWARK (NC)-New Jerseythis month the clothes were the food packet but they couldntsupply Today was Christmas in pastors agree that the numberattraction for new clothes come read it Others havent been toSanto Domingo receiving Communion has risenonly once a year Hunger can be Mass for years No one quesshyOnce they received the clothes since fasting rul~s were relaxedhidden and a sense of personal tioned them on anything butthe people sat outside the exit dignity remain even witl a their need And that was obviousgate and displayed their wardshygnawing stomach But nakedness robe Guilt seeped through my Tomorrow I must preach tocannot be hidden soul as I watched with well shy these people As I stand before

Today Was Chfistmas HUTCHINSONSfitting clothes on my back peoshy them in a pressed clean tailored There is something sad about ple combine garments of the cassock I am sure my words will

seeing naked children reach out most garish colors as I watched sound hollow ART SHOPPE

REV JAMES A CLARK

135 FRANKLIN STREETRevise Ceremonies of Four Sacraments FALL RIVER OS 2-0211

PapaI Instruction Simplifies Rites bull Picture Framing The Instruction which puts (Therefore accursed devil) No casion this shall be given imshy bull Art Supplies

much of the Constitution on the 25 (Therefore accursed devil) Tum to Page Six Liturgy into practice besides No 27 (I exorcise you unclean devoting much to the Mass spirit) and (Therefore accursed seminary training legislative devil) No 33 (The threats of bodies and church architecture punishments) and No37 (Go also speaks concerning the Sashy forth unclean spirit) (63)

craments Confirmation Much of what is here containshy If Confirmation is conferred

ed especially concerning the at Mass it is fitting that the Bisshyvernacular in the administration hop be the celebrant and he of the Sacraments is already thus confers the Sacrament in part of the Dioceses normal Mas s vestments The Mas s ministry since Sept 14 1964 would be that of the Holy Spirit On Sept 10th the Most Revershy Votive 2nd Cl end Bishop-by mandate--estabshy After the homily of the Mass lished that the new American but before Confirmation it is Ritual was to be used regularly praiseworthy that the candishythroughout the Diocese dates renew the promises 01

However Pope Paul has furshy Baptism ther simplified the rites and If another celebratfs the Mass brought clear meaning to the the Bishop shall wear the vestshyadministration of the Sacrashy ments for the conferral of the ments by extending the reform Sacrament-white or the color demanded by the Council of the Mass The Bishop shall

Following are changes to be give the homily and the Mass made in the new Arneri8an Ritshy shall resume only after the Sacshy AI Deposits 0 ual rament has been administered INSURED Fri Nights

Anointing of SickBaptism Full Til bull OClock If the Anointing and the VitshyIn the rite for supplying omisshy

ticum are to be administeredsions in the case of a baptised at the same time the continuousinfant (Collectio Rituum 1964 rite should be followed (CollecshyXII and I) the following exorshytio Rituum 1964 VI)cisms are suppressed No 3

If however the Apopstolie(Depart from him (herraquo No Blessing with a plenary indulshy7 (I exorcise you unclean spirshygence at the hour of death isit) and (Therefore accursed to be imparted on the same ocshydevil) No 12 (I exorcise you

every unclean spirit) (62) In the rite fo) supplying omisshy WEAR ~ GreaterfaD RiVU Isions in the case of a baptized Shoes That Fitadult (Collectio Rituum 1964

THE FAMILY SHOE STOREOrdo Baptismi Adultoroum) the 1 Family Banking Center ~~ following exorcisms are supshy Johns rpressed No8 (Depart from him (herraquo No 17 (Therefore acshy ~i ISAVINGS bull HOME LOANS Shoe Storecursed devil) No 19 (Hear acshy l~l lHOME FIX-UP LOANS bull AUTO LOANScursed devil) No 21 (I exorcise 43 FOURTH STREET you uncean spirit) and (Thereshy r PERSONAL LOANS bull 15c MONEY ORDER CHECKS Fall River OS 8-5811fore accursed devil) No 23 i_~~~--~h~~t~m~f~-braquoraquo--raquo~4~~~~~)iraquoJmJ$)A~~J~r~2~11iimiddot~(~~raquoJi

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

yeW Movement Assists Million Young Workers

By ~fsgr George G Higgins Canon Joseph Cardijns elevation to the College of

Cardinals which was unexpectedly announced by Pope Paul VI Monday Jan 25 was a richly deserved tribute to a great pioneer in the social apostolate of the Church and to the worldwide movement which he established a genshyeration ago - the Young Christian Workers (JOC)

What is this movement which has merited such a welcome tribute fro m His Holiness middotT heY 0 u n g ChristianWorkshyers is a moveshyment of the Church which r e c r u i t sand trains you n g working men and women Its aim is to educate young workers so as to enable them to re-Christianize their lives and surroundings

The YCW is a school of life Through the inquiry method the genius of the movement young workers discover the problems of their work life of their neighshyhorhood and iamily and of their leisure life

Last and most importaIt a concrete action is taken to bring their life close to the ideal of Christ and His Church This is -the school through which have passed thousands of youngworkers the world over

Christian Lines By meeting weekly with other

young workers the Young Christian Workers develop charshyacter The YCW shows its memshybers how unChristian their enshyvironment is in many respects Realizing gradually that they themselves are affected by it young workers are stimulated to think and act personally on Christian lines It is a school which combines knowledge spirshyitual formation and action

The spirit of service shows itself on the most simple occashysions of the daily life of the Young Christian Worker The kinds of service are as numerous as the many needs created by the various circumstances of everyday life i e making friends with new workers visit shying a sick friend helping a young worker to get a job passshying out leaflets in a union camshypaign and the like

All service in the YCW must rest entirely on the Christian conception of love of others This is the soul of the movement

In Daily Life Through the actions and sershy

vices of its members the Young Christian Workers Movement is constantly in touch with the young workers daily life in factories and offices home and leisure ip short with the needs and desires of working youth

The YCW is a permanent reshysponse to the problems of all young workers The Church gives us the doctrine of Christ and communicates His life to us The YCW has been charged With the responsibility of helping to bring the Divine Life to all young workers and to change

First Fridians If Members of the Fall River First Friday Club will have John J Gallagher president of the Fall River Mental Health Assoshy1iation as their speaker at their montlily dinner meeting tomorshyrow night The gathering will follow 6 oclock Mass at Sacred Reart Church and will be held in the parochial school All Cathshyolic men in the Fall River area are invited to join the club

things which stand in the way of their living this new life

Established by Canon Cardijn in Belgium in 1912 the Young Christian Workers was officially recognized as a national organshyization in Belgium in 1925 by the Church Today the movement exists in 40-odd countries and is in the process of formation in 25 others Over one million ~oung

vvorkers throughout the world make up its membership

Produces Vocations Today the YCW has taken its

place as a small but important youth movement in the United States It has trained worker leaders who have set their shoulders to the wheel in ecoshynomic and political life It has produced many vocations to the priesthood and religious life and hundreds of Catholic marriages

Much has been tione But the task has just begun God willing the elevation of Canon Cardijn to the College of Cardinals in the evening of his inspiring life will serve as a stimulus to the movement not only in the United States but in every other part of the world as well

S h A middot out merlca Continued from Page Ten

through combating such probshylems as poverty illiteracy reli shygious ignorance and communism a consensus seemed to emerge from the discussions that the Church has started to come to grips with the realities of the situation and will continue to gather strength in the struggle of the Latin American peoples to overcome their crippling problems

Assessing the help which has already come from North Amershyica and the role the Church in Latin America must play in helping its people Bishop Marshycos G McGrath CSC of Sanshytiago de Veraguas Panamasaid in a private interview the inshycreased impact of the Church in Latin American life is enough reason for optimism

Give Impetus

The material and spiritual aid which has begun to flow into Latin America is of great imporshytance bee a use cooperation brings forth cooperation He expressed the hope that before long the programs of education and material aid would give Latin Americans the impetus they need to help themselves

Defining what he believes should be the role of the Church he said much of the materialmiddot help needed is really the funcshytion of the civil governments but it has to be done by someshyone and sometimes the Church is the only one willing or able to do the job But the real place of the Church he believes is as a teacher and former of attitudes

ANDERSON amp OLSIEN INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIC

HEATING-PIPING and AIR CONDITIONING

CONTRACTORS 312 Hillman Street WY 7-9162 New Bedford ~

W IS E INVEST~IENT

Every pastor should make it his business to see to it that every family in his parish gets a copy of his diocesan newspaper said Msgr Robert G Peters of Peoria The lllshyinois prelate is president of the Catholic Press Associashytion NC Photo

Minister AddJresses Catholic Conention

HOBART (NC)-An Anglican minister has addressed the 23m convention of the Catholic Unishyversity Federation of Australia which is being held at the Unishyversity of Tasmania

The Rev B Marshall chapshylain of Trinity College Univershysity of Melbourne delivered a speech on the liturgy as the road to Christian unity

M-KRestaurant featuring

liThe Gaslight Roomll

Ideal far Communion Breakfasts

crganization Banquets

386 Acushnet twenue New Bedford

Can WYman 2-1703

HATHAAY OIL CO INC

NEW BEDF10RD

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OilS

TIMKENI

Oll BURNIERS

Sales amp Servce

501 COUNTY STREET NEW BEDFIgtRD

WY 3-1751

Mor~ Mass Changes After March 7 Continued from Page One The Roman edition will contain

hitherto recited in a low voice seven or eight samples simply be sung or recited aloud Among to demonstrate the spirit of the such prayers are the Secret the format to be approved by the Doxology at the end of the various episcopal conferencesshyCanon the prayer of peace fol- Eventually the Prayer of the lowmg the Our Father Faithful-being offered immedi-

Holy Coinmunion ately after the Creed during The reception of Holy Com- Mass - will vary from week to

munion at Mass by the faithful week at the discretion of the celshyis an essential part of the Mass ebrant but within the format apshyTheir abstinence from the Eu- proved by the national body of charist would make the Mass bishops It will be in the vernaeshysomething abnormal Fat her ular and is intended to express Bugnini asserted A Mass with- the special concerns of the comshyout the communion of the faith- munity in which the Mass is beshyful is like a ring without its ing celebrated precious stone Besides the revisions for the

Prayer of Faithful Iass a Kyriale is also being Individual bishops may com-printed which will contain the

pose a temporary Prayer of the chant for the Ordinary of the Faithful to be a normal part of liass and Chants Called For in Mass as of March 7 The Vatican the Roman Missal This book compositions will be guidelines Will contain a small selection of for the National Bishops Con- melodies for the newer rites of ferences to use to establish their the Mass for roncelebration own prayer in their territories prayer of the faithful etc

FR JOSEPH WORKERS PRIEST COMMUNISTS IN SOUTH INDIA WOULD LIKE TO GET RID OF FATHER JOSEPH CHAKIAK Because be isthe worker

priest Communism lulampan uphill figh1 in the factory towD of Eioor bull bull 20000 workers ba1f of them Catholics put lDloq hours for less than $1 a du Families have eight and ten children the cost of Uving goes lIP and up and the Communists make false promlses

Father Joseph fights vigo ously for social iustice Does be worry about the outcome David

The Hoi Pilshers Missi_ Ail hadonJy one sman stone when be Of Ih Orienslll ChINch wem out to fight Goliath be says

bull bull For the church and parisb censhyter Fatber Josepb needs Archbishop Parecattil 53 asks our readers help The workers stand in the rain ~en Father Josepb offers Mass be reports u we eanbuild a parish center and a church we ean guarantee for generations to come Iheextraordinary work Father Joseph is doing The ebureh will cost only $2900-the parish-eenter $3600 WU1 you put a stone in Fatber Josepbs sling Name tbe ehureh (or the parish center) in honor of your favorite saini (Si middotIoseph the Worker) in memory of your 1000ed ones if you build it aU b3

yourself Send at leasi a smaller cift-$lOO SSG $10 $5 $2shy

Youll be helping Father Josepb fight for tbe poor Christ lov~

FEBRUARY FOLLOWTHROUGH o BRIGHTEN BIRTHDAYS AND ANNIVERSARIES (your own

as well of course) byenrolling your friends and relatives (and their -familiesgt in this Association Theyll benefit In the Masses and sacrifices of our priests and Sisters and youll be helping bring souls to Ctrist MembershJp dues are only $l-a~year for an individual ($20 fot life) $5-a-year for a Family ($100 for life) Ask us to send the person you enroll a gift card with the certificate

o FEED A FAMILY FOR A MONTH It costs only $10 Well send you an Olive Wood Rosary from the Holy Land

o LET THE HOLY FATHER DECIDE Hell use your no strings attached stringless gift (in any amount) where its needed most

o CATHOLIC BOOK WEEK begins Feb 21 $5 will make one more Catholic book available to Pontifical Mission Library users in Jerusalem

fAKING A NEW WILL Tbe good you can do by remembershyIng tbe missions goes to your credit eternally Our legal title

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION

Dear Monsignor Ryan

Enclosed please find bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullfor bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Name bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Street City u bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullState bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullZip Code bull

dnl2earSstOlissioosrill FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President

Msgr Jose T ICIII Nat Sec Seed aU coMlllnleatioM to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION 330 Madlsoll Ave at 4211d St N_ York N Y 10017

-5

Center said here it found an overwhelming lack of evishydence to support the theory that Catholic schools are divisive

In a report in the FebruaryshyMarch issue of the Critic magashyzine three officials of the Unishyversity of Chicagos center cited bull survey made on the effects of Catholic education

Persons who went to Catholic scbools they said were just as likely to have Protestant friends in adulthood to be involved in civic activities tomiddot respect civil liberties to be open-minded to be tolerant of others and to be If anything more upwardly moshybile

Authors of the report are Dr Peter Rossi head of the research eenter Father Andrew Greeley director of the study and Leonshyard J Pinto assoc~ate director

They concluded Even though the measures

ased in this study are not as soshyphisticated as might be desired the overwhelming lack of evishydence for the divisiveness theshyory at least calls it into serious question

Indeed the general similarshyity of Protestants and Catholics and of the various Catholic subshygroups suggests that the attishytudes we attempted to measure are formed by general cultural forces rather than the kind of school attended and that the dishyvisiveness that exists springs rather from the influence of reshyligion itself than from religious education

Baltimore Gets ETV Station Approval

BALTIMORE (NC)-The Balshytimore archdiocese said the Fedshyeral Communications Commisshysion has approved its plan for eonstruction of an educational TV station to serve parochial schools here

Msgr James C Donohue su- perintendent of the archdioceses department of Catholic educashytion said the station will be ealIed KRM-67 and will be reshyeeived on television sets which have a special adaptor

In addition to programs for schools MsgrDonohue said the station may be used for Confrashyternity of Christian Doctrine training courses adult education liturgical instruction and pershyhaps clergy conferences

30 Priests Serve Southern Sudan

VATICAN CITY (NC)-There are now only one bishop and one apostolic administrator and 28 other priests to look after the Catholics of the southern Sudan the mission news agency Fides reported here

The agency said that they would normally have to min- ister to some 440000 Catholics but that thousands of their people are now refugees in neighboring countries

The total of 30 all Sudanese is all that remains following the expulsion a year ago of all forshyeign missionaries from the southshyern part of the country

Homowners Course A course in minor home reshy

pairs for homeowners and those dealing in real estate will be ofshyfered by Everett W Ericson as P3rt of the Spring program of the Continuing Education Divishysion of Stonehill College First RSSion will be held Tuesday night Feb 16 and the class win eoutinue for 10 weeka

THE ANCHORshyReport Questions Brother Michael Misses Warmth of Africa Thurs Feb 4 1965

Divisive School As He Shivers in New England Winter Church Council Assertion I wish I were back in Africa shivered Brother Michael E Barnaby home from To Open Talks

CHICAGO (NC) - The Tanzania East Africa where the thermometer is more or less permanently fixed in the National Opinion Research 90s to ~isit his pare~ts in chill Fall River The Brother of Christian Instruction son of With Catholics

Mrand Mrs Ernest J Barnaby of Notre Dame parish Fall River has been on home leave since the end of Noshyvember He will return to the land that doesnt need furshynaces on Valentines Day

Brother Michael has been a missionary in various parts of Africa for the past 11 years His present assignment is at St Marys Secondary School in Mwanza Tanzania Tanzania he explainer is the former Tanganshyyika renamed Tanzania a matter of weeks ago when Tanganyika and the island of Zanaibar formed an alliance

There are 283 boarders boys of 16 to 24 at St Marys School said Brother Michael Classes are in English but the government requires all teachers to learn Swahili and gives them about two years to do so Brother Michael hasnt as yet fulfilled this requirement since other languages were spoken in the parts of Africa where he was previously stationed but its high on his list of priority things to do

New School Year The teacher will be a little

late for school said Brother noting that the new school year began in Tanzania on Tuesday Jan 19 Why Tuesday Well the steamer that plies Lake Victoria on whose shores Mwanza is loshycated arrives on Tuesday bringshying most of St Marys students with it

Tbree and a half week vacashytions come every three months for students said Brother Mishychael and there are six free weeks in December when the school year ends Students work hard towards the Cambridge Overseas Examinations adminshyistered by Cambridge University from England

They are tough exams deshyclared Brother Michael If a boy passes them he is able to go on to higher studies Some stushydents he said are sent to the United States and some go to England Regrettably however

PrefatetoBless Center for Deaf

LAFAYETTE (NC)~First dishyocesan center here for work with the deaf will be blessed Sunday by Bishop Maurice Schexnayder of Lafayette

A former residence which for several years was a diocesan building has been converted to a center where the deaf can come to relax play bingo toshygether and we can also have edshyucational and spiritual proshygrams according to Father Carroll Dupuis diocesan chapshylain for the deaf

Bishop Preaches PROVIDENCE (NC)-Auxilshy

iary Bishop Bernard M Kelly of Providence preached at an ecushymenical prayer service in Beneshyficent Congregational c h u r c h attended by Catholics and memshybers of the Beneficent congregashytion It was the first time amiddot Catholic bishop has preached in a Protestant church in Rhode Island

Michael Ce Austin Inc

FUNERAL SEPVICE

NEW BEDfORD MASS

549 COUNTY STREET

BROTHER MICHAEL

hard for students to advance Closed all day SundayThe school day at St Marys

begins at 830 running until Macleans1245 and then from 230 to 4 with time out for a midday UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN siesta Students then have a

Continuing Education

EVENING CLASSES CLASSES ON TUESDAY EVENINGS 730 TO 930 PM

Liberal Arts TIt ABC Of Cime Th Artist At Work Comporative Religions Contemporary Novel In America Conversational French- in Conversational Spani Cr-m Writing Draw Anct Effecti Engliolo Laltor Law Effecti Public Rmtt- Sociology You And Society Reading Improvement For Adults (Oth Reading Clasbullbullbull

Weolltly For Primary C Secondary ~)

TIM above Ctur non-credi ood withoul prerequisitesbull

bull

Business Accounting For N~ Accountants Elementary Shaltthand (Gregg) Insurance Part II Investing ht Stocb Real Estate Training Cou Pew

Supervisors To Revie Co

Attomeys

Special Interest InteriM Decoration Th Houbullbull yetu LiYe In Personality Improvementmiddot Fee

Women Updating Efficiency In

Tomorrows Food Service

Spring Session FeIJ 16-Apr 27

58ftd Brochur wi1ft application form or

pho local-CE 8-2Oft or am- Ii -OK 6-9050 Ot apply puan Monday rough Friday Adminshyistration Building from

730 PM to 830 PM

NEW YORK (NC)-The World Council of Churches has approved laquoexploratory talks with Catholic represenshytatives a World Council official said here

The Rev Dr Franklin Clark Fry president of the Lutheran Church in America and chairshyman of the World Councils 100shymember central committee said procedures for the talks were outlined at a meeting of the committee in Enugu Nigeria

Dr Fry spoke at a news conshyference after returning from 10 days at the Nigeria meeting

He predicted that talks beshytween Catholic and World Counshycil representatives would begin in a few months He called such talks the next logical step in improving relations between Roman Catholics andmiddot other Christians

Step While the talks would be a

momentous step Dr Fry said nevertheless they would be a step not a leap

He said the initial discussions would concern matters that are not too complicated and apshypear 1ikeiy to produce progress in interreligious cooperation

The World Council of Churches includes 214 Protestants Orthoshydox Anglican and Old Catholic denominations with some 350 million members throughout the world

lARIVIERES Pharmacy

Prescriptions carted for and Delivered

HEADQUARTERS FOR DIETETIC SUPPLIES

600 Cottage St WY 4-7439 New Bedford

~

manual work period for three quarters of an hour during which said Brother all the heavy work of the school is taken care of Its quite an efshyficient system he noted A sports period follows

Brother Michael teaches biolshyogy math and sociology at St Marys He says his students are highly motivated Few boys can go to school so those who can want to stay and they study hard They know their futures depend upon it Most St Marys graduates go into government or business and Brother Michael noted that Julius Nyerere Tanshyzanias president is himself a graduate of a Catholic school He is a good Catholic he said

Native Vocations The Brothers of Christian Inshy

struction operate a Jlostulate and juniorate in connection with St Marys Some 40 boys are enshyrolled in the two institutions and will go to Uganda for their noshyvitiate

The area around Mwanza is hilly and rocky and vegetation is sparse said Brother Michael Nearby are gold and diamond mines but security is very up to date We ca~t take field trips to the mines

A native of Notre Dame parshyish Brother Michael has a brothshyer and sister still residing in the parish in addition to his parshyents He attended Prevost High School leaving in his senior year to enter the brotherhood and complete his education at the communitys school in Alfred Me He has been a religious since 1947

Brother Michael expects to visit Fall River again in three years under a government polshyicy which prescribes that all foreign teachers take home leave for six months every three years

very few educated youngsters become teachers

The good students get bettershypaying jobs and its the less able ones who turn to teaching Thus teachers are mediocre and its

STORE HOURS

MON TUES WED 900 AM to 500 PM

THURS FRI SAT 830 AM to 600 PM

-6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965 lVlission for Journalists SacrDments

Necessary Instrument The Catholic newspaper is not a superficial luxuty

or an optional devotion it is an instrument necessary for the circulation of those ideas which feed our faith

These words of Pope Paul spoken less than a year ago need no additional commentary to explain his view of the Catholic press and the importance that a Catholic newsshypaper plays and should play in the life of the Catholic

In the mind of th~ Pope the Catholic newspaper is necessary

The faith of the individual Catholic and the events of the life that he daily lives are inextricably interwinetl The faith must influence and give meaning to daily life and the events of the day must be viewed in the light of God and their impact for eternal life Where is the Catholic to receive information that will guide him in making these judgements and applications

This is the function of the Catholic newspapershyagain in Pope Pauls words-to present a fund of thought aligned along Christian principles Thlt Catholic newsshypaper the Pope points out must not only inform but form the reader And it must let the reader see in how many areas there is unity of belief among Catholics and with their non-Catholic friends and in how many areas there is complete freedom within the bounds of charity for discussion and disagreement

During February Catholic Press Month the Popes insistence on the Catholic newspaper as necessary should find response in the minds and lives of every Catholic family

This means that Catholic reading material must be in every home A Catholic weekly newspaper magazines books and pamphlets-these are instruments of Cathoshylic thought aids to the Catholic in his evaluation of the events in which he participates and these enable him to continue his education and to mature in the faith that is his

Responsible Press The announcement by the Holy Father of his creation

of new Cardinals was given excellent coverage in the daily press and many of the outstanding newspapers of the country saw fit to make it the subject of editorials

This in itself 3hould be proof if proof is needed that the daily press is willing and anxious to cooperate with the Church and with every other responsible group in the featuring of newsworthy releases It shows that there is concern in the higher e-chelons of newspaper administration over what the Church does and its influence in and on the world

Occasionally the cry is heard from some Catholics that this or that newspaper is prejudiced against the Church This is the ghetto-voice crying out the self-styled secondshyclass citizen speaking the inferiority complex-ridden Cathshyolic making protest serve instead of presentation and proshymotion This attitude happily is all but gone but it is still discouraging to see and hear it on occasion

When a newspaper presents a view that is deemed hostile to the Church the explanation is that the editor sincerely thought this to be a newsworthy item or else he was met with so many no comments from Catholic officials or was given such a run-around in his efforts to seek the other viewpoint that he met his deadline with what he had at hand

The press in the United States is a responsible one Exceptions to this are so few as to be easily and quickly recognizable Catholics would do well to take an active role in applauding and assisting the press in its presentation of news and viewpoints instead of carping and sniping from the sidelines

rhe tNCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diqcese of Fali River 410 Highland Avenue

Fall River Mass 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAqER It Rev Daniel F ShallooMA Rev John P Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR ~ Hugh J GoldeJ)

~

y

FEBRUARY

OATHoLa PRESS MONTH

ThnolACJh the Week With the Chunch By REV ROBERT W HOVDA Catholic University

TODAY-St Andrew Corsini Bishop What have we sinners done that God should trust us so Yet he assures us again and again in scripture as He does in the lessons of this Mass that He not only loves us but entrusts to us the salvation of our world

Sirachs tribute to the great priest and the Gospel parable of the industrious and reliable slaves-both come to the Chrisshytian people to t14e assembled church as messages of trust and confidencemiddot and hope Gods hope if we may so speak

TOMORROW - St Agatha Virgin Martyr Those who have made themselves thus for the sake of the kingdom of heaven (Gospel) are the Religious among us whose vows of reshynouncement establish a way of life that points to heaven

Whatever they do whatever concrete form their mission takes this is their common sershyvice to the whole Church - to remind us all that the worid moves toward a goal beyond it shyself not only in words but in the daily fabric of their lives

SATURDAY-St Titus Bishshyop The bishop of course but also every Christian must be a person who knows where he is going (Gospel) Jesus is teachshying here a simple directness in accomplishing the mission He entrusts to us Success is not the measure but the will the intent the steadfastness and purposeshyfulness To say The kingdom of God has approached you is not to brag nor to herald triumph It is only to announce the fact that one is here is present who is animated by faith and is therefore a vessel of the Holy Spirit

FIFTH SUNDA~ AFTER EPIPHANY You must bear with one anothers faults (first reading) or perhaps while you are gathering the tares you will root up the wheat with them (Gospel) These are great days of belated reformation in many areas of the Churchs Hfe in its worship in its conception of it shyself and of its mission

The movement of the Holy Spirit in the Church and in the times we live in has brought fresh air to us breaking a crust hardened by the defensiveness and fear of centuries With the Offertory hymn we can sing ~Gone is the threat of death

now I shall live aind proclaim to the world what the Lord hail done for me Now we shall live

with the constant reform and reshynewal that life demands

Yet our aims must be reasonshyable and we must be strengthshyened against the vain hope that because the structures and patshyterns of our Church life are imshyproved we shall be perfect First and last we deal in the Church with humans and with those faults the readings speak of Our reform is successful if those structures and patterns begin again to beckon and challenge and inspire us where we are and as we are

MONDAY-St John of Matha Confessor Hymning the praises of the good man the man who confesses his faith in the Father by dealing with every person as his brother the entrance psalm begins Be not envious of the wicked nor jealous of evil shydoers

Sometimes we pretend that a real envy a true jealousy is purely a desire to see (and help) virtue triumph But the saints too like the man we honor toshyday are fields in which tares are present They differ from us perhaps only in that they do not covet them nor envy the tares in other lives

TUESDAY-St Cyril of Alexshyandria Doctor Do not think that I have come to set aside the law and the prophets I have not come to set them aside but to bring them to perfection (Gospel) (I hope the new and improved text of scripture readings at Mass is soon avail shyable in books smaller than the altar missal)

Christ announces thatmiddot the job of His teacher of the man or woman who teaches in His name is not to set aside the law and the prophets nor isii to repeat them It is to bring them to perfection So the Christian teacher must heed the Spirit here and now as well as in tradition

WEDNESDAY - St Scholasshytica Virgin The maidens love of and openness to her groom with all her hope of fulfillment and completion is the model of the Churchs stance toward Christ Even as the Church the community of salvation we are not a finished product

We are always reformable al shyways perfectible always pil shygrims on the march It is this virgin spirit submissive to the L()td thatenables the Church to welCome such a period as thV time of change and progress

Continued from Page Three mediately before the annointinlf omitting the sprinkling with itS formula and the Confiteor and absolution Conselration

All bishops present may imshypose hands on the new bishop However only the consecrator and two co-consecrating bishopS are to pronounce the words Acshycipe Spiritum Sanctum Matrimony

Matrimony shall be ce)~brated

within the Mass unless a just cause excuses this It sl-jall be done after the Gospel and the homily Th~ latter is nevpr omitshyted

Within Mass The Votive Mass shall always be celebrted or a commemoration of it made according to the rubri(~ even during the prohibited tine

The pastor or his dnJegate who assists at the marri~O~ shan celebrate the Mass if it is anshyother Mn~s shall not (~ltinue

untn the MarrlageRite hls been completed The non-c~l~brant

who assists at Marriage ~lall be vested in surplice and white stole (and cope if it is the cusshytom) and he shall give tln homshyily The celebrant shall pve the blessing after the Lord Prayer and before the Placeat

The Nuotial Rlessing hlll al shyways be imparted even f it is one of the partys seconrl marshyriage or the marriage is rluring the prohibited season

Without Mass Accorrng ta the Apostolic Letter ~acram

Liturgiam (Jan 1964) rgt brief admonition shall be given before the rite Tis is not a homily but only a simple imtuction before the celebration of Marshyriage After the reading of the Epistle and Gospel of the Mass for Spouses there shall then be given a homily Thlllt the order shall be brief admrgtnition Epistle and Gospel in the vershynacular homily celebr2tonof marriage nuptial blessing

If no vernacular text is avail shyable for the Epistle and nos~l

it is lawful to use for the inshyterim a text approved by the local Ordinary~ bull

A chant may be sung bntweea the Epistle and Gospel The Prayer of the Faithful is highly recommended after the compleshytion of the Mariage Rite accordshying to the formula of the local Ordinary and in which petitions for the spouses are also to be included

At the end of the rite the nuptial blessing shall always be given as within Mass The formshyula shall be the one designated for this occasion (Collectio Hishytuum 1964 Rite of Matrimony Without Mass Nuptial Pessing Outside Mass Sacristy Manual p 283

If marriage is celebrated duJ shying the prohibited season the pastor shall advise the spouses to~take into account the special character of this liturgical seashyson Sacramentals

A single prayer from among the prayers which are found in the Roman Mis$al for Feb Z and for Ash Wednesday mashybe said on the occasion of the blessing of candles or ashes

Blessings which have been reshyserved up to the present time and which are contained in the Roman Ritual tit IX cap 9 10 11 _may be given by any

- priest with the exception of the following Blessing of a bell for the use of a blessed church or oratory Blessing of the first stone for the building of a

church B I e s sin g of a new church or public oratory Blessshy

ing of an antimimsiori Blessing of a new cemetery the Papal Blessings (cap 10 n 1-3) and the Blessings and erection of the

Stations of the Way of the Cr~ inasmuch asthis reserved to tbe JUahop

ACRES Of FREE

PARICNG

OOIJfIlElftENI BUDGETmiddot Finance

f 1It_ 10 Pay

1

Meeting to Plan CathQlic Press i

World Congress NEW YORK (NC)-The

Seventh World Congress of the Catholic Press to be held here May 18 to 22 will be the first subject for discussion at a meeting of officials of the Inshyternational Union of the Cathoshylic Press Saturday in Stuttgart Germany

Two representatives of the Catholic Press of the United States and Canada will attend the Stuttgart meeting They are Tames A Doyle executive secreshytary of the Catholic Press Assoshyciation and Father Hugh Morley

OFM Cap who represents the international union at the United Nations

Father Albert J Nevins MM editor of Maryknoll magazine is general chairman of the world congress and of the 55th annual convention of the Catholic Press Association which includes Catholic newspaper magazine and general publisher members in the United States and Canshyada

Modern Society The Stuttgart meeting will be

held under the direction of Raishymondo Manzini editor of the Vatican City newspaper LOsshyservatore Romano and president of the IUCP and Father Emile Gabel AA secretary general

Meetings at the world congress will be organized around the overall theme of Truth in the Pursuit of Liberty and will Inshyelude a number of special sesshysions relating the theme to modshyem society

There Will be conferences on the press and political liberty liberty and international order liberty and eivil rights con science and religious liberty freedom and the creative arts and liberty in the Catholic press

Three Missioners Martyred in Congo

ROME (NC) - The deaths of three more Catholic missionarIes and an African priest at the hands of Congolese rebels have been reported by the Pious Soshyciety of St Francis Xavier for the Foreign Missions of Parma

Italy The three Xaverian missionets

were Fathers Giovanni Didone 35 and Luigi Carrara 32 and Brother Vittorio Faccin 31

Patron of Rio RIO DE JANEffiO (NC-An

altar dedicated to St Sebastian has been blessed here to comshymemorate the fourth centenary of the founding of the Portushyguese settlement of St Sebastian of Rio de Janeiro

DUEtFEE- FALL RIVER

On Our Stage IN PERSON

Arthur Fiedler and

60 Members of the Boston Pops

an evening of enchanted music

ALL New Program Special Attention to evo ~nd Church Groups

FRIDAY FEBRUA~Y 12 830 PM

TEL 6fT-93S1

fHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965 1 Press Association Head Evaluates Press Month Theme

BY MSGR ROBERT G PETERS perfect setting up distortions in world but with every walk of proper interpretation of the

its reflection A mirror can be life every slightest concern of question itself The theme of this years Cathshy too small to tell the full story morality Anything else is not things as

olic Press Month gives everyone A mirror can be faithful to the they are or things in truth -readers and writers-reason to Christian Principlessurfacemiddotof things and miss what Anything else is not the Catholic consider the task of the Catholic A mirror that tells things as press that the popes have adshylies behind the obvious facade press They are the words of they really are must reflect not vised to place itself in the world Pope Paul VI Your Catholic A mirror that tells all things only the object in question but and interpret that world for press mirror of the world as they are must be a mirror that the surrounding world that afshy readers in the light of Christianbull bull telling things as they are seldom limits its area of reflecshy fects what must be told The principlesbullbullbull In truth tion And the press that attempts publication that mirrors the famshy Catholic readers should be

To mirror the world is not the to be such a mirror must concern ily the factory the field and the happy to have at hand a press simple task it first appears For itself not only with the obvious forum must include the Chrisshy that dedicates itself to so imporshyone thing a mirror can be im- ecclesiastical aspects of the tian principles needed for a tant a task

The Fumlture Wonderland Open Daily 9 AM to 10 PMe

_ the East Including Saturdays

Hew Englands Greatest Furniture (Iearance is Now in Full SwinQ

FREE DELIVERY

8

l

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall liver-Thurs Feb W85

Catholic Press Bears Witness 10 Churchs Spirit of Renewal

By Mary Tinley Daly -Reading habits must be changing in my parish

Mid a priest of our acquaintance Few years ago he ruminated Id go into a horne to make a sick call put my hat on the coffee table on the top of the New Yorker Vogue Look Life and the daily newspaper When Id come downstairs again my hat would be on top of a flock of Catholic m iss ion magazines and the diocesan newspaper The others were all chucked for the time being I was to be imshypressed quite obviously he laughedWhats the change now Father we asked Are the magazines more lurid where you park your hator

And Nowmiddotmiddotmiddot Just the opposite our priest

friend chuckled Theyre not ashamed of the Catholic press any more In the line-up among the popular publiclltions on those living room tables-and usually on top of the heap--are well shythumbed copies of Commonweal America The Sign and others Even the Diocesan paper is out in full view right beside toshynights edition of the city newsshypaper

This priests observation Is D~ all unusual

The Catholic press has made giant strides within the past few years strides which should be noted during this the month of February Catholic Pre s bull Month Why February We dont know Perhaps from the very name of the month derived from Februarius month of exshypiation and purification since en the 15th the Roman festival of expiation and purifi~ation was beld

To our way of thinking this iii appropriate since we believe that the Catholie press should take its place as a gOOd influshyence in the currentmiddot world of journalism To quote the present Pontiff Pope Paul VI Your CatholiC Press is a mirror of toshydays world telling things shythey are-in truth

And how is the Catholie predoing Better thank you

Todays Renewal Reflecting the Catholic layshy

mans view is the sophisticatedCommonweal edited by dedishycated Cafllolic laymen America edited by the Jesuits The Sign magazine of the Passionists and SO many others mirroring mod-middot ern Catholic thinking in our aggiornamento of today enunshyciated first by Pope John XXIII

Fresh air is not only seeping in it is sweeping int9 Catholic journalism

Notre Dame Superior Heads New- Cornmittee

WASHINGTON (NC)-5ister Mary Daniel provincial superior of the Maryland province of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur has been elected chairmaflof the newly formed National Sister Formation Committee

New vice chairman is Mother Mary Borromeo mother general of the Sisters of St Francis Joliet Ill the Sister Formation Conference announced from it headquarters here

Sister Mary Daniel heads a 12-member unit which guides activities of the formation conshyference a 12-year-old cooperashytive movement of U S Sistershyhoods to bolster the spiritual academic and professional trainshying of Sisters

Time was and in the memory of even young readers when a great many Catholic newsshypapers were pretty ho-hum a picture of the bishop on every page notices of sodality meetshyings ham or turkey dinners items which could and should be carried in parish bulletins edishytorials wildly denouncing thisshyand-that-a generally negative and boring experience for readshyers of which there were few

Catholic magazines were only slightly better mediocre articles namby-pamby fiction

Those were the days when out of a sense of loyalty or obedishyence Catholics supported their Catholic press with their subshyscription dollars but not with their attention

Catholic periodicals found their way from the mail slot to the magazine rack for a while then out into the trash Seldom did they appear on a living room table to be picked up for intershyest or enjoyment along with the mass media publications EVeJl less rarely was a Catholic peri shyodical quoted ill the secular press or discussed among intelli shygent Catholics

Fortunately times h a changed The Catholiepress is abreast of world news local news features book film and play r~views entertainment and famshyily pages And nowhere else of course can one get more authorshyitative information on the vital changes within themiddot Church itshyself Vatican Council liturgieal reforms ecumenism -eally alive issues

The change has been long _ coming hindered ~ maD7 r0adshyblocks but its here

Alumae Style Shaw Alumnae and parents of Jesusshy

Mary Academy Fall River wiD sponsor a supper style show at 630 Tuesday night March 2 at Whites restaurant

Sto Francis Resodence

FOR YOUNG WOMEN 196 Whipple St Fall River Conduded by Franciscan

Missionaries of Mary ROOMS - MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALtill Inquire OS 3-2892

bull bull bull bull bull bullbull bull bullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Williams Funeral Home

EST 1870 I Washington Square

NEW BEDFORD Reg Funeral Director CIftd

Embalmer PRIVATE middotPARKING AREA

TEL WY 6-8098

AT RED MASS Luci Baines Johnson daughter of the President attended the annual Red Mass in St Matthew Cathedral Washin~~ton last Sunday in the company of her escort Paul Betz of Washington left President Johnson preeeded the COUplEI into the Oathedral NC Photo

Protestants Must Change Attitude BONN (NC)-German Protesshy the Orthodox Church which

tants have been asked to meet takes a similar stand the spirit of change at the Vatshy He also pointed to the diffi shy

ican council with changes ill culty of solving problems in this their own attitudes area because the Catholic

Lutheran theologian Dr Hanl Church cannot find anyone aushyAsmussen wove his appeal thorized to negotiate for Protesshyaround a strong criticism of tants He said We have no Protestant impatienCE with the branch with which questions of Catholic position on mixed marshy this kind can be regulated in a riages He pointed out that Protshy binding way and we do not waDi estants who are angrr with the to create one either Catholic stand do not criticize

your OVENFRESH

NEIGHBORHOOD~ DAILY STORE

Asks End of Fee In Teaching

PADERBORN (NC)-Dao ligious training should _be more positive at all age levels and the element of all shyxiety and fear should be elimoo inated ill teaching children bull German Catholic churchman aeshyserted here

Archbishop Lorenz Jaeger ell Paderborn in Germany said bull more positive stress requires IEo vision not only of the catechism but also of the rite of confessioDo In line with this approach m said parents in the rearing of their children should stress the dignity of the human person iQoo stead of harping on duties

The prelate a member of 12ie ecumenical councils Secretarial for Promoting Christian Unit was addressing the annual cooshyvention of representatives 01 German Catholic womens ganizations He said that to tain awareness of the dignity all the Christian vocation Chri9shytians must first realize natural virtues and true humanity bull Pope John showed by his exa pIe

Defines ApoStolate Of Catholic Nurse

WICHITA (NC)-Bishop L8 C Byrne defined the CathoHe nurse-one who combines proshyfessional excellence with spa itual excellence to sanctify hetlo self and Christianize society

SpeaKing before the DioeeSRII Counell of Catholic Nurses here Wichitas apostolic administ

tor told 200 nurses Your laP apostolate is nursing Specifi shycally in our age which histolF will describe as the age of tile laity the Catholic nurse must be a shining symbol of both tbe Church and the nursing prof~

sion

~ DEBROSS OIL ( ~ COo

) Heating Oils ( ~ and Burners ~

365 NORTH FRONT STREET ~ NEW BEDFORD ~

~ WYman 2-5534 ~

VinesWill HaveTenderGrapes f Pruned Now Says Gardener

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

One of the few jobs in the garden middotwhich should be done in Winter is that of pruning grape vines By pruning vines now while they are dormant you will avoid a drippy vine when the sap begins to flow Actually the pruning should take place in two steps once now and again in never to be awakened again

late March or April Maybe this is how TV dinnersbegan

Too often grape produc- Now Im as guilty as any other Clon suffers from too little prunshy mother of not wanting four exshyIng As a result vines become tra elbows around me when I am overcrowded and produce small trying to cook and I often have stunted bunches of fruit or at to suppress a scream of anguish best production of fruit is when my last egg hits the floor limited Then I remember my early ef

In pruning a vine the first forts offer a prayer to the thing to do is to remove all Blessed Mother for an extra Winter-killed growth (this is dose of patience and find someshysimple to determine since dead thing for those little hands to eliDes are dry and brittle) These help me with canes should be cut back to the One day last week when my main stem The second step is to patience was at an unusually eut aU thin straggly growth at high peak we had a dolls birthshyleast half way back to the main day party cake mixed and baked stem or until the cane is at least by Meryl and Melissa instrucshythe thickness of a finger The tions read by mother The utter shape of the vine is of no conshy delight on their faces when the eern now since it will be shaped finished cake turned out so well after the second pruning more than paid for any extra

The first pruning should thin effort on my part the vine to approxima~ely twoshy A very young friend of ours thirds of its original bulk Do Christine McGowan of St JoshyDot make the mistake of being sephs parish Fall River was cautious about cutting Rememshy nice enough to give us one of her ber new growth will appear off recipes to pass on to the younger the old growth and unless you set Miss McGowan with the aid are thOrough the vine will be of an understanding mother has overcrowded been baking since a very tender

In late March or April the age ~e shouidbe pruned again duiped and tied First remove

Chrissies Cookies 1 Ie white sugar

any canes which were missed atmiddot 1 C brown sugar packed the fiist pruning or any recently C soft shortening (this III killed canes Other canes to be equal to lb butter or margarshy~moved are those which are old ine) IUld overuown since theywiU 1 t vanilla produce littleif any fruit 3 C flour

Once the thinning out process 1 t baking soda comple~ the canes which t salt are to be kept should be ~ nuts andor raisins to taste back to five or six buds and tied Heat oven to 375 Mix sugars During the tying process the shortening eggs vanilla Sift toshyme can be shaped so that no -gether flour soda salt and stir __0 canes are closer than a foot in Add raisins andor nuts ~d a half apart This is a time- Fo~ balls of about 1 t middotof dough eonsuming job which is very apiece flatten on ungreased ~y to do sloppily with a poor baking sheetallowing room far ~p resulting so t~e a few ~ys to do it properly Above an JIrUlle heavily In the Kitchen On of my older daughters reshy~ests last Christmas was for an electric oven that baked just like monunys I felt that this was a little too grown up for five year old because the temshyperature went up as high as 400 degrees so needless to say this particular item didnt find a place under our ~ris~as tree However I still feel quite guilty about this as I intend to try very hard to encourage any cooking tendencies in my daughters Speaking from personal expeshy

dence I remember the years I ipent getting shoo~d out 9f my mothers kitchen until finally ~y interest in that direction iemained dormant until mar ~age forced me to face squareshy~ the prospect of preparing three meals a day Fortunately hen I did solve this problem liided by many cookbooks I did discover how much I loved to eook but I still wonder how any other girls have had their love of cooking equally squelchshytid by a well-meaning mother

Dorries Patronesses Dames Patronesses of Sacred

Beart Home New Bedford will hold a Valentine party for hOJIle residents at 130 Tuesday aftershynoon Feb 9 Mrs Jean Boutin-is m charge of arrangements The lInits annual meeting is planned for Sunday April 25 and the -tOth anniversary of the group Will be marked with a banquet and dance Wednesday May 5 in New Bedford Hotel Next board meeting will be held at 30 luesday niIht March 11

cookies to spread (Wetting the handS with Cold water keeps dOUgh from sticking to them)

Bake 8middot to 10 miuutes Makes about 60 cookies

Notre Dame Nun Joins Inter-Radal Staff

CHICAGO (NC)-Sister Mary Peter (Traxle~r) of the School Sisters of Notre Dame has joined the staff of the educational -sershyvices department of the National Catholic Conference for Intershyracial Justice here

Raymond M Hilliard confershyence chairman said rapid growth of the agencys services necessi-_ tated staff expansion While doshying graduate work in political

science at Georgetown Univershysity in Washington Sister Mary Peter organized a tutorial proshygram for under-privileged youth

NO JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main OHice and Plant 95 Bridge St Lowell Mass

Tel 458-6333

Auxiliary Plants

BOSTON CAMDEN N J OCEANPORT N J MIAMI PAWTUCKET R L PHILADELPHIA

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ c 9 j

REPRESENT Us CATHOLIC WOMEN The Board of Direct-ors of the National Council of Catholi~ Women is received by Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi Apostolic Delshyegate in the US at the annual meeting in ~ashington Mrs Mar~us Kilch ~oungsto~ Ohio left front is NCCW president and Miss Margaret Mealey nght front 18 executIve director NC Photo

Vatican Pavilion Second Most Popular in Fair NEW YORK(NG) --At

most half of the visitors at the New York World~sFair~

last year stopped off at the Vatican Pavilion making it the second most popular of the Fairs 151 pavilions Average daily attendance was over 75000 giving the pavilion a total at- tendance figure of more than 138 million

The Good Shepherd Chapel was the scene of 1204 Masses

SAVE MONEY ON YOUR OILHEATI bull CfJH n

CHARLES F VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE NEW BEDFORD MASS

IwflkltdeliNlyK

~SS~ HEATING OIL

at whichCo~union was dis- The most popular item at the tributed to ~ie th8ll- 42000 pavilions sales counters was a people POStcard featuring P~pe Paul

gt 1 1

- ~- ~

-_

_ ~~ f y

~ I

NO NONOt

Piggy banks dont pay dividends Put your money in a Fail River Trust Savings Account where generous divishydends are compounded semi-annually Its much safer too 1

FALL RIVER ~~h TRUST CO- V

64J U1t4 ~~ bull~ Fatt ~

-

THE ANCHORshy10 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Prelate Stresses Ecumenism on Spiritual Level

MADEIRA (NC) - Auxshyiliary Bishop Paul F Leishybold of Cincinnati called for a spiritual ecumenism shyprayer and holiness - as the soul of the ecumenical moveshyment

He preached at a special low Mass which he offered at St middotGertrudes church here in Ohio for some 300 Protestants many escorted by Catholic neighbors Many Protestant visitors were guests in homes of Catholic pashyrishioners after the evening Mass which was (lffered at an altar facing the congregation

Bishop Leibold cited five ways in which those who profess Christ can work for Christian unity

1 We must make every effort to avoid expressions judgments

and action~hich do not represhysent the condition of our sepashyrated brethren with truth and faimess

2 DIalogue must be carried on between competent experts from different churches and communities

3 Cooperation among differshyent churches for the common good of humanity

4 A spiritual ecumenismmiddot which he said involves a change of heart holiness of life and public and private prayer for unity

5 All must examine their own faithfulness to Gods will for the Church and accordingly undertake with vigor the task of renewal arid reform

Scores FCC Stand On Religious Test

WASHINGTON (N C) - A middotmember of the Federal Commushynications Commission charged here that the FCC is violating constitutional limits marked out by the Supreme Court by makshy

ing religious broadcasting one test of a broadcasters public service performance

Commissioner Lee Loevinger addressing the National Reli shygious Broadcasters convention said the FCC has gone far beshyyond the limits that have been marked by the Supreme Court as permissible govertiment acshytion in the field of religion

Loevinger noted that the FCC includes religious pro g ram I

among the types of programs considered to be in the public interest on its license application forms He said it made the broadcasting of such programs one of the FCCs tests for detershymining whether a broadcaster operates in the public interest

Pope Paul Thanks Italian Policemen

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI greeted the Italian poshylicemen whose beat is the Vatican and saidit was a great consolation to know they were around

Answering an address of homshyage by Inspector General Oreste Correti who was accompaniel by other officials and members of the force the Pope said he is grateful for the zealous expert generous and selfless work in which you display your integrity as distinguished state officials and your dedication as faithful IOns of the Church

Though members of the Italian force the groups are assigned ~ special guard duties and ~

directing traffic in St Peters iquare and the area surropndinl Vatic~ City

BOSTON (NC)-Richard Card~ inal Cushing touched off a cheershying demonstration by 1300 Jews here when he predicte9 the Secshyond Vatican Council will apshyprove a declaration absolving Jcws of direct blame in the death of Christ

If we dont Im wasting my time talking of brotherhood said the Archbishop of Boston after he was presented withmiddot the annual Good Will Award of Temple Ohabei Shalom Brothershyhood oldest and largest Jewish organization of its kind in the

country He was selected for the award because of his compasshysion generosity love and broth- erhood

Reds Fear Religion The prelate said Ill never forget the Second

Vatican Council I didnt know What they were talking about I had never heard a lecture in Latin and it was all Greek to me I dont know how many others were in the same boat

CEF Head Praises Johnson Proposals

TRAVERSE CITY (NC)-The national president of Citizens for Educational Freedom had praise here in Michigan for Presshyident Johnsons statements in his State-of-the-Union address

Stuart D Hubbell a lawyer lauded the President for his wilshylingness to tr~at all school chil shydren equally He said he sent Mr Johnson a telegram which said in part

While your proposals have not as yet been made specific to the extent that they follow the principle of equality that you outlined in your message you will have made a signifi shycant beginning in developing broad support for educational achievement

bull SEQUIN Truck Body Builders Aluminum or Steel 944 County Street

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2middot6618

DISCUSS PROBLEMS CONFRONTING HOSPITALS Meeting at the 20th annual conclave of Bishops representatives for Catholic hospitals in Scottsdale Ariz are left to right Msgr Harold A Murray director of thE NCWC Bureau of Health and Hospital Hospitals Bishop Francis J t Green of Tucson Bishop Joseph B Brunini episCOgtal burshyeau chairman and Auxiliary of Natchez-Jackson Miss and Father John J Flanagan SJ~ executive director of the Oatholic Hospital Association NC Photo

We Have Come Long ~Way in Short Time Hub Cardinal Sees Church Gains Continuing

~

but I sat between two very ven- around religion He added For crable Italian cardinals They that reason they try to eliminate

knew no English and I knew no Italian All the time they kept calling me Cardinal Spellman or Cardinal Mindzen1y or even Cardinal OConnell (The late William Cardinal OCgtnnell was Cardinal Cushings predecessor as Archbishop of Boston)

In a more serious mood Cardshyinal Cushing said the one great fear communists have centers

Interfaith Service For Church UII1ity

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Byzanshytine Rite Catholics joined with Orthodox and Protestants in a common prayer service for

Christian unity Sunday in Holy Spirit Byzantine rite c hu r c h here

Participants in the vespershytype service includE)d Father Andrew Resetar of Erie Pa Very Rev A Dixon Etollit dean of Trinity Episcopal cathedral here Father GeorgE) Scoulas dean of St Nicholas Greek Orshythodox cathedral in Oakland and Dr Harold R Alert former president of the Pittsburgh Council of Churches

The service was arranged by the Pittsburgh C 0 tI n c i I of Churches and the Pittsburgh Byzantine rite diocesE~

Where A

GOOD NAME

Means A

GREAT DAL

GEO OHARA CHEVROLET

565 MILL 5JREET

HEW BEDFIORD

Open Evenings

it from the lives of their peoplemiddot He revealed he has 25 engageshy

ments to talk to groups of other religious faiths including a lodge of Masons before Easter The Cardinal inquired Who would have thought even five years ago that a Catholic archbislfop would be preaching good will in a Protestant church or in a synshyagogue Or that a rabbi would be addressing other faiths We sure have come a long way in a short time-and its going to get better

Preaching Brotherhood The cardinal also observed I

am not trying to convert Protesshytants to Catholics or Jews to Catholics I never made a conshyvert in my life My only messhysage is one of brotherhood

Sturtevant 6shyHook Est 1897

Builders Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New Bedford WY 6-5661

Deny Dispatch About Ca rdinaI

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Sta_ Departm~nt spokesman her categorically denied a recent press story that there are ~

obstacles to Jozsef Cardinal Mindszentys leaving his refuge in the U S legation in Budapest but that the Primate of HungaI7 ~wants to die a prisoner there

The story (which was released by NANA and published in t~

daily press Jan 20) credited its source a State Deparme~ source in Bonn German~

who has taken part in recent U S-Hungarian negotiations

The State Department spokesshyman here described the story bull completely incorrect

We dont have any Americali official in Bonn who has had anything to do with the Hungar-o ian negotiations he said in an swer to inquiries It doesn1 represent anything that an American official would hold

New Orleans Plans New High Schools

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Arch-t bishop John P CodY of New Orleans has announced plansfOS construction of seven new hip schools in several parts of the archdiocese

Declaring that Catholic educashytion never was so flourishin nor were our Catholic people bull desirous of increasing the num bel of schools and improving t~

methods of teaching The Loushyisiana prelate said we must build so that all the children oil our area may have the blessin of a thorough Catholic educashytion

SERVING FINE ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4-8754bull

TIte Falmoufh NatiOnal Sanlc Falmouth Mass

tilt Villale Ir Sian 1121

WM T MANNING (0 WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE

AND

INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES bull GENERAL TIRES bull DELCOBATTERIES

bull PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS

FALL RIVER - NEW BEDFO~D - HYANNIS - NEWPORT

First Federal Savings AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF ATlLEBORO

4 on ali $avings Accouni

1 Extra on Systematic Bonus~vings

bull bull bull bull bull

11 bull

Portugal Bishops Plan University For Country

LISBON (NO) - Portushygals bishops have announcshyed plans to found this nashytions first Catholic Univershysity

They said in a joint pastoral letter issued after their meeting here that there is an imperative need for a Catholic university for the nations conscience They said the university win have greater freedom greater dynamism and greater flexibil shyity than the present state uni versities

The letter said that the govshyernment will help the bishops in founding the new Catholic university

Last Summer Manuel Cardishynal Goncalves Cerejeira of Lisshybon told a meeting studying the foundation of the Catholic Unishyversity that it would be open to both laymen and the clergy and located in Lisbon instead of the older university town of Coimshybra Earlier efforts were made to restore a theological faculty at Coimbra University The facshyultY was closed following the revolution which made Port~gal a republic in1910

Several years agothe cardinal noted that a Church-sponsored university has been a hope of 1Ihe VI has called on individual Cathshy one part of the Mystical Body of many Latill American counshy~oI1uguese bishops for a long olies to become more aware of Christ to another tries and CICOP itself whichtime ~ut that priorities for the world-wide dimensions and seminanes new churche~ pri- needs of the Church mary schools and Catholic Acshytion organization had delayed Today bull bull bull it is absolutely eoncrete plans indispensable that each pers~n

become aware of the true dishymensions of the Church the

Sees Greater Church Pope declared adding Greater awareness will iead to wideningNeed for Laity Role

LAKE CHARLES (NC) - A Louisiana editor predicts the time will come in the 20th censhytury when laymen wi~ domishynate the clergy in many fields

Msgr Alexander O Sigur edshyitor of the Southwest Louisiana Register diocesan newspaper feels in the present age of scishyence and technology Catholic laymen with specialized knowl- edge of law science and other fiElds must of necessity advise the clergy on the many facets of todays society

He pointed out that the layshymens role has made more progshyress since the opening of the Second Vatican Council than in the previous 10 centuries

But because of centuries of tradition there will be problems for some time connected with evolution of the laymans role in the Church he asserted

British Conversions Continue to Decline

LONDON (NC)-The number of converts to Catholicism in England and Wales continues to decline but the Catholic popushylation shows a steady increase according to the 1965 Catholic Directory published here

The known number of adult conversions for 1963 the most recent year for which statistics are available was 12778 This was a decrease of 552 from the previous year which also showed a considerably lower figure than that for 1961

But the Catholic population increased in 1963 by 129500 to 3956500 and the Catholic popshyulation in Scotland rose by 13shy310 to 812460

Foundation Member NEW YORK (NC) - William

G Ryan presidentmiddot of Seton Htn College Greensburg Pa haa been named a corporate member of the FoundationfOr the arts Religion and culture which win hold its fim meetina laue tomonow

THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

HIGH HONOR FOR K of C HEAD Supreme Knight John W McDevitt of the Knights of Columbus invested as a Knigh t Commander of St Gregory at a testimonial banquet in Boston is with left to right AuxiHary Bishop John F Hackett of H~rtford Archbishop Henry J OBrien of Hartford Bishop Charles P GreltfO Qf Ale~andna La Supreme K of C Chaplain and Bishop William J Smith of Pembroke OntarIO NO Photo

Pope Hail~ US Church Mission Work Says Transfe~ of Energies I Most ~onsoling

CHICAGO (NC)-Pope Paul this transfer of energies from unteers who are serving la

of vitality and fuller realization of the meaning of the name Catholic

Nature of Church Pope Paul made his plea in a

message to the second annual conference of the Catholic Inshyter-American Cooperation Proshygram (CICOP)

The Holy Father coupled his appeal for greater awareness of the worldwide nature vf the

Church with high praise for aid rendered in recent years by US Catholics to the Church in Latin America Prellently he said there are 4091 US priests reshyligious and laymen serving there

Greater Understanding I He called us Catholic proshygrams for Latin America a proshyvidential apostolic ~ovement and said they make up one of the most beautiful pages in the history of the Church in the United States

Particularly in light of the Ecumenical Councils constitushytion on the Church he said it iamost consoling to witness

BEFORE YOU BUY-TRY

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault 67 Middle Street Fairhaven

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICE

lJe singled out for praise US seeks by educational means to promote greater understandingdioceses which have sent 178 of Latin Americas problemsdiocesan priests to mission work

in Latin America US religious among the Catholic millions of the United Statescommunities of men and women

which he said are fulfilling the Urllent Demands engagement they have undershy Pope Paul voiced hope that thetaken of sending a tithe of meeting here would producetheir total memership to Latin many practical results parshyAmerica by 1970 US lay vol~ ticularly a wider and more soshy

licitous collaboration of the Refugee Children United States of America with

the Church in Latin AmericaHONG KONG (NC) - Archshy such as urgent needs dem~ndbishop Joseph Caprio apostolic

internuncio to China opened here for refugee children a new $100000 primary school built by Norris H Trippthe Franciscan Missionary Sisshyters of Our Lady of Sorrows SHEET METAL Mother Leola superior of the J TESER Proporder which has its headquarshy RESIDENTIALters in Beaverton Ore attended

INDUSTRIALthe ceremony COMMERCIAL

253 Cedar St New Bedford WY 3-3222 Montie Plumbing amp

Heating Co Inc

Counci~s Effects Years Away

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The universal effects of the Second Vatican Council will not be recshyognized completely for years to come James Francis Cardinal McIntyre told 2200 Holy Name men here in California

It is entirely impossible to estimate at the present time the effects of the council on the thinking of the world the carshydinal said

These effects have penetrated deeply into the spiritual life of all people not only of the Church alone he told a Holy Name Union Communion breakshy

fast One index of its effects is the

attention the council has comshymanded in the press of the world the cardinal said

Names Two Priests To Federal Board

NEW YOItK (NC) - T w bull priests are on the 30-niember board of directors of the new Sex Information and Education Council of the United Stat~

(SIECUS) formed to foster im- proved study and education oa the role of sex

TheYlre Father George Hag- maier CSP of the Paulist In- stitute for Religious Researc~ and Father John L Thomas SJ St Louis (Mo) University soci ologist

The executive director of the council is Dr Mary Steichen Calderone former medical dishyrector of the Planned Parentshyhood Federationand its presishyident is Wallace C Fulton formshyer presidtDt of the National Coundl on Family Relations

Whites Farm Dairy SPECIAL MilK

From Our Own Tested Herd

Acushnet Mass WY 3-4457 bull Special Milk bull Homogenized Vito 0 Milk bull Buttermilk bull Tropicana Orange Juice bull Coffee and Choc Milk bull Eggs - Butter

FIVE CONVENIENT OFFICES- -TOSERVE YOUReg Master Plumber 2930

GEORGE M MONTlE ONE-STOP BANKING Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET FIRSTmiddotMACHImiddotNISTS Fall ~River OS 5-7497 NATIONAL BAN Ilt

OF TAUNTON Norton W MaIn St-Raynham Rte 44-Taunton Main St

North Dighton Spring St-North Easton Main St_ w H RILEY amp SO~J Inc Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

CITIES SERVICE bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnmbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullDISTRIBUTORS

Gasoline i F L COLLINS amp SONS i Fuel and Range INCORPORATED 1937

OILS bull

GENERAL (ONTRAOORS5bullOIL BURNERS

For prompt delivery 5 and ENGINEERS 5amp Day amp Night Service

bull JAMES H COLLINS CE Pres G E BOILER BURNER UNITS bull Registered Civil and Structural Engineer bull

Rural Bottled Gas Se~ Member National Society Professional Engineers

61 COHANNET ST FRANCIS L COLLINS JR Treas = TAUNTON bull THOMAS Ie COLLINS Secy bull

Attteboro - No Attlebor~ middot =ACADEMY BUILDING FALL RIVER MASS Taunto1

-bullbull

bull 12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Humphreymiddot Becker Write Novels of Reminiscence

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Both William Humphreys The Ordways (Knopf

$595) and Stephen Beckers A Covenant with Death (Athshyeneum $450) are novels of reminiscence Both are laid in the Southwest the former in Texas the latter in an unshyidentified state The narrashytor in the Ordway book is for the most part telling what happened to his greatshygrandparents and his grandparshyents in the Civil War period and at the tum of the century In the Becker book the narrator is in his seventies recalling Ii decisive expeshyrience in his oWn life when he was 29 back in 1923 If there are similarities between the works there are also differences and they are very great

Mr Beckers novel is a Book of-the-Month Club middotselection has already been bought by a movie company for a vast sum and unshydoubtedly will be a roaring popshyular success Mr Humphreys novel will probably have far fewer readers and will bring its author far less money But it is by all odds and in every reshyIJPect the better book

Long-Winded It has one fault that of being

long-winded and at times meandering I just wanted to hear the same old things over and over again the narrator -of The Qrdways says at one point It is evidently presumed that the reader has the same desire and that he will not object to lengthy digressions But repetition and extended parenthetical exercises do become tiring even if as in ~is instance the writing is of a high order

1$ The Ordways really a novel in the Strict sense The pook cOritillns a notice reading A portion of Part One in some- what different form first apshypeared in The Saturday Evening Post

It is quite true that the first seetion could stand alone that the second and third sections could form a story by themshyselves and that only the fourth section depends for intelligibility on what has gone before Noneshytheless there is unity here if not the tight construction of the most effective novel

Family Lore Mr Ordway begins by describshy

ing graveyard working days in the hamlet of Mabry near the town of Clarksville in eastern Texas On that day occurring once a year the descendants or suniivors of those burled in the Mabry cemetery come together to set the place to rights

middotAs they do so they rec~ the histories of the dead and thus the family lore is passed on from generation to generation But it is more than family lore which is conveyed the countrys past is reconstructed and the making of the present

The narrator a boy in the 1930s learns of two decisive episodes in his own family One has to do with Thomas and Ella Ordway who were Tennessee people until 1863 Thomas was an infantryman was horribly wounded and disabled in the batshytle of Shiloh and would have died or at least have been lost to his famIly had it not been for his wifes valor The narrative of her recovering him ann bringshying him back to a ~blance of life is harrowing

Journey to Texas But somethinamp more harrowshy

ing is still to come the account of their six months journey in a wagon drawn by oxen from Tennessee to Texas in the hope of beginning a new and better life The reader not only follows this arduous exodus but makes and suffers it and is haunted by it thereafter

This portion of the book is a storY complete in itself dramatshyic pathetic comic packed with lively incidents and colorful characters some heroic some corrupt some rascally all disshytinctive and engaging

Occasionally the side excurshysions pall a bit as in the depicshytion of stump speaking by polit shyical candidates or of life with a small shabby traveling circus Yet each of these sideshows has something to contribute to the pictUre of emerging Texas

Acute Observations

Mr Humphrey writes extremeshyly well a little less fancily as the book progresses but always vivshyidly and with plentymiddot of power for the high moments His peoshyple are nicely differentiated and come memorably to life He has many acute observations and even authentic wisdom to disshypense and this he does neatly His book rings with truth about human nature and is the work of a highly gifted and skillful artist

Mr Beekers A Covenant with Death on the other hand strikes me as contrJved empty and often obnoxiousmiddot Its nub is a legal stickler What is to be dQne with a man who is convicted of m~rger bought +c the gallows there Gki1ls~e hangman and then is cleareu of the first kill shying ~is poser ismiddot put to the 29shy

year~old judge Ben Lewis He solyes Wby niakiIig law and when confronted with this puzshyzler solves as well a key probshylent in his personal life At one and the same time he becomes at last a real judge and a real man

Precise 3udgment

Or so we are asked to believe Lewis says of himself I passed the crisis of adolescence at the ludicrous age of 29 bull bull bull I was swollen with garbage and bittershyness My own ego was monshystrous mainly because I had never done anything for anyone and could justify my own useshylessness only by assuming that the world was not worth my energies This is a precise judgment

The trouble is that the book is swollen with garbage and bitterness as well as sophistry

Young Lewis conversations with his mother for example They irk by their pretentiousness and they disgust with their obscenishyties The youngmiddot judge is thorshyoughly sophomQric and we are asked to credit his sudden leap into maturity We are asked too much

It is with ill grace that the author scorns small town folk for their prurience It is just this to which most of his book apshypeals When he sneers that Soledad City our wholesome middle-class American town would be lined up three deep for good seats at a murder trial with sensational sexual aspects he apparently forgets that the predictably huge sales of his novel will be in large part to people attracted by itligamineaa

3AMES OGARA

PauiSft CElnter Lists Spe(d~er

James OGara editor of Comshyrronweai magazinEl will be guest speaker in the Christian Culture Series at the Paulist Ce-nter in Boston on Wednesday evening Feb 17 on the topic The Role and Future of Cathshyolic Education

Mr OGara has written numshyerous articles for leading Cathshyolic magazines in middotthis country end Europe and has appeared on many religiow television programs of the National Counshycil Of Catholic Men

Rev Andrew Greeley sociolshyogist and author of many books on social subjects will join Mr O-Gara in the discussion

Monsignor Francis 3 Lally editor of the Pilot will be pr0shy

gram moderator

Deplores Agtncies Poverty Appoach

CHICAGO (NC) -- Catholic charity and welfareillgencies and institutions must drop thebusishyness as usual appreach and get into the actual aIl~na of povshyerty a National Conference of Catholic Charities Dleeting here in Illinois was told

The surge of natilmal concern about poverty is one of the most dramatic and compelling moveshyments in our day rather Robshyert Monticello of DEltroit chairshyman of the conferences program committee told assembled social work executives

His views were echoed by Msgr Raymond 3 Gallagher secretary of the comerence who said that personal service to families and individuals among the poor must be a coriunitment each of us makes dailly

CENTIER Paint and Wldlpaper

Dupont PClint

iiP cor Middle St

422 6lcush Ave

~Qc=t~ New Bedford ~ARKING

Rear of Store

ProtEct What You Hav~

McGO~VAN Insurance J~gency

TEL MYrtle ~1middot8231

188 NORTH MAIN $TREET NORTH ATTU8ORO

Beggars for All the Missions

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen DO

rn the mail last week a package arrived containing several hundred printed and self-addressed envelopes from various begshyging organizations in the United States The good woman who sent the package admitted being neither rich nor comfortable and yet she was flooded with appeals She wanted to know how she became a victim of this deluge The answer is that she is on a mailing list There are hundreds of mailing lists for sale in the United States These can be bought for various amounts depending on the number and quality of the names listed The good woman who wrote us was on at least one of these lists

Never before has it been brought home to us with Such impact how swamped our faithful are with appeals It grieves DB

that we too are beggars but we find some consolation in the fact that the Holy Fathers Society for the Propagation of the Faith has never used such mailing lists

This incident highlightsmiddot an urgent need that the Vatican Council must recognize that of co-ordinating appeals for all these really worthwhile causes especially those of misshysionaries Pius XI said that the method by which each missionary group solicited only for itself did not provide an even distribution of help Some can barely survive others have investments in Wall Street How to know who out of the hundreds who beg are most deservng is not only difficult but almost impossible

We have never liked begging In fact there is too much inshysistence on money in the Church tOday We would like to be unshackled from our tin cup and not add to this confusion But this is our duty Why 1 Because the Holy Father has asked us to be his beggars in the United States for -all the missions of tlie world 2 Becanse it is the glory of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith not to helf) one order or society of the world but the entire world (As a matter of fact 88middot per cent of the appeals in the above-mentioned package received soDie aid from The Society for the Propagation of the Faith) 3 Because being under the direction of the Holy Father The Society for the Propagation of the Faith does not invest any of yoUrmiddot alms Every eent Is distributed by the Holy Father each year The world Is too poor So fOldve us

Oh yes the lady who sent us the package wrote I could not keep 240 missionary appeals because I have not the money Since The -Society for the Propagation of the Faith aids all I send the Holy Father my $100 to be divi4ed as he sees fit

GOD LOVE YOU to Anoafor $5 Here Is Diy poeen valeiI- Une for the poor bullbullbull toMLA for $78 This is whist l diel Ilot spend on eigarettes Somehow I cannot enjoy them auYmore knowing that today 10000 people riD die of ~rntionmiddot

-

Think ahead to Valentines day and order a GOD LOVE YOU medal In classic Florentine gold finish or pure sterling silver this lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of the World is one you would be proud to give or delighted to receive Designed by the world-renouned jeweler Harry Winston and blessed by Bishop Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal may be obtained by sending your request and corresponding offering to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001

$ 2 small sterling silyershy $ 3 small 10k gold filled $ 5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut 01lt ft1Is colUIDn pin your sacrifice to it and maD It te Most Rev Fulton 3 Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York New York 10001 or to your Diocesan Director

Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 368 North Main Street

Fall River Massachusetts

791 PurcIaase Street Betweea

WIUIam bull UnI_ S_

NEW BEDFORD

FIVE CENTS SAVINGS BANK

WE HAVE PLENTY OF MONEY FOR HOME LOANS

If youre buying or building -Ioolc to us CONVENTIONAL GI - FH~ FINANCING

Ca on us anytime aDd talk over your plans

Fathers andmiddot Daughters Will Twirl At Annual Sucordium-Sponsored Hop at SHA Fan River

Dads and daughters win twirl at the annual fathep daughter dance at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River Its scheduled fltgtr 8 tomorrow night in the academy gymshynatorium and is sponsored by the moms and dads and daughters-members of the

SHA Fall River and her team very active Sucordium Club marked its first league debateHomemaker of the year at this season by defeating Case

Holy Family High in New Dartmouth Taunton and PreshyBedford as a result of the annushy vost al Homemaker of Tomorrow test Coyle High was host for a taken by thousands of girls novice tournament of two rounds across the nation is Christian with nine schools competing last Saulnier Shes National Honor weekend and the varsity team Society treasurer and copy edshy last week won three of four iJtor of By Fy Spy the school matches over Bishop Stang paper Bishop Stang was host to Narshy

At Dominican Academy in Fan ragansett League debate last River the top homemaker is week with 12 schools representshyJulia Melvin Senior A president ed each by four man teams Repshysodality vice-prefect and student resenting Stang were John council vice-president Another Golenski Michael Hogan Thomshyfeather in Julias cap is that as Keary and Myles Tillotson shes to represent her school at At the same meeting Bishop the state capitol on Student Feehan was represented by Government Day Francis Detellis Kateri Detellis

Christine Julia and an other Roger Watts and Raymond StafshyDiocesan school winners in the ford They won one debate out homemaker contest are now eli shy of four gible for consideration as state Current Affairs Contest winners Themiddot states highestshy Many Diocesan schools partici shyranking girl will receive a $1500 pated in a current affairs conshyscholarship and will tour Washshy test sponsored by a weekly news ington and New York City this magazine and among top scorers Spring From the state finalists were Janet Gendreau Moniquewill be chosen national winners Boulay and Muriel Raiche at in the homemaking contest and Jesus-Mary and Paula Powersthese girls will have their scholshy Susan Penrose and Mary Kellyarship grants substantially illshy at SIlA Fall River creased Also in the spotlight is 1anice

Benoit of SHA Fall River whosGrac1aatlOIl GOWIl8

received honorable mention for rrs snowy outside but thoughts the Bishop Connolly award preshy

of the seniors at Mt St Mary sented annually to the DioceseAcademy in Fall River are Oft outstanding girl athletethe days of June Theyre curshy Yearbook pictures for Coylerently selecting g r a d u at i 0 Il juniors sophomores and freshshygowns and are making a critical men have been safely taken so survey of ofterings from several another milestone is passed OIl area stores the road to publication

And National Bonot- Society Dominican Academy juniopsmembers have been busy at Sashy and seniors will make a closedcred Hearts Fall River Theyve retreat at the Cenacle Conventwritten to all accredited colleges ill Brighton during their Februshyin the US requesting inforshy ary vacation while the annualmation on admission requireshy school retreat is in progressments and availability of finanshy hOW at Bishop Stangcial aid The gathered informashy The program includes dallytion will augment the guidanee Mass Benediction and confershyfile in the school library ences and retreat masters are

Sevenmiddot new clubs have beeR Rev John OBrien SSCCmiddot andorganized at Tauntons Coyle Rev Andrew Jahn SSCCHigh School They are French An unusual auction was a feashySpanish Stamp and Coin Pep ture of a dance sponsored lastEnglish Literature Chess and weekend by Feehan seniors forPhotography Something theremiddot all their fellow students Eachfor everyone faculty member donated a prize

Four Dominican Academy stushy for the auction including suchdents have passed 120 word tests valuable items as a pass excusingin Gregg shorthand and two a student from detention pershyhave passed 100 word tests On mission to omit a book from anthe bowling scene at DA high outside reading list and a driy scorers include Susan Pacheco ing passAnne Marie FoIster Colleen Auctionmiddot proceeds benefited bullDesrosiers and Patricia Od) shy performance of Leave It tonecky Jane to be produced by the

The junior prom at Bishop Feehan Dramatics Club SundayFeehan High in Attleboro has and Monday Feb 14 and 15been set for Tuesday night April Jeannine Dumont senior class20 In charge ofmiddot arrangements secretary and middotlssistant editor of are Robert Bedard and Carol the school paper at Holy FamilyMiller while committees are al shy High has been accepted at Bosshyready at work on decorations ton College as have classmates e n t e r t a i n men t refreshshy Maureen OBrien Christine Ponshyments tickets and that unher ichtera and John AylwardaIded but all-important chore of Mother McAuley Guild at Mtclean-up St Mary Academy will hold its

annual calendar party WednesshyDebaiioi- Prcmt day night Feb 10 EntertainshyIn the indoor days of Winter ment will reprelC~t each monthdebating holds an honored spot of the year and the decoratedamong extra-curricular activishycakes willbe ~oor prizesties at Diocesan schools At Preshy Class -laeement vost in Fall River the debate

THE ANCHOR-- 13 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Churchmen Favor Johnson School Aid Program

WASHINGTON (NC) shyCatholic and Protestant spokesmen applauded Presishydent Johnsons school aid proposal in a placid Congresshysional bearing where the on~ disagreement came over mi~

technical questions The release from the charged

atmosphere of past hearings w noted all around

A Catholic spokesman smilin~

ly commented that it was a relief not to fear getting out of the

Vour nearescmall box i$ Q Firsf Ilfderal branch office that open 24 hours $ day to make $(lving easy for you No traffic nO parking no leather problem~

Withdrawals ate just as implt taY~ngs paymencS

bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull r fRlE o~middottymiddotmiddot ~ ubullbullh coupon 7bullbull~ trti 0middot

team was victorious over Mt St Marys and Bishop Stang in Narshyragansett League debate but lost to SHA Fall River The varisity also met Coyle during the past week

Mt st Marys debate record stands at 2-2 with Anne Browshynell Linda Mello Susan Jenkinshyson and Nancy Curran defending their school in Narragansett

Tomorrows the day of reckonshying at SHA Fall River Not only will report cards be distributed but a list of all seniorsand their placement in middottheir class for the past four years will be published

Fifteen seniors It DA partici shypated in a French Listening Comprehension Test on Tuesday This supplementary test is ofshyfered by the eollege entrance

PREVOST SCHOLARS High scorers in National Merit Scholarship Examinations at Prevost High School Fall River are Gerard Gltgtu~et left and Paul Nowak

tests in addition to the French Written exams come in March

Also at Feehan where report cards will come tomorrow high honors will be achieved by those with an average of 90 or better honors by those earning 85 or better and honorable mention by those with grades of 80 01 better

Bishop Stang mathematiciana placed first ill the Notre Dame Math Meet held last week at Cardinal Cushing High in South Boston Eighteen schools com~

peted and Stang won by n points Responsible for the vieshytory were John Keavy Paul Roy John De Ciccio Raymond Desrosiers and Alan Roskiewiez Top individual scorer was John DeCiccio

Best Girl Athlete Senior Nancy Vogel of Bishop Stang High School received the Bishop Connolly Award for the best girl athlete of Fall River area Diocesan high schools at a ceremony held last night at Whites restaurant Nancy as shining a star schoshylastically as athletically plays hockey basketball and volley~ ball at the North Dartmouth school She will be the first reshycipient of what is to become an

Influence Declining MADRID (NC)-Castroist inshy

fluence among young people in Latin Ameriea has declined the past two years Luis Garcia Arishyas professor of international law at the University of Saragossa here in Spain said on his return from a tour of Latin America Thursday Feb 1amp

SCHOOL Mainte~ance suppr~

SWEEPERS SOAPS DISINFECTANTS

FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

DAHILL CO 1886 PURCHASE STREET

annual award made by the FaD River Clover Club Also honored at last nights dinner-dance WBI Coach Carlin Lynch of 11M Stang Spartans

Forty Hours devotion was celshyebrated for the first time at Bishop Feehan high scbool starting Sunday and ending Tuesday Seniors Eileen Pashyquette Mary Duffy Nancy Clegg and Susall Ouelle~te aided Sister Mary Kateri of Feehan home economics department III making a cope and humeral veil used for the first time at the ceremonies

And Feehanites celebrated terms end by viewing A Raisin in the Sun

bullbullbullbullbullbull

hearing room alive The major Protestant spokesmen described the bill as an instrument of recshyonciliation Con g res smiddotm e a praised the compromises they saw being made by all sid~

church groups and educators -The President has proposed bull

$12 billion program to improve elementary and secondary schooling from poverty-strickea families

A total of $1 billion wouldge to public school districts in lowshyincome areas Additionally the proposal would spend $100 milshylion for textbooks for all school children and school libraries and another $100 million to create bull system of public-priva~commushynity educational centers to offer cultural enrichment and specitl eourses to all school ehildren

Pittsburgh School Enroll~ent Down

PITSBURGH (NC) - Enroll shyment in the Pittsburgh diocellMl Catholic school system has dro~ ped by 40 pupils Msgr John B McDowell superintendent ball reported

The monsignor said the sliglll drop has been preceded by fo_ years of leveling oft in enrol) ment figures because of enforeet gradual cuts in class size

Since 1960 he said there _ been an increase of only 24 pushypils in the total number of stushydents Elementary and seconda schools last June tallied 129531 pupils a drop of 40 he said

bullbullbullFREEKI _forbullbull~to bull ~-~----- shy _ StampMo _ middot----1

City_middot bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbulliibullbullbullbullbullbullbull WE pAY POSTAGa

(tree po5t-pald~Clddd i-velop ady to mall

FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND lOAN ASSOCIATION

OF FALL RIVER Home OHice 1 North Main St Fall River

Somerset OHice 149 GAR Highway Rte 6 League bouts The team meets exam board and consists of Both Offices Open Friday Evenings until INEW BEDFORDBishop Cassidy of TauntOn Wedshy questions and answers concernshy Sonterset Drive-In Window Open Mon-Thurs til 4 nesday Feb 10 ing subject matter on tape At WY 3-3786 Susan Nunes heads debate 111amp Feeha aiYdentll 1ook Germaa

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Stresses ilroad beep Gulf Between Two Generafions

By John J Kane Ph D What is your opinion of secretive sons and daughters

()f today Our married son and daughter never tell us anyshything Friends and strangers knew they bought a new home before we did My daughters husband knows all the ansshywers and wants no advice from anyone My son is afraid of his wife and she makes all decisions They ask us to visit but hurt our feelshyings when we do by what they say We were raised to reshyspect our elders and ask their advice

You r letter Jean does pose some justifiable complaints But it also seems to make some unshyreasonable deshy

mands Furthershymore amusingshy1y enough you conclude that you were reared to respect your elders and intimate your chil shydren werent If so whom can you blame

I dont know the reason why your children failed to inform you of their intentions to purshyehase a home But I do have some suspicions Do you have a tendency to be critical about what they buy Sometimes parshyents do

Tremendous Inflation Y-oungsters and parents both

make a certain type of mistake when it comes to purchasing of such things as homes cars or expensive appliances So m e young marrieds try to begin at a level their parents only achieved after 10 or 15 years of married life

But some parents do not seem to realize that inflation has been tremendous in the last 20 years When they hear a son or daughshyter is about to buy it home for 20 or 25 thousand dollars they are horrified They remember they paid perhaps 6 8 or 10

thousand dollars when they bought

They also forget credit is a bit easier than in the past that F BA and even the GI Bill help young people today and they may not even have existed when they were shopping for a house Longer te~ mortgages are possible today and lower down payments These of course do mean more interest

Coinmon CourteSY In other words parents should

Dot use the yardstick of economshyic conditions when they were young for the youth of today When they state perhaps with heated emphasis Why your father and I paid 10 thousand for a home the children are understandably irritated

But once having made their decisions com m 0 n courtesy would seem to demand tpat parshyents be told before strangers or at least as soon as friends Your sense -of hurt feelings here is quite understandable

Your complaint that your sons wife makes all the decisions may be true If so I agree that you have reared a Milquetoast But

is it true Are you actually cershytain or are you imagining someshything Are you really sayingshyand I frankly fear youare-that your son listens to his wife more than he listens to you

Mother-in-Law Role Being a mother-in-law is not

an easy role in Anierican soClshyety and many of the stupid

at least not if you wish to be a successful parent

Because most parents do love their children they are eager to help them They feel that their years of experience give them an advantage and this advantage they would extend to their chil shydren

At times this is true At times it is not The gulf between genshyerations is broad and deep Life has changed greatly in the space of one generation and the bench marks of the past may be unshysuitable today There are certain areas of living in which children may have better ideas than their parents Be prepared to admit as much

But within those areas where the maturity and experience of parents can be helpful advice can be given when not reshyquested only indirectly and cautiously Young marrieds misshyconstrue it as an effort to domshyinate which they reject Pershyhaps you can recall when you too felt this way

But it is indeed sad if they hurt your feelings when you do visit them You have not enshylarged on this so it is impossible to determine just what is said or done that annoys you Assuming you are making a correct judgshyment it is at the very least a breach of hospitality

Many of the inter-generational and in-laws problems of today are the result of social changes As one grows older it is less and less easy to change to adopt ways of doing and thinkshying After all if one succeeded under one system there is little motivation to alter it

Life Easier But conditions have changed

and to paraphrase a commercial this is the Pepsi generationbull Today boys and girls get married even wher the boy is unemshyployed This is scarcely advisable but somemake it Boys marry while still in college and their wives work to help put them through This would have been unthinkable 40 years ago

One of the really amazing changes is the use of long term credit The proud boast of years ago was that one didnt owe any money If you said this today youngsters would view you with open amazement and quietly conclude your credit was no good

No doubt some of this is overshydone and can bring about tragic results But if used intelligently it can make life somewhat easier perhaps more pleasant than in the past

These are only a few of the changes that could be listed a complete litany of them would be impossible Now this doesnt mean that parents are old fogeys that their counsel is useshyless It does mean that they must try tomiddot understand their married children better than some do

And incidentally because of these sweeping changes it is more difficult than it was But it isnt impossible an4 when donepays off in much better relationships

Anti-Smut Effort NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Loushy

isiana Knights of Columbus have jokes ]lake it even more diffi- launched a public information cult But parents after having campaign to combat what one reared their children to the best official t e r m e d indifference of their ability must let them go stemming from lack of knowlshyon their own You cannot keep edge about the growing traffic them tied to your apron strings in obscene literature

PRINCE OF THE CHURCH Americas new cardin~l recelyes congratulations from an old friend as Archbishop Patrlck A OBoyle of Washington felicitatesmiddot Lawrence Cardmal Shehan Archbishop of Baltimore on his elevation to the College of Cardinals by Pope Paul vi NC Photo

~Glassand Wire Tiny Foulr-Bell Chime in Bay State Church

Producing Soundof Big Heavy Metal WALTHAM (N C) - The string-shaped length of glass

church-bell of the future may which may be up to a foot i~ bE a ht~le thing of glass and length and a tiny hammer to Wire weighm~ about two grams produce the proper vibrations but reproducmg the sound of These vibrations are converted cast-metal constructions weigh- into an electronic signal which ing more than a ton ~asses through an amplifier is

j Pope Emphasizes Import of Hymns

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul in an audience for more han 1000 priests participating in a convention on pastoral lit shyurgy emphasized the key role of hymn-singing in the liturgy

We are not in a hurry he said

We must raise up a new peoshyple who learn to pray as the Church now prescribes

One of the prescriptions which I believe to be most influshyential and most necessary is singing

The Pope said that hymns inshycluding popular ones lift the soul and nourish it with religious sentiments

Illinois School Joins Expanding ETV Plan

MORTON (NC)-A parochial school here in Dlinois has served as pilot school in a historic edushyeational television experiment

Blessed Sacrament School reshyceived the first experimental transmission of v ide 0 tap e d courses in color from a high freshyquency monidirectional terminal

A 120-foot tower atop the school received signals from a tower on the Bradley University campus 10 miles away Bradley Coordinator Philip Weinburg said he expects an ETV program to be operational in the 1965-66 school year

The Catholic school tower will remain as a permanent inshystallation to serve both as an ETV booster station with a 15shymile radius and a receiver for educational programs in the school next Fall

Changes in Mass EDINBURGH (NC) - Scots

Catholics are busily preparing for the introduction of English and Gaelic into the Mass on March 1 the first Sunday in Lent

bull HYANNIS bull HARWICH PORT bull ~olri YAAMOUTH

--- shy

funeral Service

DoANmiddotSpoundALmiddotAMtS INCOIlPOItATtiD

Glassblower Gerhard B Finkshybeiner of Brandeis University here in Mass lpoundlas installed for the first time in the United States a set of the tiny bells in St Susanna church in Dedham named for the t~tula church in ~ome of ~ostOIl s Richardmiddot Carshydinal Cushmg

Finkbeiner whose small glass bells already al~e making kingshysiZed sounds in 10 churches in Germany and ]~rance has proshyduced a four-bell chime for the Dedham church encased in a metal cabinet only two feet long and weighing a mere 40 pounds In cast metal equivalent sotmdshyproducers would occupy a goodshysized belfry and weigh aboUt 10000 pounds Finbeiner envishysions his discovery as destined for churches which cannot afford regular bells

The new-style bells look like nothing so much as the fa~iliar vacuum tubes found in any nonshytransistor radio but they proshyduce a never-changing high quality sound which is fully comparable to the metallic clang

of the old-fashioned bell shy

Inside each vacuum tube in Finkbeiners system there is a

MON~~GHAN

ACCEF-TANCE CQIRP

JHOMAS F MONAGHAN JR

Trecisurer

142 SECOND STREET

OSborne 5-7856

FALL RIVER

Increased 100000 times and comes out through a ~pecial speaker whose sound most exshyperts cannot tell from a metallic ben

The sound of a heavy metallic bell is one of the most complex of all musical sounds according to Finbeiner but he has been able to dUJlicat~ it through parshyallel ~Udi~ in glassblowing electronics and ~acuum techshyniques

BARDAHL MAKES YOUR

CAR RUN BEnER tAt New Car Dealers and Service Stations

Everywhere -I

With Safety at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK

115 WILLIAM sr NEW BEDFORD MASS

WEBB OIL (OMPANY TEXACO FUEL ()IL$

DOMESTIC amp HFAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS

Sales~SetYce-lnstaDtjon MAINO~FICE~JO ~RFEEmiddot sTREETmiddotfAll ~IVER

Phone OS 5-7484

11

1S --

Views of New Ho~Y TrinitYmiddotmiddot-C-h-~-rc-h-I-W-e-s-t-~-I-a-li-i-ac-h-middotmiddotmiddotI

-

I I

16 THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

Says Pope John Left Cha lIenge To Catholicsmiddot

NORTH PALM BEACH (NC) - Pope John XXIII left Catholics with a chalshylenge to meet the world Bishop Coleman F Carroll of Miami said here

Bishop Carroll said Pope John dared Catholics to meet other Christians and non-Christians and to discuss our common problems and seek by discussion a solution to these problems

This challenge cannot be met by the pope alone or by the bishops and priests alone he said It must be met by all inshycluding-indeed especially-the laymen

-He said laymen must be propshy

erly prepared for this task through study training and spirshyitual preparation In this conshynection he called a closed spirshyitual retreat an absolute must for the lay person

Bishop Carroll spoke to memshybers of the Our Lady of Florida Retreat League at a dinner in his honor at the Passionist Retreat House here

PrelWtes Sc~~dlJ(e

US~ ~f VeCrulall ROME (NC)-The Italian lanshy

guage will be used in Mass throughout I t a I y beginning March 7 the first Sunday of Lent

The Italian Bishops Commitshytee on the Liturgy in announcshying the change specified that the Italian language would be used in Masses on Sundays and holy days and at all Masses attended by a substantial number of the faithful

The parts of the Mass to be said in Italian are the following the Epistle Gospel acclamations salutations and dialogues (inshycluding the prayers at the foot of the altar and the dialogue preshyceding the Preface) the Kyrie Gloria Creed Sanctus-Benedicshytus and Agnus Dei themiddot Patermiddot Noster with its introduction and the formula for the Communion

Peloquin Chorale Televises Hymns

NEW YORK (NC)-Hymns -Yesterday and Today featurshyipg C Alexander Peloquin and members of his popular Peloquin Chorale will be telecast Feb 14 from 1 to 130 PM EST over the ABC-TV network

The latest program in the seshyries Directions 65 - a Catholic Perspective produced by the National Council of Catholic Men and the ABC public affairs department was written by Peloquin and traces the develshyopment of hymnody from the Te Deum of the 4th century to the works of contemporary composers

Stresses Doctrines Substance Remains

DAVENPORT (NC) -Bishop Ralph L Hayes of Davenport adshymonished an interfaith meeting here in Iowa against expecting changes in Catholic doctrine

The (Second Vatican) Counshycil may change the manner of presentation of doctrines but not their substance he said pointing to the liturgy as an exshyample of such a change

We must admit bigotry and misunderstanding on both sides But followers of Christ have Scripture devotion to the Holy Spirit and devotion to Christ in common Why not talk about the things on which we agree he asked

Sisters of Mercy General Asks Personal ST LOUIS (NC)-Weve got

to develop the Sister in depth Thats what the times call for said the mother general of the 7300 American nuns of the Sisshyters of Mercy of the Union

Mother Mary Regina Cunningshyham ending her first six-year term as the head of the widely known teaching social work and hospital nuns was talking about what the Sisters of Mercy are doing to bring themselves fully up to the times

In St Louis Mo to meet with the superiors of the nine Mercy provinces Mother Regina talked about the main vehicle she and her colleagues hope will achieve the transformation

This is the year in the commu- nity for chapter meetings and general meetings of the nuns in

each of the provinces climaxed by a meeting of the general chapter at the orders mothershyhoupse in Bethesda Md she said

Changing Church Results will be ~olnown in Aushy

gust and Mother Regina hopes that they will show her commushynity to be in line with the mind of a rapidly changing Church in the midst of an even faster movshying world

She predicted tlat the chapshyters would have some surprises not only in the deisions but in the way they are organized to give a more representative view of all the Sisters in the order

If one overall phrase had to sum up what Mother Regina and the other planners are looking for in the Mere chapters it

would be personal responsibil shyity she said

A Sister has to have the reshysponsibility to make judgments for herself said the mother general Her superiors have to give her the responsibility to achieve her own role She has to make the decision to take the risks

~And then of course be ready to pay the price for her decishysion said Mother Regina

In Updated Sense Weve gone beyond the day

Papal Count BALTIMORE (NC) - Thomas

W Pangborn a Hagerstown (Md) industrialist and philanshythropist has been named a papal count by Pope Paul

Responsibility of always being safe Some peoshyple want to be sure to have the answer before they move But sometimes that meant they never moved at all she observed

Developing a Sister in depth will mean a lot of things espeshycially an updated sense of her apostolate and the way she works at it For the Mercy nuns in the U S Central and Latin America and in the West Indies it will mean a lot of littie things Mother Regina hinted

Changes might relax regulashytions about home visits dining with others attending night meetings and cultural affairs or traveling with companions

Mother Regina said that we have to plan for more contact with the laity and for more edushycation to understand each other shy

a

lYonderful Meatsbullbullbull Anoth~r Big Reasll Why zltI ~III I bull STAYING ~c~ Z ~

with FIRST NATIONAL it

l~middotmiddotsowll ItmiddotI

IIIIr-All vlu

FACE RUMIP Fine Grained Texture shy

Heavy Steer Beef for Hearty Eating LB

The Perfect Roast for large Families

ROASTL854CAITCHBONE Same [ow Self-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vidnily rNe Reserve Iie Right to Limit Quantitietl

-

I The Parish Parade I SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO bull

Holy Name Society members will receive corporate Communshyion at 7 oclock Mass Sunday morning Feb 14 The unit plans a Valentine dance and supper from 7 to 12 Saturday night Feb 13 in the Elks auditorium on Church Street SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs John DeBettenshycourt president Mrs Arnold Muckerheid vice-president Mrs Nelson J DeBettencourt Jr treasurer Mrs Charles Davis secretary

For the Holy Name SOGiety James Ferreira is president supshyported by Freeman Willoughby vice-president Alfred Metell treasurer Anthony Rebello secshyretary The units next meeting will be Sunday Feb 14 at the parish hall OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a Masquerade Ball Friday night Feb 26 at Wimpys resshytaurantr Osterville Mrs James E Murphy is chairman ST JOSEPH ATTLEBORO

The CYO will sponsor a dance Saturday night Feb 20 with enshytertainment by Mickey Chagnon and the Rivieras Chairmen for the unit include Carolee Desshyrochers membership Judy Roy spiritual Claudette Ouimet culshytural Sue Reynolds publicity Claire Piette social Don Fisher recreational BLESSED SACRAMENT FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will present a fashion fair at an open meeting to be held Wedshynesday Feb 17 in the church basement Planned for April are a rummage sale and a whist party ST JEAN BAPTISTE FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women announces a ham and basket whist party for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 in the lower church hall In charge will be Mrs Napoleon Picard and Mrs Eugene Gagnon aided by a large committee ST STANISLAUS FALL RIVER

Civics Club members of the parochial school will deliver pastry to nursing home patients for Valentines Day Other projshyects include collecting Christmas cards for missionaries and shovshyelling snow to augment the club treasury OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION OSTERVILLE

Mr and Mrs William Dacey will be co-chairmen of a preshyLenten dance to be held Friday night Feb 19 at Wimpys restaushyrant in Osterville under sponsorshyship of the Womens Guild The program will include a buffef and dancing from 9 to to ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

Mrs Lionel J Dulude presishydent of the Sacred Hearts Assoshyciation requests all ladies of the unit who have First Friday Adoration to check their asshysigned times in order that the full quota will be present at all hours

Corporate Communion for members will be held on Sunday at the 815 Mass and the regushylar meeting will be held the same evening at 730 in the Church Hall

The Penny Sale scheduled for Feb 20 will be discussed atthis meeting ST JOSEPH FALLRIVER

The annual mid-Winter Gala is set for Saturday night at Venus de Milo restaurant A buffet supper from 630 to 830 will be followed by dancing a parish reunion and awarding of prizes

ST JOAN OF ARC ORLEANS

Forthcoming events for the Womens Guild include penny sales this month April and next November socials in March and June and Summer fairs in July and August A ham and bean supper is ~cheduled for May ST JAMES NEW BEDFORD

middotMsgr Noon Circle plans a potluck supper for members and their guests Saturday night Feb 20 OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION NEW BEDFORD

Holy Name Society officers inshyclude Severo G Alfama presishydent James P Gonsalves and John Monteiro vice-president Antonio Rocha treasurer John Soares secretary ST GEORGE WESTPORT

Womens Guild members will form the congregation at the TV Mass to be broadcast on channel 6 at 10 Sunday morning Feb 7 Participants will meet at the parish school hall at 9 to travel to New Bedford ST JOHN BAPTIST NEW BEDFORD

Parishioners will hold their annual filhoz supper and penny sale at 530 Sunday evening Feb 21 in the cllurch hall Tickshyets are available from officers of church organizations or at the rectory In charge are Gilbert Brazil and George Ladino ST PIUS X SOUTH YARMOUTH

The WQmens Guild will hold a past presidents dinner Monshyday night March 1 at Armands restaurant_ Hyannis NOTRE DAME FALL RIVER

Cubs and Boy Scouts will at shytend a Communion breakfast Sunday Feb 7 following 815 Mass A blue and gold banquet for the Cubs is set for Sunday Feb 28 in the parish hall with Roger Labonte in charge of arshyrangements

The Council of Catholic Women will hold its installation banquet Monday Feb 22 at Whites resshytaurant under the chairmanship of Mrs Paul Ilmais To be seated are Miss Helena Dumont president Mrs Cecile Barnabe frst vice-president Mrs Gershyard DextTaze second vice-presishydent Mrs Richard Perry treasshyurer Mrs Romeo Parent reshycording secretary Mrs Roger Langlois corresponding secreshytary

The third in a series of cake sales will follow all Masses this Sunday in the lower church Mrs Ferdnand Letendre chairman will be aided by Mrs Robert Phenixco-chairman Cakes can be brought to the lower church from 4 to 5 and 630 to s Saturshyday afternoon and evening SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a potluck supper for members at 630 Tuesday night Feb 16 in the parish hall A silent auction will follow the slipper In charge of arrangeshyments is Mrs Mary Pereira chairman aided by Mrs Mary Gagne The council announces a malassada supper and penny sale open to the public from 530 to 7 Sunday night Feb 21 also in the hall Tickets will be available at the door and chairshymen are Mrs Mary Cabeceiras and Mrs Albina Quintill

A regular meeting is set for 730 Friday night Feb 12 in the hall Installation of officers is planned for later in the month ST MATIDEU FALL RIVER 4

A Valentine whist is planned by the Council of Catholic Womshyen for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 at the parish hall Mrs Raymond Antaya is chairman

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan RIver-Thurs Feb 1l96I rr

GIVE VIEWS ON AID Presenting views on federal aid to education to the House Education sub-committee was this panel representing the Catholic school system left to right Msgr William E McManus Chicago superintendent of the largest Ctholic school system in the country Mr Edward McArdle Washington DC who focussed on the parents view of the childs needs as the father of seven children Msgr Freclerck G Hochwalt Director Education Department NCWC and Msgr John B McDowell sushyperintendent of the Pittsburgh diocesan school system NC Photo

bullSays Church Must Live In Wide World~ Cardinal Hits Ignorance of Our Neighbor

CHICAGO (NC)-An Amerishycan prelate prominent in the Churchs work for Latin Amershyica has told US Catholics there is no excuse for our ignorance of our neighbors the nations of Central and South America

Archbishop Paul L Hallinan of Atlanta chairman of the subshycommittee for inter-American cooperation of the US Bishops Committee for Latin America in a message to the second annual conference of the Catholic IntershyAmerican Cooperation Program SClid the Church today lives in a new world but it must preshypare to live in a wide world

Miles Are Nothing Catholics in tpe United States

with a strong cultural and comshymercial bridge to Europe find Africa a puzzle and Asia an Orshyiental mystery Strangest of all is our ignorance of our own neighbors the nations of Central

E~ual Treatment JERSEY CITY (NC)-Hudson

County parishes here in New Jersey are joining in a countyshywide interfaith appeal seeking pledges of fair housing practices

~T FRANCIS XAVIER IIYANNIS

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a penny sale at 8 Tuesday right Feb 9 in the parish hall A Communion breakfast and fashion show are on the units Spring schedule

ST JOHN BAPTIST CENTRAL VILLAGE

A housewares demonstraticm will follow an open meeting scheduled by the Womens Guild for 8 Thursday night Feb 11 in the church hall In charge of refreshments will be Mrs Matil shyda Shelter Miss Margaret Shay and Miss May Taggart The unit plans a Valentine whist for 3 Saturday night Feb 13 also in the church hall on Main Road Miss Edith Kirby and Mrs Louise Vieira are chairmen ST JOHN POCASSET

The Womens Guild announces a penny sale for Friday Feb 12 Mrs Sprague Spooner will be chairman The units next meetshying will feature slides and a talk by Col Eugene S Clark on the early history of Marthas Vineshyyard It will be held Tuesd~

Feb 16

and South America he deshyclared

The ~rchbishop said 60 years ago there was an excuse-travel communications and cultural knowledge were in their inshylancy But now miles are nothshying since Pope John XXIII brought his message of unity to the world he averred adding

Real Import The CICOP meeting brings

bishops priests and laymen of both hemispheres together for a remarkable in-service training period a healthy learn while you work program We know much of Latin American needs both religious economic and culshytural We are helping in our way to repair these shortcomings But we need even more to share

in this Christian fraternity fIIf background common resources and future hopes Only by free easy association with the repshyresentatives of Latin America can we get the real import

ELECTRICAL Contractors~

~ ~ ~ ~

944 County St ~ New Bedford

ecec~c~ccccee~o

C) LOUlUl~S iiffii~ ~ i middotbull EWrIMA ~- shyg l~

ROMEamp I~-

I SHmNES imiddot ~ OF EUROPE iiI bull ampHOLY LAND ~) C~ 1 bull CATBOLIC PROGRAJ 1965 ~)

ALI~~16 ~I CachoIlcTeI Orrlce ~) c~ WASHINGTON CHICAGOIOMI LONDONI CATHOLtC TRAVEL OFFICE FRM ~------------II -~ Dupont Circle Building WashIngton D C 20036 fali ~ ~ j1ii Please send me your free Illustrated booklet describing in ~ iJl detail the wOrldmiddotcovering pilgrimages

C~ Name iI ~IJ Address ~ C_~ CityIloneState 11 =~~~~~_~_~~_~_ft~ftVw ijrv _ii~middotV

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Teen-agers Outstanding For Prodigal Generosity

By Rev Joseph T McGloin S J Several times in this column Ive had some glowing

words to say about our Mexican neighbors to the south about their friendliness and hospitality- and general likeshyableness And certainly its all true These people busy as they are will go out of their of other peoples is that you canway give you their precious easily give the idea you are sell shytime and attention to see ing all your own countrymen that you enjoy your visit to short And this would be the their country When a Mexican furthest thing from my own says Mi casa es su casa My thoughts house is your Because there is great friendli shyhouse - which ness in our country too - in he invariably varying degrees and manifested

middot does-he means in various ways The Mexican is it F r i end s in general more spontaneous strangers even than we and most of us have to shopkeepshy be approached before we give ers youve never our friendship since an initial II e e n before shyness seems to hold us back will introduce Often enough however this

middotyou to the whole shyness is caused by a national family and inshy superiority complex by a fear vite you to hav~ of not being accepted and by

middotdinner wit h the fear of making fools of ourshymiddot them To put it mildly hospital shy selves in a language we dont ity like this would be impossible know In other words humility to forget or to overlook is an esseatial to friendliness and _ Sometimes you wonder as you hospitality Sometimes we have walk the downtown- streets of it Often we dont CHle of our own cities and as you Hospitable People see pe~ple going their own inshy We Americans are sometimessulated ways if it isnt true that afraid to show our real feelingsas a country we have only a -afraid to show for inst~nce

-head while Mexico has a head our sympathy forthe underdogand a heart We usually make up for t~is

Superiority Complex psychologically by cheering on - This feeling grows on - you the hiss favored side at spe~tator when you visit Mexico and have sports when we should be doingthe misfortunE to encounter the it in the causes of racial justiceAmerican tourist who is bent on and equality of opportunity inshyacting like one It is a crying stead shame that so many Americans We are afraid others usuallyhave to show a superiority com- those very loud others will look

middotplex to those they encounter in down on us if we give public middot other countries seeming to feel support to those who need our that no matter where they go it support the little -people the is not they who are the foreignshy least of Christs and our brethshyers but those they encounter ren

All too often these types seem The fact is though that we to despise the customs and lanshy Americans do have a- heart and guage and even the currency of that once we put aside our sillythe countries they visit apparshy ideas that we are too busy to be ently thinking that anyone can hospitable or that others will understand English if you only look on us as soft and foolish if speak louder and that real we are or that we must not goAmerican money will buy anyshy out of way forour foreign~rs thing even respect because we might make a misshy

Worst of all are those wbo take in speaking their languagebring their aura of racial supeshy -then we can be and are just as riority along with them and hospitable and friendly as anymake little effort to hide it It is peoplein the world undoubtedly true that some of Ideals of Youththis patronizing attitude is partly There are many Americansresponsible (along with Castro~ and fortunately there are gettingeternal vigilance for American to be more who are willing tomistakes and seeming mistakes) stand up publicly and be countedfor the affection with which on the side of right instead ofAmericans are held in some parts - merely clucking in quiet privateof Latin America such as in sympathy There are lots ofPanama Americans who are not jqst

Race Prejudice friendly and hospitable to forshyAnd its tragic that have eigners but who do heroic workwe

to expoFt the most shameful of with the poor and downtrodden our national sins the stupidity and handicapped of their own which is race prejudice We country and their own city as might as well forget in fact well about any good neighbor polshy - Now there are lots of adult icy until we ourselves become Americans of this type But good neighbors when it comes to out-and-out

But even when we are not prodigal generosity it is the snobbish at home we are seldom teens as a rule whohave to be as spontaneous in our friendli shy given first prize ness other peoples The forshy A teen-agel who has not yetas eign students who come to stuay outgrown the honest ideals of at our universities often get youth will give his time and enshylonely and discouraged because ergy unstintingly and with little they have seemingly no friends thought of consequences This

author has instanceThe Negro in his fight for for seen equality (a fight which should kids doing heroic work with the never have been necessary in the very poor and the orphans-notfirst place) very often feels just throwing money into a colshyalone (though decreasingly so) lection box for them but givingwhen even those who know he is them their time and their love getting a raw deal do nothing working with them face to face at least publicly to help him even as Christ did set things right America has a great heart

Which may be one reason the and many Americans are just as Negro American often makes a spontaneous and natural at better ambassador abroad than showing it as any people anyshyother Americans where As a country however

Friendliness Here we still have some distance to But the trouble with extolling go before this sort of generosity

the hospitality and friendlin~ becomes our national image

CHECK COMPARE SAVE

Turkeys 10to11 LIS

Ready-to-Cook 39~ FIR S T Nancy Vogel

daughter of Mr and Mrs SAVE CASH bullbullbull SHOP AampPLeonard J Vogel of Sacred Heart Parish Fall River and a senior at Starg High last night became the first recishypient of the Bishop Connolly award for the outstanding

girl athlete n a Catholic High School The Clover Club of Fall River sponsored the award

Thomas ~Vhalen

In Noviticlte Brother Thomas Whalen son

of Mr and Mrs Thomas Whalen -8 General Cobb St Taunton and a member of the Sacred Heart Parish has received the religshyious habit of the Erothers of the

SMOKED P()RK SHOUlDERS

SUPER-RIGHT SHORT SHANK 6 TO 8 lBS

PICNICS 1829c

CHICKEN LEe or BREAST 33c

QUARTERS l8

SAVE CASH ON THESEHoly Cross at ceremonies conshyducted at St Joseph Novitiate

Valatie NY 6 POUNDS ofi BREAD ONLY 99c Brother John Donoghue CSC

Provincial Superior of the Broshy Whitl Breadp~~~E~ 4 ~6~~~z99c thers of the Holy Cross of the SAVI 20e - REGULAR 59c - 8 INCHEastern Province announced I p 118 8 OZ 39CJANEthat Brother Thomas was one of App I II PARKER IACHthe 14 candidates who is now starting a canonical year of proshy JANI PARKER - SAVlOe REGULAR 9c

bation for the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross bull hB Ck 1 lB 3 OZ 3ftCSpaRIS ar a e EACH i

Following the reception the parents and friends of Brother Thomas were guests at a lunchshyeon at the novitiate

Total Now 430 NEW YORK (NC)-With the

opening of two more parish schools the number of Catholic elementary schools in the New York archdiocese now totals 430

ATWC)OD OIL CO~~PANY

SHEILL HEATIN4 OILS South SeC] Streets Hyannis Tel HY 81

COMPLleTE

Mortgage Service anywhere on Cape Cod

bull RESIDENTIAL bull COMMEI~CIAL

bull CONSTRUCTION bull SEASONAL

Call EX 8-2266

Bass ~iver Savings Bank

SOUTH YARMOUTH Hyannis - Dennis Port

Yarmouth Plaza

Special Donut and Coffee SoleI All THIS weEKI

PLAIN SUGARED CJlNNAMON OR COMBINATION

2 PKGS 4ftltJane Parker Donuts 29cR~~ Of 12

I E 5 ON ON SAVE 4c B~~S SAV 1 c B3~S MILO AND MRLOW COFfil

Eight OClock ~A~ 69c-3 IJ~G 198 RICH FULLmiddotBOOleo

Red Circle CoHee ~A~ 71 c-3 B~G204 VIGOROUS ANO WINEY

lokar Coffe ~A~ 73c-3 B~G210 rice shown In thl ud guiltnteed tlltu Sat Feb

Tobacco products and Items prohibIted by Iaw eKempt from Plaid Stamp Offbullbull amp effective at ALL Aamp Sup Matlcotn thl communll1 and lclnll1

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 4: 02.04.65

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

yeW Movement Assists Million Young Workers

By ~fsgr George G Higgins Canon Joseph Cardijns elevation to the College of

Cardinals which was unexpectedly announced by Pope Paul VI Monday Jan 25 was a richly deserved tribute to a great pioneer in the social apostolate of the Church and to the worldwide movement which he established a genshyeration ago - the Young Christian Workers (JOC)

What is this movement which has merited such a welcome tribute fro m His Holiness middotT heY 0 u n g ChristianWorkshyers is a moveshyment of the Church which r e c r u i t sand trains you n g working men and women Its aim is to educate young workers so as to enable them to re-Christianize their lives and surroundings

The YCW is a school of life Through the inquiry method the genius of the movement young workers discover the problems of their work life of their neighshyhorhood and iamily and of their leisure life

Last and most importaIt a concrete action is taken to bring their life close to the ideal of Christ and His Church This is -the school through which have passed thousands of youngworkers the world over

Christian Lines By meeting weekly with other

young workers the Young Christian Workers develop charshyacter The YCW shows its memshybers how unChristian their enshyvironment is in many respects Realizing gradually that they themselves are affected by it young workers are stimulated to think and act personally on Christian lines It is a school which combines knowledge spirshyitual formation and action

The spirit of service shows itself on the most simple occashysions of the daily life of the Young Christian Worker The kinds of service are as numerous as the many needs created by the various circumstances of everyday life i e making friends with new workers visit shying a sick friend helping a young worker to get a job passshying out leaflets in a union camshypaign and the like

All service in the YCW must rest entirely on the Christian conception of love of others This is the soul of the movement

In Daily Life Through the actions and sershy

vices of its members the Young Christian Workers Movement is constantly in touch with the young workers daily life in factories and offices home and leisure ip short with the needs and desires of working youth

The YCW is a permanent reshysponse to the problems of all young workers The Church gives us the doctrine of Christ and communicates His life to us The YCW has been charged With the responsibility of helping to bring the Divine Life to all young workers and to change

First Fridians If Members of the Fall River First Friday Club will have John J Gallagher president of the Fall River Mental Health Assoshy1iation as their speaker at their montlily dinner meeting tomorshyrow night The gathering will follow 6 oclock Mass at Sacred Reart Church and will be held in the parochial school All Cathshyolic men in the Fall River area are invited to join the club

things which stand in the way of their living this new life

Established by Canon Cardijn in Belgium in 1912 the Young Christian Workers was officially recognized as a national organshyization in Belgium in 1925 by the Church Today the movement exists in 40-odd countries and is in the process of formation in 25 others Over one million ~oung

vvorkers throughout the world make up its membership

Produces Vocations Today the YCW has taken its

place as a small but important youth movement in the United States It has trained worker leaders who have set their shoulders to the wheel in ecoshynomic and political life It has produced many vocations to the priesthood and religious life and hundreds of Catholic marriages

Much has been tione But the task has just begun God willing the elevation of Canon Cardijn to the College of Cardinals in the evening of his inspiring life will serve as a stimulus to the movement not only in the United States but in every other part of the world as well

S h A middot out merlca Continued from Page Ten

through combating such probshylems as poverty illiteracy reli shygious ignorance and communism a consensus seemed to emerge from the discussions that the Church has started to come to grips with the realities of the situation and will continue to gather strength in the struggle of the Latin American peoples to overcome their crippling problems

Assessing the help which has already come from North Amershyica and the role the Church in Latin America must play in helping its people Bishop Marshycos G McGrath CSC of Sanshytiago de Veraguas Panamasaid in a private interview the inshycreased impact of the Church in Latin American life is enough reason for optimism

Give Impetus

The material and spiritual aid which has begun to flow into Latin America is of great imporshytance bee a use cooperation brings forth cooperation He expressed the hope that before long the programs of education and material aid would give Latin Americans the impetus they need to help themselves

Defining what he believes should be the role of the Church he said much of the materialmiddot help needed is really the funcshytion of the civil governments but it has to be done by someshyone and sometimes the Church is the only one willing or able to do the job But the real place of the Church he believes is as a teacher and former of attitudes

ANDERSON amp OLSIEN INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIC

HEATING-PIPING and AIR CONDITIONING

CONTRACTORS 312 Hillman Street WY 7-9162 New Bedford ~

W IS E INVEST~IENT

Every pastor should make it his business to see to it that every family in his parish gets a copy of his diocesan newspaper said Msgr Robert G Peters of Peoria The lllshyinois prelate is president of the Catholic Press Associashytion NC Photo

Minister AddJresses Catholic Conention

HOBART (NC)-An Anglican minister has addressed the 23m convention of the Catholic Unishyversity Federation of Australia which is being held at the Unishyversity of Tasmania

The Rev B Marshall chapshylain of Trinity College Univershysity of Melbourne delivered a speech on the liturgy as the road to Christian unity

M-KRestaurant featuring

liThe Gaslight Roomll

Ideal far Communion Breakfasts

crganization Banquets

386 Acushnet twenue New Bedford

Can WYman 2-1703

HATHAAY OIL CO INC

NEW BEDF10RD

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OilS

TIMKENI

Oll BURNIERS

Sales amp Servce

501 COUNTY STREET NEW BEDFIgtRD

WY 3-1751

Mor~ Mass Changes After March 7 Continued from Page One The Roman edition will contain

hitherto recited in a low voice seven or eight samples simply be sung or recited aloud Among to demonstrate the spirit of the such prayers are the Secret the format to be approved by the Doxology at the end of the various episcopal conferencesshyCanon the prayer of peace fol- Eventually the Prayer of the lowmg the Our Father Faithful-being offered immedi-

Holy Coinmunion ately after the Creed during The reception of Holy Com- Mass - will vary from week to

munion at Mass by the faithful week at the discretion of the celshyis an essential part of the Mass ebrant but within the format apshyTheir abstinence from the Eu- proved by the national body of charist would make the Mass bishops It will be in the vernaeshysomething abnormal Fat her ular and is intended to express Bugnini asserted A Mass with- the special concerns of the comshyout the communion of the faith- munity in which the Mass is beshyful is like a ring without its ing celebrated precious stone Besides the revisions for the

Prayer of Faithful Iass a Kyriale is also being Individual bishops may com-printed which will contain the

pose a temporary Prayer of the chant for the Ordinary of the Faithful to be a normal part of liass and Chants Called For in Mass as of March 7 The Vatican the Roman Missal This book compositions will be guidelines Will contain a small selection of for the National Bishops Con- melodies for the newer rites of ferences to use to establish their the Mass for roncelebration own prayer in their territories prayer of the faithful etc

FR JOSEPH WORKERS PRIEST COMMUNISTS IN SOUTH INDIA WOULD LIKE TO GET RID OF FATHER JOSEPH CHAKIAK Because be isthe worker

priest Communism lulampan uphill figh1 in the factory towD of Eioor bull bull 20000 workers ba1f of them Catholics put lDloq hours for less than $1 a du Families have eight and ten children the cost of Uving goes lIP and up and the Communists make false promlses

Father Joseph fights vigo ously for social iustice Does be worry about the outcome David

The Hoi Pilshers Missi_ Ail hadonJy one sman stone when be Of Ih Orienslll ChINch wem out to fight Goliath be says

bull bull For the church and parisb censhyter Fatber Josepb needs Archbishop Parecattil 53 asks our readers help The workers stand in the rain ~en Father Josepb offers Mass be reports u we eanbuild a parish center and a church we ean guarantee for generations to come Iheextraordinary work Father Joseph is doing The ebureh will cost only $2900-the parish-eenter $3600 WU1 you put a stone in Fatber Josepbs sling Name tbe ehureh (or the parish center) in honor of your favorite saini (Si middotIoseph the Worker) in memory of your 1000ed ones if you build it aU b3

yourself Send at leasi a smaller cift-$lOO SSG $10 $5 $2shy

Youll be helping Father Josepb fight for tbe poor Christ lov~

FEBRUARY FOLLOWTHROUGH o BRIGHTEN BIRTHDAYS AND ANNIVERSARIES (your own

as well of course) byenrolling your friends and relatives (and their -familiesgt in this Association Theyll benefit In the Masses and sacrifices of our priests and Sisters and youll be helping bring souls to Ctrist MembershJp dues are only $l-a~year for an individual ($20 fot life) $5-a-year for a Family ($100 for life) Ask us to send the person you enroll a gift card with the certificate

o FEED A FAMILY FOR A MONTH It costs only $10 Well send you an Olive Wood Rosary from the Holy Land

o LET THE HOLY FATHER DECIDE Hell use your no strings attached stringless gift (in any amount) where its needed most

o CATHOLIC BOOK WEEK begins Feb 21 $5 will make one more Catholic book available to Pontifical Mission Library users in Jerusalem

fAKING A NEW WILL Tbe good you can do by remembershyIng tbe missions goes to your credit eternally Our legal title

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION

Dear Monsignor Ryan

Enclosed please find bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullfor bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Name bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Street City u bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullState bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullZip Code bull

dnl2earSstOlissioosrill FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President

Msgr Jose T ICIII Nat Sec Seed aU coMlllnleatioM to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION 330 Madlsoll Ave at 4211d St N_ York N Y 10017

-5

Center said here it found an overwhelming lack of evishydence to support the theory that Catholic schools are divisive

In a report in the FebruaryshyMarch issue of the Critic magashyzine three officials of the Unishyversity of Chicagos center cited bull survey made on the effects of Catholic education

Persons who went to Catholic scbools they said were just as likely to have Protestant friends in adulthood to be involved in civic activities tomiddot respect civil liberties to be open-minded to be tolerant of others and to be If anything more upwardly moshybile

Authors of the report are Dr Peter Rossi head of the research eenter Father Andrew Greeley director of the study and Leonshyard J Pinto assoc~ate director

They concluded Even though the measures

ased in this study are not as soshyphisticated as might be desired the overwhelming lack of evishydence for the divisiveness theshyory at least calls it into serious question

Indeed the general similarshyity of Protestants and Catholics and of the various Catholic subshygroups suggests that the attishytudes we attempted to measure are formed by general cultural forces rather than the kind of school attended and that the dishyvisiveness that exists springs rather from the influence of reshyligion itself than from religious education

Baltimore Gets ETV Station Approval

BALTIMORE (NC)-The Balshytimore archdiocese said the Fedshyeral Communications Commisshysion has approved its plan for eonstruction of an educational TV station to serve parochial schools here

Msgr James C Donohue su- perintendent of the archdioceses department of Catholic educashytion said the station will be ealIed KRM-67 and will be reshyeeived on television sets which have a special adaptor

In addition to programs for schools MsgrDonohue said the station may be used for Confrashyternity of Christian Doctrine training courses adult education liturgical instruction and pershyhaps clergy conferences

30 Priests Serve Southern Sudan

VATICAN CITY (NC)-There are now only one bishop and one apostolic administrator and 28 other priests to look after the Catholics of the southern Sudan the mission news agency Fides reported here

The agency said that they would normally have to min- ister to some 440000 Catholics but that thousands of their people are now refugees in neighboring countries

The total of 30 all Sudanese is all that remains following the expulsion a year ago of all forshyeign missionaries from the southshyern part of the country

Homowners Course A course in minor home reshy

pairs for homeowners and those dealing in real estate will be ofshyfered by Everett W Ericson as P3rt of the Spring program of the Continuing Education Divishysion of Stonehill College First RSSion will be held Tuesday night Feb 16 and the class win eoutinue for 10 weeka

THE ANCHORshyReport Questions Brother Michael Misses Warmth of Africa Thurs Feb 4 1965

Divisive School As He Shivers in New England Winter Church Council Assertion I wish I were back in Africa shivered Brother Michael E Barnaby home from To Open Talks

CHICAGO (NC) - The Tanzania East Africa where the thermometer is more or less permanently fixed in the National Opinion Research 90s to ~isit his pare~ts in chill Fall River The Brother of Christian Instruction son of With Catholics

Mrand Mrs Ernest J Barnaby of Notre Dame parish Fall River has been on home leave since the end of Noshyvember He will return to the land that doesnt need furshynaces on Valentines Day

Brother Michael has been a missionary in various parts of Africa for the past 11 years His present assignment is at St Marys Secondary School in Mwanza Tanzania Tanzania he explainer is the former Tanganshyyika renamed Tanzania a matter of weeks ago when Tanganyika and the island of Zanaibar formed an alliance

There are 283 boarders boys of 16 to 24 at St Marys School said Brother Michael Classes are in English but the government requires all teachers to learn Swahili and gives them about two years to do so Brother Michael hasnt as yet fulfilled this requirement since other languages were spoken in the parts of Africa where he was previously stationed but its high on his list of priority things to do

New School Year The teacher will be a little

late for school said Brother noting that the new school year began in Tanzania on Tuesday Jan 19 Why Tuesday Well the steamer that plies Lake Victoria on whose shores Mwanza is loshycated arrives on Tuesday bringshying most of St Marys students with it

Tbree and a half week vacashytions come every three months for students said Brother Mishychael and there are six free weeks in December when the school year ends Students work hard towards the Cambridge Overseas Examinations adminshyistered by Cambridge University from England

They are tough exams deshyclared Brother Michael If a boy passes them he is able to go on to higher studies Some stushydents he said are sent to the United States and some go to England Regrettably however

PrefatetoBless Center for Deaf

LAFAYETTE (NC)~First dishyocesan center here for work with the deaf will be blessed Sunday by Bishop Maurice Schexnayder of Lafayette

A former residence which for several years was a diocesan building has been converted to a center where the deaf can come to relax play bingo toshygether and we can also have edshyucational and spiritual proshygrams according to Father Carroll Dupuis diocesan chapshylain for the deaf

Bishop Preaches PROVIDENCE (NC)-Auxilshy

iary Bishop Bernard M Kelly of Providence preached at an ecushymenical prayer service in Beneshyficent Congregational c h u r c h attended by Catholics and memshybers of the Beneficent congregashytion It was the first time amiddot Catholic bishop has preached in a Protestant church in Rhode Island

Michael Ce Austin Inc

FUNERAL SEPVICE

NEW BEDfORD MASS

549 COUNTY STREET

BROTHER MICHAEL

hard for students to advance Closed all day SundayThe school day at St Marys

begins at 830 running until Macleans1245 and then from 230 to 4 with time out for a midday UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN siesta Students then have a

Continuing Education

EVENING CLASSES CLASSES ON TUESDAY EVENINGS 730 TO 930 PM

Liberal Arts TIt ABC Of Cime Th Artist At Work Comporative Religions Contemporary Novel In America Conversational French- in Conversational Spani Cr-m Writing Draw Anct Effecti Engliolo Laltor Law Effecti Public Rmtt- Sociology You And Society Reading Improvement For Adults (Oth Reading Clasbullbullbull

Weolltly For Primary C Secondary ~)

TIM above Ctur non-credi ood withoul prerequisitesbull

bull

Business Accounting For N~ Accountants Elementary Shaltthand (Gregg) Insurance Part II Investing ht Stocb Real Estate Training Cou Pew

Supervisors To Revie Co

Attomeys

Special Interest InteriM Decoration Th Houbullbull yetu LiYe In Personality Improvementmiddot Fee

Women Updating Efficiency In

Tomorrows Food Service

Spring Session FeIJ 16-Apr 27

58ftd Brochur wi1ft application form or

pho local-CE 8-2Oft or am- Ii -OK 6-9050 Ot apply puan Monday rough Friday Adminshyistration Building from

730 PM to 830 PM

NEW YORK (NC)-The World Council of Churches has approved laquoexploratory talks with Catholic represenshytatives a World Council official said here

The Rev Dr Franklin Clark Fry president of the Lutheran Church in America and chairshyman of the World Councils 100shymember central committee said procedures for the talks were outlined at a meeting of the committee in Enugu Nigeria

Dr Fry spoke at a news conshyference after returning from 10 days at the Nigeria meeting

He predicted that talks beshytween Catholic and World Counshycil representatives would begin in a few months He called such talks the next logical step in improving relations between Roman Catholics andmiddot other Christians

Step While the talks would be a

momentous step Dr Fry said nevertheless they would be a step not a leap

He said the initial discussions would concern matters that are not too complicated and apshypear 1ikeiy to produce progress in interreligious cooperation

The World Council of Churches includes 214 Protestants Orthoshydox Anglican and Old Catholic denominations with some 350 million members throughout the world

lARIVIERES Pharmacy

Prescriptions carted for and Delivered

HEADQUARTERS FOR DIETETIC SUPPLIES

600 Cottage St WY 4-7439 New Bedford

~

manual work period for three quarters of an hour during which said Brother all the heavy work of the school is taken care of Its quite an efshyficient system he noted A sports period follows

Brother Michael teaches biolshyogy math and sociology at St Marys He says his students are highly motivated Few boys can go to school so those who can want to stay and they study hard They know their futures depend upon it Most St Marys graduates go into government or business and Brother Michael noted that Julius Nyerere Tanshyzanias president is himself a graduate of a Catholic school He is a good Catholic he said

Native Vocations The Brothers of Christian Inshy

struction operate a Jlostulate and juniorate in connection with St Marys Some 40 boys are enshyrolled in the two institutions and will go to Uganda for their noshyvitiate

The area around Mwanza is hilly and rocky and vegetation is sparse said Brother Michael Nearby are gold and diamond mines but security is very up to date We ca~t take field trips to the mines

A native of Notre Dame parshyish Brother Michael has a brothshyer and sister still residing in the parish in addition to his parshyents He attended Prevost High School leaving in his senior year to enter the brotherhood and complete his education at the communitys school in Alfred Me He has been a religious since 1947

Brother Michael expects to visit Fall River again in three years under a government polshyicy which prescribes that all foreign teachers take home leave for six months every three years

very few educated youngsters become teachers

The good students get bettershypaying jobs and its the less able ones who turn to teaching Thus teachers are mediocre and its

STORE HOURS

MON TUES WED 900 AM to 500 PM

THURS FRI SAT 830 AM to 600 PM

-6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965 lVlission for Journalists SacrDments

Necessary Instrument The Catholic newspaper is not a superficial luxuty

or an optional devotion it is an instrument necessary for the circulation of those ideas which feed our faith

These words of Pope Paul spoken less than a year ago need no additional commentary to explain his view of the Catholic press and the importance that a Catholic newsshypaper plays and should play in the life of the Catholic

In the mind of th~ Pope the Catholic newspaper is necessary

The faith of the individual Catholic and the events of the life that he daily lives are inextricably interwinetl The faith must influence and give meaning to daily life and the events of the day must be viewed in the light of God and their impact for eternal life Where is the Catholic to receive information that will guide him in making these judgements and applications

This is the function of the Catholic newspapershyagain in Pope Pauls words-to present a fund of thought aligned along Christian principles Thlt Catholic newsshypaper the Pope points out must not only inform but form the reader And it must let the reader see in how many areas there is unity of belief among Catholics and with their non-Catholic friends and in how many areas there is complete freedom within the bounds of charity for discussion and disagreement

During February Catholic Press Month the Popes insistence on the Catholic newspaper as necessary should find response in the minds and lives of every Catholic family

This means that Catholic reading material must be in every home A Catholic weekly newspaper magazines books and pamphlets-these are instruments of Cathoshylic thought aids to the Catholic in his evaluation of the events in which he participates and these enable him to continue his education and to mature in the faith that is his

Responsible Press The announcement by the Holy Father of his creation

of new Cardinals was given excellent coverage in the daily press and many of the outstanding newspapers of the country saw fit to make it the subject of editorials

This in itself 3hould be proof if proof is needed that the daily press is willing and anxious to cooperate with the Church and with every other responsible group in the featuring of newsworthy releases It shows that there is concern in the higher e-chelons of newspaper administration over what the Church does and its influence in and on the world

Occasionally the cry is heard from some Catholics that this or that newspaper is prejudiced against the Church This is the ghetto-voice crying out the self-styled secondshyclass citizen speaking the inferiority complex-ridden Cathshyolic making protest serve instead of presentation and proshymotion This attitude happily is all but gone but it is still discouraging to see and hear it on occasion

When a newspaper presents a view that is deemed hostile to the Church the explanation is that the editor sincerely thought this to be a newsworthy item or else he was met with so many no comments from Catholic officials or was given such a run-around in his efforts to seek the other viewpoint that he met his deadline with what he had at hand

The press in the United States is a responsible one Exceptions to this are so few as to be easily and quickly recognizable Catholics would do well to take an active role in applauding and assisting the press in its presentation of news and viewpoints instead of carping and sniping from the sidelines

rhe tNCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diqcese of Fali River 410 Highland Avenue

Fall River Mass 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAqER It Rev Daniel F ShallooMA Rev John P Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR ~ Hugh J GoldeJ)

~

y

FEBRUARY

OATHoLa PRESS MONTH

ThnolACJh the Week With the Chunch By REV ROBERT W HOVDA Catholic University

TODAY-St Andrew Corsini Bishop What have we sinners done that God should trust us so Yet he assures us again and again in scripture as He does in the lessons of this Mass that He not only loves us but entrusts to us the salvation of our world

Sirachs tribute to the great priest and the Gospel parable of the industrious and reliable slaves-both come to the Chrisshytian people to t14e assembled church as messages of trust and confidencemiddot and hope Gods hope if we may so speak

TOMORROW - St Agatha Virgin Martyr Those who have made themselves thus for the sake of the kingdom of heaven (Gospel) are the Religious among us whose vows of reshynouncement establish a way of life that points to heaven

Whatever they do whatever concrete form their mission takes this is their common sershyvice to the whole Church - to remind us all that the worid moves toward a goal beyond it shyself not only in words but in the daily fabric of their lives

SATURDAY-St Titus Bishshyop The bishop of course but also every Christian must be a person who knows where he is going (Gospel) Jesus is teachshying here a simple directness in accomplishing the mission He entrusts to us Success is not the measure but the will the intent the steadfastness and purposeshyfulness To say The kingdom of God has approached you is not to brag nor to herald triumph It is only to announce the fact that one is here is present who is animated by faith and is therefore a vessel of the Holy Spirit

FIFTH SUNDA~ AFTER EPIPHANY You must bear with one anothers faults (first reading) or perhaps while you are gathering the tares you will root up the wheat with them (Gospel) These are great days of belated reformation in many areas of the Churchs Hfe in its worship in its conception of it shyself and of its mission

The movement of the Holy Spirit in the Church and in the times we live in has brought fresh air to us breaking a crust hardened by the defensiveness and fear of centuries With the Offertory hymn we can sing ~Gone is the threat of death

now I shall live aind proclaim to the world what the Lord hail done for me Now we shall live

with the constant reform and reshynewal that life demands

Yet our aims must be reasonshyable and we must be strengthshyened against the vain hope that because the structures and patshyterns of our Church life are imshyproved we shall be perfect First and last we deal in the Church with humans and with those faults the readings speak of Our reform is successful if those structures and patterns begin again to beckon and challenge and inspire us where we are and as we are

MONDAY-St John of Matha Confessor Hymning the praises of the good man the man who confesses his faith in the Father by dealing with every person as his brother the entrance psalm begins Be not envious of the wicked nor jealous of evil shydoers

Sometimes we pretend that a real envy a true jealousy is purely a desire to see (and help) virtue triumph But the saints too like the man we honor toshyday are fields in which tares are present They differ from us perhaps only in that they do not covet them nor envy the tares in other lives

TUESDAY-St Cyril of Alexshyandria Doctor Do not think that I have come to set aside the law and the prophets I have not come to set them aside but to bring them to perfection (Gospel) (I hope the new and improved text of scripture readings at Mass is soon avail shyable in books smaller than the altar missal)

Christ announces thatmiddot the job of His teacher of the man or woman who teaches in His name is not to set aside the law and the prophets nor isii to repeat them It is to bring them to perfection So the Christian teacher must heed the Spirit here and now as well as in tradition

WEDNESDAY - St Scholasshytica Virgin The maidens love of and openness to her groom with all her hope of fulfillment and completion is the model of the Churchs stance toward Christ Even as the Church the community of salvation we are not a finished product

We are always reformable al shyways perfectible always pil shygrims on the march It is this virgin spirit submissive to the L()td thatenables the Church to welCome such a period as thV time of change and progress

Continued from Page Three mediately before the annointinlf omitting the sprinkling with itS formula and the Confiteor and absolution Conselration

All bishops present may imshypose hands on the new bishop However only the consecrator and two co-consecrating bishopS are to pronounce the words Acshycipe Spiritum Sanctum Matrimony

Matrimony shall be ce)~brated

within the Mass unless a just cause excuses this It sl-jall be done after the Gospel and the homily Th~ latter is nevpr omitshyted

Within Mass The Votive Mass shall always be celebrted or a commemoration of it made according to the rubri(~ even during the prohibited tine

The pastor or his dnJegate who assists at the marri~O~ shan celebrate the Mass if it is anshyother Mn~s shall not (~ltinue

untn the MarrlageRite hls been completed The non-c~l~brant

who assists at Marriage ~lall be vested in surplice and white stole (and cope if it is the cusshytom) and he shall give tln homshyily The celebrant shall pve the blessing after the Lord Prayer and before the Placeat

The Nuotial Rlessing hlll al shyways be imparted even f it is one of the partys seconrl marshyriage or the marriage is rluring the prohibited season

Without Mass Accorrng ta the Apostolic Letter ~acram

Liturgiam (Jan 1964) rgt brief admonition shall be given before the rite Tis is not a homily but only a simple imtuction before the celebration of Marshyriage After the reading of the Epistle and Gospel of the Mass for Spouses there shall then be given a homily Thlllt the order shall be brief admrgtnition Epistle and Gospel in the vershynacular homily celebr2tonof marriage nuptial blessing

If no vernacular text is avail shyable for the Epistle and nos~l

it is lawful to use for the inshyterim a text approved by the local Ordinary~ bull

A chant may be sung bntweea the Epistle and Gospel The Prayer of the Faithful is highly recommended after the compleshytion of the Mariage Rite accordshying to the formula of the local Ordinary and in which petitions for the spouses are also to be included

At the end of the rite the nuptial blessing shall always be given as within Mass The formshyula shall be the one designated for this occasion (Collectio Hishytuum 1964 Rite of Matrimony Without Mass Nuptial Pessing Outside Mass Sacristy Manual p 283

If marriage is celebrated duJ shying the prohibited season the pastor shall advise the spouses to~take into account the special character of this liturgical seashyson Sacramentals

A single prayer from among the prayers which are found in the Roman Mis$al for Feb Z and for Ash Wednesday mashybe said on the occasion of the blessing of candles or ashes

Blessings which have been reshyserved up to the present time and which are contained in the Roman Ritual tit IX cap 9 10 11 _may be given by any

- priest with the exception of the following Blessing of a bell for the use of a blessed church or oratory Blessing of the first stone for the building of a

church B I e s sin g of a new church or public oratory Blessshy

ing of an antimimsiori Blessing of a new cemetery the Papal Blessings (cap 10 n 1-3) and the Blessings and erection of the

Stations of the Way of the Cr~ inasmuch asthis reserved to tbe JUahop

ACRES Of FREE

PARICNG

OOIJfIlElftENI BUDGETmiddot Finance

f 1It_ 10 Pay

1

Meeting to Plan CathQlic Press i

World Congress NEW YORK (NC)-The

Seventh World Congress of the Catholic Press to be held here May 18 to 22 will be the first subject for discussion at a meeting of officials of the Inshyternational Union of the Cathoshylic Press Saturday in Stuttgart Germany

Two representatives of the Catholic Press of the United States and Canada will attend the Stuttgart meeting They are Tames A Doyle executive secreshytary of the Catholic Press Assoshyciation and Father Hugh Morley

OFM Cap who represents the international union at the United Nations

Father Albert J Nevins MM editor of Maryknoll magazine is general chairman of the world congress and of the 55th annual convention of the Catholic Press Association which includes Catholic newspaper magazine and general publisher members in the United States and Canshyada

Modern Society The Stuttgart meeting will be

held under the direction of Raishymondo Manzini editor of the Vatican City newspaper LOsshyservatore Romano and president of the IUCP and Father Emile Gabel AA secretary general

Meetings at the world congress will be organized around the overall theme of Truth in the Pursuit of Liberty and will Inshyelude a number of special sesshysions relating the theme to modshyem society

There Will be conferences on the press and political liberty liberty and international order liberty and eivil rights con science and religious liberty freedom and the creative arts and liberty in the Catholic press

Three Missioners Martyred in Congo

ROME (NC) - The deaths of three more Catholic missionarIes and an African priest at the hands of Congolese rebels have been reported by the Pious Soshyciety of St Francis Xavier for the Foreign Missions of Parma

Italy The three Xaverian missionets

were Fathers Giovanni Didone 35 and Luigi Carrara 32 and Brother Vittorio Faccin 31

Patron of Rio RIO DE JANEffiO (NC-An

altar dedicated to St Sebastian has been blessed here to comshymemorate the fourth centenary of the founding of the Portushyguese settlement of St Sebastian of Rio de Janeiro

DUEtFEE- FALL RIVER

On Our Stage IN PERSON

Arthur Fiedler and

60 Members of the Boston Pops

an evening of enchanted music

ALL New Program Special Attention to evo ~nd Church Groups

FRIDAY FEBRUA~Y 12 830 PM

TEL 6fT-93S1

fHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965 1 Press Association Head Evaluates Press Month Theme

BY MSGR ROBERT G PETERS perfect setting up distortions in world but with every walk of proper interpretation of the

its reflection A mirror can be life every slightest concern of question itself The theme of this years Cathshy too small to tell the full story morality Anything else is not things as

olic Press Month gives everyone A mirror can be faithful to the they are or things in truth -readers and writers-reason to Christian Principlessurfacemiddotof things and miss what Anything else is not the Catholic consider the task of the Catholic A mirror that tells things as press that the popes have adshylies behind the obvious facade press They are the words of they really are must reflect not vised to place itself in the world Pope Paul VI Your Catholic A mirror that tells all things only the object in question but and interpret that world for press mirror of the world as they are must be a mirror that the surrounding world that afshy readers in the light of Christianbull bull telling things as they are seldom limits its area of reflecshy fects what must be told The principlesbullbullbull In truth tion And the press that attempts publication that mirrors the famshy Catholic readers should be

To mirror the world is not the to be such a mirror must concern ily the factory the field and the happy to have at hand a press simple task it first appears For itself not only with the obvious forum must include the Chrisshy that dedicates itself to so imporshyone thing a mirror can be im- ecclesiastical aspects of the tian principles needed for a tant a task

The Fumlture Wonderland Open Daily 9 AM to 10 PMe

_ the East Including Saturdays

Hew Englands Greatest Furniture (Iearance is Now in Full SwinQ

FREE DELIVERY

8

l

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall liver-Thurs Feb W85

Catholic Press Bears Witness 10 Churchs Spirit of Renewal

By Mary Tinley Daly -Reading habits must be changing in my parish

Mid a priest of our acquaintance Few years ago he ruminated Id go into a horne to make a sick call put my hat on the coffee table on the top of the New Yorker Vogue Look Life and the daily newspaper When Id come downstairs again my hat would be on top of a flock of Catholic m iss ion magazines and the diocesan newspaper The others were all chucked for the time being I was to be imshypressed quite obviously he laughedWhats the change now Father we asked Are the magazines more lurid where you park your hator

And Nowmiddotmiddotmiddot Just the opposite our priest

friend chuckled Theyre not ashamed of the Catholic press any more In the line-up among the popular publiclltions on those living room tables-and usually on top of the heap--are well shythumbed copies of Commonweal America The Sign and others Even the Diocesan paper is out in full view right beside toshynights edition of the city newsshypaper

This priests observation Is D~ all unusual

The Catholic press has made giant strides within the past few years strides which should be noted during this the month of February Catholic Pre s bull Month Why February We dont know Perhaps from the very name of the month derived from Februarius month of exshypiation and purification since en the 15th the Roman festival of expiation and purifi~ation was beld

To our way of thinking this iii appropriate since we believe that the Catholie press should take its place as a gOOd influshyence in the currentmiddot world of journalism To quote the present Pontiff Pope Paul VI Your CatholiC Press is a mirror of toshydays world telling things shythey are-in truth

And how is the Catholie predoing Better thank you

Todays Renewal Reflecting the Catholic layshy

mans view is the sophisticatedCommonweal edited by dedishycated Cafllolic laymen America edited by the Jesuits The Sign magazine of the Passionists and SO many others mirroring mod-middot ern Catholic thinking in our aggiornamento of today enunshyciated first by Pope John XXIII

Fresh air is not only seeping in it is sweeping int9 Catholic journalism

Notre Dame Superior Heads New- Cornmittee

WASHINGTON (NC)-5ister Mary Daniel provincial superior of the Maryland province of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur has been elected chairmaflof the newly formed National Sister Formation Committee

New vice chairman is Mother Mary Borromeo mother general of the Sisters of St Francis Joliet Ill the Sister Formation Conference announced from it headquarters here

Sister Mary Daniel heads a 12-member unit which guides activities of the formation conshyference a 12-year-old cooperashytive movement of U S Sistershyhoods to bolster the spiritual academic and professional trainshying of Sisters

Time was and in the memory of even young readers when a great many Catholic newsshypapers were pretty ho-hum a picture of the bishop on every page notices of sodality meetshyings ham or turkey dinners items which could and should be carried in parish bulletins edishytorials wildly denouncing thisshyand-that-a generally negative and boring experience for readshyers of which there were few

Catholic magazines were only slightly better mediocre articles namby-pamby fiction

Those were the days when out of a sense of loyalty or obedishyence Catholics supported their Catholic press with their subshyscription dollars but not with their attention

Catholic periodicals found their way from the mail slot to the magazine rack for a while then out into the trash Seldom did they appear on a living room table to be picked up for intershyest or enjoyment along with the mass media publications EVeJl less rarely was a Catholic peri shyodical quoted ill the secular press or discussed among intelli shygent Catholics

Fortunately times h a changed The Catholiepress is abreast of world news local news features book film and play r~views entertainment and famshyily pages And nowhere else of course can one get more authorshyitative information on the vital changes within themiddot Church itshyself Vatican Council liturgieal reforms ecumenism -eally alive issues

The change has been long _ coming hindered ~ maD7 r0adshyblocks but its here

Alumae Style Shaw Alumnae and parents of Jesusshy

Mary Academy Fall River wiD sponsor a supper style show at 630 Tuesday night March 2 at Whites restaurant

Sto Francis Resodence

FOR YOUNG WOMEN 196 Whipple St Fall River Conduded by Franciscan

Missionaries of Mary ROOMS - MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALtill Inquire OS 3-2892

bull bull bull bull bull bullbull bull bullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Williams Funeral Home

EST 1870 I Washington Square

NEW BEDFORD Reg Funeral Director CIftd

Embalmer PRIVATE middotPARKING AREA

TEL WY 6-8098

AT RED MASS Luci Baines Johnson daughter of the President attended the annual Red Mass in St Matthew Cathedral Washin~~ton last Sunday in the company of her escort Paul Betz of Washington left President Johnson preeeded the COUplEI into the Oathedral NC Photo

Protestants Must Change Attitude BONN (NC)-German Protesshy the Orthodox Church which

tants have been asked to meet takes a similar stand the spirit of change at the Vatshy He also pointed to the diffi shy

ican council with changes ill culty of solving problems in this their own attitudes area because the Catholic

Lutheran theologian Dr Hanl Church cannot find anyone aushyAsmussen wove his appeal thorized to negotiate for Protesshyaround a strong criticism of tants He said We have no Protestant impatienCE with the branch with which questions of Catholic position on mixed marshy this kind can be regulated in a riages He pointed out that Protshy binding way and we do not waDi estants who are angrr with the to create one either Catholic stand do not criticize

your OVENFRESH

NEIGHBORHOOD~ DAILY STORE

Asks End of Fee In Teaching

PADERBORN (NC)-Dao ligious training should _be more positive at all age levels and the element of all shyxiety and fear should be elimoo inated ill teaching children bull German Catholic churchman aeshyserted here

Archbishop Lorenz Jaeger ell Paderborn in Germany said bull more positive stress requires IEo vision not only of the catechism but also of the rite of confessioDo In line with this approach m said parents in the rearing of their children should stress the dignity of the human person iQoo stead of harping on duties

The prelate a member of 12ie ecumenical councils Secretarial for Promoting Christian Unit was addressing the annual cooshyvention of representatives 01 German Catholic womens ganizations He said that to tain awareness of the dignity all the Christian vocation Chri9shytians must first realize natural virtues and true humanity bull Pope John showed by his exa pIe

Defines ApoStolate Of Catholic Nurse

WICHITA (NC)-Bishop L8 C Byrne defined the CathoHe nurse-one who combines proshyfessional excellence with spa itual excellence to sanctify hetlo self and Christianize society

SpeaKing before the DioeeSRII Counell of Catholic Nurses here Wichitas apostolic administ

tor told 200 nurses Your laP apostolate is nursing Specifi shycally in our age which histolF will describe as the age of tile laity the Catholic nurse must be a shining symbol of both tbe Church and the nursing prof~

sion

~ DEBROSS OIL ( ~ COo

) Heating Oils ( ~ and Burners ~

365 NORTH FRONT STREET ~ NEW BEDFORD ~

~ WYman 2-5534 ~

VinesWill HaveTenderGrapes f Pruned Now Says Gardener

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

One of the few jobs in the garden middotwhich should be done in Winter is that of pruning grape vines By pruning vines now while they are dormant you will avoid a drippy vine when the sap begins to flow Actually the pruning should take place in two steps once now and again in never to be awakened again

late March or April Maybe this is how TV dinnersbegan

Too often grape produc- Now Im as guilty as any other Clon suffers from too little prunshy mother of not wanting four exshyIng As a result vines become tra elbows around me when I am overcrowded and produce small trying to cook and I often have stunted bunches of fruit or at to suppress a scream of anguish best production of fruit is when my last egg hits the floor limited Then I remember my early ef

In pruning a vine the first forts offer a prayer to the thing to do is to remove all Blessed Mother for an extra Winter-killed growth (this is dose of patience and find someshysimple to determine since dead thing for those little hands to eliDes are dry and brittle) These help me with canes should be cut back to the One day last week when my main stem The second step is to patience was at an unusually eut aU thin straggly growth at high peak we had a dolls birthshyleast half way back to the main day party cake mixed and baked stem or until the cane is at least by Meryl and Melissa instrucshythe thickness of a finger The tions read by mother The utter shape of the vine is of no conshy delight on their faces when the eern now since it will be shaped finished cake turned out so well after the second pruning more than paid for any extra

The first pruning should thin effort on my part the vine to approxima~ely twoshy A very young friend of ours thirds of its original bulk Do Christine McGowan of St JoshyDot make the mistake of being sephs parish Fall River was cautious about cutting Rememshy nice enough to give us one of her ber new growth will appear off recipes to pass on to the younger the old growth and unless you set Miss McGowan with the aid are thOrough the vine will be of an understanding mother has overcrowded been baking since a very tender

In late March or April the age ~e shouidbe pruned again duiped and tied First remove

Chrissies Cookies 1 Ie white sugar

any canes which were missed atmiddot 1 C brown sugar packed the fiist pruning or any recently C soft shortening (this III killed canes Other canes to be equal to lb butter or margarshy~moved are those which are old ine) IUld overuown since theywiU 1 t vanilla produce littleif any fruit 3 C flour

Once the thinning out process 1 t baking soda comple~ the canes which t salt are to be kept should be ~ nuts andor raisins to taste back to five or six buds and tied Heat oven to 375 Mix sugars During the tying process the shortening eggs vanilla Sift toshyme can be shaped so that no -gether flour soda salt and stir __0 canes are closer than a foot in Add raisins andor nuts ~d a half apart This is a time- Fo~ balls of about 1 t middotof dough eonsuming job which is very apiece flatten on ungreased ~y to do sloppily with a poor baking sheetallowing room far ~p resulting so t~e a few ~ys to do it properly Above an JIrUlle heavily In the Kitchen On of my older daughters reshy~ests last Christmas was for an electric oven that baked just like monunys I felt that this was a little too grown up for five year old because the temshyperature went up as high as 400 degrees so needless to say this particular item didnt find a place under our ~ris~as tree However I still feel quite guilty about this as I intend to try very hard to encourage any cooking tendencies in my daughters Speaking from personal expeshy

dence I remember the years I ipent getting shoo~d out 9f my mothers kitchen until finally ~y interest in that direction iemained dormant until mar ~age forced me to face squareshy~ the prospect of preparing three meals a day Fortunately hen I did solve this problem liided by many cookbooks I did discover how much I loved to eook but I still wonder how any other girls have had their love of cooking equally squelchshytid by a well-meaning mother

Dorries Patronesses Dames Patronesses of Sacred

Beart Home New Bedford will hold a Valentine party for hOJIle residents at 130 Tuesday aftershynoon Feb 9 Mrs Jean Boutin-is m charge of arrangements The lInits annual meeting is planned for Sunday April 25 and the -tOth anniversary of the group Will be marked with a banquet and dance Wednesday May 5 in New Bedford Hotel Next board meeting will be held at 30 luesday niIht March 11

cookies to spread (Wetting the handS with Cold water keeps dOUgh from sticking to them)

Bake 8middot to 10 miuutes Makes about 60 cookies

Notre Dame Nun Joins Inter-Radal Staff

CHICAGO (NC)-Sister Mary Peter (Traxle~r) of the School Sisters of Notre Dame has joined the staff of the educational -sershyvices department of the National Catholic Conference for Intershyracial Justice here

Raymond M Hilliard confershyence chairman said rapid growth of the agencys services necessi-_ tated staff expansion While doshying graduate work in political

science at Georgetown Univershysity in Washington Sister Mary Peter organized a tutorial proshygram for under-privileged youth

NO JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main OHice and Plant 95 Bridge St Lowell Mass

Tel 458-6333

Auxiliary Plants

BOSTON CAMDEN N J OCEANPORT N J MIAMI PAWTUCKET R L PHILADELPHIA

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ c 9 j

REPRESENT Us CATHOLIC WOMEN The Board of Direct-ors of the National Council of Catholi~ Women is received by Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi Apostolic Delshyegate in the US at the annual meeting in ~ashington Mrs Mar~us Kilch ~oungsto~ Ohio left front is NCCW president and Miss Margaret Mealey nght front 18 executIve director NC Photo

Vatican Pavilion Second Most Popular in Fair NEW YORK(NG) --At

most half of the visitors at the New York World~sFair~

last year stopped off at the Vatican Pavilion making it the second most popular of the Fairs 151 pavilions Average daily attendance was over 75000 giving the pavilion a total at- tendance figure of more than 138 million

The Good Shepherd Chapel was the scene of 1204 Masses

SAVE MONEY ON YOUR OILHEATI bull CfJH n

CHARLES F VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE NEW BEDFORD MASS

IwflkltdeliNlyK

~SS~ HEATING OIL

at whichCo~union was dis- The most popular item at the tributed to ~ie th8ll- 42000 pavilions sales counters was a people POStcard featuring P~pe Paul

gt 1 1

- ~- ~

-_

_ ~~ f y

~ I

NO NONOt

Piggy banks dont pay dividends Put your money in a Fail River Trust Savings Account where generous divishydends are compounded semi-annually Its much safer too 1

FALL RIVER ~~h TRUST CO- V

64J U1t4 ~~ bull~ Fatt ~

-

THE ANCHORshy10 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Prelate Stresses Ecumenism on Spiritual Level

MADEIRA (NC) - Auxshyiliary Bishop Paul F Leishybold of Cincinnati called for a spiritual ecumenism shyprayer and holiness - as the soul of the ecumenical moveshyment

He preached at a special low Mass which he offered at St middotGertrudes church here in Ohio for some 300 Protestants many escorted by Catholic neighbors Many Protestant visitors were guests in homes of Catholic pashyrishioners after the evening Mass which was (lffered at an altar facing the congregation

Bishop Leibold cited five ways in which those who profess Christ can work for Christian unity

1 We must make every effort to avoid expressions judgments

and action~hich do not represhysent the condition of our sepashyrated brethren with truth and faimess

2 DIalogue must be carried on between competent experts from different churches and communities

3 Cooperation among differshyent churches for the common good of humanity

4 A spiritual ecumenismmiddot which he said involves a change of heart holiness of life and public and private prayer for unity

5 All must examine their own faithfulness to Gods will for the Church and accordingly undertake with vigor the task of renewal arid reform

Scores FCC Stand On Religious Test

WASHINGTON (N C) - A middotmember of the Federal Commushynications Commission charged here that the FCC is violating constitutional limits marked out by the Supreme Court by makshy

ing religious broadcasting one test of a broadcasters public service performance

Commissioner Lee Loevinger addressing the National Reli shygious Broadcasters convention said the FCC has gone far beshyyond the limits that have been marked by the Supreme Court as permissible govertiment acshytion in the field of religion

Loevinger noted that the FCC includes religious pro g ram I

among the types of programs considered to be in the public interest on its license application forms He said it made the broadcasting of such programs one of the FCCs tests for detershymining whether a broadcaster operates in the public interest

Pope Paul Thanks Italian Policemen

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI greeted the Italian poshylicemen whose beat is the Vatican and saidit was a great consolation to know they were around

Answering an address of homshyage by Inspector General Oreste Correti who was accompaniel by other officials and members of the force the Pope said he is grateful for the zealous expert generous and selfless work in which you display your integrity as distinguished state officials and your dedication as faithful IOns of the Church

Though members of the Italian force the groups are assigned ~ special guard duties and ~

directing traffic in St Peters iquare and the area surropndinl Vatic~ City

BOSTON (NC)-Richard Card~ inal Cushing touched off a cheershying demonstration by 1300 Jews here when he predicte9 the Secshyond Vatican Council will apshyprove a declaration absolving Jcws of direct blame in the death of Christ

If we dont Im wasting my time talking of brotherhood said the Archbishop of Boston after he was presented withmiddot the annual Good Will Award of Temple Ohabei Shalom Brothershyhood oldest and largest Jewish organization of its kind in the

country He was selected for the award because of his compasshysion generosity love and broth- erhood

Reds Fear Religion The prelate said Ill never forget the Second

Vatican Council I didnt know What they were talking about I had never heard a lecture in Latin and it was all Greek to me I dont know how many others were in the same boat

CEF Head Praises Johnson Proposals

TRAVERSE CITY (NC)-The national president of Citizens for Educational Freedom had praise here in Michigan for Presshyident Johnsons statements in his State-of-the-Union address

Stuart D Hubbell a lawyer lauded the President for his wilshylingness to tr~at all school chil shydren equally He said he sent Mr Johnson a telegram which said in part

While your proposals have not as yet been made specific to the extent that they follow the principle of equality that you outlined in your message you will have made a signifi shycant beginning in developing broad support for educational achievement

bull SEQUIN Truck Body Builders Aluminum or Steel 944 County Street

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2middot6618

DISCUSS PROBLEMS CONFRONTING HOSPITALS Meeting at the 20th annual conclave of Bishops representatives for Catholic hospitals in Scottsdale Ariz are left to right Msgr Harold A Murray director of thE NCWC Bureau of Health and Hospital Hospitals Bishop Francis J t Green of Tucson Bishop Joseph B Brunini episCOgtal burshyeau chairman and Auxiliary of Natchez-Jackson Miss and Father John J Flanagan SJ~ executive director of the Oatholic Hospital Association NC Photo

We Have Come Long ~Way in Short Time Hub Cardinal Sees Church Gains Continuing

~

but I sat between two very ven- around religion He added For crable Italian cardinals They that reason they try to eliminate

knew no English and I knew no Italian All the time they kept calling me Cardinal Spellman or Cardinal Mindzen1y or even Cardinal OConnell (The late William Cardinal OCgtnnell was Cardinal Cushings predecessor as Archbishop of Boston)

In a more serious mood Cardshyinal Cushing said the one great fear communists have centers

Interfaith Service For Church UII1ity

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Byzanshytine Rite Catholics joined with Orthodox and Protestants in a common prayer service for

Christian unity Sunday in Holy Spirit Byzantine rite c hu r c h here

Participants in the vespershytype service includE)d Father Andrew Resetar of Erie Pa Very Rev A Dixon Etollit dean of Trinity Episcopal cathedral here Father GeorgE) Scoulas dean of St Nicholas Greek Orshythodox cathedral in Oakland and Dr Harold R Alert former president of the Pittsburgh Council of Churches

The service was arranged by the Pittsburgh C 0 tI n c i I of Churches and the Pittsburgh Byzantine rite diocesE~

Where A

GOOD NAME

Means A

GREAT DAL

GEO OHARA CHEVROLET

565 MILL 5JREET

HEW BEDFIORD

Open Evenings

it from the lives of their peoplemiddot He revealed he has 25 engageshy

ments to talk to groups of other religious faiths including a lodge of Masons before Easter The Cardinal inquired Who would have thought even five years ago that a Catholic archbislfop would be preaching good will in a Protestant church or in a synshyagogue Or that a rabbi would be addressing other faiths We sure have come a long way in a short time-and its going to get better

Preaching Brotherhood The cardinal also observed I

am not trying to convert Protesshytants to Catholics or Jews to Catholics I never made a conshyvert in my life My only messhysage is one of brotherhood

Sturtevant 6shyHook Est 1897

Builders Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New Bedford WY 6-5661

Deny Dispatch About Ca rdinaI

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Sta_ Departm~nt spokesman her categorically denied a recent press story that there are ~

obstacles to Jozsef Cardinal Mindszentys leaving his refuge in the U S legation in Budapest but that the Primate of HungaI7 ~wants to die a prisoner there

The story (which was released by NANA and published in t~

daily press Jan 20) credited its source a State Deparme~ source in Bonn German~

who has taken part in recent U S-Hungarian negotiations

The State Department spokesshyman here described the story bull completely incorrect

We dont have any Americali official in Bonn who has had anything to do with the Hungar-o ian negotiations he said in an swer to inquiries It doesn1 represent anything that an American official would hold

New Orleans Plans New High Schools

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Arch-t bishop John P CodY of New Orleans has announced plansfOS construction of seven new hip schools in several parts of the archdiocese

Declaring that Catholic educashytion never was so flourishin nor were our Catholic people bull desirous of increasing the num bel of schools and improving t~

methods of teaching The Loushyisiana prelate said we must build so that all the children oil our area may have the blessin of a thorough Catholic educashytion

SERVING FINE ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4-8754bull

TIte Falmoufh NatiOnal Sanlc Falmouth Mass

tilt Villale Ir Sian 1121

WM T MANNING (0 WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE

AND

INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES bull GENERAL TIRES bull DELCOBATTERIES

bull PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS

FALL RIVER - NEW BEDFO~D - HYANNIS - NEWPORT

First Federal Savings AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF ATlLEBORO

4 on ali $avings Accouni

1 Extra on Systematic Bonus~vings

bull bull bull bull bull

11 bull

Portugal Bishops Plan University For Country

LISBON (NO) - Portushygals bishops have announcshyed plans to found this nashytions first Catholic Univershysity

They said in a joint pastoral letter issued after their meeting here that there is an imperative need for a Catholic university for the nations conscience They said the university win have greater freedom greater dynamism and greater flexibil shyity than the present state uni versities

The letter said that the govshyernment will help the bishops in founding the new Catholic university

Last Summer Manuel Cardishynal Goncalves Cerejeira of Lisshybon told a meeting studying the foundation of the Catholic Unishyversity that it would be open to both laymen and the clergy and located in Lisbon instead of the older university town of Coimshybra Earlier efforts were made to restore a theological faculty at Coimbra University The facshyultY was closed following the revolution which made Port~gal a republic in1910

Several years agothe cardinal noted that a Church-sponsored university has been a hope of 1Ihe VI has called on individual Cathshy one part of the Mystical Body of many Latill American counshy~oI1uguese bishops for a long olies to become more aware of Christ to another tries and CICOP itself whichtime ~ut that priorities for the world-wide dimensions and seminanes new churche~ pri- needs of the Church mary schools and Catholic Acshytion organization had delayed Today bull bull bull it is absolutely eoncrete plans indispensable that each pers~n

become aware of the true dishymensions of the Church the

Sees Greater Church Pope declared adding Greater awareness will iead to wideningNeed for Laity Role

LAKE CHARLES (NC) - A Louisiana editor predicts the time will come in the 20th censhytury when laymen wi~ domishynate the clergy in many fields

Msgr Alexander O Sigur edshyitor of the Southwest Louisiana Register diocesan newspaper feels in the present age of scishyence and technology Catholic laymen with specialized knowl- edge of law science and other fiElds must of necessity advise the clergy on the many facets of todays society

He pointed out that the layshymens role has made more progshyress since the opening of the Second Vatican Council than in the previous 10 centuries

But because of centuries of tradition there will be problems for some time connected with evolution of the laymans role in the Church he asserted

British Conversions Continue to Decline

LONDON (NC)-The number of converts to Catholicism in England and Wales continues to decline but the Catholic popushylation shows a steady increase according to the 1965 Catholic Directory published here

The known number of adult conversions for 1963 the most recent year for which statistics are available was 12778 This was a decrease of 552 from the previous year which also showed a considerably lower figure than that for 1961

But the Catholic population increased in 1963 by 129500 to 3956500 and the Catholic popshyulation in Scotland rose by 13shy310 to 812460

Foundation Member NEW YORK (NC) - William

G Ryan presidentmiddot of Seton Htn College Greensburg Pa haa been named a corporate member of the FoundationfOr the arts Religion and culture which win hold its fim meetina laue tomonow

THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

HIGH HONOR FOR K of C HEAD Supreme Knight John W McDevitt of the Knights of Columbus invested as a Knigh t Commander of St Gregory at a testimonial banquet in Boston is with left to right AuxiHary Bishop John F Hackett of H~rtford Archbishop Henry J OBrien of Hartford Bishop Charles P GreltfO Qf Ale~andna La Supreme K of C Chaplain and Bishop William J Smith of Pembroke OntarIO NO Photo

Pope Hail~ US Church Mission Work Says Transfe~ of Energies I Most ~onsoling

CHICAGO (NC)-Pope Paul this transfer of energies from unteers who are serving la

of vitality and fuller realization of the meaning of the name Catholic

Nature of Church Pope Paul made his plea in a

message to the second annual conference of the Catholic Inshyter-American Cooperation Proshygram (CICOP)

The Holy Father coupled his appeal for greater awareness of the worldwide nature vf the

Church with high praise for aid rendered in recent years by US Catholics to the Church in Latin America Prellently he said there are 4091 US priests reshyligious and laymen serving there

Greater Understanding I He called us Catholic proshygrams for Latin America a proshyvidential apostolic ~ovement and said they make up one of the most beautiful pages in the history of the Church in the United States

Particularly in light of the Ecumenical Councils constitushytion on the Church he said it iamost consoling to witness

BEFORE YOU BUY-TRY

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault 67 Middle Street Fairhaven

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICE

lJe singled out for praise US seeks by educational means to promote greater understandingdioceses which have sent 178 of Latin Americas problemsdiocesan priests to mission work

in Latin America US religious among the Catholic millions of the United Statescommunities of men and women

which he said are fulfilling the Urllent Demands engagement they have undershy Pope Paul voiced hope that thetaken of sending a tithe of meeting here would producetheir total memership to Latin many practical results parshyAmerica by 1970 US lay vol~ ticularly a wider and more soshy

licitous collaboration of the Refugee Children United States of America with

the Church in Latin AmericaHONG KONG (NC) - Archshy such as urgent needs dem~ndbishop Joseph Caprio apostolic

internuncio to China opened here for refugee children a new $100000 primary school built by Norris H Trippthe Franciscan Missionary Sisshyters of Our Lady of Sorrows SHEET METAL Mother Leola superior of the J TESER Proporder which has its headquarshy RESIDENTIALters in Beaverton Ore attended

INDUSTRIALthe ceremony COMMERCIAL

253 Cedar St New Bedford WY 3-3222 Montie Plumbing amp

Heating Co Inc

Counci~s Effects Years Away

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The universal effects of the Second Vatican Council will not be recshyognized completely for years to come James Francis Cardinal McIntyre told 2200 Holy Name men here in California

It is entirely impossible to estimate at the present time the effects of the council on the thinking of the world the carshydinal said

These effects have penetrated deeply into the spiritual life of all people not only of the Church alone he told a Holy Name Union Communion breakshy

fast One index of its effects is the

attention the council has comshymanded in the press of the world the cardinal said

Names Two Priests To Federal Board

NEW YOItK (NC) - T w bull priests are on the 30-niember board of directors of the new Sex Information and Education Council of the United Stat~

(SIECUS) formed to foster im- proved study and education oa the role of sex

TheYlre Father George Hag- maier CSP of the Paulist In- stitute for Religious Researc~ and Father John L Thomas SJ St Louis (Mo) University soci ologist

The executive director of the council is Dr Mary Steichen Calderone former medical dishyrector of the Planned Parentshyhood Federationand its presishyident is Wallace C Fulton formshyer presidtDt of the National Coundl on Family Relations

Whites Farm Dairy SPECIAL MilK

From Our Own Tested Herd

Acushnet Mass WY 3-4457 bull Special Milk bull Homogenized Vito 0 Milk bull Buttermilk bull Tropicana Orange Juice bull Coffee and Choc Milk bull Eggs - Butter

FIVE CONVENIENT OFFICES- -TOSERVE YOUReg Master Plumber 2930

GEORGE M MONTlE ONE-STOP BANKING Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET FIRSTmiddotMACHImiddotNISTS Fall ~River OS 5-7497 NATIONAL BAN Ilt

OF TAUNTON Norton W MaIn St-Raynham Rte 44-Taunton Main St

North Dighton Spring St-North Easton Main St_ w H RILEY amp SO~J Inc Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

CITIES SERVICE bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnmbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullDISTRIBUTORS

Gasoline i F L COLLINS amp SONS i Fuel and Range INCORPORATED 1937

OILS bull

GENERAL (ONTRAOORS5bullOIL BURNERS

For prompt delivery 5 and ENGINEERS 5amp Day amp Night Service

bull JAMES H COLLINS CE Pres G E BOILER BURNER UNITS bull Registered Civil and Structural Engineer bull

Rural Bottled Gas Se~ Member National Society Professional Engineers

61 COHANNET ST FRANCIS L COLLINS JR Treas = TAUNTON bull THOMAS Ie COLLINS Secy bull

Attteboro - No Attlebor~ middot =ACADEMY BUILDING FALL RIVER MASS Taunto1

-bullbull

bull 12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Humphreymiddot Becker Write Novels of Reminiscence

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Both William Humphreys The Ordways (Knopf

$595) and Stephen Beckers A Covenant with Death (Athshyeneum $450) are novels of reminiscence Both are laid in the Southwest the former in Texas the latter in an unshyidentified state The narrashytor in the Ordway book is for the most part telling what happened to his greatshygrandparents and his grandparshyents in the Civil War period and at the tum of the century In the Becker book the narrator is in his seventies recalling Ii decisive expeshyrience in his oWn life when he was 29 back in 1923 If there are similarities between the works there are also differences and they are very great

Mr Beckers novel is a Book of-the-Month Club middotselection has already been bought by a movie company for a vast sum and unshydoubtedly will be a roaring popshyular success Mr Humphreys novel will probably have far fewer readers and will bring its author far less money But it is by all odds and in every reshyIJPect the better book

Long-Winded It has one fault that of being

long-winded and at times meandering I just wanted to hear the same old things over and over again the narrator -of The Qrdways says at one point It is evidently presumed that the reader has the same desire and that he will not object to lengthy digressions But repetition and extended parenthetical exercises do become tiring even if as in ~is instance the writing is of a high order

1$ The Ordways really a novel in the Strict sense The pook cOritillns a notice reading A portion of Part One in some- what different form first apshypeared in The Saturday Evening Post

It is quite true that the first seetion could stand alone that the second and third sections could form a story by themshyselves and that only the fourth section depends for intelligibility on what has gone before Noneshytheless there is unity here if not the tight construction of the most effective novel

Family Lore Mr Ordway begins by describshy

ing graveyard working days in the hamlet of Mabry near the town of Clarksville in eastern Texas On that day occurring once a year the descendants or suniivors of those burled in the Mabry cemetery come together to set the place to rights

middotAs they do so they rec~ the histories of the dead and thus the family lore is passed on from generation to generation But it is more than family lore which is conveyed the countrys past is reconstructed and the making of the present

The narrator a boy in the 1930s learns of two decisive episodes in his own family One has to do with Thomas and Ella Ordway who were Tennessee people until 1863 Thomas was an infantryman was horribly wounded and disabled in the batshytle of Shiloh and would have died or at least have been lost to his famIly had it not been for his wifes valor The narrative of her recovering him ann bringshying him back to a ~blance of life is harrowing

Journey to Texas But somethinamp more harrowshy

ing is still to come the account of their six months journey in a wagon drawn by oxen from Tennessee to Texas in the hope of beginning a new and better life The reader not only follows this arduous exodus but makes and suffers it and is haunted by it thereafter

This portion of the book is a storY complete in itself dramatshyic pathetic comic packed with lively incidents and colorful characters some heroic some corrupt some rascally all disshytinctive and engaging

Occasionally the side excurshysions pall a bit as in the depicshytion of stump speaking by polit shyical candidates or of life with a small shabby traveling circus Yet each of these sideshows has something to contribute to the pictUre of emerging Texas

Acute Observations

Mr Humphrey writes extremeshyly well a little less fancily as the book progresses but always vivshyidly and with plentymiddot of power for the high moments His peoshyple are nicely differentiated and come memorably to life He has many acute observations and even authentic wisdom to disshypense and this he does neatly His book rings with truth about human nature and is the work of a highly gifted and skillful artist

Mr Beekers A Covenant with Death on the other hand strikes me as contrJved empty and often obnoxiousmiddot Its nub is a legal stickler What is to be dQne with a man who is convicted of m~rger bought +c the gallows there Gki1ls~e hangman and then is cleareu of the first kill shying ~is poser ismiddot put to the 29shy

year~old judge Ben Lewis He solyes Wby niakiIig law and when confronted with this puzshyzler solves as well a key probshylent in his personal life At one and the same time he becomes at last a real judge and a real man

Precise 3udgment

Or so we are asked to believe Lewis says of himself I passed the crisis of adolescence at the ludicrous age of 29 bull bull bull I was swollen with garbage and bittershyness My own ego was monshystrous mainly because I had never done anything for anyone and could justify my own useshylessness only by assuming that the world was not worth my energies This is a precise judgment

The trouble is that the book is swollen with garbage and bitterness as well as sophistry

Young Lewis conversations with his mother for example They irk by their pretentiousness and they disgust with their obscenishyties The youngmiddot judge is thorshyoughly sophomQric and we are asked to credit his sudden leap into maturity We are asked too much

It is with ill grace that the author scorns small town folk for their prurience It is just this to which most of his book apshypeals When he sneers that Soledad City our wholesome middle-class American town would be lined up three deep for good seats at a murder trial with sensational sexual aspects he apparently forgets that the predictably huge sales of his novel will be in large part to people attracted by itligamineaa

3AMES OGARA

PauiSft CElnter Lists Spe(d~er

James OGara editor of Comshyrronweai magazinEl will be guest speaker in the Christian Culture Series at the Paulist Ce-nter in Boston on Wednesday evening Feb 17 on the topic The Role and Future of Cathshyolic Education

Mr OGara has written numshyerous articles for leading Cathshyolic magazines in middotthis country end Europe and has appeared on many religiow television programs of the National Counshycil Of Catholic Men

Rev Andrew Greeley sociolshyogist and author of many books on social subjects will join Mr O-Gara in the discussion

Monsignor Francis 3 Lally editor of the Pilot will be pr0shy

gram moderator

Deplores Agtncies Poverty Appoach

CHICAGO (NC) -- Catholic charity and welfareillgencies and institutions must drop thebusishyness as usual appreach and get into the actual aIl~na of povshyerty a National Conference of Catholic Charities Dleeting here in Illinois was told

The surge of natilmal concern about poverty is one of the most dramatic and compelling moveshyments in our day rather Robshyert Monticello of DEltroit chairshyman of the conferences program committee told assembled social work executives

His views were echoed by Msgr Raymond 3 Gallagher secretary of the comerence who said that personal service to families and individuals among the poor must be a coriunitment each of us makes dailly

CENTIER Paint and Wldlpaper

Dupont PClint

iiP cor Middle St

422 6lcush Ave

~Qc=t~ New Bedford ~ARKING

Rear of Store

ProtEct What You Hav~

McGO~VAN Insurance J~gency

TEL MYrtle ~1middot8231

188 NORTH MAIN $TREET NORTH ATTU8ORO

Beggars for All the Missions

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen DO

rn the mail last week a package arrived containing several hundred printed and self-addressed envelopes from various begshyging organizations in the United States The good woman who sent the package admitted being neither rich nor comfortable and yet she was flooded with appeals She wanted to know how she became a victim of this deluge The answer is that she is on a mailing list There are hundreds of mailing lists for sale in the United States These can be bought for various amounts depending on the number and quality of the names listed The good woman who wrote us was on at least one of these lists

Never before has it been brought home to us with Such impact how swamped our faithful are with appeals It grieves DB

that we too are beggars but we find some consolation in the fact that the Holy Fathers Society for the Propagation of the Faith has never used such mailing lists

This incident highlightsmiddot an urgent need that the Vatican Council must recognize that of co-ordinating appeals for all these really worthwhile causes especially those of misshysionaries Pius XI said that the method by which each missionary group solicited only for itself did not provide an even distribution of help Some can barely survive others have investments in Wall Street How to know who out of the hundreds who beg are most deservng is not only difficult but almost impossible

We have never liked begging In fact there is too much inshysistence on money in the Church tOday We would like to be unshackled from our tin cup and not add to this confusion But this is our duty Why 1 Because the Holy Father has asked us to be his beggars in the United States for -all the missions of tlie world 2 Becanse it is the glory of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith not to helf) one order or society of the world but the entire world (As a matter of fact 88middot per cent of the appeals in the above-mentioned package received soDie aid from The Society for the Propagation of the Faith) 3 Because being under the direction of the Holy Father The Society for the Propagation of the Faith does not invest any of yoUrmiddot alms Every eent Is distributed by the Holy Father each year The world Is too poor So fOldve us

Oh yes the lady who sent us the package wrote I could not keep 240 missionary appeals because I have not the money Since The -Society for the Propagation of the Faith aids all I send the Holy Father my $100 to be divi4ed as he sees fit

GOD LOVE YOU to Anoafor $5 Here Is Diy poeen valeiI- Une for the poor bullbullbull toMLA for $78 This is whist l diel Ilot spend on eigarettes Somehow I cannot enjoy them auYmore knowing that today 10000 people riD die of ~rntionmiddot

-

Think ahead to Valentines day and order a GOD LOVE YOU medal In classic Florentine gold finish or pure sterling silver this lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of the World is one you would be proud to give or delighted to receive Designed by the world-renouned jeweler Harry Winston and blessed by Bishop Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal may be obtained by sending your request and corresponding offering to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001

$ 2 small sterling silyershy $ 3 small 10k gold filled $ 5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut 01lt ft1Is colUIDn pin your sacrifice to it and maD It te Most Rev Fulton 3 Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York New York 10001 or to your Diocesan Director

Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 368 North Main Street

Fall River Massachusetts

791 PurcIaase Street Betweea

WIUIam bull UnI_ S_

NEW BEDFORD

FIVE CENTS SAVINGS BANK

WE HAVE PLENTY OF MONEY FOR HOME LOANS

If youre buying or building -Ioolc to us CONVENTIONAL GI - FH~ FINANCING

Ca on us anytime aDd talk over your plans

Fathers andmiddot Daughters Will Twirl At Annual Sucordium-Sponsored Hop at SHA Fan River

Dads and daughters win twirl at the annual fathep daughter dance at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River Its scheduled fltgtr 8 tomorrow night in the academy gymshynatorium and is sponsored by the moms and dads and daughters-members of the

SHA Fall River and her team very active Sucordium Club marked its first league debateHomemaker of the year at this season by defeating Case

Holy Family High in New Dartmouth Taunton and PreshyBedford as a result of the annushy vost al Homemaker of Tomorrow test Coyle High was host for a taken by thousands of girls novice tournament of two rounds across the nation is Christian with nine schools competing last Saulnier Shes National Honor weekend and the varsity team Society treasurer and copy edshy last week won three of four iJtor of By Fy Spy the school matches over Bishop Stang paper Bishop Stang was host to Narshy

At Dominican Academy in Fan ragansett League debate last River the top homemaker is week with 12 schools representshyJulia Melvin Senior A president ed each by four man teams Repshysodality vice-prefect and student resenting Stang were John council vice-president Another Golenski Michael Hogan Thomshyfeather in Julias cap is that as Keary and Myles Tillotson shes to represent her school at At the same meeting Bishop the state capitol on Student Feehan was represented by Government Day Francis Detellis Kateri Detellis

Christine Julia and an other Roger Watts and Raymond StafshyDiocesan school winners in the ford They won one debate out homemaker contest are now eli shy of four gible for consideration as state Current Affairs Contest winners Themiddot states highestshy Many Diocesan schools partici shyranking girl will receive a $1500 pated in a current affairs conshyscholarship and will tour Washshy test sponsored by a weekly news ington and New York City this magazine and among top scorers Spring From the state finalists were Janet Gendreau Moniquewill be chosen national winners Boulay and Muriel Raiche at in the homemaking contest and Jesus-Mary and Paula Powersthese girls will have their scholshy Susan Penrose and Mary Kellyarship grants substantially illshy at SIlA Fall River creased Also in the spotlight is 1anice

Benoit of SHA Fall River whosGrac1aatlOIl GOWIl8

received honorable mention for rrs snowy outside but thoughts the Bishop Connolly award preshy

of the seniors at Mt St Mary sented annually to the DioceseAcademy in Fall River are Oft outstanding girl athletethe days of June Theyre curshy Yearbook pictures for Coylerently selecting g r a d u at i 0 Il juniors sophomores and freshshygowns and are making a critical men have been safely taken so survey of ofterings from several another milestone is passed OIl area stores the road to publication

And National Bonot- Society Dominican Academy juniopsmembers have been busy at Sashy and seniors will make a closedcred Hearts Fall River Theyve retreat at the Cenacle Conventwritten to all accredited colleges ill Brighton during their Februshyin the US requesting inforshy ary vacation while the annualmation on admission requireshy school retreat is in progressments and availability of finanshy hOW at Bishop Stangcial aid The gathered informashy The program includes dallytion will augment the guidanee Mass Benediction and confershyfile in the school library ences and retreat masters are

Sevenmiddot new clubs have beeR Rev John OBrien SSCCmiddot andorganized at Tauntons Coyle Rev Andrew Jahn SSCCHigh School They are French An unusual auction was a feashySpanish Stamp and Coin Pep ture of a dance sponsored lastEnglish Literature Chess and weekend by Feehan seniors forPhotography Something theremiddot all their fellow students Eachfor everyone faculty member donated a prize

Four Dominican Academy stushy for the auction including suchdents have passed 120 word tests valuable items as a pass excusingin Gregg shorthand and two a student from detention pershyhave passed 100 word tests On mission to omit a book from anthe bowling scene at DA high outside reading list and a driy scorers include Susan Pacheco ing passAnne Marie FoIster Colleen Auctionmiddot proceeds benefited bullDesrosiers and Patricia Od) shy performance of Leave It tonecky Jane to be produced by the

The junior prom at Bishop Feehan Dramatics Club SundayFeehan High in Attleboro has and Monday Feb 14 and 15been set for Tuesday night April Jeannine Dumont senior class20 In charge ofmiddot arrangements secretary and middotlssistant editor of are Robert Bedard and Carol the school paper at Holy FamilyMiller while committees are al shy High has been accepted at Bosshyready at work on decorations ton College as have classmates e n t e r t a i n men t refreshshy Maureen OBrien Christine Ponshyments tickets and that unher ichtera and John AylwardaIded but all-important chore of Mother McAuley Guild at Mtclean-up St Mary Academy will hold its

annual calendar party WednesshyDebaiioi- Prcmt day night Feb 10 EntertainshyIn the indoor days of Winter ment will reprelC~t each monthdebating holds an honored spot of the year and the decoratedamong extra-curricular activishycakes willbe ~oor prizesties at Diocesan schools At Preshy Class -laeement vost in Fall River the debate

THE ANCHOR-- 13 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Churchmen Favor Johnson School Aid Program

WASHINGTON (NC) shyCatholic and Protestant spokesmen applauded Presishydent Johnsons school aid proposal in a placid Congresshysional bearing where the on~ disagreement came over mi~

technical questions The release from the charged

atmosphere of past hearings w noted all around

A Catholic spokesman smilin~

ly commented that it was a relief not to fear getting out of the

Vour nearescmall box i$ Q Firsf Ilfderal branch office that open 24 hours $ day to make $(lving easy for you No traffic nO parking no leather problem~

Withdrawals ate just as implt taY~ngs paymencS

bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull r fRlE o~middottymiddotmiddot ~ ubullbullh coupon 7bullbull~ trti 0middot

team was victorious over Mt St Marys and Bishop Stang in Narshyragansett League debate but lost to SHA Fall River The varisity also met Coyle during the past week

Mt st Marys debate record stands at 2-2 with Anne Browshynell Linda Mello Susan Jenkinshyson and Nancy Curran defending their school in Narragansett

Tomorrows the day of reckonshying at SHA Fall River Not only will report cards be distributed but a list of all seniorsand their placement in middottheir class for the past four years will be published

Fifteen seniors It DA partici shypated in a French Listening Comprehension Test on Tuesday This supplementary test is ofshyfered by the eollege entrance

PREVOST SCHOLARS High scorers in National Merit Scholarship Examinations at Prevost High School Fall River are Gerard Gltgtu~et left and Paul Nowak

tests in addition to the French Written exams come in March

Also at Feehan where report cards will come tomorrow high honors will be achieved by those with an average of 90 or better honors by those earning 85 or better and honorable mention by those with grades of 80 01 better

Bishop Stang mathematiciana placed first ill the Notre Dame Math Meet held last week at Cardinal Cushing High in South Boston Eighteen schools com~

peted and Stang won by n points Responsible for the vieshytory were John Keavy Paul Roy John De Ciccio Raymond Desrosiers and Alan Roskiewiez Top individual scorer was John DeCiccio

Best Girl Athlete Senior Nancy Vogel of Bishop Stang High School received the Bishop Connolly Award for the best girl athlete of Fall River area Diocesan high schools at a ceremony held last night at Whites restaurant Nancy as shining a star schoshylastically as athletically plays hockey basketball and volley~ ball at the North Dartmouth school She will be the first reshycipient of what is to become an

Influence Declining MADRID (NC)-Castroist inshy

fluence among young people in Latin Ameriea has declined the past two years Luis Garcia Arishyas professor of international law at the University of Saragossa here in Spain said on his return from a tour of Latin America Thursday Feb 1amp

SCHOOL Mainte~ance suppr~

SWEEPERS SOAPS DISINFECTANTS

FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

DAHILL CO 1886 PURCHASE STREET

annual award made by the FaD River Clover Club Also honored at last nights dinner-dance WBI Coach Carlin Lynch of 11M Stang Spartans

Forty Hours devotion was celshyebrated for the first time at Bishop Feehan high scbool starting Sunday and ending Tuesday Seniors Eileen Pashyquette Mary Duffy Nancy Clegg and Susall Ouelle~te aided Sister Mary Kateri of Feehan home economics department III making a cope and humeral veil used for the first time at the ceremonies

And Feehanites celebrated terms end by viewing A Raisin in the Sun

bullbullbullbullbullbull

hearing room alive The major Protestant spokesmen described the bill as an instrument of recshyonciliation Con g res smiddotm e a praised the compromises they saw being made by all sid~

church groups and educators -The President has proposed bull

$12 billion program to improve elementary and secondary schooling from poverty-strickea families

A total of $1 billion wouldge to public school districts in lowshyincome areas Additionally the proposal would spend $100 milshylion for textbooks for all school children and school libraries and another $100 million to create bull system of public-priva~commushynity educational centers to offer cultural enrichment and specitl eourses to all school ehildren

Pittsburgh School Enroll~ent Down

PITSBURGH (NC) - Enroll shyment in the Pittsburgh diocellMl Catholic school system has dro~ ped by 40 pupils Msgr John B McDowell superintendent ball reported

The monsignor said the sliglll drop has been preceded by fo_ years of leveling oft in enrol) ment figures because of enforeet gradual cuts in class size

Since 1960 he said there _ been an increase of only 24 pushypils in the total number of stushydents Elementary and seconda schools last June tallied 129531 pupils a drop of 40 he said

bullbullbullFREEKI _forbullbull~to bull ~-~----- shy _ StampMo _ middot----1

City_middot bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbulliibullbullbullbullbullbullbull WE pAY POSTAGa

(tree po5t-pald~Clddd i-velop ady to mall

FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND lOAN ASSOCIATION

OF FALL RIVER Home OHice 1 North Main St Fall River

Somerset OHice 149 GAR Highway Rte 6 League bouts The team meets exam board and consists of Both Offices Open Friday Evenings until INEW BEDFORDBishop Cassidy of TauntOn Wedshy questions and answers concernshy Sonterset Drive-In Window Open Mon-Thurs til 4 nesday Feb 10 ing subject matter on tape At WY 3-3786 Susan Nunes heads debate 111amp Feeha aiYdentll 1ook Germaa

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Stresses ilroad beep Gulf Between Two Generafions

By John J Kane Ph D What is your opinion of secretive sons and daughters

()f today Our married son and daughter never tell us anyshything Friends and strangers knew they bought a new home before we did My daughters husband knows all the ansshywers and wants no advice from anyone My son is afraid of his wife and she makes all decisions They ask us to visit but hurt our feelshyings when we do by what they say We were raised to reshyspect our elders and ask their advice

You r letter Jean does pose some justifiable complaints But it also seems to make some unshyreasonable deshy

mands Furthershymore amusingshy1y enough you conclude that you were reared to respect your elders and intimate your chil shydren werent If so whom can you blame

I dont know the reason why your children failed to inform you of their intentions to purshyehase a home But I do have some suspicions Do you have a tendency to be critical about what they buy Sometimes parshyents do

Tremendous Inflation Y-oungsters and parents both

make a certain type of mistake when it comes to purchasing of such things as homes cars or expensive appliances So m e young marrieds try to begin at a level their parents only achieved after 10 or 15 years of married life

But some parents do not seem to realize that inflation has been tremendous in the last 20 years When they hear a son or daughshyter is about to buy it home for 20 or 25 thousand dollars they are horrified They remember they paid perhaps 6 8 or 10

thousand dollars when they bought

They also forget credit is a bit easier than in the past that F BA and even the GI Bill help young people today and they may not even have existed when they were shopping for a house Longer te~ mortgages are possible today and lower down payments These of course do mean more interest

Coinmon CourteSY In other words parents should

Dot use the yardstick of economshyic conditions when they were young for the youth of today When they state perhaps with heated emphasis Why your father and I paid 10 thousand for a home the children are understandably irritated

But once having made their decisions com m 0 n courtesy would seem to demand tpat parshyents be told before strangers or at least as soon as friends Your sense -of hurt feelings here is quite understandable

Your complaint that your sons wife makes all the decisions may be true If so I agree that you have reared a Milquetoast But

is it true Are you actually cershytain or are you imagining someshything Are you really sayingshyand I frankly fear youare-that your son listens to his wife more than he listens to you

Mother-in-Law Role Being a mother-in-law is not

an easy role in Anierican soClshyety and many of the stupid

at least not if you wish to be a successful parent

Because most parents do love their children they are eager to help them They feel that their years of experience give them an advantage and this advantage they would extend to their chil shydren

At times this is true At times it is not The gulf between genshyerations is broad and deep Life has changed greatly in the space of one generation and the bench marks of the past may be unshysuitable today There are certain areas of living in which children may have better ideas than their parents Be prepared to admit as much

But within those areas where the maturity and experience of parents can be helpful advice can be given when not reshyquested only indirectly and cautiously Young marrieds misshyconstrue it as an effort to domshyinate which they reject Pershyhaps you can recall when you too felt this way

But it is indeed sad if they hurt your feelings when you do visit them You have not enshylarged on this so it is impossible to determine just what is said or done that annoys you Assuming you are making a correct judgshyment it is at the very least a breach of hospitality

Many of the inter-generational and in-laws problems of today are the result of social changes As one grows older it is less and less easy to change to adopt ways of doing and thinkshying After all if one succeeded under one system there is little motivation to alter it

Life Easier But conditions have changed

and to paraphrase a commercial this is the Pepsi generationbull Today boys and girls get married even wher the boy is unemshyployed This is scarcely advisable but somemake it Boys marry while still in college and their wives work to help put them through This would have been unthinkable 40 years ago

One of the really amazing changes is the use of long term credit The proud boast of years ago was that one didnt owe any money If you said this today youngsters would view you with open amazement and quietly conclude your credit was no good

No doubt some of this is overshydone and can bring about tragic results But if used intelligently it can make life somewhat easier perhaps more pleasant than in the past

These are only a few of the changes that could be listed a complete litany of them would be impossible Now this doesnt mean that parents are old fogeys that their counsel is useshyless It does mean that they must try tomiddot understand their married children better than some do

And incidentally because of these sweeping changes it is more difficult than it was But it isnt impossible an4 when donepays off in much better relationships

Anti-Smut Effort NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Loushy

isiana Knights of Columbus have jokes ]lake it even more diffi- launched a public information cult But parents after having campaign to combat what one reared their children to the best official t e r m e d indifference of their ability must let them go stemming from lack of knowlshyon their own You cannot keep edge about the growing traffic them tied to your apron strings in obscene literature

PRINCE OF THE CHURCH Americas new cardin~l recelyes congratulations from an old friend as Archbishop Patrlck A OBoyle of Washington felicitatesmiddot Lawrence Cardmal Shehan Archbishop of Baltimore on his elevation to the College of Cardinals by Pope Paul vi NC Photo

~Glassand Wire Tiny Foulr-Bell Chime in Bay State Church

Producing Soundof Big Heavy Metal WALTHAM (N C) - The string-shaped length of glass

church-bell of the future may which may be up to a foot i~ bE a ht~le thing of glass and length and a tiny hammer to Wire weighm~ about two grams produce the proper vibrations but reproducmg the sound of These vibrations are converted cast-metal constructions weigh- into an electronic signal which ing more than a ton ~asses through an amplifier is

j Pope Emphasizes Import of Hymns

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul in an audience for more han 1000 priests participating in a convention on pastoral lit shyurgy emphasized the key role of hymn-singing in the liturgy

We are not in a hurry he said

We must raise up a new peoshyple who learn to pray as the Church now prescribes

One of the prescriptions which I believe to be most influshyential and most necessary is singing

The Pope said that hymns inshycluding popular ones lift the soul and nourish it with religious sentiments

Illinois School Joins Expanding ETV Plan

MORTON (NC)-A parochial school here in Dlinois has served as pilot school in a historic edushyeational television experiment

Blessed Sacrament School reshyceived the first experimental transmission of v ide 0 tap e d courses in color from a high freshyquency monidirectional terminal

A 120-foot tower atop the school received signals from a tower on the Bradley University campus 10 miles away Bradley Coordinator Philip Weinburg said he expects an ETV program to be operational in the 1965-66 school year

The Catholic school tower will remain as a permanent inshystallation to serve both as an ETV booster station with a 15shymile radius and a receiver for educational programs in the school next Fall

Changes in Mass EDINBURGH (NC) - Scots

Catholics are busily preparing for the introduction of English and Gaelic into the Mass on March 1 the first Sunday in Lent

bull HYANNIS bull HARWICH PORT bull ~olri YAAMOUTH

--- shy

funeral Service

DoANmiddotSpoundALmiddotAMtS INCOIlPOItATtiD

Glassblower Gerhard B Finkshybeiner of Brandeis University here in Mass lpoundlas installed for the first time in the United States a set of the tiny bells in St Susanna church in Dedham named for the t~tula church in ~ome of ~ostOIl s Richardmiddot Carshydinal Cushmg

Finkbeiner whose small glass bells already al~e making kingshysiZed sounds in 10 churches in Germany and ]~rance has proshyduced a four-bell chime for the Dedham church encased in a metal cabinet only two feet long and weighing a mere 40 pounds In cast metal equivalent sotmdshyproducers would occupy a goodshysized belfry and weigh aboUt 10000 pounds Finbeiner envishysions his discovery as destined for churches which cannot afford regular bells

The new-style bells look like nothing so much as the fa~iliar vacuum tubes found in any nonshytransistor radio but they proshyduce a never-changing high quality sound which is fully comparable to the metallic clang

of the old-fashioned bell shy

Inside each vacuum tube in Finkbeiners system there is a

MON~~GHAN

ACCEF-TANCE CQIRP

JHOMAS F MONAGHAN JR

Trecisurer

142 SECOND STREET

OSborne 5-7856

FALL RIVER

Increased 100000 times and comes out through a ~pecial speaker whose sound most exshyperts cannot tell from a metallic ben

The sound of a heavy metallic bell is one of the most complex of all musical sounds according to Finbeiner but he has been able to dUJlicat~ it through parshyallel ~Udi~ in glassblowing electronics and ~acuum techshyniques

BARDAHL MAKES YOUR

CAR RUN BEnER tAt New Car Dealers and Service Stations

Everywhere -I

With Safety at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK

115 WILLIAM sr NEW BEDFORD MASS

WEBB OIL (OMPANY TEXACO FUEL ()IL$

DOMESTIC amp HFAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS

Sales~SetYce-lnstaDtjon MAINO~FICE~JO ~RFEEmiddot sTREETmiddotfAll ~IVER

Phone OS 5-7484

11

1S --

Views of New Ho~Y TrinitYmiddotmiddot-C-h-~-rc-h-I-W-e-s-t-~-I-a-li-i-ac-h-middotmiddotmiddotI

-

I I

16 THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

Says Pope John Left Cha lIenge To Catholicsmiddot

NORTH PALM BEACH (NC) - Pope John XXIII left Catholics with a chalshylenge to meet the world Bishop Coleman F Carroll of Miami said here

Bishop Carroll said Pope John dared Catholics to meet other Christians and non-Christians and to discuss our common problems and seek by discussion a solution to these problems

This challenge cannot be met by the pope alone or by the bishops and priests alone he said It must be met by all inshycluding-indeed especially-the laymen

-He said laymen must be propshy

erly prepared for this task through study training and spirshyitual preparation In this conshynection he called a closed spirshyitual retreat an absolute must for the lay person

Bishop Carroll spoke to memshybers of the Our Lady of Florida Retreat League at a dinner in his honor at the Passionist Retreat House here

PrelWtes Sc~~dlJ(e

US~ ~f VeCrulall ROME (NC)-The Italian lanshy

guage will be used in Mass throughout I t a I y beginning March 7 the first Sunday of Lent

The Italian Bishops Commitshytee on the Liturgy in announcshying the change specified that the Italian language would be used in Masses on Sundays and holy days and at all Masses attended by a substantial number of the faithful

The parts of the Mass to be said in Italian are the following the Epistle Gospel acclamations salutations and dialogues (inshycluding the prayers at the foot of the altar and the dialogue preshyceding the Preface) the Kyrie Gloria Creed Sanctus-Benedicshytus and Agnus Dei themiddot Patermiddot Noster with its introduction and the formula for the Communion

Peloquin Chorale Televises Hymns

NEW YORK (NC)-Hymns -Yesterday and Today featurshyipg C Alexander Peloquin and members of his popular Peloquin Chorale will be telecast Feb 14 from 1 to 130 PM EST over the ABC-TV network

The latest program in the seshyries Directions 65 - a Catholic Perspective produced by the National Council of Catholic Men and the ABC public affairs department was written by Peloquin and traces the develshyopment of hymnody from the Te Deum of the 4th century to the works of contemporary composers

Stresses Doctrines Substance Remains

DAVENPORT (NC) -Bishop Ralph L Hayes of Davenport adshymonished an interfaith meeting here in Iowa against expecting changes in Catholic doctrine

The (Second Vatican) Counshycil may change the manner of presentation of doctrines but not their substance he said pointing to the liturgy as an exshyample of such a change

We must admit bigotry and misunderstanding on both sides But followers of Christ have Scripture devotion to the Holy Spirit and devotion to Christ in common Why not talk about the things on which we agree he asked

Sisters of Mercy General Asks Personal ST LOUIS (NC)-Weve got

to develop the Sister in depth Thats what the times call for said the mother general of the 7300 American nuns of the Sisshyters of Mercy of the Union

Mother Mary Regina Cunningshyham ending her first six-year term as the head of the widely known teaching social work and hospital nuns was talking about what the Sisters of Mercy are doing to bring themselves fully up to the times

In St Louis Mo to meet with the superiors of the nine Mercy provinces Mother Regina talked about the main vehicle she and her colleagues hope will achieve the transformation

This is the year in the commu- nity for chapter meetings and general meetings of the nuns in

each of the provinces climaxed by a meeting of the general chapter at the orders mothershyhoupse in Bethesda Md she said

Changing Church Results will be ~olnown in Aushy

gust and Mother Regina hopes that they will show her commushynity to be in line with the mind of a rapidly changing Church in the midst of an even faster movshying world

She predicted tlat the chapshyters would have some surprises not only in the deisions but in the way they are organized to give a more representative view of all the Sisters in the order

If one overall phrase had to sum up what Mother Regina and the other planners are looking for in the Mere chapters it

would be personal responsibil shyity she said

A Sister has to have the reshysponsibility to make judgments for herself said the mother general Her superiors have to give her the responsibility to achieve her own role She has to make the decision to take the risks

~And then of course be ready to pay the price for her decishysion said Mother Regina

In Updated Sense Weve gone beyond the day

Papal Count BALTIMORE (NC) - Thomas

W Pangborn a Hagerstown (Md) industrialist and philanshythropist has been named a papal count by Pope Paul

Responsibility of always being safe Some peoshyple want to be sure to have the answer before they move But sometimes that meant they never moved at all she observed

Developing a Sister in depth will mean a lot of things espeshycially an updated sense of her apostolate and the way she works at it For the Mercy nuns in the U S Central and Latin America and in the West Indies it will mean a lot of littie things Mother Regina hinted

Changes might relax regulashytions about home visits dining with others attending night meetings and cultural affairs or traveling with companions

Mother Regina said that we have to plan for more contact with the laity and for more edushycation to understand each other shy

a

lYonderful Meatsbullbullbull Anoth~r Big Reasll Why zltI ~III I bull STAYING ~c~ Z ~

with FIRST NATIONAL it

l~middotmiddotsowll ItmiddotI

IIIIr-All vlu

FACE RUMIP Fine Grained Texture shy

Heavy Steer Beef for Hearty Eating LB

The Perfect Roast for large Families

ROASTL854CAITCHBONE Same [ow Self-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vidnily rNe Reserve Iie Right to Limit Quantitietl

-

I The Parish Parade I SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO bull

Holy Name Society members will receive corporate Communshyion at 7 oclock Mass Sunday morning Feb 14 The unit plans a Valentine dance and supper from 7 to 12 Saturday night Feb 13 in the Elks auditorium on Church Street SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs John DeBettenshycourt president Mrs Arnold Muckerheid vice-president Mrs Nelson J DeBettencourt Jr treasurer Mrs Charles Davis secretary

For the Holy Name SOGiety James Ferreira is president supshyported by Freeman Willoughby vice-president Alfred Metell treasurer Anthony Rebello secshyretary The units next meeting will be Sunday Feb 14 at the parish hall OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a Masquerade Ball Friday night Feb 26 at Wimpys resshytaurantr Osterville Mrs James E Murphy is chairman ST JOSEPH ATTLEBORO

The CYO will sponsor a dance Saturday night Feb 20 with enshytertainment by Mickey Chagnon and the Rivieras Chairmen for the unit include Carolee Desshyrochers membership Judy Roy spiritual Claudette Ouimet culshytural Sue Reynolds publicity Claire Piette social Don Fisher recreational BLESSED SACRAMENT FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will present a fashion fair at an open meeting to be held Wedshynesday Feb 17 in the church basement Planned for April are a rummage sale and a whist party ST JEAN BAPTISTE FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women announces a ham and basket whist party for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 in the lower church hall In charge will be Mrs Napoleon Picard and Mrs Eugene Gagnon aided by a large committee ST STANISLAUS FALL RIVER

Civics Club members of the parochial school will deliver pastry to nursing home patients for Valentines Day Other projshyects include collecting Christmas cards for missionaries and shovshyelling snow to augment the club treasury OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION OSTERVILLE

Mr and Mrs William Dacey will be co-chairmen of a preshyLenten dance to be held Friday night Feb 19 at Wimpys restaushyrant in Osterville under sponsorshyship of the Womens Guild The program will include a buffef and dancing from 9 to to ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

Mrs Lionel J Dulude presishydent of the Sacred Hearts Assoshyciation requests all ladies of the unit who have First Friday Adoration to check their asshysigned times in order that the full quota will be present at all hours

Corporate Communion for members will be held on Sunday at the 815 Mass and the regushylar meeting will be held the same evening at 730 in the Church Hall

The Penny Sale scheduled for Feb 20 will be discussed atthis meeting ST JOSEPH FALLRIVER

The annual mid-Winter Gala is set for Saturday night at Venus de Milo restaurant A buffet supper from 630 to 830 will be followed by dancing a parish reunion and awarding of prizes

ST JOAN OF ARC ORLEANS

Forthcoming events for the Womens Guild include penny sales this month April and next November socials in March and June and Summer fairs in July and August A ham and bean supper is ~cheduled for May ST JAMES NEW BEDFORD

middotMsgr Noon Circle plans a potluck supper for members and their guests Saturday night Feb 20 OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION NEW BEDFORD

Holy Name Society officers inshyclude Severo G Alfama presishydent James P Gonsalves and John Monteiro vice-president Antonio Rocha treasurer John Soares secretary ST GEORGE WESTPORT

Womens Guild members will form the congregation at the TV Mass to be broadcast on channel 6 at 10 Sunday morning Feb 7 Participants will meet at the parish school hall at 9 to travel to New Bedford ST JOHN BAPTIST NEW BEDFORD

Parishioners will hold their annual filhoz supper and penny sale at 530 Sunday evening Feb 21 in the cllurch hall Tickshyets are available from officers of church organizations or at the rectory In charge are Gilbert Brazil and George Ladino ST PIUS X SOUTH YARMOUTH

The WQmens Guild will hold a past presidents dinner Monshyday night March 1 at Armands restaurant_ Hyannis NOTRE DAME FALL RIVER

Cubs and Boy Scouts will at shytend a Communion breakfast Sunday Feb 7 following 815 Mass A blue and gold banquet for the Cubs is set for Sunday Feb 28 in the parish hall with Roger Labonte in charge of arshyrangements

The Council of Catholic Women will hold its installation banquet Monday Feb 22 at Whites resshytaurant under the chairmanship of Mrs Paul Ilmais To be seated are Miss Helena Dumont president Mrs Cecile Barnabe frst vice-president Mrs Gershyard DextTaze second vice-presishydent Mrs Richard Perry treasshyurer Mrs Romeo Parent reshycording secretary Mrs Roger Langlois corresponding secreshytary

The third in a series of cake sales will follow all Masses this Sunday in the lower church Mrs Ferdnand Letendre chairman will be aided by Mrs Robert Phenixco-chairman Cakes can be brought to the lower church from 4 to 5 and 630 to s Saturshyday afternoon and evening SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a potluck supper for members at 630 Tuesday night Feb 16 in the parish hall A silent auction will follow the slipper In charge of arrangeshyments is Mrs Mary Pereira chairman aided by Mrs Mary Gagne The council announces a malassada supper and penny sale open to the public from 530 to 7 Sunday night Feb 21 also in the hall Tickets will be available at the door and chairshymen are Mrs Mary Cabeceiras and Mrs Albina Quintill

A regular meeting is set for 730 Friday night Feb 12 in the hall Installation of officers is planned for later in the month ST MATIDEU FALL RIVER 4

A Valentine whist is planned by the Council of Catholic Womshyen for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 at the parish hall Mrs Raymond Antaya is chairman

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan RIver-Thurs Feb 1l96I rr

GIVE VIEWS ON AID Presenting views on federal aid to education to the House Education sub-committee was this panel representing the Catholic school system left to right Msgr William E McManus Chicago superintendent of the largest Ctholic school system in the country Mr Edward McArdle Washington DC who focussed on the parents view of the childs needs as the father of seven children Msgr Freclerck G Hochwalt Director Education Department NCWC and Msgr John B McDowell sushyperintendent of the Pittsburgh diocesan school system NC Photo

bullSays Church Must Live In Wide World~ Cardinal Hits Ignorance of Our Neighbor

CHICAGO (NC)-An Amerishycan prelate prominent in the Churchs work for Latin Amershyica has told US Catholics there is no excuse for our ignorance of our neighbors the nations of Central and South America

Archbishop Paul L Hallinan of Atlanta chairman of the subshycommittee for inter-American cooperation of the US Bishops Committee for Latin America in a message to the second annual conference of the Catholic IntershyAmerican Cooperation Program SClid the Church today lives in a new world but it must preshypare to live in a wide world

Miles Are Nothing Catholics in tpe United States

with a strong cultural and comshymercial bridge to Europe find Africa a puzzle and Asia an Orshyiental mystery Strangest of all is our ignorance of our own neighbors the nations of Central

E~ual Treatment JERSEY CITY (NC)-Hudson

County parishes here in New Jersey are joining in a countyshywide interfaith appeal seeking pledges of fair housing practices

~T FRANCIS XAVIER IIYANNIS

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a penny sale at 8 Tuesday right Feb 9 in the parish hall A Communion breakfast and fashion show are on the units Spring schedule

ST JOHN BAPTIST CENTRAL VILLAGE

A housewares demonstraticm will follow an open meeting scheduled by the Womens Guild for 8 Thursday night Feb 11 in the church hall In charge of refreshments will be Mrs Matil shyda Shelter Miss Margaret Shay and Miss May Taggart The unit plans a Valentine whist for 3 Saturday night Feb 13 also in the church hall on Main Road Miss Edith Kirby and Mrs Louise Vieira are chairmen ST JOHN POCASSET

The Womens Guild announces a penny sale for Friday Feb 12 Mrs Sprague Spooner will be chairman The units next meetshying will feature slides and a talk by Col Eugene S Clark on the early history of Marthas Vineshyyard It will be held Tuesd~

Feb 16

and South America he deshyclared

The ~rchbishop said 60 years ago there was an excuse-travel communications and cultural knowledge were in their inshylancy But now miles are nothshying since Pope John XXIII brought his message of unity to the world he averred adding

Real Import The CICOP meeting brings

bishops priests and laymen of both hemispheres together for a remarkable in-service training period a healthy learn while you work program We know much of Latin American needs both religious economic and culshytural We are helping in our way to repair these shortcomings But we need even more to share

in this Christian fraternity fIIf background common resources and future hopes Only by free easy association with the repshyresentatives of Latin America can we get the real import

ELECTRICAL Contractors~

~ ~ ~ ~

944 County St ~ New Bedford

ecec~c~ccccee~o

C) LOUlUl~S iiffii~ ~ i middotbull EWrIMA ~- shyg l~

ROMEamp I~-

I SHmNES imiddot ~ OF EUROPE iiI bull ampHOLY LAND ~) C~ 1 bull CATBOLIC PROGRAJ 1965 ~)

ALI~~16 ~I CachoIlcTeI Orrlce ~) c~ WASHINGTON CHICAGOIOMI LONDONI CATHOLtC TRAVEL OFFICE FRM ~------------II -~ Dupont Circle Building WashIngton D C 20036 fali ~ ~ j1ii Please send me your free Illustrated booklet describing in ~ iJl detail the wOrldmiddotcovering pilgrimages

C~ Name iI ~IJ Address ~ C_~ CityIloneState 11 =~~~~~_~_~~_~_ft~ftVw ijrv _ii~middotV

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Teen-agers Outstanding For Prodigal Generosity

By Rev Joseph T McGloin S J Several times in this column Ive had some glowing

words to say about our Mexican neighbors to the south about their friendliness and hospitality- and general likeshyableness And certainly its all true These people busy as they are will go out of their of other peoples is that you canway give you their precious easily give the idea you are sell shytime and attention to see ing all your own countrymen that you enjoy your visit to short And this would be the their country When a Mexican furthest thing from my own says Mi casa es su casa My thoughts house is your Because there is great friendli shyhouse - which ness in our country too - in he invariably varying degrees and manifested

middot does-he means in various ways The Mexican is it F r i end s in general more spontaneous strangers even than we and most of us have to shopkeepshy be approached before we give ers youve never our friendship since an initial II e e n before shyness seems to hold us back will introduce Often enough however this

middotyou to the whole shyness is caused by a national family and inshy superiority complex by a fear vite you to hav~ of not being accepted and by

middotdinner wit h the fear of making fools of ourshymiddot them To put it mildly hospital shy selves in a language we dont ity like this would be impossible know In other words humility to forget or to overlook is an esseatial to friendliness and _ Sometimes you wonder as you hospitality Sometimes we have walk the downtown- streets of it Often we dont CHle of our own cities and as you Hospitable People see pe~ple going their own inshy We Americans are sometimessulated ways if it isnt true that afraid to show our real feelingsas a country we have only a -afraid to show for inst~nce

-head while Mexico has a head our sympathy forthe underdogand a heart We usually make up for t~is

Superiority Complex psychologically by cheering on - This feeling grows on - you the hiss favored side at spe~tator when you visit Mexico and have sports when we should be doingthe misfortunE to encounter the it in the causes of racial justiceAmerican tourist who is bent on and equality of opportunity inshyacting like one It is a crying stead shame that so many Americans We are afraid others usuallyhave to show a superiority com- those very loud others will look

middotplex to those they encounter in down on us if we give public middot other countries seeming to feel support to those who need our that no matter where they go it support the little -people the is not they who are the foreignshy least of Christs and our brethshyers but those they encounter ren

All too often these types seem The fact is though that we to despise the customs and lanshy Americans do have a- heart and guage and even the currency of that once we put aside our sillythe countries they visit apparshy ideas that we are too busy to be ently thinking that anyone can hospitable or that others will understand English if you only look on us as soft and foolish if speak louder and that real we are or that we must not goAmerican money will buy anyshy out of way forour foreign~rs thing even respect because we might make a misshy

Worst of all are those wbo take in speaking their languagebring their aura of racial supeshy -then we can be and are just as riority along with them and hospitable and friendly as anymake little effort to hide it It is peoplein the world undoubtedly true that some of Ideals of Youththis patronizing attitude is partly There are many Americansresponsible (along with Castro~ and fortunately there are gettingeternal vigilance for American to be more who are willing tomistakes and seeming mistakes) stand up publicly and be countedfor the affection with which on the side of right instead ofAmericans are held in some parts - merely clucking in quiet privateof Latin America such as in sympathy There are lots ofPanama Americans who are not jqst

Race Prejudice friendly and hospitable to forshyAnd its tragic that have eigners but who do heroic workwe

to expoFt the most shameful of with the poor and downtrodden our national sins the stupidity and handicapped of their own which is race prejudice We country and their own city as might as well forget in fact well about any good neighbor polshy - Now there are lots of adult icy until we ourselves become Americans of this type But good neighbors when it comes to out-and-out

But even when we are not prodigal generosity it is the snobbish at home we are seldom teens as a rule whohave to be as spontaneous in our friendli shy given first prize ness other peoples The forshy A teen-agel who has not yetas eign students who come to stuay outgrown the honest ideals of at our universities often get youth will give his time and enshylonely and discouraged because ergy unstintingly and with little they have seemingly no friends thought of consequences This

author has instanceThe Negro in his fight for for seen equality (a fight which should kids doing heroic work with the never have been necessary in the very poor and the orphans-notfirst place) very often feels just throwing money into a colshyalone (though decreasingly so) lection box for them but givingwhen even those who know he is them their time and their love getting a raw deal do nothing working with them face to face at least publicly to help him even as Christ did set things right America has a great heart

Which may be one reason the and many Americans are just as Negro American often makes a spontaneous and natural at better ambassador abroad than showing it as any people anyshyother Americans where As a country however

Friendliness Here we still have some distance to But the trouble with extolling go before this sort of generosity

the hospitality and friendlin~ becomes our national image

CHECK COMPARE SAVE

Turkeys 10to11 LIS

Ready-to-Cook 39~ FIR S T Nancy Vogel

daughter of Mr and Mrs SAVE CASH bullbullbull SHOP AampPLeonard J Vogel of Sacred Heart Parish Fall River and a senior at Starg High last night became the first recishypient of the Bishop Connolly award for the outstanding

girl athlete n a Catholic High School The Clover Club of Fall River sponsored the award

Thomas ~Vhalen

In Noviticlte Brother Thomas Whalen son

of Mr and Mrs Thomas Whalen -8 General Cobb St Taunton and a member of the Sacred Heart Parish has received the religshyious habit of the Erothers of the

SMOKED P()RK SHOUlDERS

SUPER-RIGHT SHORT SHANK 6 TO 8 lBS

PICNICS 1829c

CHICKEN LEe or BREAST 33c

QUARTERS l8

SAVE CASH ON THESEHoly Cross at ceremonies conshyducted at St Joseph Novitiate

Valatie NY 6 POUNDS ofi BREAD ONLY 99c Brother John Donoghue CSC

Provincial Superior of the Broshy Whitl Breadp~~~E~ 4 ~6~~~z99c thers of the Holy Cross of the SAVI 20e - REGULAR 59c - 8 INCHEastern Province announced I p 118 8 OZ 39CJANEthat Brother Thomas was one of App I II PARKER IACHthe 14 candidates who is now starting a canonical year of proshy JANI PARKER - SAVlOe REGULAR 9c

bation for the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross bull hB Ck 1 lB 3 OZ 3ftCSpaRIS ar a e EACH i

Following the reception the parents and friends of Brother Thomas were guests at a lunchshyeon at the novitiate

Total Now 430 NEW YORK (NC)-With the

opening of two more parish schools the number of Catholic elementary schools in the New York archdiocese now totals 430

ATWC)OD OIL CO~~PANY

SHEILL HEATIN4 OILS South SeC] Streets Hyannis Tel HY 81

COMPLleTE

Mortgage Service anywhere on Cape Cod

bull RESIDENTIAL bull COMMEI~CIAL

bull CONSTRUCTION bull SEASONAL

Call EX 8-2266

Bass ~iver Savings Bank

SOUTH YARMOUTH Hyannis - Dennis Port

Yarmouth Plaza

Special Donut and Coffee SoleI All THIS weEKI

PLAIN SUGARED CJlNNAMON OR COMBINATION

2 PKGS 4ftltJane Parker Donuts 29cR~~ Of 12

I E 5 ON ON SAVE 4c B~~S SAV 1 c B3~S MILO AND MRLOW COFfil

Eight OClock ~A~ 69c-3 IJ~G 198 RICH FULLmiddotBOOleo

Red Circle CoHee ~A~ 71 c-3 B~G204 VIGOROUS ANO WINEY

lokar Coffe ~A~ 73c-3 B~G210 rice shown In thl ud guiltnteed tlltu Sat Feb

Tobacco products and Items prohibIted by Iaw eKempt from Plaid Stamp Offbullbull amp effective at ALL Aamp Sup Matlcotn thl communll1 and lclnll1

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 5: 02.04.65

-5

Center said here it found an overwhelming lack of evishydence to support the theory that Catholic schools are divisive

In a report in the FebruaryshyMarch issue of the Critic magashyzine three officials of the Unishyversity of Chicagos center cited bull survey made on the effects of Catholic education

Persons who went to Catholic scbools they said were just as likely to have Protestant friends in adulthood to be involved in civic activities tomiddot respect civil liberties to be open-minded to be tolerant of others and to be If anything more upwardly moshybile

Authors of the report are Dr Peter Rossi head of the research eenter Father Andrew Greeley director of the study and Leonshyard J Pinto assoc~ate director

They concluded Even though the measures

ased in this study are not as soshyphisticated as might be desired the overwhelming lack of evishydence for the divisiveness theshyory at least calls it into serious question

Indeed the general similarshyity of Protestants and Catholics and of the various Catholic subshygroups suggests that the attishytudes we attempted to measure are formed by general cultural forces rather than the kind of school attended and that the dishyvisiveness that exists springs rather from the influence of reshyligion itself than from religious education

Baltimore Gets ETV Station Approval

BALTIMORE (NC)-The Balshytimore archdiocese said the Fedshyeral Communications Commisshysion has approved its plan for eonstruction of an educational TV station to serve parochial schools here

Msgr James C Donohue su- perintendent of the archdioceses department of Catholic educashytion said the station will be ealIed KRM-67 and will be reshyeeived on television sets which have a special adaptor

In addition to programs for schools MsgrDonohue said the station may be used for Confrashyternity of Christian Doctrine training courses adult education liturgical instruction and pershyhaps clergy conferences

30 Priests Serve Southern Sudan

VATICAN CITY (NC)-There are now only one bishop and one apostolic administrator and 28 other priests to look after the Catholics of the southern Sudan the mission news agency Fides reported here

The agency said that they would normally have to min- ister to some 440000 Catholics but that thousands of their people are now refugees in neighboring countries

The total of 30 all Sudanese is all that remains following the expulsion a year ago of all forshyeign missionaries from the southshyern part of the country

Homowners Course A course in minor home reshy

pairs for homeowners and those dealing in real estate will be ofshyfered by Everett W Ericson as P3rt of the Spring program of the Continuing Education Divishysion of Stonehill College First RSSion will be held Tuesday night Feb 16 and the class win eoutinue for 10 weeka

THE ANCHORshyReport Questions Brother Michael Misses Warmth of Africa Thurs Feb 4 1965

Divisive School As He Shivers in New England Winter Church Council Assertion I wish I were back in Africa shivered Brother Michael E Barnaby home from To Open Talks

CHICAGO (NC) - The Tanzania East Africa where the thermometer is more or less permanently fixed in the National Opinion Research 90s to ~isit his pare~ts in chill Fall River The Brother of Christian Instruction son of With Catholics

Mrand Mrs Ernest J Barnaby of Notre Dame parish Fall River has been on home leave since the end of Noshyvember He will return to the land that doesnt need furshynaces on Valentines Day

Brother Michael has been a missionary in various parts of Africa for the past 11 years His present assignment is at St Marys Secondary School in Mwanza Tanzania Tanzania he explainer is the former Tanganshyyika renamed Tanzania a matter of weeks ago when Tanganyika and the island of Zanaibar formed an alliance

There are 283 boarders boys of 16 to 24 at St Marys School said Brother Michael Classes are in English but the government requires all teachers to learn Swahili and gives them about two years to do so Brother Michael hasnt as yet fulfilled this requirement since other languages were spoken in the parts of Africa where he was previously stationed but its high on his list of priority things to do

New School Year The teacher will be a little

late for school said Brother noting that the new school year began in Tanzania on Tuesday Jan 19 Why Tuesday Well the steamer that plies Lake Victoria on whose shores Mwanza is loshycated arrives on Tuesday bringshying most of St Marys students with it

Tbree and a half week vacashytions come every three months for students said Brother Mishychael and there are six free weeks in December when the school year ends Students work hard towards the Cambridge Overseas Examinations adminshyistered by Cambridge University from England

They are tough exams deshyclared Brother Michael If a boy passes them he is able to go on to higher studies Some stushydents he said are sent to the United States and some go to England Regrettably however

PrefatetoBless Center for Deaf

LAFAYETTE (NC)~First dishyocesan center here for work with the deaf will be blessed Sunday by Bishop Maurice Schexnayder of Lafayette

A former residence which for several years was a diocesan building has been converted to a center where the deaf can come to relax play bingo toshygether and we can also have edshyucational and spiritual proshygrams according to Father Carroll Dupuis diocesan chapshylain for the deaf

Bishop Preaches PROVIDENCE (NC)-Auxilshy

iary Bishop Bernard M Kelly of Providence preached at an ecushymenical prayer service in Beneshyficent Congregational c h u r c h attended by Catholics and memshybers of the Beneficent congregashytion It was the first time amiddot Catholic bishop has preached in a Protestant church in Rhode Island

Michael Ce Austin Inc

FUNERAL SEPVICE

NEW BEDfORD MASS

549 COUNTY STREET

BROTHER MICHAEL

hard for students to advance Closed all day SundayThe school day at St Marys

begins at 830 running until Macleans1245 and then from 230 to 4 with time out for a midday UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN siesta Students then have a

Continuing Education

EVENING CLASSES CLASSES ON TUESDAY EVENINGS 730 TO 930 PM

Liberal Arts TIt ABC Of Cime Th Artist At Work Comporative Religions Contemporary Novel In America Conversational French- in Conversational Spani Cr-m Writing Draw Anct Effecti Engliolo Laltor Law Effecti Public Rmtt- Sociology You And Society Reading Improvement For Adults (Oth Reading Clasbullbullbull

Weolltly For Primary C Secondary ~)

TIM above Ctur non-credi ood withoul prerequisitesbull

bull

Business Accounting For N~ Accountants Elementary Shaltthand (Gregg) Insurance Part II Investing ht Stocb Real Estate Training Cou Pew

Supervisors To Revie Co

Attomeys

Special Interest InteriM Decoration Th Houbullbull yetu LiYe In Personality Improvementmiddot Fee

Women Updating Efficiency In

Tomorrows Food Service

Spring Session FeIJ 16-Apr 27

58ftd Brochur wi1ft application form or

pho local-CE 8-2Oft or am- Ii -OK 6-9050 Ot apply puan Monday rough Friday Adminshyistration Building from

730 PM to 830 PM

NEW YORK (NC)-The World Council of Churches has approved laquoexploratory talks with Catholic represenshytatives a World Council official said here

The Rev Dr Franklin Clark Fry president of the Lutheran Church in America and chairshyman of the World Councils 100shymember central committee said procedures for the talks were outlined at a meeting of the committee in Enugu Nigeria

Dr Fry spoke at a news conshyference after returning from 10 days at the Nigeria meeting

He predicted that talks beshytween Catholic and World Counshycil representatives would begin in a few months He called such talks the next logical step in improving relations between Roman Catholics andmiddot other Christians

Step While the talks would be a

momentous step Dr Fry said nevertheless they would be a step not a leap

He said the initial discussions would concern matters that are not too complicated and apshypear 1ikeiy to produce progress in interreligious cooperation

The World Council of Churches includes 214 Protestants Orthoshydox Anglican and Old Catholic denominations with some 350 million members throughout the world

lARIVIERES Pharmacy

Prescriptions carted for and Delivered

HEADQUARTERS FOR DIETETIC SUPPLIES

600 Cottage St WY 4-7439 New Bedford

~

manual work period for three quarters of an hour during which said Brother all the heavy work of the school is taken care of Its quite an efshyficient system he noted A sports period follows

Brother Michael teaches biolshyogy math and sociology at St Marys He says his students are highly motivated Few boys can go to school so those who can want to stay and they study hard They know their futures depend upon it Most St Marys graduates go into government or business and Brother Michael noted that Julius Nyerere Tanshyzanias president is himself a graduate of a Catholic school He is a good Catholic he said

Native Vocations The Brothers of Christian Inshy

struction operate a Jlostulate and juniorate in connection with St Marys Some 40 boys are enshyrolled in the two institutions and will go to Uganda for their noshyvitiate

The area around Mwanza is hilly and rocky and vegetation is sparse said Brother Michael Nearby are gold and diamond mines but security is very up to date We ca~t take field trips to the mines

A native of Notre Dame parshyish Brother Michael has a brothshyer and sister still residing in the parish in addition to his parshyents He attended Prevost High School leaving in his senior year to enter the brotherhood and complete his education at the communitys school in Alfred Me He has been a religious since 1947

Brother Michael expects to visit Fall River again in three years under a government polshyicy which prescribes that all foreign teachers take home leave for six months every three years

very few educated youngsters become teachers

The good students get bettershypaying jobs and its the less able ones who turn to teaching Thus teachers are mediocre and its

STORE HOURS

MON TUES WED 900 AM to 500 PM

THURS FRI SAT 830 AM to 600 PM

-6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965 lVlission for Journalists SacrDments

Necessary Instrument The Catholic newspaper is not a superficial luxuty

or an optional devotion it is an instrument necessary for the circulation of those ideas which feed our faith

These words of Pope Paul spoken less than a year ago need no additional commentary to explain his view of the Catholic press and the importance that a Catholic newsshypaper plays and should play in the life of the Catholic

In the mind of th~ Pope the Catholic newspaper is necessary

The faith of the individual Catholic and the events of the life that he daily lives are inextricably interwinetl The faith must influence and give meaning to daily life and the events of the day must be viewed in the light of God and their impact for eternal life Where is the Catholic to receive information that will guide him in making these judgements and applications

This is the function of the Catholic newspapershyagain in Pope Pauls words-to present a fund of thought aligned along Christian principles Thlt Catholic newsshypaper the Pope points out must not only inform but form the reader And it must let the reader see in how many areas there is unity of belief among Catholics and with their non-Catholic friends and in how many areas there is complete freedom within the bounds of charity for discussion and disagreement

During February Catholic Press Month the Popes insistence on the Catholic newspaper as necessary should find response in the minds and lives of every Catholic family

This means that Catholic reading material must be in every home A Catholic weekly newspaper magazines books and pamphlets-these are instruments of Cathoshylic thought aids to the Catholic in his evaluation of the events in which he participates and these enable him to continue his education and to mature in the faith that is his

Responsible Press The announcement by the Holy Father of his creation

of new Cardinals was given excellent coverage in the daily press and many of the outstanding newspapers of the country saw fit to make it the subject of editorials

This in itself 3hould be proof if proof is needed that the daily press is willing and anxious to cooperate with the Church and with every other responsible group in the featuring of newsworthy releases It shows that there is concern in the higher e-chelons of newspaper administration over what the Church does and its influence in and on the world

Occasionally the cry is heard from some Catholics that this or that newspaper is prejudiced against the Church This is the ghetto-voice crying out the self-styled secondshyclass citizen speaking the inferiority complex-ridden Cathshyolic making protest serve instead of presentation and proshymotion This attitude happily is all but gone but it is still discouraging to see and hear it on occasion

When a newspaper presents a view that is deemed hostile to the Church the explanation is that the editor sincerely thought this to be a newsworthy item or else he was met with so many no comments from Catholic officials or was given such a run-around in his efforts to seek the other viewpoint that he met his deadline with what he had at hand

The press in the United States is a responsible one Exceptions to this are so few as to be easily and quickly recognizable Catholics would do well to take an active role in applauding and assisting the press in its presentation of news and viewpoints instead of carping and sniping from the sidelines

rhe tNCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diqcese of Fali River 410 Highland Avenue

Fall River Mass 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAqER It Rev Daniel F ShallooMA Rev John P Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR ~ Hugh J GoldeJ)

~

y

FEBRUARY

OATHoLa PRESS MONTH

ThnolACJh the Week With the Chunch By REV ROBERT W HOVDA Catholic University

TODAY-St Andrew Corsini Bishop What have we sinners done that God should trust us so Yet he assures us again and again in scripture as He does in the lessons of this Mass that He not only loves us but entrusts to us the salvation of our world

Sirachs tribute to the great priest and the Gospel parable of the industrious and reliable slaves-both come to the Chrisshytian people to t14e assembled church as messages of trust and confidencemiddot and hope Gods hope if we may so speak

TOMORROW - St Agatha Virgin Martyr Those who have made themselves thus for the sake of the kingdom of heaven (Gospel) are the Religious among us whose vows of reshynouncement establish a way of life that points to heaven

Whatever they do whatever concrete form their mission takes this is their common sershyvice to the whole Church - to remind us all that the worid moves toward a goal beyond it shyself not only in words but in the daily fabric of their lives

SATURDAY-St Titus Bishshyop The bishop of course but also every Christian must be a person who knows where he is going (Gospel) Jesus is teachshying here a simple directness in accomplishing the mission He entrusts to us Success is not the measure but the will the intent the steadfastness and purposeshyfulness To say The kingdom of God has approached you is not to brag nor to herald triumph It is only to announce the fact that one is here is present who is animated by faith and is therefore a vessel of the Holy Spirit

FIFTH SUNDA~ AFTER EPIPHANY You must bear with one anothers faults (first reading) or perhaps while you are gathering the tares you will root up the wheat with them (Gospel) These are great days of belated reformation in many areas of the Churchs Hfe in its worship in its conception of it shyself and of its mission

The movement of the Holy Spirit in the Church and in the times we live in has brought fresh air to us breaking a crust hardened by the defensiveness and fear of centuries With the Offertory hymn we can sing ~Gone is the threat of death

now I shall live aind proclaim to the world what the Lord hail done for me Now we shall live

with the constant reform and reshynewal that life demands

Yet our aims must be reasonshyable and we must be strengthshyened against the vain hope that because the structures and patshyterns of our Church life are imshyproved we shall be perfect First and last we deal in the Church with humans and with those faults the readings speak of Our reform is successful if those structures and patterns begin again to beckon and challenge and inspire us where we are and as we are

MONDAY-St John of Matha Confessor Hymning the praises of the good man the man who confesses his faith in the Father by dealing with every person as his brother the entrance psalm begins Be not envious of the wicked nor jealous of evil shydoers

Sometimes we pretend that a real envy a true jealousy is purely a desire to see (and help) virtue triumph But the saints too like the man we honor toshyday are fields in which tares are present They differ from us perhaps only in that they do not covet them nor envy the tares in other lives

TUESDAY-St Cyril of Alexshyandria Doctor Do not think that I have come to set aside the law and the prophets I have not come to set them aside but to bring them to perfection (Gospel) (I hope the new and improved text of scripture readings at Mass is soon avail shyable in books smaller than the altar missal)

Christ announces thatmiddot the job of His teacher of the man or woman who teaches in His name is not to set aside the law and the prophets nor isii to repeat them It is to bring them to perfection So the Christian teacher must heed the Spirit here and now as well as in tradition

WEDNESDAY - St Scholasshytica Virgin The maidens love of and openness to her groom with all her hope of fulfillment and completion is the model of the Churchs stance toward Christ Even as the Church the community of salvation we are not a finished product

We are always reformable al shyways perfectible always pil shygrims on the march It is this virgin spirit submissive to the L()td thatenables the Church to welCome such a period as thV time of change and progress

Continued from Page Three mediately before the annointinlf omitting the sprinkling with itS formula and the Confiteor and absolution Conselration

All bishops present may imshypose hands on the new bishop However only the consecrator and two co-consecrating bishopS are to pronounce the words Acshycipe Spiritum Sanctum Matrimony

Matrimony shall be ce)~brated

within the Mass unless a just cause excuses this It sl-jall be done after the Gospel and the homily Th~ latter is nevpr omitshyted

Within Mass The Votive Mass shall always be celebrted or a commemoration of it made according to the rubri(~ even during the prohibited tine

The pastor or his dnJegate who assists at the marri~O~ shan celebrate the Mass if it is anshyother Mn~s shall not (~ltinue

untn the MarrlageRite hls been completed The non-c~l~brant

who assists at Marriage ~lall be vested in surplice and white stole (and cope if it is the cusshytom) and he shall give tln homshyily The celebrant shall pve the blessing after the Lord Prayer and before the Placeat

The Nuotial Rlessing hlll al shyways be imparted even f it is one of the partys seconrl marshyriage or the marriage is rluring the prohibited season

Without Mass Accorrng ta the Apostolic Letter ~acram

Liturgiam (Jan 1964) rgt brief admonition shall be given before the rite Tis is not a homily but only a simple imtuction before the celebration of Marshyriage After the reading of the Epistle and Gospel of the Mass for Spouses there shall then be given a homily Thlllt the order shall be brief admrgtnition Epistle and Gospel in the vershynacular homily celebr2tonof marriage nuptial blessing

If no vernacular text is avail shyable for the Epistle and nos~l

it is lawful to use for the inshyterim a text approved by the local Ordinary~ bull

A chant may be sung bntweea the Epistle and Gospel The Prayer of the Faithful is highly recommended after the compleshytion of the Mariage Rite accordshying to the formula of the local Ordinary and in which petitions for the spouses are also to be included

At the end of the rite the nuptial blessing shall always be given as within Mass The formshyula shall be the one designated for this occasion (Collectio Hishytuum 1964 Rite of Matrimony Without Mass Nuptial Pessing Outside Mass Sacristy Manual p 283

If marriage is celebrated duJ shying the prohibited season the pastor shall advise the spouses to~take into account the special character of this liturgical seashyson Sacramentals

A single prayer from among the prayers which are found in the Roman Mis$al for Feb Z and for Ash Wednesday mashybe said on the occasion of the blessing of candles or ashes

Blessings which have been reshyserved up to the present time and which are contained in the Roman Ritual tit IX cap 9 10 11 _may be given by any

- priest with the exception of the following Blessing of a bell for the use of a blessed church or oratory Blessing of the first stone for the building of a

church B I e s sin g of a new church or public oratory Blessshy

ing of an antimimsiori Blessing of a new cemetery the Papal Blessings (cap 10 n 1-3) and the Blessings and erection of the

Stations of the Way of the Cr~ inasmuch asthis reserved to tbe JUahop

ACRES Of FREE

PARICNG

OOIJfIlElftENI BUDGETmiddot Finance

f 1It_ 10 Pay

1

Meeting to Plan CathQlic Press i

World Congress NEW YORK (NC)-The

Seventh World Congress of the Catholic Press to be held here May 18 to 22 will be the first subject for discussion at a meeting of officials of the Inshyternational Union of the Cathoshylic Press Saturday in Stuttgart Germany

Two representatives of the Catholic Press of the United States and Canada will attend the Stuttgart meeting They are Tames A Doyle executive secreshytary of the Catholic Press Assoshyciation and Father Hugh Morley

OFM Cap who represents the international union at the United Nations

Father Albert J Nevins MM editor of Maryknoll magazine is general chairman of the world congress and of the 55th annual convention of the Catholic Press Association which includes Catholic newspaper magazine and general publisher members in the United States and Canshyada

Modern Society The Stuttgart meeting will be

held under the direction of Raishymondo Manzini editor of the Vatican City newspaper LOsshyservatore Romano and president of the IUCP and Father Emile Gabel AA secretary general

Meetings at the world congress will be organized around the overall theme of Truth in the Pursuit of Liberty and will Inshyelude a number of special sesshysions relating the theme to modshyem society

There Will be conferences on the press and political liberty liberty and international order liberty and eivil rights con science and religious liberty freedom and the creative arts and liberty in the Catholic press

Three Missioners Martyred in Congo

ROME (NC) - The deaths of three more Catholic missionarIes and an African priest at the hands of Congolese rebels have been reported by the Pious Soshyciety of St Francis Xavier for the Foreign Missions of Parma

Italy The three Xaverian missionets

were Fathers Giovanni Didone 35 and Luigi Carrara 32 and Brother Vittorio Faccin 31

Patron of Rio RIO DE JANEffiO (NC-An

altar dedicated to St Sebastian has been blessed here to comshymemorate the fourth centenary of the founding of the Portushyguese settlement of St Sebastian of Rio de Janeiro

DUEtFEE- FALL RIVER

On Our Stage IN PERSON

Arthur Fiedler and

60 Members of the Boston Pops

an evening of enchanted music

ALL New Program Special Attention to evo ~nd Church Groups

FRIDAY FEBRUA~Y 12 830 PM

TEL 6fT-93S1

fHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965 1 Press Association Head Evaluates Press Month Theme

BY MSGR ROBERT G PETERS perfect setting up distortions in world but with every walk of proper interpretation of the

its reflection A mirror can be life every slightest concern of question itself The theme of this years Cathshy too small to tell the full story morality Anything else is not things as

olic Press Month gives everyone A mirror can be faithful to the they are or things in truth -readers and writers-reason to Christian Principlessurfacemiddotof things and miss what Anything else is not the Catholic consider the task of the Catholic A mirror that tells things as press that the popes have adshylies behind the obvious facade press They are the words of they really are must reflect not vised to place itself in the world Pope Paul VI Your Catholic A mirror that tells all things only the object in question but and interpret that world for press mirror of the world as they are must be a mirror that the surrounding world that afshy readers in the light of Christianbull bull telling things as they are seldom limits its area of reflecshy fects what must be told The principlesbullbullbull In truth tion And the press that attempts publication that mirrors the famshy Catholic readers should be

To mirror the world is not the to be such a mirror must concern ily the factory the field and the happy to have at hand a press simple task it first appears For itself not only with the obvious forum must include the Chrisshy that dedicates itself to so imporshyone thing a mirror can be im- ecclesiastical aspects of the tian principles needed for a tant a task

The Fumlture Wonderland Open Daily 9 AM to 10 PMe

_ the East Including Saturdays

Hew Englands Greatest Furniture (Iearance is Now in Full SwinQ

FREE DELIVERY

8

l

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall liver-Thurs Feb W85

Catholic Press Bears Witness 10 Churchs Spirit of Renewal

By Mary Tinley Daly -Reading habits must be changing in my parish

Mid a priest of our acquaintance Few years ago he ruminated Id go into a horne to make a sick call put my hat on the coffee table on the top of the New Yorker Vogue Look Life and the daily newspaper When Id come downstairs again my hat would be on top of a flock of Catholic m iss ion magazines and the diocesan newspaper The others were all chucked for the time being I was to be imshypressed quite obviously he laughedWhats the change now Father we asked Are the magazines more lurid where you park your hator

And Nowmiddotmiddotmiddot Just the opposite our priest

friend chuckled Theyre not ashamed of the Catholic press any more In the line-up among the popular publiclltions on those living room tables-and usually on top of the heap--are well shythumbed copies of Commonweal America The Sign and others Even the Diocesan paper is out in full view right beside toshynights edition of the city newsshypaper

This priests observation Is D~ all unusual

The Catholic press has made giant strides within the past few years strides which should be noted during this the month of February Catholic Pre s bull Month Why February We dont know Perhaps from the very name of the month derived from Februarius month of exshypiation and purification since en the 15th the Roman festival of expiation and purifi~ation was beld

To our way of thinking this iii appropriate since we believe that the Catholie press should take its place as a gOOd influshyence in the currentmiddot world of journalism To quote the present Pontiff Pope Paul VI Your CatholiC Press is a mirror of toshydays world telling things shythey are-in truth

And how is the Catholie predoing Better thank you

Todays Renewal Reflecting the Catholic layshy

mans view is the sophisticatedCommonweal edited by dedishycated Cafllolic laymen America edited by the Jesuits The Sign magazine of the Passionists and SO many others mirroring mod-middot ern Catholic thinking in our aggiornamento of today enunshyciated first by Pope John XXIII

Fresh air is not only seeping in it is sweeping int9 Catholic journalism

Notre Dame Superior Heads New- Cornmittee

WASHINGTON (NC)-5ister Mary Daniel provincial superior of the Maryland province of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur has been elected chairmaflof the newly formed National Sister Formation Committee

New vice chairman is Mother Mary Borromeo mother general of the Sisters of St Francis Joliet Ill the Sister Formation Conference announced from it headquarters here

Sister Mary Daniel heads a 12-member unit which guides activities of the formation conshyference a 12-year-old cooperashytive movement of U S Sistershyhoods to bolster the spiritual academic and professional trainshying of Sisters

Time was and in the memory of even young readers when a great many Catholic newsshypapers were pretty ho-hum a picture of the bishop on every page notices of sodality meetshyings ham or turkey dinners items which could and should be carried in parish bulletins edishytorials wildly denouncing thisshyand-that-a generally negative and boring experience for readshyers of which there were few

Catholic magazines were only slightly better mediocre articles namby-pamby fiction

Those were the days when out of a sense of loyalty or obedishyence Catholics supported their Catholic press with their subshyscription dollars but not with their attention

Catholic periodicals found their way from the mail slot to the magazine rack for a while then out into the trash Seldom did they appear on a living room table to be picked up for intershyest or enjoyment along with the mass media publications EVeJl less rarely was a Catholic peri shyodical quoted ill the secular press or discussed among intelli shygent Catholics

Fortunately times h a changed The Catholiepress is abreast of world news local news features book film and play r~views entertainment and famshyily pages And nowhere else of course can one get more authorshyitative information on the vital changes within themiddot Church itshyself Vatican Council liturgieal reforms ecumenism -eally alive issues

The change has been long _ coming hindered ~ maD7 r0adshyblocks but its here

Alumae Style Shaw Alumnae and parents of Jesusshy

Mary Academy Fall River wiD sponsor a supper style show at 630 Tuesday night March 2 at Whites restaurant

Sto Francis Resodence

FOR YOUNG WOMEN 196 Whipple St Fall River Conduded by Franciscan

Missionaries of Mary ROOMS - MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALtill Inquire OS 3-2892

bull bull bull bull bull bullbull bull bullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Williams Funeral Home

EST 1870 I Washington Square

NEW BEDFORD Reg Funeral Director CIftd

Embalmer PRIVATE middotPARKING AREA

TEL WY 6-8098

AT RED MASS Luci Baines Johnson daughter of the President attended the annual Red Mass in St Matthew Cathedral Washin~~ton last Sunday in the company of her escort Paul Betz of Washington left President Johnson preeeded the COUplEI into the Oathedral NC Photo

Protestants Must Change Attitude BONN (NC)-German Protesshy the Orthodox Church which

tants have been asked to meet takes a similar stand the spirit of change at the Vatshy He also pointed to the diffi shy

ican council with changes ill culty of solving problems in this their own attitudes area because the Catholic

Lutheran theologian Dr Hanl Church cannot find anyone aushyAsmussen wove his appeal thorized to negotiate for Protesshyaround a strong criticism of tants He said We have no Protestant impatienCE with the branch with which questions of Catholic position on mixed marshy this kind can be regulated in a riages He pointed out that Protshy binding way and we do not waDi estants who are angrr with the to create one either Catholic stand do not criticize

your OVENFRESH

NEIGHBORHOOD~ DAILY STORE

Asks End of Fee In Teaching

PADERBORN (NC)-Dao ligious training should _be more positive at all age levels and the element of all shyxiety and fear should be elimoo inated ill teaching children bull German Catholic churchman aeshyserted here

Archbishop Lorenz Jaeger ell Paderborn in Germany said bull more positive stress requires IEo vision not only of the catechism but also of the rite of confessioDo In line with this approach m said parents in the rearing of their children should stress the dignity of the human person iQoo stead of harping on duties

The prelate a member of 12ie ecumenical councils Secretarial for Promoting Christian Unit was addressing the annual cooshyvention of representatives 01 German Catholic womens ganizations He said that to tain awareness of the dignity all the Christian vocation Chri9shytians must first realize natural virtues and true humanity bull Pope John showed by his exa pIe

Defines ApoStolate Of Catholic Nurse

WICHITA (NC)-Bishop L8 C Byrne defined the CathoHe nurse-one who combines proshyfessional excellence with spa itual excellence to sanctify hetlo self and Christianize society

SpeaKing before the DioeeSRII Counell of Catholic Nurses here Wichitas apostolic administ

tor told 200 nurses Your laP apostolate is nursing Specifi shycally in our age which histolF will describe as the age of tile laity the Catholic nurse must be a shining symbol of both tbe Church and the nursing prof~

sion

~ DEBROSS OIL ( ~ COo

) Heating Oils ( ~ and Burners ~

365 NORTH FRONT STREET ~ NEW BEDFORD ~

~ WYman 2-5534 ~

VinesWill HaveTenderGrapes f Pruned Now Says Gardener

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

One of the few jobs in the garden middotwhich should be done in Winter is that of pruning grape vines By pruning vines now while they are dormant you will avoid a drippy vine when the sap begins to flow Actually the pruning should take place in two steps once now and again in never to be awakened again

late March or April Maybe this is how TV dinnersbegan

Too often grape produc- Now Im as guilty as any other Clon suffers from too little prunshy mother of not wanting four exshyIng As a result vines become tra elbows around me when I am overcrowded and produce small trying to cook and I often have stunted bunches of fruit or at to suppress a scream of anguish best production of fruit is when my last egg hits the floor limited Then I remember my early ef

In pruning a vine the first forts offer a prayer to the thing to do is to remove all Blessed Mother for an extra Winter-killed growth (this is dose of patience and find someshysimple to determine since dead thing for those little hands to eliDes are dry and brittle) These help me with canes should be cut back to the One day last week when my main stem The second step is to patience was at an unusually eut aU thin straggly growth at high peak we had a dolls birthshyleast half way back to the main day party cake mixed and baked stem or until the cane is at least by Meryl and Melissa instrucshythe thickness of a finger The tions read by mother The utter shape of the vine is of no conshy delight on their faces when the eern now since it will be shaped finished cake turned out so well after the second pruning more than paid for any extra

The first pruning should thin effort on my part the vine to approxima~ely twoshy A very young friend of ours thirds of its original bulk Do Christine McGowan of St JoshyDot make the mistake of being sephs parish Fall River was cautious about cutting Rememshy nice enough to give us one of her ber new growth will appear off recipes to pass on to the younger the old growth and unless you set Miss McGowan with the aid are thOrough the vine will be of an understanding mother has overcrowded been baking since a very tender

In late March or April the age ~e shouidbe pruned again duiped and tied First remove

Chrissies Cookies 1 Ie white sugar

any canes which were missed atmiddot 1 C brown sugar packed the fiist pruning or any recently C soft shortening (this III killed canes Other canes to be equal to lb butter or margarshy~moved are those which are old ine) IUld overuown since theywiU 1 t vanilla produce littleif any fruit 3 C flour

Once the thinning out process 1 t baking soda comple~ the canes which t salt are to be kept should be ~ nuts andor raisins to taste back to five or six buds and tied Heat oven to 375 Mix sugars During the tying process the shortening eggs vanilla Sift toshyme can be shaped so that no -gether flour soda salt and stir __0 canes are closer than a foot in Add raisins andor nuts ~d a half apart This is a time- Fo~ balls of about 1 t middotof dough eonsuming job which is very apiece flatten on ungreased ~y to do sloppily with a poor baking sheetallowing room far ~p resulting so t~e a few ~ys to do it properly Above an JIrUlle heavily In the Kitchen On of my older daughters reshy~ests last Christmas was for an electric oven that baked just like monunys I felt that this was a little too grown up for five year old because the temshyperature went up as high as 400 degrees so needless to say this particular item didnt find a place under our ~ris~as tree However I still feel quite guilty about this as I intend to try very hard to encourage any cooking tendencies in my daughters Speaking from personal expeshy

dence I remember the years I ipent getting shoo~d out 9f my mothers kitchen until finally ~y interest in that direction iemained dormant until mar ~age forced me to face squareshy~ the prospect of preparing three meals a day Fortunately hen I did solve this problem liided by many cookbooks I did discover how much I loved to eook but I still wonder how any other girls have had their love of cooking equally squelchshytid by a well-meaning mother

Dorries Patronesses Dames Patronesses of Sacred

Beart Home New Bedford will hold a Valentine party for hOJIle residents at 130 Tuesday aftershynoon Feb 9 Mrs Jean Boutin-is m charge of arrangements The lInits annual meeting is planned for Sunday April 25 and the -tOth anniversary of the group Will be marked with a banquet and dance Wednesday May 5 in New Bedford Hotel Next board meeting will be held at 30 luesday niIht March 11

cookies to spread (Wetting the handS with Cold water keeps dOUgh from sticking to them)

Bake 8middot to 10 miuutes Makes about 60 cookies

Notre Dame Nun Joins Inter-Radal Staff

CHICAGO (NC)-Sister Mary Peter (Traxle~r) of the School Sisters of Notre Dame has joined the staff of the educational -sershyvices department of the National Catholic Conference for Intershyracial Justice here

Raymond M Hilliard confershyence chairman said rapid growth of the agencys services necessi-_ tated staff expansion While doshying graduate work in political

science at Georgetown Univershysity in Washington Sister Mary Peter organized a tutorial proshygram for under-privileged youth

NO JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main OHice and Plant 95 Bridge St Lowell Mass

Tel 458-6333

Auxiliary Plants

BOSTON CAMDEN N J OCEANPORT N J MIAMI PAWTUCKET R L PHILADELPHIA

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ c 9 j

REPRESENT Us CATHOLIC WOMEN The Board of Direct-ors of the National Council of Catholi~ Women is received by Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi Apostolic Delshyegate in the US at the annual meeting in ~ashington Mrs Mar~us Kilch ~oungsto~ Ohio left front is NCCW president and Miss Margaret Mealey nght front 18 executIve director NC Photo

Vatican Pavilion Second Most Popular in Fair NEW YORK(NG) --At

most half of the visitors at the New York World~sFair~

last year stopped off at the Vatican Pavilion making it the second most popular of the Fairs 151 pavilions Average daily attendance was over 75000 giving the pavilion a total at- tendance figure of more than 138 million

The Good Shepherd Chapel was the scene of 1204 Masses

SAVE MONEY ON YOUR OILHEATI bull CfJH n

CHARLES F VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE NEW BEDFORD MASS

IwflkltdeliNlyK

~SS~ HEATING OIL

at whichCo~union was dis- The most popular item at the tributed to ~ie th8ll- 42000 pavilions sales counters was a people POStcard featuring P~pe Paul

gt 1 1

- ~- ~

-_

_ ~~ f y

~ I

NO NONOt

Piggy banks dont pay dividends Put your money in a Fail River Trust Savings Account where generous divishydends are compounded semi-annually Its much safer too 1

FALL RIVER ~~h TRUST CO- V

64J U1t4 ~~ bull~ Fatt ~

-

THE ANCHORshy10 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Prelate Stresses Ecumenism on Spiritual Level

MADEIRA (NC) - Auxshyiliary Bishop Paul F Leishybold of Cincinnati called for a spiritual ecumenism shyprayer and holiness - as the soul of the ecumenical moveshyment

He preached at a special low Mass which he offered at St middotGertrudes church here in Ohio for some 300 Protestants many escorted by Catholic neighbors Many Protestant visitors were guests in homes of Catholic pashyrishioners after the evening Mass which was (lffered at an altar facing the congregation

Bishop Leibold cited five ways in which those who profess Christ can work for Christian unity

1 We must make every effort to avoid expressions judgments

and action~hich do not represhysent the condition of our sepashyrated brethren with truth and faimess

2 DIalogue must be carried on between competent experts from different churches and communities

3 Cooperation among differshyent churches for the common good of humanity

4 A spiritual ecumenismmiddot which he said involves a change of heart holiness of life and public and private prayer for unity

5 All must examine their own faithfulness to Gods will for the Church and accordingly undertake with vigor the task of renewal arid reform

Scores FCC Stand On Religious Test

WASHINGTON (N C) - A middotmember of the Federal Commushynications Commission charged here that the FCC is violating constitutional limits marked out by the Supreme Court by makshy

ing religious broadcasting one test of a broadcasters public service performance

Commissioner Lee Loevinger addressing the National Reli shygious Broadcasters convention said the FCC has gone far beshyyond the limits that have been marked by the Supreme Court as permissible govertiment acshytion in the field of religion

Loevinger noted that the FCC includes religious pro g ram I

among the types of programs considered to be in the public interest on its license application forms He said it made the broadcasting of such programs one of the FCCs tests for detershymining whether a broadcaster operates in the public interest

Pope Paul Thanks Italian Policemen

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI greeted the Italian poshylicemen whose beat is the Vatican and saidit was a great consolation to know they were around

Answering an address of homshyage by Inspector General Oreste Correti who was accompaniel by other officials and members of the force the Pope said he is grateful for the zealous expert generous and selfless work in which you display your integrity as distinguished state officials and your dedication as faithful IOns of the Church

Though members of the Italian force the groups are assigned ~ special guard duties and ~

directing traffic in St Peters iquare and the area surropndinl Vatic~ City

BOSTON (NC)-Richard Card~ inal Cushing touched off a cheershying demonstration by 1300 Jews here when he predicte9 the Secshyond Vatican Council will apshyprove a declaration absolving Jcws of direct blame in the death of Christ

If we dont Im wasting my time talking of brotherhood said the Archbishop of Boston after he was presented withmiddot the annual Good Will Award of Temple Ohabei Shalom Brothershyhood oldest and largest Jewish organization of its kind in the

country He was selected for the award because of his compasshysion generosity love and broth- erhood

Reds Fear Religion The prelate said Ill never forget the Second

Vatican Council I didnt know What they were talking about I had never heard a lecture in Latin and it was all Greek to me I dont know how many others were in the same boat

CEF Head Praises Johnson Proposals

TRAVERSE CITY (NC)-The national president of Citizens for Educational Freedom had praise here in Michigan for Presshyident Johnsons statements in his State-of-the-Union address

Stuart D Hubbell a lawyer lauded the President for his wilshylingness to tr~at all school chil shydren equally He said he sent Mr Johnson a telegram which said in part

While your proposals have not as yet been made specific to the extent that they follow the principle of equality that you outlined in your message you will have made a signifi shycant beginning in developing broad support for educational achievement

bull SEQUIN Truck Body Builders Aluminum or Steel 944 County Street

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2middot6618

DISCUSS PROBLEMS CONFRONTING HOSPITALS Meeting at the 20th annual conclave of Bishops representatives for Catholic hospitals in Scottsdale Ariz are left to right Msgr Harold A Murray director of thE NCWC Bureau of Health and Hospital Hospitals Bishop Francis J t Green of Tucson Bishop Joseph B Brunini episCOgtal burshyeau chairman and Auxiliary of Natchez-Jackson Miss and Father John J Flanagan SJ~ executive director of the Oatholic Hospital Association NC Photo

We Have Come Long ~Way in Short Time Hub Cardinal Sees Church Gains Continuing

~

but I sat between two very ven- around religion He added For crable Italian cardinals They that reason they try to eliminate

knew no English and I knew no Italian All the time they kept calling me Cardinal Spellman or Cardinal Mindzen1y or even Cardinal OConnell (The late William Cardinal OCgtnnell was Cardinal Cushings predecessor as Archbishop of Boston)

In a more serious mood Cardshyinal Cushing said the one great fear communists have centers

Interfaith Service For Church UII1ity

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Byzanshytine Rite Catholics joined with Orthodox and Protestants in a common prayer service for

Christian unity Sunday in Holy Spirit Byzantine rite c hu r c h here

Participants in the vespershytype service includE)d Father Andrew Resetar of Erie Pa Very Rev A Dixon Etollit dean of Trinity Episcopal cathedral here Father GeorgE) Scoulas dean of St Nicholas Greek Orshythodox cathedral in Oakland and Dr Harold R Alert former president of the Pittsburgh Council of Churches

The service was arranged by the Pittsburgh C 0 tI n c i I of Churches and the Pittsburgh Byzantine rite diocesE~

Where A

GOOD NAME

Means A

GREAT DAL

GEO OHARA CHEVROLET

565 MILL 5JREET

HEW BEDFIORD

Open Evenings

it from the lives of their peoplemiddot He revealed he has 25 engageshy

ments to talk to groups of other religious faiths including a lodge of Masons before Easter The Cardinal inquired Who would have thought even five years ago that a Catholic archbislfop would be preaching good will in a Protestant church or in a synshyagogue Or that a rabbi would be addressing other faiths We sure have come a long way in a short time-and its going to get better

Preaching Brotherhood The cardinal also observed I

am not trying to convert Protesshytants to Catholics or Jews to Catholics I never made a conshyvert in my life My only messhysage is one of brotherhood

Sturtevant 6shyHook Est 1897

Builders Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New Bedford WY 6-5661

Deny Dispatch About Ca rdinaI

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Sta_ Departm~nt spokesman her categorically denied a recent press story that there are ~

obstacles to Jozsef Cardinal Mindszentys leaving his refuge in the U S legation in Budapest but that the Primate of HungaI7 ~wants to die a prisoner there

The story (which was released by NANA and published in t~

daily press Jan 20) credited its source a State Deparme~ source in Bonn German~

who has taken part in recent U S-Hungarian negotiations

The State Department spokesshyman here described the story bull completely incorrect

We dont have any Americali official in Bonn who has had anything to do with the Hungar-o ian negotiations he said in an swer to inquiries It doesn1 represent anything that an American official would hold

New Orleans Plans New High Schools

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Arch-t bishop John P CodY of New Orleans has announced plansfOS construction of seven new hip schools in several parts of the archdiocese

Declaring that Catholic educashytion never was so flourishin nor were our Catholic people bull desirous of increasing the num bel of schools and improving t~

methods of teaching The Loushyisiana prelate said we must build so that all the children oil our area may have the blessin of a thorough Catholic educashytion

SERVING FINE ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4-8754bull

TIte Falmoufh NatiOnal Sanlc Falmouth Mass

tilt Villale Ir Sian 1121

WM T MANNING (0 WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE

AND

INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES bull GENERAL TIRES bull DELCOBATTERIES

bull PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS

FALL RIVER - NEW BEDFO~D - HYANNIS - NEWPORT

First Federal Savings AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF ATlLEBORO

4 on ali $avings Accouni

1 Extra on Systematic Bonus~vings

bull bull bull bull bull

11 bull

Portugal Bishops Plan University For Country

LISBON (NO) - Portushygals bishops have announcshyed plans to found this nashytions first Catholic Univershysity

They said in a joint pastoral letter issued after their meeting here that there is an imperative need for a Catholic university for the nations conscience They said the university win have greater freedom greater dynamism and greater flexibil shyity than the present state uni versities

The letter said that the govshyernment will help the bishops in founding the new Catholic university

Last Summer Manuel Cardishynal Goncalves Cerejeira of Lisshybon told a meeting studying the foundation of the Catholic Unishyversity that it would be open to both laymen and the clergy and located in Lisbon instead of the older university town of Coimshybra Earlier efforts were made to restore a theological faculty at Coimbra University The facshyultY was closed following the revolution which made Port~gal a republic in1910

Several years agothe cardinal noted that a Church-sponsored university has been a hope of 1Ihe VI has called on individual Cathshy one part of the Mystical Body of many Latill American counshy~oI1uguese bishops for a long olies to become more aware of Christ to another tries and CICOP itself whichtime ~ut that priorities for the world-wide dimensions and seminanes new churche~ pri- needs of the Church mary schools and Catholic Acshytion organization had delayed Today bull bull bull it is absolutely eoncrete plans indispensable that each pers~n

become aware of the true dishymensions of the Church the

Sees Greater Church Pope declared adding Greater awareness will iead to wideningNeed for Laity Role

LAKE CHARLES (NC) - A Louisiana editor predicts the time will come in the 20th censhytury when laymen wi~ domishynate the clergy in many fields

Msgr Alexander O Sigur edshyitor of the Southwest Louisiana Register diocesan newspaper feels in the present age of scishyence and technology Catholic laymen with specialized knowl- edge of law science and other fiElds must of necessity advise the clergy on the many facets of todays society

He pointed out that the layshymens role has made more progshyress since the opening of the Second Vatican Council than in the previous 10 centuries

But because of centuries of tradition there will be problems for some time connected with evolution of the laymans role in the Church he asserted

British Conversions Continue to Decline

LONDON (NC)-The number of converts to Catholicism in England and Wales continues to decline but the Catholic popushylation shows a steady increase according to the 1965 Catholic Directory published here

The known number of adult conversions for 1963 the most recent year for which statistics are available was 12778 This was a decrease of 552 from the previous year which also showed a considerably lower figure than that for 1961

But the Catholic population increased in 1963 by 129500 to 3956500 and the Catholic popshyulation in Scotland rose by 13shy310 to 812460

Foundation Member NEW YORK (NC) - William

G Ryan presidentmiddot of Seton Htn College Greensburg Pa haa been named a corporate member of the FoundationfOr the arts Religion and culture which win hold its fim meetina laue tomonow

THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

HIGH HONOR FOR K of C HEAD Supreme Knight John W McDevitt of the Knights of Columbus invested as a Knigh t Commander of St Gregory at a testimonial banquet in Boston is with left to right AuxiHary Bishop John F Hackett of H~rtford Archbishop Henry J OBrien of Hartford Bishop Charles P GreltfO Qf Ale~andna La Supreme K of C Chaplain and Bishop William J Smith of Pembroke OntarIO NO Photo

Pope Hail~ US Church Mission Work Says Transfe~ of Energies I Most ~onsoling

CHICAGO (NC)-Pope Paul this transfer of energies from unteers who are serving la

of vitality and fuller realization of the meaning of the name Catholic

Nature of Church Pope Paul made his plea in a

message to the second annual conference of the Catholic Inshyter-American Cooperation Proshygram (CICOP)

The Holy Father coupled his appeal for greater awareness of the worldwide nature vf the

Church with high praise for aid rendered in recent years by US Catholics to the Church in Latin America Prellently he said there are 4091 US priests reshyligious and laymen serving there

Greater Understanding I He called us Catholic proshygrams for Latin America a proshyvidential apostolic ~ovement and said they make up one of the most beautiful pages in the history of the Church in the United States

Particularly in light of the Ecumenical Councils constitushytion on the Church he said it iamost consoling to witness

BEFORE YOU BUY-TRY

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault 67 Middle Street Fairhaven

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICE

lJe singled out for praise US seeks by educational means to promote greater understandingdioceses which have sent 178 of Latin Americas problemsdiocesan priests to mission work

in Latin America US religious among the Catholic millions of the United Statescommunities of men and women

which he said are fulfilling the Urllent Demands engagement they have undershy Pope Paul voiced hope that thetaken of sending a tithe of meeting here would producetheir total memership to Latin many practical results parshyAmerica by 1970 US lay vol~ ticularly a wider and more soshy

licitous collaboration of the Refugee Children United States of America with

the Church in Latin AmericaHONG KONG (NC) - Archshy such as urgent needs dem~ndbishop Joseph Caprio apostolic

internuncio to China opened here for refugee children a new $100000 primary school built by Norris H Trippthe Franciscan Missionary Sisshyters of Our Lady of Sorrows SHEET METAL Mother Leola superior of the J TESER Proporder which has its headquarshy RESIDENTIALters in Beaverton Ore attended

INDUSTRIALthe ceremony COMMERCIAL

253 Cedar St New Bedford WY 3-3222 Montie Plumbing amp

Heating Co Inc

Counci~s Effects Years Away

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The universal effects of the Second Vatican Council will not be recshyognized completely for years to come James Francis Cardinal McIntyre told 2200 Holy Name men here in California

It is entirely impossible to estimate at the present time the effects of the council on the thinking of the world the carshydinal said

These effects have penetrated deeply into the spiritual life of all people not only of the Church alone he told a Holy Name Union Communion breakshy

fast One index of its effects is the

attention the council has comshymanded in the press of the world the cardinal said

Names Two Priests To Federal Board

NEW YOItK (NC) - T w bull priests are on the 30-niember board of directors of the new Sex Information and Education Council of the United Stat~

(SIECUS) formed to foster im- proved study and education oa the role of sex

TheYlre Father George Hag- maier CSP of the Paulist In- stitute for Religious Researc~ and Father John L Thomas SJ St Louis (Mo) University soci ologist

The executive director of the council is Dr Mary Steichen Calderone former medical dishyrector of the Planned Parentshyhood Federationand its presishyident is Wallace C Fulton formshyer presidtDt of the National Coundl on Family Relations

Whites Farm Dairy SPECIAL MilK

From Our Own Tested Herd

Acushnet Mass WY 3-4457 bull Special Milk bull Homogenized Vito 0 Milk bull Buttermilk bull Tropicana Orange Juice bull Coffee and Choc Milk bull Eggs - Butter

FIVE CONVENIENT OFFICES- -TOSERVE YOUReg Master Plumber 2930

GEORGE M MONTlE ONE-STOP BANKING Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET FIRSTmiddotMACHImiddotNISTS Fall ~River OS 5-7497 NATIONAL BAN Ilt

OF TAUNTON Norton W MaIn St-Raynham Rte 44-Taunton Main St

North Dighton Spring St-North Easton Main St_ w H RILEY amp SO~J Inc Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

CITIES SERVICE bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnmbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullDISTRIBUTORS

Gasoline i F L COLLINS amp SONS i Fuel and Range INCORPORATED 1937

OILS bull

GENERAL (ONTRAOORS5bullOIL BURNERS

For prompt delivery 5 and ENGINEERS 5amp Day amp Night Service

bull JAMES H COLLINS CE Pres G E BOILER BURNER UNITS bull Registered Civil and Structural Engineer bull

Rural Bottled Gas Se~ Member National Society Professional Engineers

61 COHANNET ST FRANCIS L COLLINS JR Treas = TAUNTON bull THOMAS Ie COLLINS Secy bull

Attteboro - No Attlebor~ middot =ACADEMY BUILDING FALL RIVER MASS Taunto1

-bullbull

bull 12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Humphreymiddot Becker Write Novels of Reminiscence

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Both William Humphreys The Ordways (Knopf

$595) and Stephen Beckers A Covenant with Death (Athshyeneum $450) are novels of reminiscence Both are laid in the Southwest the former in Texas the latter in an unshyidentified state The narrashytor in the Ordway book is for the most part telling what happened to his greatshygrandparents and his grandparshyents in the Civil War period and at the tum of the century In the Becker book the narrator is in his seventies recalling Ii decisive expeshyrience in his oWn life when he was 29 back in 1923 If there are similarities between the works there are also differences and they are very great

Mr Beckers novel is a Book of-the-Month Club middotselection has already been bought by a movie company for a vast sum and unshydoubtedly will be a roaring popshyular success Mr Humphreys novel will probably have far fewer readers and will bring its author far less money But it is by all odds and in every reshyIJPect the better book

Long-Winded It has one fault that of being

long-winded and at times meandering I just wanted to hear the same old things over and over again the narrator -of The Qrdways says at one point It is evidently presumed that the reader has the same desire and that he will not object to lengthy digressions But repetition and extended parenthetical exercises do become tiring even if as in ~is instance the writing is of a high order

1$ The Ordways really a novel in the Strict sense The pook cOritillns a notice reading A portion of Part One in some- what different form first apshypeared in The Saturday Evening Post

It is quite true that the first seetion could stand alone that the second and third sections could form a story by themshyselves and that only the fourth section depends for intelligibility on what has gone before Noneshytheless there is unity here if not the tight construction of the most effective novel

Family Lore Mr Ordway begins by describshy

ing graveyard working days in the hamlet of Mabry near the town of Clarksville in eastern Texas On that day occurring once a year the descendants or suniivors of those burled in the Mabry cemetery come together to set the place to rights

middotAs they do so they rec~ the histories of the dead and thus the family lore is passed on from generation to generation But it is more than family lore which is conveyed the countrys past is reconstructed and the making of the present

The narrator a boy in the 1930s learns of two decisive episodes in his own family One has to do with Thomas and Ella Ordway who were Tennessee people until 1863 Thomas was an infantryman was horribly wounded and disabled in the batshytle of Shiloh and would have died or at least have been lost to his famIly had it not been for his wifes valor The narrative of her recovering him ann bringshying him back to a ~blance of life is harrowing

Journey to Texas But somethinamp more harrowshy

ing is still to come the account of their six months journey in a wagon drawn by oxen from Tennessee to Texas in the hope of beginning a new and better life The reader not only follows this arduous exodus but makes and suffers it and is haunted by it thereafter

This portion of the book is a storY complete in itself dramatshyic pathetic comic packed with lively incidents and colorful characters some heroic some corrupt some rascally all disshytinctive and engaging

Occasionally the side excurshysions pall a bit as in the depicshytion of stump speaking by polit shyical candidates or of life with a small shabby traveling circus Yet each of these sideshows has something to contribute to the pictUre of emerging Texas

Acute Observations

Mr Humphrey writes extremeshyly well a little less fancily as the book progresses but always vivshyidly and with plentymiddot of power for the high moments His peoshyple are nicely differentiated and come memorably to life He has many acute observations and even authentic wisdom to disshypense and this he does neatly His book rings with truth about human nature and is the work of a highly gifted and skillful artist

Mr Beekers A Covenant with Death on the other hand strikes me as contrJved empty and often obnoxiousmiddot Its nub is a legal stickler What is to be dQne with a man who is convicted of m~rger bought +c the gallows there Gki1ls~e hangman and then is cleareu of the first kill shying ~is poser ismiddot put to the 29shy

year~old judge Ben Lewis He solyes Wby niakiIig law and when confronted with this puzshyzler solves as well a key probshylent in his personal life At one and the same time he becomes at last a real judge and a real man

Precise 3udgment

Or so we are asked to believe Lewis says of himself I passed the crisis of adolescence at the ludicrous age of 29 bull bull bull I was swollen with garbage and bittershyness My own ego was monshystrous mainly because I had never done anything for anyone and could justify my own useshylessness only by assuming that the world was not worth my energies This is a precise judgment

The trouble is that the book is swollen with garbage and bitterness as well as sophistry

Young Lewis conversations with his mother for example They irk by their pretentiousness and they disgust with their obscenishyties The youngmiddot judge is thorshyoughly sophomQric and we are asked to credit his sudden leap into maturity We are asked too much

It is with ill grace that the author scorns small town folk for their prurience It is just this to which most of his book apshypeals When he sneers that Soledad City our wholesome middle-class American town would be lined up three deep for good seats at a murder trial with sensational sexual aspects he apparently forgets that the predictably huge sales of his novel will be in large part to people attracted by itligamineaa

3AMES OGARA

PauiSft CElnter Lists Spe(d~er

James OGara editor of Comshyrronweai magazinEl will be guest speaker in the Christian Culture Series at the Paulist Ce-nter in Boston on Wednesday evening Feb 17 on the topic The Role and Future of Cathshyolic Education

Mr OGara has written numshyerous articles for leading Cathshyolic magazines in middotthis country end Europe and has appeared on many religiow television programs of the National Counshycil Of Catholic Men

Rev Andrew Greeley sociolshyogist and author of many books on social subjects will join Mr O-Gara in the discussion

Monsignor Francis 3 Lally editor of the Pilot will be pr0shy

gram moderator

Deplores Agtncies Poverty Appoach

CHICAGO (NC) -- Catholic charity and welfareillgencies and institutions must drop thebusishyness as usual appreach and get into the actual aIl~na of povshyerty a National Conference of Catholic Charities Dleeting here in Illinois was told

The surge of natilmal concern about poverty is one of the most dramatic and compelling moveshyments in our day rather Robshyert Monticello of DEltroit chairshyman of the conferences program committee told assembled social work executives

His views were echoed by Msgr Raymond 3 Gallagher secretary of the comerence who said that personal service to families and individuals among the poor must be a coriunitment each of us makes dailly

CENTIER Paint and Wldlpaper

Dupont PClint

iiP cor Middle St

422 6lcush Ave

~Qc=t~ New Bedford ~ARKING

Rear of Store

ProtEct What You Hav~

McGO~VAN Insurance J~gency

TEL MYrtle ~1middot8231

188 NORTH MAIN $TREET NORTH ATTU8ORO

Beggars for All the Missions

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen DO

rn the mail last week a package arrived containing several hundred printed and self-addressed envelopes from various begshyging organizations in the United States The good woman who sent the package admitted being neither rich nor comfortable and yet she was flooded with appeals She wanted to know how she became a victim of this deluge The answer is that she is on a mailing list There are hundreds of mailing lists for sale in the United States These can be bought for various amounts depending on the number and quality of the names listed The good woman who wrote us was on at least one of these lists

Never before has it been brought home to us with Such impact how swamped our faithful are with appeals It grieves DB

that we too are beggars but we find some consolation in the fact that the Holy Fathers Society for the Propagation of the Faith has never used such mailing lists

This incident highlightsmiddot an urgent need that the Vatican Council must recognize that of co-ordinating appeals for all these really worthwhile causes especially those of misshysionaries Pius XI said that the method by which each missionary group solicited only for itself did not provide an even distribution of help Some can barely survive others have investments in Wall Street How to know who out of the hundreds who beg are most deservng is not only difficult but almost impossible

We have never liked begging In fact there is too much inshysistence on money in the Church tOday We would like to be unshackled from our tin cup and not add to this confusion But this is our duty Why 1 Because the Holy Father has asked us to be his beggars in the United States for -all the missions of tlie world 2 Becanse it is the glory of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith not to helf) one order or society of the world but the entire world (As a matter of fact 88middot per cent of the appeals in the above-mentioned package received soDie aid from The Society for the Propagation of the Faith) 3 Because being under the direction of the Holy Father The Society for the Propagation of the Faith does not invest any of yoUrmiddot alms Every eent Is distributed by the Holy Father each year The world Is too poor So fOldve us

Oh yes the lady who sent us the package wrote I could not keep 240 missionary appeals because I have not the money Since The -Society for the Propagation of the Faith aids all I send the Holy Father my $100 to be divi4ed as he sees fit

GOD LOVE YOU to Anoafor $5 Here Is Diy poeen valeiI- Une for the poor bullbullbull toMLA for $78 This is whist l diel Ilot spend on eigarettes Somehow I cannot enjoy them auYmore knowing that today 10000 people riD die of ~rntionmiddot

-

Think ahead to Valentines day and order a GOD LOVE YOU medal In classic Florentine gold finish or pure sterling silver this lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of the World is one you would be proud to give or delighted to receive Designed by the world-renouned jeweler Harry Winston and blessed by Bishop Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal may be obtained by sending your request and corresponding offering to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001

$ 2 small sterling silyershy $ 3 small 10k gold filled $ 5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut 01lt ft1Is colUIDn pin your sacrifice to it and maD It te Most Rev Fulton 3 Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York New York 10001 or to your Diocesan Director

Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 368 North Main Street

Fall River Massachusetts

791 PurcIaase Street Betweea

WIUIam bull UnI_ S_

NEW BEDFORD

FIVE CENTS SAVINGS BANK

WE HAVE PLENTY OF MONEY FOR HOME LOANS

If youre buying or building -Ioolc to us CONVENTIONAL GI - FH~ FINANCING

Ca on us anytime aDd talk over your plans

Fathers andmiddot Daughters Will Twirl At Annual Sucordium-Sponsored Hop at SHA Fan River

Dads and daughters win twirl at the annual fathep daughter dance at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River Its scheduled fltgtr 8 tomorrow night in the academy gymshynatorium and is sponsored by the moms and dads and daughters-members of the

SHA Fall River and her team very active Sucordium Club marked its first league debateHomemaker of the year at this season by defeating Case

Holy Family High in New Dartmouth Taunton and PreshyBedford as a result of the annushy vost al Homemaker of Tomorrow test Coyle High was host for a taken by thousands of girls novice tournament of two rounds across the nation is Christian with nine schools competing last Saulnier Shes National Honor weekend and the varsity team Society treasurer and copy edshy last week won three of four iJtor of By Fy Spy the school matches over Bishop Stang paper Bishop Stang was host to Narshy

At Dominican Academy in Fan ragansett League debate last River the top homemaker is week with 12 schools representshyJulia Melvin Senior A president ed each by four man teams Repshysodality vice-prefect and student resenting Stang were John council vice-president Another Golenski Michael Hogan Thomshyfeather in Julias cap is that as Keary and Myles Tillotson shes to represent her school at At the same meeting Bishop the state capitol on Student Feehan was represented by Government Day Francis Detellis Kateri Detellis

Christine Julia and an other Roger Watts and Raymond StafshyDiocesan school winners in the ford They won one debate out homemaker contest are now eli shy of four gible for consideration as state Current Affairs Contest winners Themiddot states highestshy Many Diocesan schools partici shyranking girl will receive a $1500 pated in a current affairs conshyscholarship and will tour Washshy test sponsored by a weekly news ington and New York City this magazine and among top scorers Spring From the state finalists were Janet Gendreau Moniquewill be chosen national winners Boulay and Muriel Raiche at in the homemaking contest and Jesus-Mary and Paula Powersthese girls will have their scholshy Susan Penrose and Mary Kellyarship grants substantially illshy at SIlA Fall River creased Also in the spotlight is 1anice

Benoit of SHA Fall River whosGrac1aatlOIl GOWIl8

received honorable mention for rrs snowy outside but thoughts the Bishop Connolly award preshy

of the seniors at Mt St Mary sented annually to the DioceseAcademy in Fall River are Oft outstanding girl athletethe days of June Theyre curshy Yearbook pictures for Coylerently selecting g r a d u at i 0 Il juniors sophomores and freshshygowns and are making a critical men have been safely taken so survey of ofterings from several another milestone is passed OIl area stores the road to publication

And National Bonot- Society Dominican Academy juniopsmembers have been busy at Sashy and seniors will make a closedcred Hearts Fall River Theyve retreat at the Cenacle Conventwritten to all accredited colleges ill Brighton during their Februshyin the US requesting inforshy ary vacation while the annualmation on admission requireshy school retreat is in progressments and availability of finanshy hOW at Bishop Stangcial aid The gathered informashy The program includes dallytion will augment the guidanee Mass Benediction and confershyfile in the school library ences and retreat masters are

Sevenmiddot new clubs have beeR Rev John OBrien SSCCmiddot andorganized at Tauntons Coyle Rev Andrew Jahn SSCCHigh School They are French An unusual auction was a feashySpanish Stamp and Coin Pep ture of a dance sponsored lastEnglish Literature Chess and weekend by Feehan seniors forPhotography Something theremiddot all their fellow students Eachfor everyone faculty member donated a prize

Four Dominican Academy stushy for the auction including suchdents have passed 120 word tests valuable items as a pass excusingin Gregg shorthand and two a student from detention pershyhave passed 100 word tests On mission to omit a book from anthe bowling scene at DA high outside reading list and a driy scorers include Susan Pacheco ing passAnne Marie FoIster Colleen Auctionmiddot proceeds benefited bullDesrosiers and Patricia Od) shy performance of Leave It tonecky Jane to be produced by the

The junior prom at Bishop Feehan Dramatics Club SundayFeehan High in Attleboro has and Monday Feb 14 and 15been set for Tuesday night April Jeannine Dumont senior class20 In charge ofmiddot arrangements secretary and middotlssistant editor of are Robert Bedard and Carol the school paper at Holy FamilyMiller while committees are al shy High has been accepted at Bosshyready at work on decorations ton College as have classmates e n t e r t a i n men t refreshshy Maureen OBrien Christine Ponshyments tickets and that unher ichtera and John AylwardaIded but all-important chore of Mother McAuley Guild at Mtclean-up St Mary Academy will hold its

annual calendar party WednesshyDebaiioi- Prcmt day night Feb 10 EntertainshyIn the indoor days of Winter ment will reprelC~t each monthdebating holds an honored spot of the year and the decoratedamong extra-curricular activishycakes willbe ~oor prizesties at Diocesan schools At Preshy Class -laeement vost in Fall River the debate

THE ANCHOR-- 13 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Churchmen Favor Johnson School Aid Program

WASHINGTON (NC) shyCatholic and Protestant spokesmen applauded Presishydent Johnsons school aid proposal in a placid Congresshysional bearing where the on~ disagreement came over mi~

technical questions The release from the charged

atmosphere of past hearings w noted all around

A Catholic spokesman smilin~

ly commented that it was a relief not to fear getting out of the

Vour nearescmall box i$ Q Firsf Ilfderal branch office that open 24 hours $ day to make $(lving easy for you No traffic nO parking no leather problem~

Withdrawals ate just as implt taY~ngs paymencS

bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull r fRlE o~middottymiddotmiddot ~ ubullbullh coupon 7bullbull~ trti 0middot

team was victorious over Mt St Marys and Bishop Stang in Narshyragansett League debate but lost to SHA Fall River The varisity also met Coyle during the past week

Mt st Marys debate record stands at 2-2 with Anne Browshynell Linda Mello Susan Jenkinshyson and Nancy Curran defending their school in Narragansett

Tomorrows the day of reckonshying at SHA Fall River Not only will report cards be distributed but a list of all seniorsand their placement in middottheir class for the past four years will be published

Fifteen seniors It DA partici shypated in a French Listening Comprehension Test on Tuesday This supplementary test is ofshyfered by the eollege entrance

PREVOST SCHOLARS High scorers in National Merit Scholarship Examinations at Prevost High School Fall River are Gerard Gltgtu~et left and Paul Nowak

tests in addition to the French Written exams come in March

Also at Feehan where report cards will come tomorrow high honors will be achieved by those with an average of 90 or better honors by those earning 85 or better and honorable mention by those with grades of 80 01 better

Bishop Stang mathematiciana placed first ill the Notre Dame Math Meet held last week at Cardinal Cushing High in South Boston Eighteen schools com~

peted and Stang won by n points Responsible for the vieshytory were John Keavy Paul Roy John De Ciccio Raymond Desrosiers and Alan Roskiewiez Top individual scorer was John DeCiccio

Best Girl Athlete Senior Nancy Vogel of Bishop Stang High School received the Bishop Connolly Award for the best girl athlete of Fall River area Diocesan high schools at a ceremony held last night at Whites restaurant Nancy as shining a star schoshylastically as athletically plays hockey basketball and volley~ ball at the North Dartmouth school She will be the first reshycipient of what is to become an

Influence Declining MADRID (NC)-Castroist inshy

fluence among young people in Latin Ameriea has declined the past two years Luis Garcia Arishyas professor of international law at the University of Saragossa here in Spain said on his return from a tour of Latin America Thursday Feb 1amp

SCHOOL Mainte~ance suppr~

SWEEPERS SOAPS DISINFECTANTS

FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

DAHILL CO 1886 PURCHASE STREET

annual award made by the FaD River Clover Club Also honored at last nights dinner-dance WBI Coach Carlin Lynch of 11M Stang Spartans

Forty Hours devotion was celshyebrated for the first time at Bishop Feehan high scbool starting Sunday and ending Tuesday Seniors Eileen Pashyquette Mary Duffy Nancy Clegg and Susall Ouelle~te aided Sister Mary Kateri of Feehan home economics department III making a cope and humeral veil used for the first time at the ceremonies

And Feehanites celebrated terms end by viewing A Raisin in the Sun

bullbullbullbullbullbull

hearing room alive The major Protestant spokesmen described the bill as an instrument of recshyonciliation Con g res smiddotm e a praised the compromises they saw being made by all sid~

church groups and educators -The President has proposed bull

$12 billion program to improve elementary and secondary schooling from poverty-strickea families

A total of $1 billion wouldge to public school districts in lowshyincome areas Additionally the proposal would spend $100 milshylion for textbooks for all school children and school libraries and another $100 million to create bull system of public-priva~commushynity educational centers to offer cultural enrichment and specitl eourses to all school ehildren

Pittsburgh School Enroll~ent Down

PITSBURGH (NC) - Enroll shyment in the Pittsburgh diocellMl Catholic school system has dro~ ped by 40 pupils Msgr John B McDowell superintendent ball reported

The monsignor said the sliglll drop has been preceded by fo_ years of leveling oft in enrol) ment figures because of enforeet gradual cuts in class size

Since 1960 he said there _ been an increase of only 24 pushypils in the total number of stushydents Elementary and seconda schools last June tallied 129531 pupils a drop of 40 he said

bullbullbullFREEKI _forbullbull~to bull ~-~----- shy _ StampMo _ middot----1

City_middot bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbulliibullbullbullbullbullbullbull WE pAY POSTAGa

(tree po5t-pald~Clddd i-velop ady to mall

FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND lOAN ASSOCIATION

OF FALL RIVER Home OHice 1 North Main St Fall River

Somerset OHice 149 GAR Highway Rte 6 League bouts The team meets exam board and consists of Both Offices Open Friday Evenings until INEW BEDFORDBishop Cassidy of TauntOn Wedshy questions and answers concernshy Sonterset Drive-In Window Open Mon-Thurs til 4 nesday Feb 10 ing subject matter on tape At WY 3-3786 Susan Nunes heads debate 111amp Feeha aiYdentll 1ook Germaa

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Stresses ilroad beep Gulf Between Two Generafions

By John J Kane Ph D What is your opinion of secretive sons and daughters

()f today Our married son and daughter never tell us anyshything Friends and strangers knew they bought a new home before we did My daughters husband knows all the ansshywers and wants no advice from anyone My son is afraid of his wife and she makes all decisions They ask us to visit but hurt our feelshyings when we do by what they say We were raised to reshyspect our elders and ask their advice

You r letter Jean does pose some justifiable complaints But it also seems to make some unshyreasonable deshy

mands Furthershymore amusingshy1y enough you conclude that you were reared to respect your elders and intimate your chil shydren werent If so whom can you blame

I dont know the reason why your children failed to inform you of their intentions to purshyehase a home But I do have some suspicions Do you have a tendency to be critical about what they buy Sometimes parshyents do

Tremendous Inflation Y-oungsters and parents both

make a certain type of mistake when it comes to purchasing of such things as homes cars or expensive appliances So m e young marrieds try to begin at a level their parents only achieved after 10 or 15 years of married life

But some parents do not seem to realize that inflation has been tremendous in the last 20 years When they hear a son or daughshyter is about to buy it home for 20 or 25 thousand dollars they are horrified They remember they paid perhaps 6 8 or 10

thousand dollars when they bought

They also forget credit is a bit easier than in the past that F BA and even the GI Bill help young people today and they may not even have existed when they were shopping for a house Longer te~ mortgages are possible today and lower down payments These of course do mean more interest

Coinmon CourteSY In other words parents should

Dot use the yardstick of economshyic conditions when they were young for the youth of today When they state perhaps with heated emphasis Why your father and I paid 10 thousand for a home the children are understandably irritated

But once having made their decisions com m 0 n courtesy would seem to demand tpat parshyents be told before strangers or at least as soon as friends Your sense -of hurt feelings here is quite understandable

Your complaint that your sons wife makes all the decisions may be true If so I agree that you have reared a Milquetoast But

is it true Are you actually cershytain or are you imagining someshything Are you really sayingshyand I frankly fear youare-that your son listens to his wife more than he listens to you

Mother-in-Law Role Being a mother-in-law is not

an easy role in Anierican soClshyety and many of the stupid

at least not if you wish to be a successful parent

Because most parents do love their children they are eager to help them They feel that their years of experience give them an advantage and this advantage they would extend to their chil shydren

At times this is true At times it is not The gulf between genshyerations is broad and deep Life has changed greatly in the space of one generation and the bench marks of the past may be unshysuitable today There are certain areas of living in which children may have better ideas than their parents Be prepared to admit as much

But within those areas where the maturity and experience of parents can be helpful advice can be given when not reshyquested only indirectly and cautiously Young marrieds misshyconstrue it as an effort to domshyinate which they reject Pershyhaps you can recall when you too felt this way

But it is indeed sad if they hurt your feelings when you do visit them You have not enshylarged on this so it is impossible to determine just what is said or done that annoys you Assuming you are making a correct judgshyment it is at the very least a breach of hospitality

Many of the inter-generational and in-laws problems of today are the result of social changes As one grows older it is less and less easy to change to adopt ways of doing and thinkshying After all if one succeeded under one system there is little motivation to alter it

Life Easier But conditions have changed

and to paraphrase a commercial this is the Pepsi generationbull Today boys and girls get married even wher the boy is unemshyployed This is scarcely advisable but somemake it Boys marry while still in college and their wives work to help put them through This would have been unthinkable 40 years ago

One of the really amazing changes is the use of long term credit The proud boast of years ago was that one didnt owe any money If you said this today youngsters would view you with open amazement and quietly conclude your credit was no good

No doubt some of this is overshydone and can bring about tragic results But if used intelligently it can make life somewhat easier perhaps more pleasant than in the past

These are only a few of the changes that could be listed a complete litany of them would be impossible Now this doesnt mean that parents are old fogeys that their counsel is useshyless It does mean that they must try tomiddot understand their married children better than some do

And incidentally because of these sweeping changes it is more difficult than it was But it isnt impossible an4 when donepays off in much better relationships

Anti-Smut Effort NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Loushy

isiana Knights of Columbus have jokes ]lake it even more diffi- launched a public information cult But parents after having campaign to combat what one reared their children to the best official t e r m e d indifference of their ability must let them go stemming from lack of knowlshyon their own You cannot keep edge about the growing traffic them tied to your apron strings in obscene literature

PRINCE OF THE CHURCH Americas new cardin~l recelyes congratulations from an old friend as Archbishop Patrlck A OBoyle of Washington felicitatesmiddot Lawrence Cardmal Shehan Archbishop of Baltimore on his elevation to the College of Cardinals by Pope Paul vi NC Photo

~Glassand Wire Tiny Foulr-Bell Chime in Bay State Church

Producing Soundof Big Heavy Metal WALTHAM (N C) - The string-shaped length of glass

church-bell of the future may which may be up to a foot i~ bE a ht~le thing of glass and length and a tiny hammer to Wire weighm~ about two grams produce the proper vibrations but reproducmg the sound of These vibrations are converted cast-metal constructions weigh- into an electronic signal which ing more than a ton ~asses through an amplifier is

j Pope Emphasizes Import of Hymns

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul in an audience for more han 1000 priests participating in a convention on pastoral lit shyurgy emphasized the key role of hymn-singing in the liturgy

We are not in a hurry he said

We must raise up a new peoshyple who learn to pray as the Church now prescribes

One of the prescriptions which I believe to be most influshyential and most necessary is singing

The Pope said that hymns inshycluding popular ones lift the soul and nourish it with religious sentiments

Illinois School Joins Expanding ETV Plan

MORTON (NC)-A parochial school here in Dlinois has served as pilot school in a historic edushyeational television experiment

Blessed Sacrament School reshyceived the first experimental transmission of v ide 0 tap e d courses in color from a high freshyquency monidirectional terminal

A 120-foot tower atop the school received signals from a tower on the Bradley University campus 10 miles away Bradley Coordinator Philip Weinburg said he expects an ETV program to be operational in the 1965-66 school year

The Catholic school tower will remain as a permanent inshystallation to serve both as an ETV booster station with a 15shymile radius and a receiver for educational programs in the school next Fall

Changes in Mass EDINBURGH (NC) - Scots

Catholics are busily preparing for the introduction of English and Gaelic into the Mass on March 1 the first Sunday in Lent

bull HYANNIS bull HARWICH PORT bull ~olri YAAMOUTH

--- shy

funeral Service

DoANmiddotSpoundALmiddotAMtS INCOIlPOItATtiD

Glassblower Gerhard B Finkshybeiner of Brandeis University here in Mass lpoundlas installed for the first time in the United States a set of the tiny bells in St Susanna church in Dedham named for the t~tula church in ~ome of ~ostOIl s Richardmiddot Carshydinal Cushmg

Finkbeiner whose small glass bells already al~e making kingshysiZed sounds in 10 churches in Germany and ]~rance has proshyduced a four-bell chime for the Dedham church encased in a metal cabinet only two feet long and weighing a mere 40 pounds In cast metal equivalent sotmdshyproducers would occupy a goodshysized belfry and weigh aboUt 10000 pounds Finbeiner envishysions his discovery as destined for churches which cannot afford regular bells

The new-style bells look like nothing so much as the fa~iliar vacuum tubes found in any nonshytransistor radio but they proshyduce a never-changing high quality sound which is fully comparable to the metallic clang

of the old-fashioned bell shy

Inside each vacuum tube in Finkbeiners system there is a

MON~~GHAN

ACCEF-TANCE CQIRP

JHOMAS F MONAGHAN JR

Trecisurer

142 SECOND STREET

OSborne 5-7856

FALL RIVER

Increased 100000 times and comes out through a ~pecial speaker whose sound most exshyperts cannot tell from a metallic ben

The sound of a heavy metallic bell is one of the most complex of all musical sounds according to Finbeiner but he has been able to dUJlicat~ it through parshyallel ~Udi~ in glassblowing electronics and ~acuum techshyniques

BARDAHL MAKES YOUR

CAR RUN BEnER tAt New Car Dealers and Service Stations

Everywhere -I

With Safety at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK

115 WILLIAM sr NEW BEDFORD MASS

WEBB OIL (OMPANY TEXACO FUEL ()IL$

DOMESTIC amp HFAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS

Sales~SetYce-lnstaDtjon MAINO~FICE~JO ~RFEEmiddot sTREETmiddotfAll ~IVER

Phone OS 5-7484

11

1S --

Views of New Ho~Y TrinitYmiddotmiddot-C-h-~-rc-h-I-W-e-s-t-~-I-a-li-i-ac-h-middotmiddotmiddotI

-

I I

16 THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

Says Pope John Left Cha lIenge To Catholicsmiddot

NORTH PALM BEACH (NC) - Pope John XXIII left Catholics with a chalshylenge to meet the world Bishop Coleman F Carroll of Miami said here

Bishop Carroll said Pope John dared Catholics to meet other Christians and non-Christians and to discuss our common problems and seek by discussion a solution to these problems

This challenge cannot be met by the pope alone or by the bishops and priests alone he said It must be met by all inshycluding-indeed especially-the laymen

-He said laymen must be propshy

erly prepared for this task through study training and spirshyitual preparation In this conshynection he called a closed spirshyitual retreat an absolute must for the lay person

Bishop Carroll spoke to memshybers of the Our Lady of Florida Retreat League at a dinner in his honor at the Passionist Retreat House here

PrelWtes Sc~~dlJ(e

US~ ~f VeCrulall ROME (NC)-The Italian lanshy

guage will be used in Mass throughout I t a I y beginning March 7 the first Sunday of Lent

The Italian Bishops Commitshytee on the Liturgy in announcshying the change specified that the Italian language would be used in Masses on Sundays and holy days and at all Masses attended by a substantial number of the faithful

The parts of the Mass to be said in Italian are the following the Epistle Gospel acclamations salutations and dialogues (inshycluding the prayers at the foot of the altar and the dialogue preshyceding the Preface) the Kyrie Gloria Creed Sanctus-Benedicshytus and Agnus Dei themiddot Patermiddot Noster with its introduction and the formula for the Communion

Peloquin Chorale Televises Hymns

NEW YORK (NC)-Hymns -Yesterday and Today featurshyipg C Alexander Peloquin and members of his popular Peloquin Chorale will be telecast Feb 14 from 1 to 130 PM EST over the ABC-TV network

The latest program in the seshyries Directions 65 - a Catholic Perspective produced by the National Council of Catholic Men and the ABC public affairs department was written by Peloquin and traces the develshyopment of hymnody from the Te Deum of the 4th century to the works of contemporary composers

Stresses Doctrines Substance Remains

DAVENPORT (NC) -Bishop Ralph L Hayes of Davenport adshymonished an interfaith meeting here in Iowa against expecting changes in Catholic doctrine

The (Second Vatican) Counshycil may change the manner of presentation of doctrines but not their substance he said pointing to the liturgy as an exshyample of such a change

We must admit bigotry and misunderstanding on both sides But followers of Christ have Scripture devotion to the Holy Spirit and devotion to Christ in common Why not talk about the things on which we agree he asked

Sisters of Mercy General Asks Personal ST LOUIS (NC)-Weve got

to develop the Sister in depth Thats what the times call for said the mother general of the 7300 American nuns of the Sisshyters of Mercy of the Union

Mother Mary Regina Cunningshyham ending her first six-year term as the head of the widely known teaching social work and hospital nuns was talking about what the Sisters of Mercy are doing to bring themselves fully up to the times

In St Louis Mo to meet with the superiors of the nine Mercy provinces Mother Regina talked about the main vehicle she and her colleagues hope will achieve the transformation

This is the year in the commu- nity for chapter meetings and general meetings of the nuns in

each of the provinces climaxed by a meeting of the general chapter at the orders mothershyhoupse in Bethesda Md she said

Changing Church Results will be ~olnown in Aushy

gust and Mother Regina hopes that they will show her commushynity to be in line with the mind of a rapidly changing Church in the midst of an even faster movshying world

She predicted tlat the chapshyters would have some surprises not only in the deisions but in the way they are organized to give a more representative view of all the Sisters in the order

If one overall phrase had to sum up what Mother Regina and the other planners are looking for in the Mere chapters it

would be personal responsibil shyity she said

A Sister has to have the reshysponsibility to make judgments for herself said the mother general Her superiors have to give her the responsibility to achieve her own role She has to make the decision to take the risks

~And then of course be ready to pay the price for her decishysion said Mother Regina

In Updated Sense Weve gone beyond the day

Papal Count BALTIMORE (NC) - Thomas

W Pangborn a Hagerstown (Md) industrialist and philanshythropist has been named a papal count by Pope Paul

Responsibility of always being safe Some peoshyple want to be sure to have the answer before they move But sometimes that meant they never moved at all she observed

Developing a Sister in depth will mean a lot of things espeshycially an updated sense of her apostolate and the way she works at it For the Mercy nuns in the U S Central and Latin America and in the West Indies it will mean a lot of littie things Mother Regina hinted

Changes might relax regulashytions about home visits dining with others attending night meetings and cultural affairs or traveling with companions

Mother Regina said that we have to plan for more contact with the laity and for more edushycation to understand each other shy

a

lYonderful Meatsbullbullbull Anoth~r Big Reasll Why zltI ~III I bull STAYING ~c~ Z ~

with FIRST NATIONAL it

l~middotmiddotsowll ItmiddotI

IIIIr-All vlu

FACE RUMIP Fine Grained Texture shy

Heavy Steer Beef for Hearty Eating LB

The Perfect Roast for large Families

ROASTL854CAITCHBONE Same [ow Self-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vidnily rNe Reserve Iie Right to Limit Quantitietl

-

I The Parish Parade I SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO bull

Holy Name Society members will receive corporate Communshyion at 7 oclock Mass Sunday morning Feb 14 The unit plans a Valentine dance and supper from 7 to 12 Saturday night Feb 13 in the Elks auditorium on Church Street SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs John DeBettenshycourt president Mrs Arnold Muckerheid vice-president Mrs Nelson J DeBettencourt Jr treasurer Mrs Charles Davis secretary

For the Holy Name SOGiety James Ferreira is president supshyported by Freeman Willoughby vice-president Alfred Metell treasurer Anthony Rebello secshyretary The units next meeting will be Sunday Feb 14 at the parish hall OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a Masquerade Ball Friday night Feb 26 at Wimpys resshytaurantr Osterville Mrs James E Murphy is chairman ST JOSEPH ATTLEBORO

The CYO will sponsor a dance Saturday night Feb 20 with enshytertainment by Mickey Chagnon and the Rivieras Chairmen for the unit include Carolee Desshyrochers membership Judy Roy spiritual Claudette Ouimet culshytural Sue Reynolds publicity Claire Piette social Don Fisher recreational BLESSED SACRAMENT FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will present a fashion fair at an open meeting to be held Wedshynesday Feb 17 in the church basement Planned for April are a rummage sale and a whist party ST JEAN BAPTISTE FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women announces a ham and basket whist party for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 in the lower church hall In charge will be Mrs Napoleon Picard and Mrs Eugene Gagnon aided by a large committee ST STANISLAUS FALL RIVER

Civics Club members of the parochial school will deliver pastry to nursing home patients for Valentines Day Other projshyects include collecting Christmas cards for missionaries and shovshyelling snow to augment the club treasury OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION OSTERVILLE

Mr and Mrs William Dacey will be co-chairmen of a preshyLenten dance to be held Friday night Feb 19 at Wimpys restaushyrant in Osterville under sponsorshyship of the Womens Guild The program will include a buffef and dancing from 9 to to ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

Mrs Lionel J Dulude presishydent of the Sacred Hearts Assoshyciation requests all ladies of the unit who have First Friday Adoration to check their asshysigned times in order that the full quota will be present at all hours

Corporate Communion for members will be held on Sunday at the 815 Mass and the regushylar meeting will be held the same evening at 730 in the Church Hall

The Penny Sale scheduled for Feb 20 will be discussed atthis meeting ST JOSEPH FALLRIVER

The annual mid-Winter Gala is set for Saturday night at Venus de Milo restaurant A buffet supper from 630 to 830 will be followed by dancing a parish reunion and awarding of prizes

ST JOAN OF ARC ORLEANS

Forthcoming events for the Womens Guild include penny sales this month April and next November socials in March and June and Summer fairs in July and August A ham and bean supper is ~cheduled for May ST JAMES NEW BEDFORD

middotMsgr Noon Circle plans a potluck supper for members and their guests Saturday night Feb 20 OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION NEW BEDFORD

Holy Name Society officers inshyclude Severo G Alfama presishydent James P Gonsalves and John Monteiro vice-president Antonio Rocha treasurer John Soares secretary ST GEORGE WESTPORT

Womens Guild members will form the congregation at the TV Mass to be broadcast on channel 6 at 10 Sunday morning Feb 7 Participants will meet at the parish school hall at 9 to travel to New Bedford ST JOHN BAPTIST NEW BEDFORD

Parishioners will hold their annual filhoz supper and penny sale at 530 Sunday evening Feb 21 in the cllurch hall Tickshyets are available from officers of church organizations or at the rectory In charge are Gilbert Brazil and George Ladino ST PIUS X SOUTH YARMOUTH

The WQmens Guild will hold a past presidents dinner Monshyday night March 1 at Armands restaurant_ Hyannis NOTRE DAME FALL RIVER

Cubs and Boy Scouts will at shytend a Communion breakfast Sunday Feb 7 following 815 Mass A blue and gold banquet for the Cubs is set for Sunday Feb 28 in the parish hall with Roger Labonte in charge of arshyrangements

The Council of Catholic Women will hold its installation banquet Monday Feb 22 at Whites resshytaurant under the chairmanship of Mrs Paul Ilmais To be seated are Miss Helena Dumont president Mrs Cecile Barnabe frst vice-president Mrs Gershyard DextTaze second vice-presishydent Mrs Richard Perry treasshyurer Mrs Romeo Parent reshycording secretary Mrs Roger Langlois corresponding secreshytary

The third in a series of cake sales will follow all Masses this Sunday in the lower church Mrs Ferdnand Letendre chairman will be aided by Mrs Robert Phenixco-chairman Cakes can be brought to the lower church from 4 to 5 and 630 to s Saturshyday afternoon and evening SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a potluck supper for members at 630 Tuesday night Feb 16 in the parish hall A silent auction will follow the slipper In charge of arrangeshyments is Mrs Mary Pereira chairman aided by Mrs Mary Gagne The council announces a malassada supper and penny sale open to the public from 530 to 7 Sunday night Feb 21 also in the hall Tickets will be available at the door and chairshymen are Mrs Mary Cabeceiras and Mrs Albina Quintill

A regular meeting is set for 730 Friday night Feb 12 in the hall Installation of officers is planned for later in the month ST MATIDEU FALL RIVER 4

A Valentine whist is planned by the Council of Catholic Womshyen for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 at the parish hall Mrs Raymond Antaya is chairman

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan RIver-Thurs Feb 1l96I rr

GIVE VIEWS ON AID Presenting views on federal aid to education to the House Education sub-committee was this panel representing the Catholic school system left to right Msgr William E McManus Chicago superintendent of the largest Ctholic school system in the country Mr Edward McArdle Washington DC who focussed on the parents view of the childs needs as the father of seven children Msgr Freclerck G Hochwalt Director Education Department NCWC and Msgr John B McDowell sushyperintendent of the Pittsburgh diocesan school system NC Photo

bullSays Church Must Live In Wide World~ Cardinal Hits Ignorance of Our Neighbor

CHICAGO (NC)-An Amerishycan prelate prominent in the Churchs work for Latin Amershyica has told US Catholics there is no excuse for our ignorance of our neighbors the nations of Central and South America

Archbishop Paul L Hallinan of Atlanta chairman of the subshycommittee for inter-American cooperation of the US Bishops Committee for Latin America in a message to the second annual conference of the Catholic IntershyAmerican Cooperation Program SClid the Church today lives in a new world but it must preshypare to live in a wide world

Miles Are Nothing Catholics in tpe United States

with a strong cultural and comshymercial bridge to Europe find Africa a puzzle and Asia an Orshyiental mystery Strangest of all is our ignorance of our own neighbors the nations of Central

E~ual Treatment JERSEY CITY (NC)-Hudson

County parishes here in New Jersey are joining in a countyshywide interfaith appeal seeking pledges of fair housing practices

~T FRANCIS XAVIER IIYANNIS

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a penny sale at 8 Tuesday right Feb 9 in the parish hall A Communion breakfast and fashion show are on the units Spring schedule

ST JOHN BAPTIST CENTRAL VILLAGE

A housewares demonstraticm will follow an open meeting scheduled by the Womens Guild for 8 Thursday night Feb 11 in the church hall In charge of refreshments will be Mrs Matil shyda Shelter Miss Margaret Shay and Miss May Taggart The unit plans a Valentine whist for 3 Saturday night Feb 13 also in the church hall on Main Road Miss Edith Kirby and Mrs Louise Vieira are chairmen ST JOHN POCASSET

The Womens Guild announces a penny sale for Friday Feb 12 Mrs Sprague Spooner will be chairman The units next meetshying will feature slides and a talk by Col Eugene S Clark on the early history of Marthas Vineshyyard It will be held Tuesd~

Feb 16

and South America he deshyclared

The ~rchbishop said 60 years ago there was an excuse-travel communications and cultural knowledge were in their inshylancy But now miles are nothshying since Pope John XXIII brought his message of unity to the world he averred adding

Real Import The CICOP meeting brings

bishops priests and laymen of both hemispheres together for a remarkable in-service training period a healthy learn while you work program We know much of Latin American needs both religious economic and culshytural We are helping in our way to repair these shortcomings But we need even more to share

in this Christian fraternity fIIf background common resources and future hopes Only by free easy association with the repshyresentatives of Latin America can we get the real import

ELECTRICAL Contractors~

~ ~ ~ ~

944 County St ~ New Bedford

ecec~c~ccccee~o

C) LOUlUl~S iiffii~ ~ i middotbull EWrIMA ~- shyg l~

ROMEamp I~-

I SHmNES imiddot ~ OF EUROPE iiI bull ampHOLY LAND ~) C~ 1 bull CATBOLIC PROGRAJ 1965 ~)

ALI~~16 ~I CachoIlcTeI Orrlce ~) c~ WASHINGTON CHICAGOIOMI LONDONI CATHOLtC TRAVEL OFFICE FRM ~------------II -~ Dupont Circle Building WashIngton D C 20036 fali ~ ~ j1ii Please send me your free Illustrated booklet describing in ~ iJl detail the wOrldmiddotcovering pilgrimages

C~ Name iI ~IJ Address ~ C_~ CityIloneState 11 =~~~~~_~_~~_~_ft~ftVw ijrv _ii~middotV

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Teen-agers Outstanding For Prodigal Generosity

By Rev Joseph T McGloin S J Several times in this column Ive had some glowing

words to say about our Mexican neighbors to the south about their friendliness and hospitality- and general likeshyableness And certainly its all true These people busy as they are will go out of their of other peoples is that you canway give you their precious easily give the idea you are sell shytime and attention to see ing all your own countrymen that you enjoy your visit to short And this would be the their country When a Mexican furthest thing from my own says Mi casa es su casa My thoughts house is your Because there is great friendli shyhouse - which ness in our country too - in he invariably varying degrees and manifested

middot does-he means in various ways The Mexican is it F r i end s in general more spontaneous strangers even than we and most of us have to shopkeepshy be approached before we give ers youve never our friendship since an initial II e e n before shyness seems to hold us back will introduce Often enough however this

middotyou to the whole shyness is caused by a national family and inshy superiority complex by a fear vite you to hav~ of not being accepted and by

middotdinner wit h the fear of making fools of ourshymiddot them To put it mildly hospital shy selves in a language we dont ity like this would be impossible know In other words humility to forget or to overlook is an esseatial to friendliness and _ Sometimes you wonder as you hospitality Sometimes we have walk the downtown- streets of it Often we dont CHle of our own cities and as you Hospitable People see pe~ple going their own inshy We Americans are sometimessulated ways if it isnt true that afraid to show our real feelingsas a country we have only a -afraid to show for inst~nce

-head while Mexico has a head our sympathy forthe underdogand a heart We usually make up for t~is

Superiority Complex psychologically by cheering on - This feeling grows on - you the hiss favored side at spe~tator when you visit Mexico and have sports when we should be doingthe misfortunE to encounter the it in the causes of racial justiceAmerican tourist who is bent on and equality of opportunity inshyacting like one It is a crying stead shame that so many Americans We are afraid others usuallyhave to show a superiority com- those very loud others will look

middotplex to those they encounter in down on us if we give public middot other countries seeming to feel support to those who need our that no matter where they go it support the little -people the is not they who are the foreignshy least of Christs and our brethshyers but those they encounter ren

All too often these types seem The fact is though that we to despise the customs and lanshy Americans do have a- heart and guage and even the currency of that once we put aside our sillythe countries they visit apparshy ideas that we are too busy to be ently thinking that anyone can hospitable or that others will understand English if you only look on us as soft and foolish if speak louder and that real we are or that we must not goAmerican money will buy anyshy out of way forour foreign~rs thing even respect because we might make a misshy

Worst of all are those wbo take in speaking their languagebring their aura of racial supeshy -then we can be and are just as riority along with them and hospitable and friendly as anymake little effort to hide it It is peoplein the world undoubtedly true that some of Ideals of Youththis patronizing attitude is partly There are many Americansresponsible (along with Castro~ and fortunately there are gettingeternal vigilance for American to be more who are willing tomistakes and seeming mistakes) stand up publicly and be countedfor the affection with which on the side of right instead ofAmericans are held in some parts - merely clucking in quiet privateof Latin America such as in sympathy There are lots ofPanama Americans who are not jqst

Race Prejudice friendly and hospitable to forshyAnd its tragic that have eigners but who do heroic workwe

to expoFt the most shameful of with the poor and downtrodden our national sins the stupidity and handicapped of their own which is race prejudice We country and their own city as might as well forget in fact well about any good neighbor polshy - Now there are lots of adult icy until we ourselves become Americans of this type But good neighbors when it comes to out-and-out

But even when we are not prodigal generosity it is the snobbish at home we are seldom teens as a rule whohave to be as spontaneous in our friendli shy given first prize ness other peoples The forshy A teen-agel who has not yetas eign students who come to stuay outgrown the honest ideals of at our universities often get youth will give his time and enshylonely and discouraged because ergy unstintingly and with little they have seemingly no friends thought of consequences This

author has instanceThe Negro in his fight for for seen equality (a fight which should kids doing heroic work with the never have been necessary in the very poor and the orphans-notfirst place) very often feels just throwing money into a colshyalone (though decreasingly so) lection box for them but givingwhen even those who know he is them their time and their love getting a raw deal do nothing working with them face to face at least publicly to help him even as Christ did set things right America has a great heart

Which may be one reason the and many Americans are just as Negro American often makes a spontaneous and natural at better ambassador abroad than showing it as any people anyshyother Americans where As a country however

Friendliness Here we still have some distance to But the trouble with extolling go before this sort of generosity

the hospitality and friendlin~ becomes our national image

CHECK COMPARE SAVE

Turkeys 10to11 LIS

Ready-to-Cook 39~ FIR S T Nancy Vogel

daughter of Mr and Mrs SAVE CASH bullbullbull SHOP AampPLeonard J Vogel of Sacred Heart Parish Fall River and a senior at Starg High last night became the first recishypient of the Bishop Connolly award for the outstanding

girl athlete n a Catholic High School The Clover Club of Fall River sponsored the award

Thomas ~Vhalen

In Noviticlte Brother Thomas Whalen son

of Mr and Mrs Thomas Whalen -8 General Cobb St Taunton and a member of the Sacred Heart Parish has received the religshyious habit of the Erothers of the

SMOKED P()RK SHOUlDERS

SUPER-RIGHT SHORT SHANK 6 TO 8 lBS

PICNICS 1829c

CHICKEN LEe or BREAST 33c

QUARTERS l8

SAVE CASH ON THESEHoly Cross at ceremonies conshyducted at St Joseph Novitiate

Valatie NY 6 POUNDS ofi BREAD ONLY 99c Brother John Donoghue CSC

Provincial Superior of the Broshy Whitl Breadp~~~E~ 4 ~6~~~z99c thers of the Holy Cross of the SAVI 20e - REGULAR 59c - 8 INCHEastern Province announced I p 118 8 OZ 39CJANEthat Brother Thomas was one of App I II PARKER IACHthe 14 candidates who is now starting a canonical year of proshy JANI PARKER - SAVlOe REGULAR 9c

bation for the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross bull hB Ck 1 lB 3 OZ 3ftCSpaRIS ar a e EACH i

Following the reception the parents and friends of Brother Thomas were guests at a lunchshyeon at the novitiate

Total Now 430 NEW YORK (NC)-With the

opening of two more parish schools the number of Catholic elementary schools in the New York archdiocese now totals 430

ATWC)OD OIL CO~~PANY

SHEILL HEATIN4 OILS South SeC] Streets Hyannis Tel HY 81

COMPLleTE

Mortgage Service anywhere on Cape Cod

bull RESIDENTIAL bull COMMEI~CIAL

bull CONSTRUCTION bull SEASONAL

Call EX 8-2266

Bass ~iver Savings Bank

SOUTH YARMOUTH Hyannis - Dennis Port

Yarmouth Plaza

Special Donut and Coffee SoleI All THIS weEKI

PLAIN SUGARED CJlNNAMON OR COMBINATION

2 PKGS 4ftltJane Parker Donuts 29cR~~ Of 12

I E 5 ON ON SAVE 4c B~~S SAV 1 c B3~S MILO AND MRLOW COFfil

Eight OClock ~A~ 69c-3 IJ~G 198 RICH FULLmiddotBOOleo

Red Circle CoHee ~A~ 71 c-3 B~G204 VIGOROUS ANO WINEY

lokar Coffe ~A~ 73c-3 B~G210 rice shown In thl ud guiltnteed tlltu Sat Feb

Tobacco products and Items prohibIted by Iaw eKempt from Plaid Stamp Offbullbull amp effective at ALL Aamp Sup Matlcotn thl communll1 and lclnll1

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 6: 02.04.65

-6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965 lVlission for Journalists SacrDments

Necessary Instrument The Catholic newspaper is not a superficial luxuty

or an optional devotion it is an instrument necessary for the circulation of those ideas which feed our faith

These words of Pope Paul spoken less than a year ago need no additional commentary to explain his view of the Catholic press and the importance that a Catholic newsshypaper plays and should play in the life of the Catholic

In the mind of th~ Pope the Catholic newspaper is necessary

The faith of the individual Catholic and the events of the life that he daily lives are inextricably interwinetl The faith must influence and give meaning to daily life and the events of the day must be viewed in the light of God and their impact for eternal life Where is the Catholic to receive information that will guide him in making these judgements and applications

This is the function of the Catholic newspapershyagain in Pope Pauls words-to present a fund of thought aligned along Christian principles Thlt Catholic newsshypaper the Pope points out must not only inform but form the reader And it must let the reader see in how many areas there is unity of belief among Catholics and with their non-Catholic friends and in how many areas there is complete freedom within the bounds of charity for discussion and disagreement

During February Catholic Press Month the Popes insistence on the Catholic newspaper as necessary should find response in the minds and lives of every Catholic family

This means that Catholic reading material must be in every home A Catholic weekly newspaper magazines books and pamphlets-these are instruments of Cathoshylic thought aids to the Catholic in his evaluation of the events in which he participates and these enable him to continue his education and to mature in the faith that is his

Responsible Press The announcement by the Holy Father of his creation

of new Cardinals was given excellent coverage in the daily press and many of the outstanding newspapers of the country saw fit to make it the subject of editorials

This in itself 3hould be proof if proof is needed that the daily press is willing and anxious to cooperate with the Church and with every other responsible group in the featuring of newsworthy releases It shows that there is concern in the higher e-chelons of newspaper administration over what the Church does and its influence in and on the world

Occasionally the cry is heard from some Catholics that this or that newspaper is prejudiced against the Church This is the ghetto-voice crying out the self-styled secondshyclass citizen speaking the inferiority complex-ridden Cathshyolic making protest serve instead of presentation and proshymotion This attitude happily is all but gone but it is still discouraging to see and hear it on occasion

When a newspaper presents a view that is deemed hostile to the Church the explanation is that the editor sincerely thought this to be a newsworthy item or else he was met with so many no comments from Catholic officials or was given such a run-around in his efforts to seek the other viewpoint that he met his deadline with what he had at hand

The press in the United States is a responsible one Exceptions to this are so few as to be easily and quickly recognizable Catholics would do well to take an active role in applauding and assisting the press in its presentation of news and viewpoints instead of carping and sniping from the sidelines

rhe tNCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diqcese of Fali River 410 Highland Avenue

Fall River Mass 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAqER It Rev Daniel F ShallooMA Rev John P Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR ~ Hugh J GoldeJ)

~

y

FEBRUARY

OATHoLa PRESS MONTH

ThnolACJh the Week With the Chunch By REV ROBERT W HOVDA Catholic University

TODAY-St Andrew Corsini Bishop What have we sinners done that God should trust us so Yet he assures us again and again in scripture as He does in the lessons of this Mass that He not only loves us but entrusts to us the salvation of our world

Sirachs tribute to the great priest and the Gospel parable of the industrious and reliable slaves-both come to the Chrisshytian people to t14e assembled church as messages of trust and confidencemiddot and hope Gods hope if we may so speak

TOMORROW - St Agatha Virgin Martyr Those who have made themselves thus for the sake of the kingdom of heaven (Gospel) are the Religious among us whose vows of reshynouncement establish a way of life that points to heaven

Whatever they do whatever concrete form their mission takes this is their common sershyvice to the whole Church - to remind us all that the worid moves toward a goal beyond it shyself not only in words but in the daily fabric of their lives

SATURDAY-St Titus Bishshyop The bishop of course but also every Christian must be a person who knows where he is going (Gospel) Jesus is teachshying here a simple directness in accomplishing the mission He entrusts to us Success is not the measure but the will the intent the steadfastness and purposeshyfulness To say The kingdom of God has approached you is not to brag nor to herald triumph It is only to announce the fact that one is here is present who is animated by faith and is therefore a vessel of the Holy Spirit

FIFTH SUNDA~ AFTER EPIPHANY You must bear with one anothers faults (first reading) or perhaps while you are gathering the tares you will root up the wheat with them (Gospel) These are great days of belated reformation in many areas of the Churchs Hfe in its worship in its conception of it shyself and of its mission

The movement of the Holy Spirit in the Church and in the times we live in has brought fresh air to us breaking a crust hardened by the defensiveness and fear of centuries With the Offertory hymn we can sing ~Gone is the threat of death

now I shall live aind proclaim to the world what the Lord hail done for me Now we shall live

with the constant reform and reshynewal that life demands

Yet our aims must be reasonshyable and we must be strengthshyened against the vain hope that because the structures and patshyterns of our Church life are imshyproved we shall be perfect First and last we deal in the Church with humans and with those faults the readings speak of Our reform is successful if those structures and patterns begin again to beckon and challenge and inspire us where we are and as we are

MONDAY-St John of Matha Confessor Hymning the praises of the good man the man who confesses his faith in the Father by dealing with every person as his brother the entrance psalm begins Be not envious of the wicked nor jealous of evil shydoers

Sometimes we pretend that a real envy a true jealousy is purely a desire to see (and help) virtue triumph But the saints too like the man we honor toshyday are fields in which tares are present They differ from us perhaps only in that they do not covet them nor envy the tares in other lives

TUESDAY-St Cyril of Alexshyandria Doctor Do not think that I have come to set aside the law and the prophets I have not come to set them aside but to bring them to perfection (Gospel) (I hope the new and improved text of scripture readings at Mass is soon avail shyable in books smaller than the altar missal)

Christ announces thatmiddot the job of His teacher of the man or woman who teaches in His name is not to set aside the law and the prophets nor isii to repeat them It is to bring them to perfection So the Christian teacher must heed the Spirit here and now as well as in tradition

WEDNESDAY - St Scholasshytica Virgin The maidens love of and openness to her groom with all her hope of fulfillment and completion is the model of the Churchs stance toward Christ Even as the Church the community of salvation we are not a finished product

We are always reformable al shyways perfectible always pil shygrims on the march It is this virgin spirit submissive to the L()td thatenables the Church to welCome such a period as thV time of change and progress

Continued from Page Three mediately before the annointinlf omitting the sprinkling with itS formula and the Confiteor and absolution Conselration

All bishops present may imshypose hands on the new bishop However only the consecrator and two co-consecrating bishopS are to pronounce the words Acshycipe Spiritum Sanctum Matrimony

Matrimony shall be ce)~brated

within the Mass unless a just cause excuses this It sl-jall be done after the Gospel and the homily Th~ latter is nevpr omitshyted

Within Mass The Votive Mass shall always be celebrted or a commemoration of it made according to the rubri(~ even during the prohibited tine

The pastor or his dnJegate who assists at the marri~O~ shan celebrate the Mass if it is anshyother Mn~s shall not (~ltinue

untn the MarrlageRite hls been completed The non-c~l~brant

who assists at Marriage ~lall be vested in surplice and white stole (and cope if it is the cusshytom) and he shall give tln homshyily The celebrant shall pve the blessing after the Lord Prayer and before the Placeat

The Nuotial Rlessing hlll al shyways be imparted even f it is one of the partys seconrl marshyriage or the marriage is rluring the prohibited season

Without Mass Accorrng ta the Apostolic Letter ~acram

Liturgiam (Jan 1964) rgt brief admonition shall be given before the rite Tis is not a homily but only a simple imtuction before the celebration of Marshyriage After the reading of the Epistle and Gospel of the Mass for Spouses there shall then be given a homily Thlllt the order shall be brief admrgtnition Epistle and Gospel in the vershynacular homily celebr2tonof marriage nuptial blessing

If no vernacular text is avail shyable for the Epistle and nos~l

it is lawful to use for the inshyterim a text approved by the local Ordinary~ bull

A chant may be sung bntweea the Epistle and Gospel The Prayer of the Faithful is highly recommended after the compleshytion of the Mariage Rite accordshying to the formula of the local Ordinary and in which petitions for the spouses are also to be included

At the end of the rite the nuptial blessing shall always be given as within Mass The formshyula shall be the one designated for this occasion (Collectio Hishytuum 1964 Rite of Matrimony Without Mass Nuptial Pessing Outside Mass Sacristy Manual p 283

If marriage is celebrated duJ shying the prohibited season the pastor shall advise the spouses to~take into account the special character of this liturgical seashyson Sacramentals

A single prayer from among the prayers which are found in the Roman Mis$al for Feb Z and for Ash Wednesday mashybe said on the occasion of the blessing of candles or ashes

Blessings which have been reshyserved up to the present time and which are contained in the Roman Ritual tit IX cap 9 10 11 _may be given by any

- priest with the exception of the following Blessing of a bell for the use of a blessed church or oratory Blessing of the first stone for the building of a

church B I e s sin g of a new church or public oratory Blessshy

ing of an antimimsiori Blessing of a new cemetery the Papal Blessings (cap 10 n 1-3) and the Blessings and erection of the

Stations of the Way of the Cr~ inasmuch asthis reserved to tbe JUahop

ACRES Of FREE

PARICNG

OOIJfIlElftENI BUDGETmiddot Finance

f 1It_ 10 Pay

1

Meeting to Plan CathQlic Press i

World Congress NEW YORK (NC)-The

Seventh World Congress of the Catholic Press to be held here May 18 to 22 will be the first subject for discussion at a meeting of officials of the Inshyternational Union of the Cathoshylic Press Saturday in Stuttgart Germany

Two representatives of the Catholic Press of the United States and Canada will attend the Stuttgart meeting They are Tames A Doyle executive secreshytary of the Catholic Press Assoshyciation and Father Hugh Morley

OFM Cap who represents the international union at the United Nations

Father Albert J Nevins MM editor of Maryknoll magazine is general chairman of the world congress and of the 55th annual convention of the Catholic Press Association which includes Catholic newspaper magazine and general publisher members in the United States and Canshyada

Modern Society The Stuttgart meeting will be

held under the direction of Raishymondo Manzini editor of the Vatican City newspaper LOsshyservatore Romano and president of the IUCP and Father Emile Gabel AA secretary general

Meetings at the world congress will be organized around the overall theme of Truth in the Pursuit of Liberty and will Inshyelude a number of special sesshysions relating the theme to modshyem society

There Will be conferences on the press and political liberty liberty and international order liberty and eivil rights con science and religious liberty freedom and the creative arts and liberty in the Catholic press

Three Missioners Martyred in Congo

ROME (NC) - The deaths of three more Catholic missionarIes and an African priest at the hands of Congolese rebels have been reported by the Pious Soshyciety of St Francis Xavier for the Foreign Missions of Parma

Italy The three Xaverian missionets

were Fathers Giovanni Didone 35 and Luigi Carrara 32 and Brother Vittorio Faccin 31

Patron of Rio RIO DE JANEffiO (NC-An

altar dedicated to St Sebastian has been blessed here to comshymemorate the fourth centenary of the founding of the Portushyguese settlement of St Sebastian of Rio de Janeiro

DUEtFEE- FALL RIVER

On Our Stage IN PERSON

Arthur Fiedler and

60 Members of the Boston Pops

an evening of enchanted music

ALL New Program Special Attention to evo ~nd Church Groups

FRIDAY FEBRUA~Y 12 830 PM

TEL 6fT-93S1

fHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965 1 Press Association Head Evaluates Press Month Theme

BY MSGR ROBERT G PETERS perfect setting up distortions in world but with every walk of proper interpretation of the

its reflection A mirror can be life every slightest concern of question itself The theme of this years Cathshy too small to tell the full story morality Anything else is not things as

olic Press Month gives everyone A mirror can be faithful to the they are or things in truth -readers and writers-reason to Christian Principlessurfacemiddotof things and miss what Anything else is not the Catholic consider the task of the Catholic A mirror that tells things as press that the popes have adshylies behind the obvious facade press They are the words of they really are must reflect not vised to place itself in the world Pope Paul VI Your Catholic A mirror that tells all things only the object in question but and interpret that world for press mirror of the world as they are must be a mirror that the surrounding world that afshy readers in the light of Christianbull bull telling things as they are seldom limits its area of reflecshy fects what must be told The principlesbullbullbull In truth tion And the press that attempts publication that mirrors the famshy Catholic readers should be

To mirror the world is not the to be such a mirror must concern ily the factory the field and the happy to have at hand a press simple task it first appears For itself not only with the obvious forum must include the Chrisshy that dedicates itself to so imporshyone thing a mirror can be im- ecclesiastical aspects of the tian principles needed for a tant a task

The Fumlture Wonderland Open Daily 9 AM to 10 PMe

_ the East Including Saturdays

Hew Englands Greatest Furniture (Iearance is Now in Full SwinQ

FREE DELIVERY

8

l

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall liver-Thurs Feb W85

Catholic Press Bears Witness 10 Churchs Spirit of Renewal

By Mary Tinley Daly -Reading habits must be changing in my parish

Mid a priest of our acquaintance Few years ago he ruminated Id go into a horne to make a sick call put my hat on the coffee table on the top of the New Yorker Vogue Look Life and the daily newspaper When Id come downstairs again my hat would be on top of a flock of Catholic m iss ion magazines and the diocesan newspaper The others were all chucked for the time being I was to be imshypressed quite obviously he laughedWhats the change now Father we asked Are the magazines more lurid where you park your hator

And Nowmiddotmiddotmiddot Just the opposite our priest

friend chuckled Theyre not ashamed of the Catholic press any more In the line-up among the popular publiclltions on those living room tables-and usually on top of the heap--are well shythumbed copies of Commonweal America The Sign and others Even the Diocesan paper is out in full view right beside toshynights edition of the city newsshypaper

This priests observation Is D~ all unusual

The Catholic press has made giant strides within the past few years strides which should be noted during this the month of February Catholic Pre s bull Month Why February We dont know Perhaps from the very name of the month derived from Februarius month of exshypiation and purification since en the 15th the Roman festival of expiation and purifi~ation was beld

To our way of thinking this iii appropriate since we believe that the Catholie press should take its place as a gOOd influshyence in the currentmiddot world of journalism To quote the present Pontiff Pope Paul VI Your CatholiC Press is a mirror of toshydays world telling things shythey are-in truth

And how is the Catholie predoing Better thank you

Todays Renewal Reflecting the Catholic layshy

mans view is the sophisticatedCommonweal edited by dedishycated Cafllolic laymen America edited by the Jesuits The Sign magazine of the Passionists and SO many others mirroring mod-middot ern Catholic thinking in our aggiornamento of today enunshyciated first by Pope John XXIII

Fresh air is not only seeping in it is sweeping int9 Catholic journalism

Notre Dame Superior Heads New- Cornmittee

WASHINGTON (NC)-5ister Mary Daniel provincial superior of the Maryland province of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur has been elected chairmaflof the newly formed National Sister Formation Committee

New vice chairman is Mother Mary Borromeo mother general of the Sisters of St Francis Joliet Ill the Sister Formation Conference announced from it headquarters here

Sister Mary Daniel heads a 12-member unit which guides activities of the formation conshyference a 12-year-old cooperashytive movement of U S Sistershyhoods to bolster the spiritual academic and professional trainshying of Sisters

Time was and in the memory of even young readers when a great many Catholic newsshypapers were pretty ho-hum a picture of the bishop on every page notices of sodality meetshyings ham or turkey dinners items which could and should be carried in parish bulletins edishytorials wildly denouncing thisshyand-that-a generally negative and boring experience for readshyers of which there were few

Catholic magazines were only slightly better mediocre articles namby-pamby fiction

Those were the days when out of a sense of loyalty or obedishyence Catholics supported their Catholic press with their subshyscription dollars but not with their attention

Catholic periodicals found their way from the mail slot to the magazine rack for a while then out into the trash Seldom did they appear on a living room table to be picked up for intershyest or enjoyment along with the mass media publications EVeJl less rarely was a Catholic peri shyodical quoted ill the secular press or discussed among intelli shygent Catholics

Fortunately times h a changed The Catholiepress is abreast of world news local news features book film and play r~views entertainment and famshyily pages And nowhere else of course can one get more authorshyitative information on the vital changes within themiddot Church itshyself Vatican Council liturgieal reforms ecumenism -eally alive issues

The change has been long _ coming hindered ~ maD7 r0adshyblocks but its here

Alumae Style Shaw Alumnae and parents of Jesusshy

Mary Academy Fall River wiD sponsor a supper style show at 630 Tuesday night March 2 at Whites restaurant

Sto Francis Resodence

FOR YOUNG WOMEN 196 Whipple St Fall River Conduded by Franciscan

Missionaries of Mary ROOMS - MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALtill Inquire OS 3-2892

bull bull bull bull bull bullbull bull bullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Williams Funeral Home

EST 1870 I Washington Square

NEW BEDFORD Reg Funeral Director CIftd

Embalmer PRIVATE middotPARKING AREA

TEL WY 6-8098

AT RED MASS Luci Baines Johnson daughter of the President attended the annual Red Mass in St Matthew Cathedral Washin~~ton last Sunday in the company of her escort Paul Betz of Washington left President Johnson preeeded the COUplEI into the Oathedral NC Photo

Protestants Must Change Attitude BONN (NC)-German Protesshy the Orthodox Church which

tants have been asked to meet takes a similar stand the spirit of change at the Vatshy He also pointed to the diffi shy

ican council with changes ill culty of solving problems in this their own attitudes area because the Catholic

Lutheran theologian Dr Hanl Church cannot find anyone aushyAsmussen wove his appeal thorized to negotiate for Protesshyaround a strong criticism of tants He said We have no Protestant impatienCE with the branch with which questions of Catholic position on mixed marshy this kind can be regulated in a riages He pointed out that Protshy binding way and we do not waDi estants who are angrr with the to create one either Catholic stand do not criticize

your OVENFRESH

NEIGHBORHOOD~ DAILY STORE

Asks End of Fee In Teaching

PADERBORN (NC)-Dao ligious training should _be more positive at all age levels and the element of all shyxiety and fear should be elimoo inated ill teaching children bull German Catholic churchman aeshyserted here

Archbishop Lorenz Jaeger ell Paderborn in Germany said bull more positive stress requires IEo vision not only of the catechism but also of the rite of confessioDo In line with this approach m said parents in the rearing of their children should stress the dignity of the human person iQoo stead of harping on duties

The prelate a member of 12ie ecumenical councils Secretarial for Promoting Christian Unit was addressing the annual cooshyvention of representatives 01 German Catholic womens ganizations He said that to tain awareness of the dignity all the Christian vocation Chri9shytians must first realize natural virtues and true humanity bull Pope John showed by his exa pIe

Defines ApoStolate Of Catholic Nurse

WICHITA (NC)-Bishop L8 C Byrne defined the CathoHe nurse-one who combines proshyfessional excellence with spa itual excellence to sanctify hetlo self and Christianize society

SpeaKing before the DioeeSRII Counell of Catholic Nurses here Wichitas apostolic administ

tor told 200 nurses Your laP apostolate is nursing Specifi shycally in our age which histolF will describe as the age of tile laity the Catholic nurse must be a shining symbol of both tbe Church and the nursing prof~

sion

~ DEBROSS OIL ( ~ COo

) Heating Oils ( ~ and Burners ~

365 NORTH FRONT STREET ~ NEW BEDFORD ~

~ WYman 2-5534 ~

VinesWill HaveTenderGrapes f Pruned Now Says Gardener

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

One of the few jobs in the garden middotwhich should be done in Winter is that of pruning grape vines By pruning vines now while they are dormant you will avoid a drippy vine when the sap begins to flow Actually the pruning should take place in two steps once now and again in never to be awakened again

late March or April Maybe this is how TV dinnersbegan

Too often grape produc- Now Im as guilty as any other Clon suffers from too little prunshy mother of not wanting four exshyIng As a result vines become tra elbows around me when I am overcrowded and produce small trying to cook and I often have stunted bunches of fruit or at to suppress a scream of anguish best production of fruit is when my last egg hits the floor limited Then I remember my early ef

In pruning a vine the first forts offer a prayer to the thing to do is to remove all Blessed Mother for an extra Winter-killed growth (this is dose of patience and find someshysimple to determine since dead thing for those little hands to eliDes are dry and brittle) These help me with canes should be cut back to the One day last week when my main stem The second step is to patience was at an unusually eut aU thin straggly growth at high peak we had a dolls birthshyleast half way back to the main day party cake mixed and baked stem or until the cane is at least by Meryl and Melissa instrucshythe thickness of a finger The tions read by mother The utter shape of the vine is of no conshy delight on their faces when the eern now since it will be shaped finished cake turned out so well after the second pruning more than paid for any extra

The first pruning should thin effort on my part the vine to approxima~ely twoshy A very young friend of ours thirds of its original bulk Do Christine McGowan of St JoshyDot make the mistake of being sephs parish Fall River was cautious about cutting Rememshy nice enough to give us one of her ber new growth will appear off recipes to pass on to the younger the old growth and unless you set Miss McGowan with the aid are thOrough the vine will be of an understanding mother has overcrowded been baking since a very tender

In late March or April the age ~e shouidbe pruned again duiped and tied First remove

Chrissies Cookies 1 Ie white sugar

any canes which were missed atmiddot 1 C brown sugar packed the fiist pruning or any recently C soft shortening (this III killed canes Other canes to be equal to lb butter or margarshy~moved are those which are old ine) IUld overuown since theywiU 1 t vanilla produce littleif any fruit 3 C flour

Once the thinning out process 1 t baking soda comple~ the canes which t salt are to be kept should be ~ nuts andor raisins to taste back to five or six buds and tied Heat oven to 375 Mix sugars During the tying process the shortening eggs vanilla Sift toshyme can be shaped so that no -gether flour soda salt and stir __0 canes are closer than a foot in Add raisins andor nuts ~d a half apart This is a time- Fo~ balls of about 1 t middotof dough eonsuming job which is very apiece flatten on ungreased ~y to do sloppily with a poor baking sheetallowing room far ~p resulting so t~e a few ~ys to do it properly Above an JIrUlle heavily In the Kitchen On of my older daughters reshy~ests last Christmas was for an electric oven that baked just like monunys I felt that this was a little too grown up for five year old because the temshyperature went up as high as 400 degrees so needless to say this particular item didnt find a place under our ~ris~as tree However I still feel quite guilty about this as I intend to try very hard to encourage any cooking tendencies in my daughters Speaking from personal expeshy

dence I remember the years I ipent getting shoo~d out 9f my mothers kitchen until finally ~y interest in that direction iemained dormant until mar ~age forced me to face squareshy~ the prospect of preparing three meals a day Fortunately hen I did solve this problem liided by many cookbooks I did discover how much I loved to eook but I still wonder how any other girls have had their love of cooking equally squelchshytid by a well-meaning mother

Dorries Patronesses Dames Patronesses of Sacred

Beart Home New Bedford will hold a Valentine party for hOJIle residents at 130 Tuesday aftershynoon Feb 9 Mrs Jean Boutin-is m charge of arrangements The lInits annual meeting is planned for Sunday April 25 and the -tOth anniversary of the group Will be marked with a banquet and dance Wednesday May 5 in New Bedford Hotel Next board meeting will be held at 30 luesday niIht March 11

cookies to spread (Wetting the handS with Cold water keeps dOUgh from sticking to them)

Bake 8middot to 10 miuutes Makes about 60 cookies

Notre Dame Nun Joins Inter-Radal Staff

CHICAGO (NC)-Sister Mary Peter (Traxle~r) of the School Sisters of Notre Dame has joined the staff of the educational -sershyvices department of the National Catholic Conference for Intershyracial Justice here

Raymond M Hilliard confershyence chairman said rapid growth of the agencys services necessi-_ tated staff expansion While doshying graduate work in political

science at Georgetown Univershysity in Washington Sister Mary Peter organized a tutorial proshygram for under-privileged youth

NO JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main OHice and Plant 95 Bridge St Lowell Mass

Tel 458-6333

Auxiliary Plants

BOSTON CAMDEN N J OCEANPORT N J MIAMI PAWTUCKET R L PHILADELPHIA

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ c 9 j

REPRESENT Us CATHOLIC WOMEN The Board of Direct-ors of the National Council of Catholi~ Women is received by Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi Apostolic Delshyegate in the US at the annual meeting in ~ashington Mrs Mar~us Kilch ~oungsto~ Ohio left front is NCCW president and Miss Margaret Mealey nght front 18 executIve director NC Photo

Vatican Pavilion Second Most Popular in Fair NEW YORK(NG) --At

most half of the visitors at the New York World~sFair~

last year stopped off at the Vatican Pavilion making it the second most popular of the Fairs 151 pavilions Average daily attendance was over 75000 giving the pavilion a total at- tendance figure of more than 138 million

The Good Shepherd Chapel was the scene of 1204 Masses

SAVE MONEY ON YOUR OILHEATI bull CfJH n

CHARLES F VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE NEW BEDFORD MASS

IwflkltdeliNlyK

~SS~ HEATING OIL

at whichCo~union was dis- The most popular item at the tributed to ~ie th8ll- 42000 pavilions sales counters was a people POStcard featuring P~pe Paul

gt 1 1

- ~- ~

-_

_ ~~ f y

~ I

NO NONOt

Piggy banks dont pay dividends Put your money in a Fail River Trust Savings Account where generous divishydends are compounded semi-annually Its much safer too 1

FALL RIVER ~~h TRUST CO- V

64J U1t4 ~~ bull~ Fatt ~

-

THE ANCHORshy10 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Prelate Stresses Ecumenism on Spiritual Level

MADEIRA (NC) - Auxshyiliary Bishop Paul F Leishybold of Cincinnati called for a spiritual ecumenism shyprayer and holiness - as the soul of the ecumenical moveshyment

He preached at a special low Mass which he offered at St middotGertrudes church here in Ohio for some 300 Protestants many escorted by Catholic neighbors Many Protestant visitors were guests in homes of Catholic pashyrishioners after the evening Mass which was (lffered at an altar facing the congregation

Bishop Leibold cited five ways in which those who profess Christ can work for Christian unity

1 We must make every effort to avoid expressions judgments

and action~hich do not represhysent the condition of our sepashyrated brethren with truth and faimess

2 DIalogue must be carried on between competent experts from different churches and communities

3 Cooperation among differshyent churches for the common good of humanity

4 A spiritual ecumenismmiddot which he said involves a change of heart holiness of life and public and private prayer for unity

5 All must examine their own faithfulness to Gods will for the Church and accordingly undertake with vigor the task of renewal arid reform

Scores FCC Stand On Religious Test

WASHINGTON (N C) - A middotmember of the Federal Commushynications Commission charged here that the FCC is violating constitutional limits marked out by the Supreme Court by makshy

ing religious broadcasting one test of a broadcasters public service performance

Commissioner Lee Loevinger addressing the National Reli shygious Broadcasters convention said the FCC has gone far beshyyond the limits that have been marked by the Supreme Court as permissible govertiment acshytion in the field of religion

Loevinger noted that the FCC includes religious pro g ram I

among the types of programs considered to be in the public interest on its license application forms He said it made the broadcasting of such programs one of the FCCs tests for detershymining whether a broadcaster operates in the public interest

Pope Paul Thanks Italian Policemen

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI greeted the Italian poshylicemen whose beat is the Vatican and saidit was a great consolation to know they were around

Answering an address of homshyage by Inspector General Oreste Correti who was accompaniel by other officials and members of the force the Pope said he is grateful for the zealous expert generous and selfless work in which you display your integrity as distinguished state officials and your dedication as faithful IOns of the Church

Though members of the Italian force the groups are assigned ~ special guard duties and ~

directing traffic in St Peters iquare and the area surropndinl Vatic~ City

BOSTON (NC)-Richard Card~ inal Cushing touched off a cheershying demonstration by 1300 Jews here when he predicte9 the Secshyond Vatican Council will apshyprove a declaration absolving Jcws of direct blame in the death of Christ

If we dont Im wasting my time talking of brotherhood said the Archbishop of Boston after he was presented withmiddot the annual Good Will Award of Temple Ohabei Shalom Brothershyhood oldest and largest Jewish organization of its kind in the

country He was selected for the award because of his compasshysion generosity love and broth- erhood

Reds Fear Religion The prelate said Ill never forget the Second

Vatican Council I didnt know What they were talking about I had never heard a lecture in Latin and it was all Greek to me I dont know how many others were in the same boat

CEF Head Praises Johnson Proposals

TRAVERSE CITY (NC)-The national president of Citizens for Educational Freedom had praise here in Michigan for Presshyident Johnsons statements in his State-of-the-Union address

Stuart D Hubbell a lawyer lauded the President for his wilshylingness to tr~at all school chil shydren equally He said he sent Mr Johnson a telegram which said in part

While your proposals have not as yet been made specific to the extent that they follow the principle of equality that you outlined in your message you will have made a signifi shycant beginning in developing broad support for educational achievement

bull SEQUIN Truck Body Builders Aluminum or Steel 944 County Street

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2middot6618

DISCUSS PROBLEMS CONFRONTING HOSPITALS Meeting at the 20th annual conclave of Bishops representatives for Catholic hospitals in Scottsdale Ariz are left to right Msgr Harold A Murray director of thE NCWC Bureau of Health and Hospital Hospitals Bishop Francis J t Green of Tucson Bishop Joseph B Brunini episCOgtal burshyeau chairman and Auxiliary of Natchez-Jackson Miss and Father John J Flanagan SJ~ executive director of the Oatholic Hospital Association NC Photo

We Have Come Long ~Way in Short Time Hub Cardinal Sees Church Gains Continuing

~

but I sat between two very ven- around religion He added For crable Italian cardinals They that reason they try to eliminate

knew no English and I knew no Italian All the time they kept calling me Cardinal Spellman or Cardinal Mindzen1y or even Cardinal OConnell (The late William Cardinal OCgtnnell was Cardinal Cushings predecessor as Archbishop of Boston)

In a more serious mood Cardshyinal Cushing said the one great fear communists have centers

Interfaith Service For Church UII1ity

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Byzanshytine Rite Catholics joined with Orthodox and Protestants in a common prayer service for

Christian unity Sunday in Holy Spirit Byzantine rite c hu r c h here

Participants in the vespershytype service includE)d Father Andrew Resetar of Erie Pa Very Rev A Dixon Etollit dean of Trinity Episcopal cathedral here Father GeorgE) Scoulas dean of St Nicholas Greek Orshythodox cathedral in Oakland and Dr Harold R Alert former president of the Pittsburgh Council of Churches

The service was arranged by the Pittsburgh C 0 tI n c i I of Churches and the Pittsburgh Byzantine rite diocesE~

Where A

GOOD NAME

Means A

GREAT DAL

GEO OHARA CHEVROLET

565 MILL 5JREET

HEW BEDFIORD

Open Evenings

it from the lives of their peoplemiddot He revealed he has 25 engageshy

ments to talk to groups of other religious faiths including a lodge of Masons before Easter The Cardinal inquired Who would have thought even five years ago that a Catholic archbislfop would be preaching good will in a Protestant church or in a synshyagogue Or that a rabbi would be addressing other faiths We sure have come a long way in a short time-and its going to get better

Preaching Brotherhood The cardinal also observed I

am not trying to convert Protesshytants to Catholics or Jews to Catholics I never made a conshyvert in my life My only messhysage is one of brotherhood

Sturtevant 6shyHook Est 1897

Builders Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New Bedford WY 6-5661

Deny Dispatch About Ca rdinaI

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Sta_ Departm~nt spokesman her categorically denied a recent press story that there are ~

obstacles to Jozsef Cardinal Mindszentys leaving his refuge in the U S legation in Budapest but that the Primate of HungaI7 ~wants to die a prisoner there

The story (which was released by NANA and published in t~

daily press Jan 20) credited its source a State Deparme~ source in Bonn German~

who has taken part in recent U S-Hungarian negotiations

The State Department spokesshyman here described the story bull completely incorrect

We dont have any Americali official in Bonn who has had anything to do with the Hungar-o ian negotiations he said in an swer to inquiries It doesn1 represent anything that an American official would hold

New Orleans Plans New High Schools

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Arch-t bishop John P CodY of New Orleans has announced plansfOS construction of seven new hip schools in several parts of the archdiocese

Declaring that Catholic educashytion never was so flourishin nor were our Catholic people bull desirous of increasing the num bel of schools and improving t~

methods of teaching The Loushyisiana prelate said we must build so that all the children oil our area may have the blessin of a thorough Catholic educashytion

SERVING FINE ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4-8754bull

TIte Falmoufh NatiOnal Sanlc Falmouth Mass

tilt Villale Ir Sian 1121

WM T MANNING (0 WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE

AND

INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES bull GENERAL TIRES bull DELCOBATTERIES

bull PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS

FALL RIVER - NEW BEDFO~D - HYANNIS - NEWPORT

First Federal Savings AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF ATlLEBORO

4 on ali $avings Accouni

1 Extra on Systematic Bonus~vings

bull bull bull bull bull

11 bull

Portugal Bishops Plan University For Country

LISBON (NO) - Portushygals bishops have announcshyed plans to found this nashytions first Catholic Univershysity

They said in a joint pastoral letter issued after their meeting here that there is an imperative need for a Catholic university for the nations conscience They said the university win have greater freedom greater dynamism and greater flexibil shyity than the present state uni versities

The letter said that the govshyernment will help the bishops in founding the new Catholic university

Last Summer Manuel Cardishynal Goncalves Cerejeira of Lisshybon told a meeting studying the foundation of the Catholic Unishyversity that it would be open to both laymen and the clergy and located in Lisbon instead of the older university town of Coimshybra Earlier efforts were made to restore a theological faculty at Coimbra University The facshyultY was closed following the revolution which made Port~gal a republic in1910

Several years agothe cardinal noted that a Church-sponsored university has been a hope of 1Ihe VI has called on individual Cathshy one part of the Mystical Body of many Latill American counshy~oI1uguese bishops for a long olies to become more aware of Christ to another tries and CICOP itself whichtime ~ut that priorities for the world-wide dimensions and seminanes new churche~ pri- needs of the Church mary schools and Catholic Acshytion organization had delayed Today bull bull bull it is absolutely eoncrete plans indispensable that each pers~n

become aware of the true dishymensions of the Church the

Sees Greater Church Pope declared adding Greater awareness will iead to wideningNeed for Laity Role

LAKE CHARLES (NC) - A Louisiana editor predicts the time will come in the 20th censhytury when laymen wi~ domishynate the clergy in many fields

Msgr Alexander O Sigur edshyitor of the Southwest Louisiana Register diocesan newspaper feels in the present age of scishyence and technology Catholic laymen with specialized knowl- edge of law science and other fiElds must of necessity advise the clergy on the many facets of todays society

He pointed out that the layshymens role has made more progshyress since the opening of the Second Vatican Council than in the previous 10 centuries

But because of centuries of tradition there will be problems for some time connected with evolution of the laymans role in the Church he asserted

British Conversions Continue to Decline

LONDON (NC)-The number of converts to Catholicism in England and Wales continues to decline but the Catholic popushylation shows a steady increase according to the 1965 Catholic Directory published here

The known number of adult conversions for 1963 the most recent year for which statistics are available was 12778 This was a decrease of 552 from the previous year which also showed a considerably lower figure than that for 1961

But the Catholic population increased in 1963 by 129500 to 3956500 and the Catholic popshyulation in Scotland rose by 13shy310 to 812460

Foundation Member NEW YORK (NC) - William

G Ryan presidentmiddot of Seton Htn College Greensburg Pa haa been named a corporate member of the FoundationfOr the arts Religion and culture which win hold its fim meetina laue tomonow

THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

HIGH HONOR FOR K of C HEAD Supreme Knight John W McDevitt of the Knights of Columbus invested as a Knigh t Commander of St Gregory at a testimonial banquet in Boston is with left to right AuxiHary Bishop John F Hackett of H~rtford Archbishop Henry J OBrien of Hartford Bishop Charles P GreltfO Qf Ale~andna La Supreme K of C Chaplain and Bishop William J Smith of Pembroke OntarIO NO Photo

Pope Hail~ US Church Mission Work Says Transfe~ of Energies I Most ~onsoling

CHICAGO (NC)-Pope Paul this transfer of energies from unteers who are serving la

of vitality and fuller realization of the meaning of the name Catholic

Nature of Church Pope Paul made his plea in a

message to the second annual conference of the Catholic Inshyter-American Cooperation Proshygram (CICOP)

The Holy Father coupled his appeal for greater awareness of the worldwide nature vf the

Church with high praise for aid rendered in recent years by US Catholics to the Church in Latin America Prellently he said there are 4091 US priests reshyligious and laymen serving there

Greater Understanding I He called us Catholic proshygrams for Latin America a proshyvidential apostolic ~ovement and said they make up one of the most beautiful pages in the history of the Church in the United States

Particularly in light of the Ecumenical Councils constitushytion on the Church he said it iamost consoling to witness

BEFORE YOU BUY-TRY

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault 67 Middle Street Fairhaven

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICE

lJe singled out for praise US seeks by educational means to promote greater understandingdioceses which have sent 178 of Latin Americas problemsdiocesan priests to mission work

in Latin America US religious among the Catholic millions of the United Statescommunities of men and women

which he said are fulfilling the Urllent Demands engagement they have undershy Pope Paul voiced hope that thetaken of sending a tithe of meeting here would producetheir total memership to Latin many practical results parshyAmerica by 1970 US lay vol~ ticularly a wider and more soshy

licitous collaboration of the Refugee Children United States of America with

the Church in Latin AmericaHONG KONG (NC) - Archshy such as urgent needs dem~ndbishop Joseph Caprio apostolic

internuncio to China opened here for refugee children a new $100000 primary school built by Norris H Trippthe Franciscan Missionary Sisshyters of Our Lady of Sorrows SHEET METAL Mother Leola superior of the J TESER Proporder which has its headquarshy RESIDENTIALters in Beaverton Ore attended

INDUSTRIALthe ceremony COMMERCIAL

253 Cedar St New Bedford WY 3-3222 Montie Plumbing amp

Heating Co Inc

Counci~s Effects Years Away

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The universal effects of the Second Vatican Council will not be recshyognized completely for years to come James Francis Cardinal McIntyre told 2200 Holy Name men here in California

It is entirely impossible to estimate at the present time the effects of the council on the thinking of the world the carshydinal said

These effects have penetrated deeply into the spiritual life of all people not only of the Church alone he told a Holy Name Union Communion breakshy

fast One index of its effects is the

attention the council has comshymanded in the press of the world the cardinal said

Names Two Priests To Federal Board

NEW YOItK (NC) - T w bull priests are on the 30-niember board of directors of the new Sex Information and Education Council of the United Stat~

(SIECUS) formed to foster im- proved study and education oa the role of sex

TheYlre Father George Hag- maier CSP of the Paulist In- stitute for Religious Researc~ and Father John L Thomas SJ St Louis (Mo) University soci ologist

The executive director of the council is Dr Mary Steichen Calderone former medical dishyrector of the Planned Parentshyhood Federationand its presishyident is Wallace C Fulton formshyer presidtDt of the National Coundl on Family Relations

Whites Farm Dairy SPECIAL MilK

From Our Own Tested Herd

Acushnet Mass WY 3-4457 bull Special Milk bull Homogenized Vito 0 Milk bull Buttermilk bull Tropicana Orange Juice bull Coffee and Choc Milk bull Eggs - Butter

FIVE CONVENIENT OFFICES- -TOSERVE YOUReg Master Plumber 2930

GEORGE M MONTlE ONE-STOP BANKING Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET FIRSTmiddotMACHImiddotNISTS Fall ~River OS 5-7497 NATIONAL BAN Ilt

OF TAUNTON Norton W MaIn St-Raynham Rte 44-Taunton Main St

North Dighton Spring St-North Easton Main St_ w H RILEY amp SO~J Inc Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

CITIES SERVICE bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnmbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullDISTRIBUTORS

Gasoline i F L COLLINS amp SONS i Fuel and Range INCORPORATED 1937

OILS bull

GENERAL (ONTRAOORS5bullOIL BURNERS

For prompt delivery 5 and ENGINEERS 5amp Day amp Night Service

bull JAMES H COLLINS CE Pres G E BOILER BURNER UNITS bull Registered Civil and Structural Engineer bull

Rural Bottled Gas Se~ Member National Society Professional Engineers

61 COHANNET ST FRANCIS L COLLINS JR Treas = TAUNTON bull THOMAS Ie COLLINS Secy bull

Attteboro - No Attlebor~ middot =ACADEMY BUILDING FALL RIVER MASS Taunto1

-bullbull

bull 12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Humphreymiddot Becker Write Novels of Reminiscence

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Both William Humphreys The Ordways (Knopf

$595) and Stephen Beckers A Covenant with Death (Athshyeneum $450) are novels of reminiscence Both are laid in the Southwest the former in Texas the latter in an unshyidentified state The narrashytor in the Ordway book is for the most part telling what happened to his greatshygrandparents and his grandparshyents in the Civil War period and at the tum of the century In the Becker book the narrator is in his seventies recalling Ii decisive expeshyrience in his oWn life when he was 29 back in 1923 If there are similarities between the works there are also differences and they are very great

Mr Beckers novel is a Book of-the-Month Club middotselection has already been bought by a movie company for a vast sum and unshydoubtedly will be a roaring popshyular success Mr Humphreys novel will probably have far fewer readers and will bring its author far less money But it is by all odds and in every reshyIJPect the better book

Long-Winded It has one fault that of being

long-winded and at times meandering I just wanted to hear the same old things over and over again the narrator -of The Qrdways says at one point It is evidently presumed that the reader has the same desire and that he will not object to lengthy digressions But repetition and extended parenthetical exercises do become tiring even if as in ~is instance the writing is of a high order

1$ The Ordways really a novel in the Strict sense The pook cOritillns a notice reading A portion of Part One in some- what different form first apshypeared in The Saturday Evening Post

It is quite true that the first seetion could stand alone that the second and third sections could form a story by themshyselves and that only the fourth section depends for intelligibility on what has gone before Noneshytheless there is unity here if not the tight construction of the most effective novel

Family Lore Mr Ordway begins by describshy

ing graveyard working days in the hamlet of Mabry near the town of Clarksville in eastern Texas On that day occurring once a year the descendants or suniivors of those burled in the Mabry cemetery come together to set the place to rights

middotAs they do so they rec~ the histories of the dead and thus the family lore is passed on from generation to generation But it is more than family lore which is conveyed the countrys past is reconstructed and the making of the present

The narrator a boy in the 1930s learns of two decisive episodes in his own family One has to do with Thomas and Ella Ordway who were Tennessee people until 1863 Thomas was an infantryman was horribly wounded and disabled in the batshytle of Shiloh and would have died or at least have been lost to his famIly had it not been for his wifes valor The narrative of her recovering him ann bringshying him back to a ~blance of life is harrowing

Journey to Texas But somethinamp more harrowshy

ing is still to come the account of their six months journey in a wagon drawn by oxen from Tennessee to Texas in the hope of beginning a new and better life The reader not only follows this arduous exodus but makes and suffers it and is haunted by it thereafter

This portion of the book is a storY complete in itself dramatshyic pathetic comic packed with lively incidents and colorful characters some heroic some corrupt some rascally all disshytinctive and engaging

Occasionally the side excurshysions pall a bit as in the depicshytion of stump speaking by polit shyical candidates or of life with a small shabby traveling circus Yet each of these sideshows has something to contribute to the pictUre of emerging Texas

Acute Observations

Mr Humphrey writes extremeshyly well a little less fancily as the book progresses but always vivshyidly and with plentymiddot of power for the high moments His peoshyple are nicely differentiated and come memorably to life He has many acute observations and even authentic wisdom to disshypense and this he does neatly His book rings with truth about human nature and is the work of a highly gifted and skillful artist

Mr Beekers A Covenant with Death on the other hand strikes me as contrJved empty and often obnoxiousmiddot Its nub is a legal stickler What is to be dQne with a man who is convicted of m~rger bought +c the gallows there Gki1ls~e hangman and then is cleareu of the first kill shying ~is poser ismiddot put to the 29shy

year~old judge Ben Lewis He solyes Wby niakiIig law and when confronted with this puzshyzler solves as well a key probshylent in his personal life At one and the same time he becomes at last a real judge and a real man

Precise 3udgment

Or so we are asked to believe Lewis says of himself I passed the crisis of adolescence at the ludicrous age of 29 bull bull bull I was swollen with garbage and bittershyness My own ego was monshystrous mainly because I had never done anything for anyone and could justify my own useshylessness only by assuming that the world was not worth my energies This is a precise judgment

The trouble is that the book is swollen with garbage and bitterness as well as sophistry

Young Lewis conversations with his mother for example They irk by their pretentiousness and they disgust with their obscenishyties The youngmiddot judge is thorshyoughly sophomQric and we are asked to credit his sudden leap into maturity We are asked too much

It is with ill grace that the author scorns small town folk for their prurience It is just this to which most of his book apshypeals When he sneers that Soledad City our wholesome middle-class American town would be lined up three deep for good seats at a murder trial with sensational sexual aspects he apparently forgets that the predictably huge sales of his novel will be in large part to people attracted by itligamineaa

3AMES OGARA

PauiSft CElnter Lists Spe(d~er

James OGara editor of Comshyrronweai magazinEl will be guest speaker in the Christian Culture Series at the Paulist Ce-nter in Boston on Wednesday evening Feb 17 on the topic The Role and Future of Cathshyolic Education

Mr OGara has written numshyerous articles for leading Cathshyolic magazines in middotthis country end Europe and has appeared on many religiow television programs of the National Counshycil Of Catholic Men

Rev Andrew Greeley sociolshyogist and author of many books on social subjects will join Mr O-Gara in the discussion

Monsignor Francis 3 Lally editor of the Pilot will be pr0shy

gram moderator

Deplores Agtncies Poverty Appoach

CHICAGO (NC) -- Catholic charity and welfareillgencies and institutions must drop thebusishyness as usual appreach and get into the actual aIl~na of povshyerty a National Conference of Catholic Charities Dleeting here in Illinois was told

The surge of natilmal concern about poverty is one of the most dramatic and compelling moveshyments in our day rather Robshyert Monticello of DEltroit chairshyman of the conferences program committee told assembled social work executives

His views were echoed by Msgr Raymond 3 Gallagher secretary of the comerence who said that personal service to families and individuals among the poor must be a coriunitment each of us makes dailly

CENTIER Paint and Wldlpaper

Dupont PClint

iiP cor Middle St

422 6lcush Ave

~Qc=t~ New Bedford ~ARKING

Rear of Store

ProtEct What You Hav~

McGO~VAN Insurance J~gency

TEL MYrtle ~1middot8231

188 NORTH MAIN $TREET NORTH ATTU8ORO

Beggars for All the Missions

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen DO

rn the mail last week a package arrived containing several hundred printed and self-addressed envelopes from various begshyging organizations in the United States The good woman who sent the package admitted being neither rich nor comfortable and yet she was flooded with appeals She wanted to know how she became a victim of this deluge The answer is that she is on a mailing list There are hundreds of mailing lists for sale in the United States These can be bought for various amounts depending on the number and quality of the names listed The good woman who wrote us was on at least one of these lists

Never before has it been brought home to us with Such impact how swamped our faithful are with appeals It grieves DB

that we too are beggars but we find some consolation in the fact that the Holy Fathers Society for the Propagation of the Faith has never used such mailing lists

This incident highlightsmiddot an urgent need that the Vatican Council must recognize that of co-ordinating appeals for all these really worthwhile causes especially those of misshysionaries Pius XI said that the method by which each missionary group solicited only for itself did not provide an even distribution of help Some can barely survive others have investments in Wall Street How to know who out of the hundreds who beg are most deservng is not only difficult but almost impossible

We have never liked begging In fact there is too much inshysistence on money in the Church tOday We would like to be unshackled from our tin cup and not add to this confusion But this is our duty Why 1 Because the Holy Father has asked us to be his beggars in the United States for -all the missions of tlie world 2 Becanse it is the glory of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith not to helf) one order or society of the world but the entire world (As a matter of fact 88middot per cent of the appeals in the above-mentioned package received soDie aid from The Society for the Propagation of the Faith) 3 Because being under the direction of the Holy Father The Society for the Propagation of the Faith does not invest any of yoUrmiddot alms Every eent Is distributed by the Holy Father each year The world Is too poor So fOldve us

Oh yes the lady who sent us the package wrote I could not keep 240 missionary appeals because I have not the money Since The -Society for the Propagation of the Faith aids all I send the Holy Father my $100 to be divi4ed as he sees fit

GOD LOVE YOU to Anoafor $5 Here Is Diy poeen valeiI- Une for the poor bullbullbull toMLA for $78 This is whist l diel Ilot spend on eigarettes Somehow I cannot enjoy them auYmore knowing that today 10000 people riD die of ~rntionmiddot

-

Think ahead to Valentines day and order a GOD LOVE YOU medal In classic Florentine gold finish or pure sterling silver this lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of the World is one you would be proud to give or delighted to receive Designed by the world-renouned jeweler Harry Winston and blessed by Bishop Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal may be obtained by sending your request and corresponding offering to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001

$ 2 small sterling silyershy $ 3 small 10k gold filled $ 5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut 01lt ft1Is colUIDn pin your sacrifice to it and maD It te Most Rev Fulton 3 Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York New York 10001 or to your Diocesan Director

Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 368 North Main Street

Fall River Massachusetts

791 PurcIaase Street Betweea

WIUIam bull UnI_ S_

NEW BEDFORD

FIVE CENTS SAVINGS BANK

WE HAVE PLENTY OF MONEY FOR HOME LOANS

If youre buying or building -Ioolc to us CONVENTIONAL GI - FH~ FINANCING

Ca on us anytime aDd talk over your plans

Fathers andmiddot Daughters Will Twirl At Annual Sucordium-Sponsored Hop at SHA Fan River

Dads and daughters win twirl at the annual fathep daughter dance at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River Its scheduled fltgtr 8 tomorrow night in the academy gymshynatorium and is sponsored by the moms and dads and daughters-members of the

SHA Fall River and her team very active Sucordium Club marked its first league debateHomemaker of the year at this season by defeating Case

Holy Family High in New Dartmouth Taunton and PreshyBedford as a result of the annushy vost al Homemaker of Tomorrow test Coyle High was host for a taken by thousands of girls novice tournament of two rounds across the nation is Christian with nine schools competing last Saulnier Shes National Honor weekend and the varsity team Society treasurer and copy edshy last week won three of four iJtor of By Fy Spy the school matches over Bishop Stang paper Bishop Stang was host to Narshy

At Dominican Academy in Fan ragansett League debate last River the top homemaker is week with 12 schools representshyJulia Melvin Senior A president ed each by four man teams Repshysodality vice-prefect and student resenting Stang were John council vice-president Another Golenski Michael Hogan Thomshyfeather in Julias cap is that as Keary and Myles Tillotson shes to represent her school at At the same meeting Bishop the state capitol on Student Feehan was represented by Government Day Francis Detellis Kateri Detellis

Christine Julia and an other Roger Watts and Raymond StafshyDiocesan school winners in the ford They won one debate out homemaker contest are now eli shy of four gible for consideration as state Current Affairs Contest winners Themiddot states highestshy Many Diocesan schools partici shyranking girl will receive a $1500 pated in a current affairs conshyscholarship and will tour Washshy test sponsored by a weekly news ington and New York City this magazine and among top scorers Spring From the state finalists were Janet Gendreau Moniquewill be chosen national winners Boulay and Muriel Raiche at in the homemaking contest and Jesus-Mary and Paula Powersthese girls will have their scholshy Susan Penrose and Mary Kellyarship grants substantially illshy at SIlA Fall River creased Also in the spotlight is 1anice

Benoit of SHA Fall River whosGrac1aatlOIl GOWIl8

received honorable mention for rrs snowy outside but thoughts the Bishop Connolly award preshy

of the seniors at Mt St Mary sented annually to the DioceseAcademy in Fall River are Oft outstanding girl athletethe days of June Theyre curshy Yearbook pictures for Coylerently selecting g r a d u at i 0 Il juniors sophomores and freshshygowns and are making a critical men have been safely taken so survey of ofterings from several another milestone is passed OIl area stores the road to publication

And National Bonot- Society Dominican Academy juniopsmembers have been busy at Sashy and seniors will make a closedcred Hearts Fall River Theyve retreat at the Cenacle Conventwritten to all accredited colleges ill Brighton during their Februshyin the US requesting inforshy ary vacation while the annualmation on admission requireshy school retreat is in progressments and availability of finanshy hOW at Bishop Stangcial aid The gathered informashy The program includes dallytion will augment the guidanee Mass Benediction and confershyfile in the school library ences and retreat masters are

Sevenmiddot new clubs have beeR Rev John OBrien SSCCmiddot andorganized at Tauntons Coyle Rev Andrew Jahn SSCCHigh School They are French An unusual auction was a feashySpanish Stamp and Coin Pep ture of a dance sponsored lastEnglish Literature Chess and weekend by Feehan seniors forPhotography Something theremiddot all their fellow students Eachfor everyone faculty member donated a prize

Four Dominican Academy stushy for the auction including suchdents have passed 120 word tests valuable items as a pass excusingin Gregg shorthand and two a student from detention pershyhave passed 100 word tests On mission to omit a book from anthe bowling scene at DA high outside reading list and a driy scorers include Susan Pacheco ing passAnne Marie FoIster Colleen Auctionmiddot proceeds benefited bullDesrosiers and Patricia Od) shy performance of Leave It tonecky Jane to be produced by the

The junior prom at Bishop Feehan Dramatics Club SundayFeehan High in Attleboro has and Monday Feb 14 and 15been set for Tuesday night April Jeannine Dumont senior class20 In charge ofmiddot arrangements secretary and middotlssistant editor of are Robert Bedard and Carol the school paper at Holy FamilyMiller while committees are al shy High has been accepted at Bosshyready at work on decorations ton College as have classmates e n t e r t a i n men t refreshshy Maureen OBrien Christine Ponshyments tickets and that unher ichtera and John AylwardaIded but all-important chore of Mother McAuley Guild at Mtclean-up St Mary Academy will hold its

annual calendar party WednesshyDebaiioi- Prcmt day night Feb 10 EntertainshyIn the indoor days of Winter ment will reprelC~t each monthdebating holds an honored spot of the year and the decoratedamong extra-curricular activishycakes willbe ~oor prizesties at Diocesan schools At Preshy Class -laeement vost in Fall River the debate

THE ANCHOR-- 13 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Churchmen Favor Johnson School Aid Program

WASHINGTON (NC) shyCatholic and Protestant spokesmen applauded Presishydent Johnsons school aid proposal in a placid Congresshysional bearing where the on~ disagreement came over mi~

technical questions The release from the charged

atmosphere of past hearings w noted all around

A Catholic spokesman smilin~

ly commented that it was a relief not to fear getting out of the

Vour nearescmall box i$ Q Firsf Ilfderal branch office that open 24 hours $ day to make $(lving easy for you No traffic nO parking no leather problem~

Withdrawals ate just as implt taY~ngs paymencS

bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull r fRlE o~middottymiddotmiddot ~ ubullbullh coupon 7bullbull~ trti 0middot

team was victorious over Mt St Marys and Bishop Stang in Narshyragansett League debate but lost to SHA Fall River The varisity also met Coyle during the past week

Mt st Marys debate record stands at 2-2 with Anne Browshynell Linda Mello Susan Jenkinshyson and Nancy Curran defending their school in Narragansett

Tomorrows the day of reckonshying at SHA Fall River Not only will report cards be distributed but a list of all seniorsand their placement in middottheir class for the past four years will be published

Fifteen seniors It DA partici shypated in a French Listening Comprehension Test on Tuesday This supplementary test is ofshyfered by the eollege entrance

PREVOST SCHOLARS High scorers in National Merit Scholarship Examinations at Prevost High School Fall River are Gerard Gltgtu~et left and Paul Nowak

tests in addition to the French Written exams come in March

Also at Feehan where report cards will come tomorrow high honors will be achieved by those with an average of 90 or better honors by those earning 85 or better and honorable mention by those with grades of 80 01 better

Bishop Stang mathematiciana placed first ill the Notre Dame Math Meet held last week at Cardinal Cushing High in South Boston Eighteen schools com~

peted and Stang won by n points Responsible for the vieshytory were John Keavy Paul Roy John De Ciccio Raymond Desrosiers and Alan Roskiewiez Top individual scorer was John DeCiccio

Best Girl Athlete Senior Nancy Vogel of Bishop Stang High School received the Bishop Connolly Award for the best girl athlete of Fall River area Diocesan high schools at a ceremony held last night at Whites restaurant Nancy as shining a star schoshylastically as athletically plays hockey basketball and volley~ ball at the North Dartmouth school She will be the first reshycipient of what is to become an

Influence Declining MADRID (NC)-Castroist inshy

fluence among young people in Latin Ameriea has declined the past two years Luis Garcia Arishyas professor of international law at the University of Saragossa here in Spain said on his return from a tour of Latin America Thursday Feb 1amp

SCHOOL Mainte~ance suppr~

SWEEPERS SOAPS DISINFECTANTS

FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

DAHILL CO 1886 PURCHASE STREET

annual award made by the FaD River Clover Club Also honored at last nights dinner-dance WBI Coach Carlin Lynch of 11M Stang Spartans

Forty Hours devotion was celshyebrated for the first time at Bishop Feehan high scbool starting Sunday and ending Tuesday Seniors Eileen Pashyquette Mary Duffy Nancy Clegg and Susall Ouelle~te aided Sister Mary Kateri of Feehan home economics department III making a cope and humeral veil used for the first time at the ceremonies

And Feehanites celebrated terms end by viewing A Raisin in the Sun

bullbullbullbullbullbull

hearing room alive The major Protestant spokesmen described the bill as an instrument of recshyonciliation Con g res smiddotm e a praised the compromises they saw being made by all sid~

church groups and educators -The President has proposed bull

$12 billion program to improve elementary and secondary schooling from poverty-strickea families

A total of $1 billion wouldge to public school districts in lowshyincome areas Additionally the proposal would spend $100 milshylion for textbooks for all school children and school libraries and another $100 million to create bull system of public-priva~commushynity educational centers to offer cultural enrichment and specitl eourses to all school ehildren

Pittsburgh School Enroll~ent Down

PITSBURGH (NC) - Enroll shyment in the Pittsburgh diocellMl Catholic school system has dro~ ped by 40 pupils Msgr John B McDowell superintendent ball reported

The monsignor said the sliglll drop has been preceded by fo_ years of leveling oft in enrol) ment figures because of enforeet gradual cuts in class size

Since 1960 he said there _ been an increase of only 24 pushypils in the total number of stushydents Elementary and seconda schools last June tallied 129531 pupils a drop of 40 he said

bullbullbullFREEKI _forbullbull~to bull ~-~----- shy _ StampMo _ middot----1

City_middot bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbulliibullbullbullbullbullbullbull WE pAY POSTAGa

(tree po5t-pald~Clddd i-velop ady to mall

FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND lOAN ASSOCIATION

OF FALL RIVER Home OHice 1 North Main St Fall River

Somerset OHice 149 GAR Highway Rte 6 League bouts The team meets exam board and consists of Both Offices Open Friday Evenings until INEW BEDFORDBishop Cassidy of TauntOn Wedshy questions and answers concernshy Sonterset Drive-In Window Open Mon-Thurs til 4 nesday Feb 10 ing subject matter on tape At WY 3-3786 Susan Nunes heads debate 111amp Feeha aiYdentll 1ook Germaa

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Stresses ilroad beep Gulf Between Two Generafions

By John J Kane Ph D What is your opinion of secretive sons and daughters

()f today Our married son and daughter never tell us anyshything Friends and strangers knew they bought a new home before we did My daughters husband knows all the ansshywers and wants no advice from anyone My son is afraid of his wife and she makes all decisions They ask us to visit but hurt our feelshyings when we do by what they say We were raised to reshyspect our elders and ask their advice

You r letter Jean does pose some justifiable complaints But it also seems to make some unshyreasonable deshy

mands Furthershymore amusingshy1y enough you conclude that you were reared to respect your elders and intimate your chil shydren werent If so whom can you blame

I dont know the reason why your children failed to inform you of their intentions to purshyehase a home But I do have some suspicions Do you have a tendency to be critical about what they buy Sometimes parshyents do

Tremendous Inflation Y-oungsters and parents both

make a certain type of mistake when it comes to purchasing of such things as homes cars or expensive appliances So m e young marrieds try to begin at a level their parents only achieved after 10 or 15 years of married life

But some parents do not seem to realize that inflation has been tremendous in the last 20 years When they hear a son or daughshyter is about to buy it home for 20 or 25 thousand dollars they are horrified They remember they paid perhaps 6 8 or 10

thousand dollars when they bought

They also forget credit is a bit easier than in the past that F BA and even the GI Bill help young people today and they may not even have existed when they were shopping for a house Longer te~ mortgages are possible today and lower down payments These of course do mean more interest

Coinmon CourteSY In other words parents should

Dot use the yardstick of economshyic conditions when they were young for the youth of today When they state perhaps with heated emphasis Why your father and I paid 10 thousand for a home the children are understandably irritated

But once having made their decisions com m 0 n courtesy would seem to demand tpat parshyents be told before strangers or at least as soon as friends Your sense -of hurt feelings here is quite understandable

Your complaint that your sons wife makes all the decisions may be true If so I agree that you have reared a Milquetoast But

is it true Are you actually cershytain or are you imagining someshything Are you really sayingshyand I frankly fear youare-that your son listens to his wife more than he listens to you

Mother-in-Law Role Being a mother-in-law is not

an easy role in Anierican soClshyety and many of the stupid

at least not if you wish to be a successful parent

Because most parents do love their children they are eager to help them They feel that their years of experience give them an advantage and this advantage they would extend to their chil shydren

At times this is true At times it is not The gulf between genshyerations is broad and deep Life has changed greatly in the space of one generation and the bench marks of the past may be unshysuitable today There are certain areas of living in which children may have better ideas than their parents Be prepared to admit as much

But within those areas where the maturity and experience of parents can be helpful advice can be given when not reshyquested only indirectly and cautiously Young marrieds misshyconstrue it as an effort to domshyinate which they reject Pershyhaps you can recall when you too felt this way

But it is indeed sad if they hurt your feelings when you do visit them You have not enshylarged on this so it is impossible to determine just what is said or done that annoys you Assuming you are making a correct judgshyment it is at the very least a breach of hospitality

Many of the inter-generational and in-laws problems of today are the result of social changes As one grows older it is less and less easy to change to adopt ways of doing and thinkshying After all if one succeeded under one system there is little motivation to alter it

Life Easier But conditions have changed

and to paraphrase a commercial this is the Pepsi generationbull Today boys and girls get married even wher the boy is unemshyployed This is scarcely advisable but somemake it Boys marry while still in college and their wives work to help put them through This would have been unthinkable 40 years ago

One of the really amazing changes is the use of long term credit The proud boast of years ago was that one didnt owe any money If you said this today youngsters would view you with open amazement and quietly conclude your credit was no good

No doubt some of this is overshydone and can bring about tragic results But if used intelligently it can make life somewhat easier perhaps more pleasant than in the past

These are only a few of the changes that could be listed a complete litany of them would be impossible Now this doesnt mean that parents are old fogeys that their counsel is useshyless It does mean that they must try tomiddot understand their married children better than some do

And incidentally because of these sweeping changes it is more difficult than it was But it isnt impossible an4 when donepays off in much better relationships

Anti-Smut Effort NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Loushy

isiana Knights of Columbus have jokes ]lake it even more diffi- launched a public information cult But parents after having campaign to combat what one reared their children to the best official t e r m e d indifference of their ability must let them go stemming from lack of knowlshyon their own You cannot keep edge about the growing traffic them tied to your apron strings in obscene literature

PRINCE OF THE CHURCH Americas new cardin~l recelyes congratulations from an old friend as Archbishop Patrlck A OBoyle of Washington felicitatesmiddot Lawrence Cardmal Shehan Archbishop of Baltimore on his elevation to the College of Cardinals by Pope Paul vi NC Photo

~Glassand Wire Tiny Foulr-Bell Chime in Bay State Church

Producing Soundof Big Heavy Metal WALTHAM (N C) - The string-shaped length of glass

church-bell of the future may which may be up to a foot i~ bE a ht~le thing of glass and length and a tiny hammer to Wire weighm~ about two grams produce the proper vibrations but reproducmg the sound of These vibrations are converted cast-metal constructions weigh- into an electronic signal which ing more than a ton ~asses through an amplifier is

j Pope Emphasizes Import of Hymns

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul in an audience for more han 1000 priests participating in a convention on pastoral lit shyurgy emphasized the key role of hymn-singing in the liturgy

We are not in a hurry he said

We must raise up a new peoshyple who learn to pray as the Church now prescribes

One of the prescriptions which I believe to be most influshyential and most necessary is singing

The Pope said that hymns inshycluding popular ones lift the soul and nourish it with religious sentiments

Illinois School Joins Expanding ETV Plan

MORTON (NC)-A parochial school here in Dlinois has served as pilot school in a historic edushyeational television experiment

Blessed Sacrament School reshyceived the first experimental transmission of v ide 0 tap e d courses in color from a high freshyquency monidirectional terminal

A 120-foot tower atop the school received signals from a tower on the Bradley University campus 10 miles away Bradley Coordinator Philip Weinburg said he expects an ETV program to be operational in the 1965-66 school year

The Catholic school tower will remain as a permanent inshystallation to serve both as an ETV booster station with a 15shymile radius and a receiver for educational programs in the school next Fall

Changes in Mass EDINBURGH (NC) - Scots

Catholics are busily preparing for the introduction of English and Gaelic into the Mass on March 1 the first Sunday in Lent

bull HYANNIS bull HARWICH PORT bull ~olri YAAMOUTH

--- shy

funeral Service

DoANmiddotSpoundALmiddotAMtS INCOIlPOItATtiD

Glassblower Gerhard B Finkshybeiner of Brandeis University here in Mass lpoundlas installed for the first time in the United States a set of the tiny bells in St Susanna church in Dedham named for the t~tula church in ~ome of ~ostOIl s Richardmiddot Carshydinal Cushmg

Finkbeiner whose small glass bells already al~e making kingshysiZed sounds in 10 churches in Germany and ]~rance has proshyduced a four-bell chime for the Dedham church encased in a metal cabinet only two feet long and weighing a mere 40 pounds In cast metal equivalent sotmdshyproducers would occupy a goodshysized belfry and weigh aboUt 10000 pounds Finbeiner envishysions his discovery as destined for churches which cannot afford regular bells

The new-style bells look like nothing so much as the fa~iliar vacuum tubes found in any nonshytransistor radio but they proshyduce a never-changing high quality sound which is fully comparable to the metallic clang

of the old-fashioned bell shy

Inside each vacuum tube in Finkbeiners system there is a

MON~~GHAN

ACCEF-TANCE CQIRP

JHOMAS F MONAGHAN JR

Trecisurer

142 SECOND STREET

OSborne 5-7856

FALL RIVER

Increased 100000 times and comes out through a ~pecial speaker whose sound most exshyperts cannot tell from a metallic ben

The sound of a heavy metallic bell is one of the most complex of all musical sounds according to Finbeiner but he has been able to dUJlicat~ it through parshyallel ~Udi~ in glassblowing electronics and ~acuum techshyniques

BARDAHL MAKES YOUR

CAR RUN BEnER tAt New Car Dealers and Service Stations

Everywhere -I

With Safety at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK

115 WILLIAM sr NEW BEDFORD MASS

WEBB OIL (OMPANY TEXACO FUEL ()IL$

DOMESTIC amp HFAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS

Sales~SetYce-lnstaDtjon MAINO~FICE~JO ~RFEEmiddot sTREETmiddotfAll ~IVER

Phone OS 5-7484

11

1S --

Views of New Ho~Y TrinitYmiddotmiddot-C-h-~-rc-h-I-W-e-s-t-~-I-a-li-i-ac-h-middotmiddotmiddotI

-

I I

16 THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

Says Pope John Left Cha lIenge To Catholicsmiddot

NORTH PALM BEACH (NC) - Pope John XXIII left Catholics with a chalshylenge to meet the world Bishop Coleman F Carroll of Miami said here

Bishop Carroll said Pope John dared Catholics to meet other Christians and non-Christians and to discuss our common problems and seek by discussion a solution to these problems

This challenge cannot be met by the pope alone or by the bishops and priests alone he said It must be met by all inshycluding-indeed especially-the laymen

-He said laymen must be propshy

erly prepared for this task through study training and spirshyitual preparation In this conshynection he called a closed spirshyitual retreat an absolute must for the lay person

Bishop Carroll spoke to memshybers of the Our Lady of Florida Retreat League at a dinner in his honor at the Passionist Retreat House here

PrelWtes Sc~~dlJ(e

US~ ~f VeCrulall ROME (NC)-The Italian lanshy

guage will be used in Mass throughout I t a I y beginning March 7 the first Sunday of Lent

The Italian Bishops Commitshytee on the Liturgy in announcshying the change specified that the Italian language would be used in Masses on Sundays and holy days and at all Masses attended by a substantial number of the faithful

The parts of the Mass to be said in Italian are the following the Epistle Gospel acclamations salutations and dialogues (inshycluding the prayers at the foot of the altar and the dialogue preshyceding the Preface) the Kyrie Gloria Creed Sanctus-Benedicshytus and Agnus Dei themiddot Patermiddot Noster with its introduction and the formula for the Communion

Peloquin Chorale Televises Hymns

NEW YORK (NC)-Hymns -Yesterday and Today featurshyipg C Alexander Peloquin and members of his popular Peloquin Chorale will be telecast Feb 14 from 1 to 130 PM EST over the ABC-TV network

The latest program in the seshyries Directions 65 - a Catholic Perspective produced by the National Council of Catholic Men and the ABC public affairs department was written by Peloquin and traces the develshyopment of hymnody from the Te Deum of the 4th century to the works of contemporary composers

Stresses Doctrines Substance Remains

DAVENPORT (NC) -Bishop Ralph L Hayes of Davenport adshymonished an interfaith meeting here in Iowa against expecting changes in Catholic doctrine

The (Second Vatican) Counshycil may change the manner of presentation of doctrines but not their substance he said pointing to the liturgy as an exshyample of such a change

We must admit bigotry and misunderstanding on both sides But followers of Christ have Scripture devotion to the Holy Spirit and devotion to Christ in common Why not talk about the things on which we agree he asked

Sisters of Mercy General Asks Personal ST LOUIS (NC)-Weve got

to develop the Sister in depth Thats what the times call for said the mother general of the 7300 American nuns of the Sisshyters of Mercy of the Union

Mother Mary Regina Cunningshyham ending her first six-year term as the head of the widely known teaching social work and hospital nuns was talking about what the Sisters of Mercy are doing to bring themselves fully up to the times

In St Louis Mo to meet with the superiors of the nine Mercy provinces Mother Regina talked about the main vehicle she and her colleagues hope will achieve the transformation

This is the year in the commu- nity for chapter meetings and general meetings of the nuns in

each of the provinces climaxed by a meeting of the general chapter at the orders mothershyhoupse in Bethesda Md she said

Changing Church Results will be ~olnown in Aushy

gust and Mother Regina hopes that they will show her commushynity to be in line with the mind of a rapidly changing Church in the midst of an even faster movshying world

She predicted tlat the chapshyters would have some surprises not only in the deisions but in the way they are organized to give a more representative view of all the Sisters in the order

If one overall phrase had to sum up what Mother Regina and the other planners are looking for in the Mere chapters it

would be personal responsibil shyity she said

A Sister has to have the reshysponsibility to make judgments for herself said the mother general Her superiors have to give her the responsibility to achieve her own role She has to make the decision to take the risks

~And then of course be ready to pay the price for her decishysion said Mother Regina

In Updated Sense Weve gone beyond the day

Papal Count BALTIMORE (NC) - Thomas

W Pangborn a Hagerstown (Md) industrialist and philanshythropist has been named a papal count by Pope Paul

Responsibility of always being safe Some peoshyple want to be sure to have the answer before they move But sometimes that meant they never moved at all she observed

Developing a Sister in depth will mean a lot of things espeshycially an updated sense of her apostolate and the way she works at it For the Mercy nuns in the U S Central and Latin America and in the West Indies it will mean a lot of littie things Mother Regina hinted

Changes might relax regulashytions about home visits dining with others attending night meetings and cultural affairs or traveling with companions

Mother Regina said that we have to plan for more contact with the laity and for more edushycation to understand each other shy

a

lYonderful Meatsbullbullbull Anoth~r Big Reasll Why zltI ~III I bull STAYING ~c~ Z ~

with FIRST NATIONAL it

l~middotmiddotsowll ItmiddotI

IIIIr-All vlu

FACE RUMIP Fine Grained Texture shy

Heavy Steer Beef for Hearty Eating LB

The Perfect Roast for large Families

ROASTL854CAITCHBONE Same [ow Self-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vidnily rNe Reserve Iie Right to Limit Quantitietl

-

I The Parish Parade I SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO bull

Holy Name Society members will receive corporate Communshyion at 7 oclock Mass Sunday morning Feb 14 The unit plans a Valentine dance and supper from 7 to 12 Saturday night Feb 13 in the Elks auditorium on Church Street SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs John DeBettenshycourt president Mrs Arnold Muckerheid vice-president Mrs Nelson J DeBettencourt Jr treasurer Mrs Charles Davis secretary

For the Holy Name SOGiety James Ferreira is president supshyported by Freeman Willoughby vice-president Alfred Metell treasurer Anthony Rebello secshyretary The units next meeting will be Sunday Feb 14 at the parish hall OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a Masquerade Ball Friday night Feb 26 at Wimpys resshytaurantr Osterville Mrs James E Murphy is chairman ST JOSEPH ATTLEBORO

The CYO will sponsor a dance Saturday night Feb 20 with enshytertainment by Mickey Chagnon and the Rivieras Chairmen for the unit include Carolee Desshyrochers membership Judy Roy spiritual Claudette Ouimet culshytural Sue Reynolds publicity Claire Piette social Don Fisher recreational BLESSED SACRAMENT FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will present a fashion fair at an open meeting to be held Wedshynesday Feb 17 in the church basement Planned for April are a rummage sale and a whist party ST JEAN BAPTISTE FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women announces a ham and basket whist party for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 in the lower church hall In charge will be Mrs Napoleon Picard and Mrs Eugene Gagnon aided by a large committee ST STANISLAUS FALL RIVER

Civics Club members of the parochial school will deliver pastry to nursing home patients for Valentines Day Other projshyects include collecting Christmas cards for missionaries and shovshyelling snow to augment the club treasury OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION OSTERVILLE

Mr and Mrs William Dacey will be co-chairmen of a preshyLenten dance to be held Friday night Feb 19 at Wimpys restaushyrant in Osterville under sponsorshyship of the Womens Guild The program will include a buffef and dancing from 9 to to ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

Mrs Lionel J Dulude presishydent of the Sacred Hearts Assoshyciation requests all ladies of the unit who have First Friday Adoration to check their asshysigned times in order that the full quota will be present at all hours

Corporate Communion for members will be held on Sunday at the 815 Mass and the regushylar meeting will be held the same evening at 730 in the Church Hall

The Penny Sale scheduled for Feb 20 will be discussed atthis meeting ST JOSEPH FALLRIVER

The annual mid-Winter Gala is set for Saturday night at Venus de Milo restaurant A buffet supper from 630 to 830 will be followed by dancing a parish reunion and awarding of prizes

ST JOAN OF ARC ORLEANS

Forthcoming events for the Womens Guild include penny sales this month April and next November socials in March and June and Summer fairs in July and August A ham and bean supper is ~cheduled for May ST JAMES NEW BEDFORD

middotMsgr Noon Circle plans a potluck supper for members and their guests Saturday night Feb 20 OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION NEW BEDFORD

Holy Name Society officers inshyclude Severo G Alfama presishydent James P Gonsalves and John Monteiro vice-president Antonio Rocha treasurer John Soares secretary ST GEORGE WESTPORT

Womens Guild members will form the congregation at the TV Mass to be broadcast on channel 6 at 10 Sunday morning Feb 7 Participants will meet at the parish school hall at 9 to travel to New Bedford ST JOHN BAPTIST NEW BEDFORD

Parishioners will hold their annual filhoz supper and penny sale at 530 Sunday evening Feb 21 in the cllurch hall Tickshyets are available from officers of church organizations or at the rectory In charge are Gilbert Brazil and George Ladino ST PIUS X SOUTH YARMOUTH

The WQmens Guild will hold a past presidents dinner Monshyday night March 1 at Armands restaurant_ Hyannis NOTRE DAME FALL RIVER

Cubs and Boy Scouts will at shytend a Communion breakfast Sunday Feb 7 following 815 Mass A blue and gold banquet for the Cubs is set for Sunday Feb 28 in the parish hall with Roger Labonte in charge of arshyrangements

The Council of Catholic Women will hold its installation banquet Monday Feb 22 at Whites resshytaurant under the chairmanship of Mrs Paul Ilmais To be seated are Miss Helena Dumont president Mrs Cecile Barnabe frst vice-president Mrs Gershyard DextTaze second vice-presishydent Mrs Richard Perry treasshyurer Mrs Romeo Parent reshycording secretary Mrs Roger Langlois corresponding secreshytary

The third in a series of cake sales will follow all Masses this Sunday in the lower church Mrs Ferdnand Letendre chairman will be aided by Mrs Robert Phenixco-chairman Cakes can be brought to the lower church from 4 to 5 and 630 to s Saturshyday afternoon and evening SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a potluck supper for members at 630 Tuesday night Feb 16 in the parish hall A silent auction will follow the slipper In charge of arrangeshyments is Mrs Mary Pereira chairman aided by Mrs Mary Gagne The council announces a malassada supper and penny sale open to the public from 530 to 7 Sunday night Feb 21 also in the hall Tickets will be available at the door and chairshymen are Mrs Mary Cabeceiras and Mrs Albina Quintill

A regular meeting is set for 730 Friday night Feb 12 in the hall Installation of officers is planned for later in the month ST MATIDEU FALL RIVER 4

A Valentine whist is planned by the Council of Catholic Womshyen for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 at the parish hall Mrs Raymond Antaya is chairman

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan RIver-Thurs Feb 1l96I rr

GIVE VIEWS ON AID Presenting views on federal aid to education to the House Education sub-committee was this panel representing the Catholic school system left to right Msgr William E McManus Chicago superintendent of the largest Ctholic school system in the country Mr Edward McArdle Washington DC who focussed on the parents view of the childs needs as the father of seven children Msgr Freclerck G Hochwalt Director Education Department NCWC and Msgr John B McDowell sushyperintendent of the Pittsburgh diocesan school system NC Photo

bullSays Church Must Live In Wide World~ Cardinal Hits Ignorance of Our Neighbor

CHICAGO (NC)-An Amerishycan prelate prominent in the Churchs work for Latin Amershyica has told US Catholics there is no excuse for our ignorance of our neighbors the nations of Central and South America

Archbishop Paul L Hallinan of Atlanta chairman of the subshycommittee for inter-American cooperation of the US Bishops Committee for Latin America in a message to the second annual conference of the Catholic IntershyAmerican Cooperation Program SClid the Church today lives in a new world but it must preshypare to live in a wide world

Miles Are Nothing Catholics in tpe United States

with a strong cultural and comshymercial bridge to Europe find Africa a puzzle and Asia an Orshyiental mystery Strangest of all is our ignorance of our own neighbors the nations of Central

E~ual Treatment JERSEY CITY (NC)-Hudson

County parishes here in New Jersey are joining in a countyshywide interfaith appeal seeking pledges of fair housing practices

~T FRANCIS XAVIER IIYANNIS

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a penny sale at 8 Tuesday right Feb 9 in the parish hall A Communion breakfast and fashion show are on the units Spring schedule

ST JOHN BAPTIST CENTRAL VILLAGE

A housewares demonstraticm will follow an open meeting scheduled by the Womens Guild for 8 Thursday night Feb 11 in the church hall In charge of refreshments will be Mrs Matil shyda Shelter Miss Margaret Shay and Miss May Taggart The unit plans a Valentine whist for 3 Saturday night Feb 13 also in the church hall on Main Road Miss Edith Kirby and Mrs Louise Vieira are chairmen ST JOHN POCASSET

The Womens Guild announces a penny sale for Friday Feb 12 Mrs Sprague Spooner will be chairman The units next meetshying will feature slides and a talk by Col Eugene S Clark on the early history of Marthas Vineshyyard It will be held Tuesd~

Feb 16

and South America he deshyclared

The ~rchbishop said 60 years ago there was an excuse-travel communications and cultural knowledge were in their inshylancy But now miles are nothshying since Pope John XXIII brought his message of unity to the world he averred adding

Real Import The CICOP meeting brings

bishops priests and laymen of both hemispheres together for a remarkable in-service training period a healthy learn while you work program We know much of Latin American needs both religious economic and culshytural We are helping in our way to repair these shortcomings But we need even more to share

in this Christian fraternity fIIf background common resources and future hopes Only by free easy association with the repshyresentatives of Latin America can we get the real import

ELECTRICAL Contractors~

~ ~ ~ ~

944 County St ~ New Bedford

ecec~c~ccccee~o

C) LOUlUl~S iiffii~ ~ i middotbull EWrIMA ~- shyg l~

ROMEamp I~-

I SHmNES imiddot ~ OF EUROPE iiI bull ampHOLY LAND ~) C~ 1 bull CATBOLIC PROGRAJ 1965 ~)

ALI~~16 ~I CachoIlcTeI Orrlce ~) c~ WASHINGTON CHICAGOIOMI LONDONI CATHOLtC TRAVEL OFFICE FRM ~------------II -~ Dupont Circle Building WashIngton D C 20036 fali ~ ~ j1ii Please send me your free Illustrated booklet describing in ~ iJl detail the wOrldmiddotcovering pilgrimages

C~ Name iI ~IJ Address ~ C_~ CityIloneState 11 =~~~~~_~_~~_~_ft~ftVw ijrv _ii~middotV

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Teen-agers Outstanding For Prodigal Generosity

By Rev Joseph T McGloin S J Several times in this column Ive had some glowing

words to say about our Mexican neighbors to the south about their friendliness and hospitality- and general likeshyableness And certainly its all true These people busy as they are will go out of their of other peoples is that you canway give you their precious easily give the idea you are sell shytime and attention to see ing all your own countrymen that you enjoy your visit to short And this would be the their country When a Mexican furthest thing from my own says Mi casa es su casa My thoughts house is your Because there is great friendli shyhouse - which ness in our country too - in he invariably varying degrees and manifested

middot does-he means in various ways The Mexican is it F r i end s in general more spontaneous strangers even than we and most of us have to shopkeepshy be approached before we give ers youve never our friendship since an initial II e e n before shyness seems to hold us back will introduce Often enough however this

middotyou to the whole shyness is caused by a national family and inshy superiority complex by a fear vite you to hav~ of not being accepted and by

middotdinner wit h the fear of making fools of ourshymiddot them To put it mildly hospital shy selves in a language we dont ity like this would be impossible know In other words humility to forget or to overlook is an esseatial to friendliness and _ Sometimes you wonder as you hospitality Sometimes we have walk the downtown- streets of it Often we dont CHle of our own cities and as you Hospitable People see pe~ple going their own inshy We Americans are sometimessulated ways if it isnt true that afraid to show our real feelingsas a country we have only a -afraid to show for inst~nce

-head while Mexico has a head our sympathy forthe underdogand a heart We usually make up for t~is

Superiority Complex psychologically by cheering on - This feeling grows on - you the hiss favored side at spe~tator when you visit Mexico and have sports when we should be doingthe misfortunE to encounter the it in the causes of racial justiceAmerican tourist who is bent on and equality of opportunity inshyacting like one It is a crying stead shame that so many Americans We are afraid others usuallyhave to show a superiority com- those very loud others will look

middotplex to those they encounter in down on us if we give public middot other countries seeming to feel support to those who need our that no matter where they go it support the little -people the is not they who are the foreignshy least of Christs and our brethshyers but those they encounter ren

All too often these types seem The fact is though that we to despise the customs and lanshy Americans do have a- heart and guage and even the currency of that once we put aside our sillythe countries they visit apparshy ideas that we are too busy to be ently thinking that anyone can hospitable or that others will understand English if you only look on us as soft and foolish if speak louder and that real we are or that we must not goAmerican money will buy anyshy out of way forour foreign~rs thing even respect because we might make a misshy

Worst of all are those wbo take in speaking their languagebring their aura of racial supeshy -then we can be and are just as riority along with them and hospitable and friendly as anymake little effort to hide it It is peoplein the world undoubtedly true that some of Ideals of Youththis patronizing attitude is partly There are many Americansresponsible (along with Castro~ and fortunately there are gettingeternal vigilance for American to be more who are willing tomistakes and seeming mistakes) stand up publicly and be countedfor the affection with which on the side of right instead ofAmericans are held in some parts - merely clucking in quiet privateof Latin America such as in sympathy There are lots ofPanama Americans who are not jqst

Race Prejudice friendly and hospitable to forshyAnd its tragic that have eigners but who do heroic workwe

to expoFt the most shameful of with the poor and downtrodden our national sins the stupidity and handicapped of their own which is race prejudice We country and their own city as might as well forget in fact well about any good neighbor polshy - Now there are lots of adult icy until we ourselves become Americans of this type But good neighbors when it comes to out-and-out

But even when we are not prodigal generosity it is the snobbish at home we are seldom teens as a rule whohave to be as spontaneous in our friendli shy given first prize ness other peoples The forshy A teen-agel who has not yetas eign students who come to stuay outgrown the honest ideals of at our universities often get youth will give his time and enshylonely and discouraged because ergy unstintingly and with little they have seemingly no friends thought of consequences This

author has instanceThe Negro in his fight for for seen equality (a fight which should kids doing heroic work with the never have been necessary in the very poor and the orphans-notfirst place) very often feels just throwing money into a colshyalone (though decreasingly so) lection box for them but givingwhen even those who know he is them their time and their love getting a raw deal do nothing working with them face to face at least publicly to help him even as Christ did set things right America has a great heart

Which may be one reason the and many Americans are just as Negro American often makes a spontaneous and natural at better ambassador abroad than showing it as any people anyshyother Americans where As a country however

Friendliness Here we still have some distance to But the trouble with extolling go before this sort of generosity

the hospitality and friendlin~ becomes our national image

CHECK COMPARE SAVE

Turkeys 10to11 LIS

Ready-to-Cook 39~ FIR S T Nancy Vogel

daughter of Mr and Mrs SAVE CASH bullbullbull SHOP AampPLeonard J Vogel of Sacred Heart Parish Fall River and a senior at Starg High last night became the first recishypient of the Bishop Connolly award for the outstanding

girl athlete n a Catholic High School The Clover Club of Fall River sponsored the award

Thomas ~Vhalen

In Noviticlte Brother Thomas Whalen son

of Mr and Mrs Thomas Whalen -8 General Cobb St Taunton and a member of the Sacred Heart Parish has received the religshyious habit of the Erothers of the

SMOKED P()RK SHOUlDERS

SUPER-RIGHT SHORT SHANK 6 TO 8 lBS

PICNICS 1829c

CHICKEN LEe or BREAST 33c

QUARTERS l8

SAVE CASH ON THESEHoly Cross at ceremonies conshyducted at St Joseph Novitiate

Valatie NY 6 POUNDS ofi BREAD ONLY 99c Brother John Donoghue CSC

Provincial Superior of the Broshy Whitl Breadp~~~E~ 4 ~6~~~z99c thers of the Holy Cross of the SAVI 20e - REGULAR 59c - 8 INCHEastern Province announced I p 118 8 OZ 39CJANEthat Brother Thomas was one of App I II PARKER IACHthe 14 candidates who is now starting a canonical year of proshy JANI PARKER - SAVlOe REGULAR 9c

bation for the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross bull hB Ck 1 lB 3 OZ 3ftCSpaRIS ar a e EACH i

Following the reception the parents and friends of Brother Thomas were guests at a lunchshyeon at the novitiate

Total Now 430 NEW YORK (NC)-With the

opening of two more parish schools the number of Catholic elementary schools in the New York archdiocese now totals 430

ATWC)OD OIL CO~~PANY

SHEILL HEATIN4 OILS South SeC] Streets Hyannis Tel HY 81

COMPLleTE

Mortgage Service anywhere on Cape Cod

bull RESIDENTIAL bull COMMEI~CIAL

bull CONSTRUCTION bull SEASONAL

Call EX 8-2266

Bass ~iver Savings Bank

SOUTH YARMOUTH Hyannis - Dennis Port

Yarmouth Plaza

Special Donut and Coffee SoleI All THIS weEKI

PLAIN SUGARED CJlNNAMON OR COMBINATION

2 PKGS 4ftltJane Parker Donuts 29cR~~ Of 12

I E 5 ON ON SAVE 4c B~~S SAV 1 c B3~S MILO AND MRLOW COFfil

Eight OClock ~A~ 69c-3 IJ~G 198 RICH FULLmiddotBOOleo

Red Circle CoHee ~A~ 71 c-3 B~G204 VIGOROUS ANO WINEY

lokar Coffe ~A~ 73c-3 B~G210 rice shown In thl ud guiltnteed tlltu Sat Feb

Tobacco products and Items prohibIted by Iaw eKempt from Plaid Stamp Offbullbull amp effective at ALL Aamp Sup Matlcotn thl communll1 and lclnll1

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 7: 02.04.65

ACRES Of FREE

PARICNG

OOIJfIlElftENI BUDGETmiddot Finance

f 1It_ 10 Pay

1

Meeting to Plan CathQlic Press i

World Congress NEW YORK (NC)-The

Seventh World Congress of the Catholic Press to be held here May 18 to 22 will be the first subject for discussion at a meeting of officials of the Inshyternational Union of the Cathoshylic Press Saturday in Stuttgart Germany

Two representatives of the Catholic Press of the United States and Canada will attend the Stuttgart meeting They are Tames A Doyle executive secreshytary of the Catholic Press Assoshyciation and Father Hugh Morley

OFM Cap who represents the international union at the United Nations

Father Albert J Nevins MM editor of Maryknoll magazine is general chairman of the world congress and of the 55th annual convention of the Catholic Press Association which includes Catholic newspaper magazine and general publisher members in the United States and Canshyada

Modern Society The Stuttgart meeting will be

held under the direction of Raishymondo Manzini editor of the Vatican City newspaper LOsshyservatore Romano and president of the IUCP and Father Emile Gabel AA secretary general

Meetings at the world congress will be organized around the overall theme of Truth in the Pursuit of Liberty and will Inshyelude a number of special sesshysions relating the theme to modshyem society

There Will be conferences on the press and political liberty liberty and international order liberty and eivil rights con science and religious liberty freedom and the creative arts and liberty in the Catholic press

Three Missioners Martyred in Congo

ROME (NC) - The deaths of three more Catholic missionarIes and an African priest at the hands of Congolese rebels have been reported by the Pious Soshyciety of St Francis Xavier for the Foreign Missions of Parma

Italy The three Xaverian missionets

were Fathers Giovanni Didone 35 and Luigi Carrara 32 and Brother Vittorio Faccin 31

Patron of Rio RIO DE JANEffiO (NC-An

altar dedicated to St Sebastian has been blessed here to comshymemorate the fourth centenary of the founding of the Portushyguese settlement of St Sebastian of Rio de Janeiro

DUEtFEE- FALL RIVER

On Our Stage IN PERSON

Arthur Fiedler and

60 Members of the Boston Pops

an evening of enchanted music

ALL New Program Special Attention to evo ~nd Church Groups

FRIDAY FEBRUA~Y 12 830 PM

TEL 6fT-93S1

fHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965 1 Press Association Head Evaluates Press Month Theme

BY MSGR ROBERT G PETERS perfect setting up distortions in world but with every walk of proper interpretation of the

its reflection A mirror can be life every slightest concern of question itself The theme of this years Cathshy too small to tell the full story morality Anything else is not things as

olic Press Month gives everyone A mirror can be faithful to the they are or things in truth -readers and writers-reason to Christian Principlessurfacemiddotof things and miss what Anything else is not the Catholic consider the task of the Catholic A mirror that tells things as press that the popes have adshylies behind the obvious facade press They are the words of they really are must reflect not vised to place itself in the world Pope Paul VI Your Catholic A mirror that tells all things only the object in question but and interpret that world for press mirror of the world as they are must be a mirror that the surrounding world that afshy readers in the light of Christianbull bull telling things as they are seldom limits its area of reflecshy fects what must be told The principlesbullbullbull In truth tion And the press that attempts publication that mirrors the famshy Catholic readers should be

To mirror the world is not the to be such a mirror must concern ily the factory the field and the happy to have at hand a press simple task it first appears For itself not only with the obvious forum must include the Chrisshy that dedicates itself to so imporshyone thing a mirror can be im- ecclesiastical aspects of the tian principles needed for a tant a task

The Fumlture Wonderland Open Daily 9 AM to 10 PMe

_ the East Including Saturdays

Hew Englands Greatest Furniture (Iearance is Now in Full SwinQ

FREE DELIVERY

8

l

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall liver-Thurs Feb W85

Catholic Press Bears Witness 10 Churchs Spirit of Renewal

By Mary Tinley Daly -Reading habits must be changing in my parish

Mid a priest of our acquaintance Few years ago he ruminated Id go into a horne to make a sick call put my hat on the coffee table on the top of the New Yorker Vogue Look Life and the daily newspaper When Id come downstairs again my hat would be on top of a flock of Catholic m iss ion magazines and the diocesan newspaper The others were all chucked for the time being I was to be imshypressed quite obviously he laughedWhats the change now Father we asked Are the magazines more lurid where you park your hator

And Nowmiddotmiddotmiddot Just the opposite our priest

friend chuckled Theyre not ashamed of the Catholic press any more In the line-up among the popular publiclltions on those living room tables-and usually on top of the heap--are well shythumbed copies of Commonweal America The Sign and others Even the Diocesan paper is out in full view right beside toshynights edition of the city newsshypaper

This priests observation Is D~ all unusual

The Catholic press has made giant strides within the past few years strides which should be noted during this the month of February Catholic Pre s bull Month Why February We dont know Perhaps from the very name of the month derived from Februarius month of exshypiation and purification since en the 15th the Roman festival of expiation and purifi~ation was beld

To our way of thinking this iii appropriate since we believe that the Catholie press should take its place as a gOOd influshyence in the currentmiddot world of journalism To quote the present Pontiff Pope Paul VI Your CatholiC Press is a mirror of toshydays world telling things shythey are-in truth

And how is the Catholie predoing Better thank you

Todays Renewal Reflecting the Catholic layshy

mans view is the sophisticatedCommonweal edited by dedishycated Cafllolic laymen America edited by the Jesuits The Sign magazine of the Passionists and SO many others mirroring mod-middot ern Catholic thinking in our aggiornamento of today enunshyciated first by Pope John XXIII

Fresh air is not only seeping in it is sweeping int9 Catholic journalism

Notre Dame Superior Heads New- Cornmittee

WASHINGTON (NC)-5ister Mary Daniel provincial superior of the Maryland province of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur has been elected chairmaflof the newly formed National Sister Formation Committee

New vice chairman is Mother Mary Borromeo mother general of the Sisters of St Francis Joliet Ill the Sister Formation Conference announced from it headquarters here

Sister Mary Daniel heads a 12-member unit which guides activities of the formation conshyference a 12-year-old cooperashytive movement of U S Sistershyhoods to bolster the spiritual academic and professional trainshying of Sisters

Time was and in the memory of even young readers when a great many Catholic newsshypapers were pretty ho-hum a picture of the bishop on every page notices of sodality meetshyings ham or turkey dinners items which could and should be carried in parish bulletins edishytorials wildly denouncing thisshyand-that-a generally negative and boring experience for readshyers of which there were few

Catholic magazines were only slightly better mediocre articles namby-pamby fiction

Those were the days when out of a sense of loyalty or obedishyence Catholics supported their Catholic press with their subshyscription dollars but not with their attention

Catholic periodicals found their way from the mail slot to the magazine rack for a while then out into the trash Seldom did they appear on a living room table to be picked up for intershyest or enjoyment along with the mass media publications EVeJl less rarely was a Catholic peri shyodical quoted ill the secular press or discussed among intelli shygent Catholics

Fortunately times h a changed The Catholiepress is abreast of world news local news features book film and play r~views entertainment and famshyily pages And nowhere else of course can one get more authorshyitative information on the vital changes within themiddot Church itshyself Vatican Council liturgieal reforms ecumenism -eally alive issues

The change has been long _ coming hindered ~ maD7 r0adshyblocks but its here

Alumae Style Shaw Alumnae and parents of Jesusshy

Mary Academy Fall River wiD sponsor a supper style show at 630 Tuesday night March 2 at Whites restaurant

Sto Francis Resodence

FOR YOUNG WOMEN 196 Whipple St Fall River Conduded by Franciscan

Missionaries of Mary ROOMS - MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALtill Inquire OS 3-2892

bull bull bull bull bull bullbull bull bullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Williams Funeral Home

EST 1870 I Washington Square

NEW BEDFORD Reg Funeral Director CIftd

Embalmer PRIVATE middotPARKING AREA

TEL WY 6-8098

AT RED MASS Luci Baines Johnson daughter of the President attended the annual Red Mass in St Matthew Cathedral Washin~~ton last Sunday in the company of her escort Paul Betz of Washington left President Johnson preeeded the COUplEI into the Oathedral NC Photo

Protestants Must Change Attitude BONN (NC)-German Protesshy the Orthodox Church which

tants have been asked to meet takes a similar stand the spirit of change at the Vatshy He also pointed to the diffi shy

ican council with changes ill culty of solving problems in this their own attitudes area because the Catholic

Lutheran theologian Dr Hanl Church cannot find anyone aushyAsmussen wove his appeal thorized to negotiate for Protesshyaround a strong criticism of tants He said We have no Protestant impatienCE with the branch with which questions of Catholic position on mixed marshy this kind can be regulated in a riages He pointed out that Protshy binding way and we do not waDi estants who are angrr with the to create one either Catholic stand do not criticize

your OVENFRESH

NEIGHBORHOOD~ DAILY STORE

Asks End of Fee In Teaching

PADERBORN (NC)-Dao ligious training should _be more positive at all age levels and the element of all shyxiety and fear should be elimoo inated ill teaching children bull German Catholic churchman aeshyserted here

Archbishop Lorenz Jaeger ell Paderborn in Germany said bull more positive stress requires IEo vision not only of the catechism but also of the rite of confessioDo In line with this approach m said parents in the rearing of their children should stress the dignity of the human person iQoo stead of harping on duties

The prelate a member of 12ie ecumenical councils Secretarial for Promoting Christian Unit was addressing the annual cooshyvention of representatives 01 German Catholic womens ganizations He said that to tain awareness of the dignity all the Christian vocation Chri9shytians must first realize natural virtues and true humanity bull Pope John showed by his exa pIe

Defines ApoStolate Of Catholic Nurse

WICHITA (NC)-Bishop L8 C Byrne defined the CathoHe nurse-one who combines proshyfessional excellence with spa itual excellence to sanctify hetlo self and Christianize society

SpeaKing before the DioeeSRII Counell of Catholic Nurses here Wichitas apostolic administ

tor told 200 nurses Your laP apostolate is nursing Specifi shycally in our age which histolF will describe as the age of tile laity the Catholic nurse must be a shining symbol of both tbe Church and the nursing prof~

sion

~ DEBROSS OIL ( ~ COo

) Heating Oils ( ~ and Burners ~

365 NORTH FRONT STREET ~ NEW BEDFORD ~

~ WYman 2-5534 ~

VinesWill HaveTenderGrapes f Pruned Now Says Gardener

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

One of the few jobs in the garden middotwhich should be done in Winter is that of pruning grape vines By pruning vines now while they are dormant you will avoid a drippy vine when the sap begins to flow Actually the pruning should take place in two steps once now and again in never to be awakened again

late March or April Maybe this is how TV dinnersbegan

Too often grape produc- Now Im as guilty as any other Clon suffers from too little prunshy mother of not wanting four exshyIng As a result vines become tra elbows around me when I am overcrowded and produce small trying to cook and I often have stunted bunches of fruit or at to suppress a scream of anguish best production of fruit is when my last egg hits the floor limited Then I remember my early ef

In pruning a vine the first forts offer a prayer to the thing to do is to remove all Blessed Mother for an extra Winter-killed growth (this is dose of patience and find someshysimple to determine since dead thing for those little hands to eliDes are dry and brittle) These help me with canes should be cut back to the One day last week when my main stem The second step is to patience was at an unusually eut aU thin straggly growth at high peak we had a dolls birthshyleast half way back to the main day party cake mixed and baked stem or until the cane is at least by Meryl and Melissa instrucshythe thickness of a finger The tions read by mother The utter shape of the vine is of no conshy delight on their faces when the eern now since it will be shaped finished cake turned out so well after the second pruning more than paid for any extra

The first pruning should thin effort on my part the vine to approxima~ely twoshy A very young friend of ours thirds of its original bulk Do Christine McGowan of St JoshyDot make the mistake of being sephs parish Fall River was cautious about cutting Rememshy nice enough to give us one of her ber new growth will appear off recipes to pass on to the younger the old growth and unless you set Miss McGowan with the aid are thOrough the vine will be of an understanding mother has overcrowded been baking since a very tender

In late March or April the age ~e shouidbe pruned again duiped and tied First remove

Chrissies Cookies 1 Ie white sugar

any canes which were missed atmiddot 1 C brown sugar packed the fiist pruning or any recently C soft shortening (this III killed canes Other canes to be equal to lb butter or margarshy~moved are those which are old ine) IUld overuown since theywiU 1 t vanilla produce littleif any fruit 3 C flour

Once the thinning out process 1 t baking soda comple~ the canes which t salt are to be kept should be ~ nuts andor raisins to taste back to five or six buds and tied Heat oven to 375 Mix sugars During the tying process the shortening eggs vanilla Sift toshyme can be shaped so that no -gether flour soda salt and stir __0 canes are closer than a foot in Add raisins andor nuts ~d a half apart This is a time- Fo~ balls of about 1 t middotof dough eonsuming job which is very apiece flatten on ungreased ~y to do sloppily with a poor baking sheetallowing room far ~p resulting so t~e a few ~ys to do it properly Above an JIrUlle heavily In the Kitchen On of my older daughters reshy~ests last Christmas was for an electric oven that baked just like monunys I felt that this was a little too grown up for five year old because the temshyperature went up as high as 400 degrees so needless to say this particular item didnt find a place under our ~ris~as tree However I still feel quite guilty about this as I intend to try very hard to encourage any cooking tendencies in my daughters Speaking from personal expeshy

dence I remember the years I ipent getting shoo~d out 9f my mothers kitchen until finally ~y interest in that direction iemained dormant until mar ~age forced me to face squareshy~ the prospect of preparing three meals a day Fortunately hen I did solve this problem liided by many cookbooks I did discover how much I loved to eook but I still wonder how any other girls have had their love of cooking equally squelchshytid by a well-meaning mother

Dorries Patronesses Dames Patronesses of Sacred

Beart Home New Bedford will hold a Valentine party for hOJIle residents at 130 Tuesday aftershynoon Feb 9 Mrs Jean Boutin-is m charge of arrangements The lInits annual meeting is planned for Sunday April 25 and the -tOth anniversary of the group Will be marked with a banquet and dance Wednesday May 5 in New Bedford Hotel Next board meeting will be held at 30 luesday niIht March 11

cookies to spread (Wetting the handS with Cold water keeps dOUgh from sticking to them)

Bake 8middot to 10 miuutes Makes about 60 cookies

Notre Dame Nun Joins Inter-Radal Staff

CHICAGO (NC)-Sister Mary Peter (Traxle~r) of the School Sisters of Notre Dame has joined the staff of the educational -sershyvices department of the National Catholic Conference for Intershyracial Justice here

Raymond M Hilliard confershyence chairman said rapid growth of the agencys services necessi-_ tated staff expansion While doshying graduate work in political

science at Georgetown Univershysity in Washington Sister Mary Peter organized a tutorial proshygram for under-privileged youth

NO JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main OHice and Plant 95 Bridge St Lowell Mass

Tel 458-6333

Auxiliary Plants

BOSTON CAMDEN N J OCEANPORT N J MIAMI PAWTUCKET R L PHILADELPHIA

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ c 9 j

REPRESENT Us CATHOLIC WOMEN The Board of Direct-ors of the National Council of Catholi~ Women is received by Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi Apostolic Delshyegate in the US at the annual meeting in ~ashington Mrs Mar~us Kilch ~oungsto~ Ohio left front is NCCW president and Miss Margaret Mealey nght front 18 executIve director NC Photo

Vatican Pavilion Second Most Popular in Fair NEW YORK(NG) --At

most half of the visitors at the New York World~sFair~

last year stopped off at the Vatican Pavilion making it the second most popular of the Fairs 151 pavilions Average daily attendance was over 75000 giving the pavilion a total at- tendance figure of more than 138 million

The Good Shepherd Chapel was the scene of 1204 Masses

SAVE MONEY ON YOUR OILHEATI bull CfJH n

CHARLES F VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE NEW BEDFORD MASS

IwflkltdeliNlyK

~SS~ HEATING OIL

at whichCo~union was dis- The most popular item at the tributed to ~ie th8ll- 42000 pavilions sales counters was a people POStcard featuring P~pe Paul

gt 1 1

- ~- ~

-_

_ ~~ f y

~ I

NO NONOt

Piggy banks dont pay dividends Put your money in a Fail River Trust Savings Account where generous divishydends are compounded semi-annually Its much safer too 1

FALL RIVER ~~h TRUST CO- V

64J U1t4 ~~ bull~ Fatt ~

-

THE ANCHORshy10 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Prelate Stresses Ecumenism on Spiritual Level

MADEIRA (NC) - Auxshyiliary Bishop Paul F Leishybold of Cincinnati called for a spiritual ecumenism shyprayer and holiness - as the soul of the ecumenical moveshyment

He preached at a special low Mass which he offered at St middotGertrudes church here in Ohio for some 300 Protestants many escorted by Catholic neighbors Many Protestant visitors were guests in homes of Catholic pashyrishioners after the evening Mass which was (lffered at an altar facing the congregation

Bishop Leibold cited five ways in which those who profess Christ can work for Christian unity

1 We must make every effort to avoid expressions judgments

and action~hich do not represhysent the condition of our sepashyrated brethren with truth and faimess

2 DIalogue must be carried on between competent experts from different churches and communities

3 Cooperation among differshyent churches for the common good of humanity

4 A spiritual ecumenismmiddot which he said involves a change of heart holiness of life and public and private prayer for unity

5 All must examine their own faithfulness to Gods will for the Church and accordingly undertake with vigor the task of renewal arid reform

Scores FCC Stand On Religious Test

WASHINGTON (N C) - A middotmember of the Federal Commushynications Commission charged here that the FCC is violating constitutional limits marked out by the Supreme Court by makshy

ing religious broadcasting one test of a broadcasters public service performance

Commissioner Lee Loevinger addressing the National Reli shygious Broadcasters convention said the FCC has gone far beshyyond the limits that have been marked by the Supreme Court as permissible govertiment acshytion in the field of religion

Loevinger noted that the FCC includes religious pro g ram I

among the types of programs considered to be in the public interest on its license application forms He said it made the broadcasting of such programs one of the FCCs tests for detershymining whether a broadcaster operates in the public interest

Pope Paul Thanks Italian Policemen

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI greeted the Italian poshylicemen whose beat is the Vatican and saidit was a great consolation to know they were around

Answering an address of homshyage by Inspector General Oreste Correti who was accompaniel by other officials and members of the force the Pope said he is grateful for the zealous expert generous and selfless work in which you display your integrity as distinguished state officials and your dedication as faithful IOns of the Church

Though members of the Italian force the groups are assigned ~ special guard duties and ~

directing traffic in St Peters iquare and the area surropndinl Vatic~ City

BOSTON (NC)-Richard Card~ inal Cushing touched off a cheershying demonstration by 1300 Jews here when he predicte9 the Secshyond Vatican Council will apshyprove a declaration absolving Jcws of direct blame in the death of Christ

If we dont Im wasting my time talking of brotherhood said the Archbishop of Boston after he was presented withmiddot the annual Good Will Award of Temple Ohabei Shalom Brothershyhood oldest and largest Jewish organization of its kind in the

country He was selected for the award because of his compasshysion generosity love and broth- erhood

Reds Fear Religion The prelate said Ill never forget the Second

Vatican Council I didnt know What they were talking about I had never heard a lecture in Latin and it was all Greek to me I dont know how many others were in the same boat

CEF Head Praises Johnson Proposals

TRAVERSE CITY (NC)-The national president of Citizens for Educational Freedom had praise here in Michigan for Presshyident Johnsons statements in his State-of-the-Union address

Stuart D Hubbell a lawyer lauded the President for his wilshylingness to tr~at all school chil shydren equally He said he sent Mr Johnson a telegram which said in part

While your proposals have not as yet been made specific to the extent that they follow the principle of equality that you outlined in your message you will have made a signifi shycant beginning in developing broad support for educational achievement

bull SEQUIN Truck Body Builders Aluminum or Steel 944 County Street

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2middot6618

DISCUSS PROBLEMS CONFRONTING HOSPITALS Meeting at the 20th annual conclave of Bishops representatives for Catholic hospitals in Scottsdale Ariz are left to right Msgr Harold A Murray director of thE NCWC Bureau of Health and Hospital Hospitals Bishop Francis J t Green of Tucson Bishop Joseph B Brunini episCOgtal burshyeau chairman and Auxiliary of Natchez-Jackson Miss and Father John J Flanagan SJ~ executive director of the Oatholic Hospital Association NC Photo

We Have Come Long ~Way in Short Time Hub Cardinal Sees Church Gains Continuing

~

but I sat between two very ven- around religion He added For crable Italian cardinals They that reason they try to eliminate

knew no English and I knew no Italian All the time they kept calling me Cardinal Spellman or Cardinal Mindzen1y or even Cardinal OConnell (The late William Cardinal OCgtnnell was Cardinal Cushings predecessor as Archbishop of Boston)

In a more serious mood Cardshyinal Cushing said the one great fear communists have centers

Interfaith Service For Church UII1ity

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Byzanshytine Rite Catholics joined with Orthodox and Protestants in a common prayer service for

Christian unity Sunday in Holy Spirit Byzantine rite c hu r c h here

Participants in the vespershytype service includE)d Father Andrew Resetar of Erie Pa Very Rev A Dixon Etollit dean of Trinity Episcopal cathedral here Father GeorgE) Scoulas dean of St Nicholas Greek Orshythodox cathedral in Oakland and Dr Harold R Alert former president of the Pittsburgh Council of Churches

The service was arranged by the Pittsburgh C 0 tI n c i I of Churches and the Pittsburgh Byzantine rite diocesE~

Where A

GOOD NAME

Means A

GREAT DAL

GEO OHARA CHEVROLET

565 MILL 5JREET

HEW BEDFIORD

Open Evenings

it from the lives of their peoplemiddot He revealed he has 25 engageshy

ments to talk to groups of other religious faiths including a lodge of Masons before Easter The Cardinal inquired Who would have thought even five years ago that a Catholic archbislfop would be preaching good will in a Protestant church or in a synshyagogue Or that a rabbi would be addressing other faiths We sure have come a long way in a short time-and its going to get better

Preaching Brotherhood The cardinal also observed I

am not trying to convert Protesshytants to Catholics or Jews to Catholics I never made a conshyvert in my life My only messhysage is one of brotherhood

Sturtevant 6shyHook Est 1897

Builders Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New Bedford WY 6-5661

Deny Dispatch About Ca rdinaI

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Sta_ Departm~nt spokesman her categorically denied a recent press story that there are ~

obstacles to Jozsef Cardinal Mindszentys leaving his refuge in the U S legation in Budapest but that the Primate of HungaI7 ~wants to die a prisoner there

The story (which was released by NANA and published in t~

daily press Jan 20) credited its source a State Deparme~ source in Bonn German~

who has taken part in recent U S-Hungarian negotiations

The State Department spokesshyman here described the story bull completely incorrect

We dont have any Americali official in Bonn who has had anything to do with the Hungar-o ian negotiations he said in an swer to inquiries It doesn1 represent anything that an American official would hold

New Orleans Plans New High Schools

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Arch-t bishop John P CodY of New Orleans has announced plansfOS construction of seven new hip schools in several parts of the archdiocese

Declaring that Catholic educashytion never was so flourishin nor were our Catholic people bull desirous of increasing the num bel of schools and improving t~

methods of teaching The Loushyisiana prelate said we must build so that all the children oil our area may have the blessin of a thorough Catholic educashytion

SERVING FINE ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4-8754bull

TIte Falmoufh NatiOnal Sanlc Falmouth Mass

tilt Villale Ir Sian 1121

WM T MANNING (0 WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE

AND

INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES bull GENERAL TIRES bull DELCOBATTERIES

bull PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS

FALL RIVER - NEW BEDFO~D - HYANNIS - NEWPORT

First Federal Savings AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF ATlLEBORO

4 on ali $avings Accouni

1 Extra on Systematic Bonus~vings

bull bull bull bull bull

11 bull

Portugal Bishops Plan University For Country

LISBON (NO) - Portushygals bishops have announcshyed plans to found this nashytions first Catholic Univershysity

They said in a joint pastoral letter issued after their meeting here that there is an imperative need for a Catholic university for the nations conscience They said the university win have greater freedom greater dynamism and greater flexibil shyity than the present state uni versities

The letter said that the govshyernment will help the bishops in founding the new Catholic university

Last Summer Manuel Cardishynal Goncalves Cerejeira of Lisshybon told a meeting studying the foundation of the Catholic Unishyversity that it would be open to both laymen and the clergy and located in Lisbon instead of the older university town of Coimshybra Earlier efforts were made to restore a theological faculty at Coimbra University The facshyultY was closed following the revolution which made Port~gal a republic in1910

Several years agothe cardinal noted that a Church-sponsored university has been a hope of 1Ihe VI has called on individual Cathshy one part of the Mystical Body of many Latill American counshy~oI1uguese bishops for a long olies to become more aware of Christ to another tries and CICOP itself whichtime ~ut that priorities for the world-wide dimensions and seminanes new churche~ pri- needs of the Church mary schools and Catholic Acshytion organization had delayed Today bull bull bull it is absolutely eoncrete plans indispensable that each pers~n

become aware of the true dishymensions of the Church the

Sees Greater Church Pope declared adding Greater awareness will iead to wideningNeed for Laity Role

LAKE CHARLES (NC) - A Louisiana editor predicts the time will come in the 20th censhytury when laymen wi~ domishynate the clergy in many fields

Msgr Alexander O Sigur edshyitor of the Southwest Louisiana Register diocesan newspaper feels in the present age of scishyence and technology Catholic laymen with specialized knowl- edge of law science and other fiElds must of necessity advise the clergy on the many facets of todays society

He pointed out that the layshymens role has made more progshyress since the opening of the Second Vatican Council than in the previous 10 centuries

But because of centuries of tradition there will be problems for some time connected with evolution of the laymans role in the Church he asserted

British Conversions Continue to Decline

LONDON (NC)-The number of converts to Catholicism in England and Wales continues to decline but the Catholic popushylation shows a steady increase according to the 1965 Catholic Directory published here

The known number of adult conversions for 1963 the most recent year for which statistics are available was 12778 This was a decrease of 552 from the previous year which also showed a considerably lower figure than that for 1961

But the Catholic population increased in 1963 by 129500 to 3956500 and the Catholic popshyulation in Scotland rose by 13shy310 to 812460

Foundation Member NEW YORK (NC) - William

G Ryan presidentmiddot of Seton Htn College Greensburg Pa haa been named a corporate member of the FoundationfOr the arts Religion and culture which win hold its fim meetina laue tomonow

THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

HIGH HONOR FOR K of C HEAD Supreme Knight John W McDevitt of the Knights of Columbus invested as a Knigh t Commander of St Gregory at a testimonial banquet in Boston is with left to right AuxiHary Bishop John F Hackett of H~rtford Archbishop Henry J OBrien of Hartford Bishop Charles P GreltfO Qf Ale~andna La Supreme K of C Chaplain and Bishop William J Smith of Pembroke OntarIO NO Photo

Pope Hail~ US Church Mission Work Says Transfe~ of Energies I Most ~onsoling

CHICAGO (NC)-Pope Paul this transfer of energies from unteers who are serving la

of vitality and fuller realization of the meaning of the name Catholic

Nature of Church Pope Paul made his plea in a

message to the second annual conference of the Catholic Inshyter-American Cooperation Proshygram (CICOP)

The Holy Father coupled his appeal for greater awareness of the worldwide nature vf the

Church with high praise for aid rendered in recent years by US Catholics to the Church in Latin America Prellently he said there are 4091 US priests reshyligious and laymen serving there

Greater Understanding I He called us Catholic proshygrams for Latin America a proshyvidential apostolic ~ovement and said they make up one of the most beautiful pages in the history of the Church in the United States

Particularly in light of the Ecumenical Councils constitushytion on the Church he said it iamost consoling to witness

BEFORE YOU BUY-TRY

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault 67 Middle Street Fairhaven

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICE

lJe singled out for praise US seeks by educational means to promote greater understandingdioceses which have sent 178 of Latin Americas problemsdiocesan priests to mission work

in Latin America US religious among the Catholic millions of the United Statescommunities of men and women

which he said are fulfilling the Urllent Demands engagement they have undershy Pope Paul voiced hope that thetaken of sending a tithe of meeting here would producetheir total memership to Latin many practical results parshyAmerica by 1970 US lay vol~ ticularly a wider and more soshy

licitous collaboration of the Refugee Children United States of America with

the Church in Latin AmericaHONG KONG (NC) - Archshy such as urgent needs dem~ndbishop Joseph Caprio apostolic

internuncio to China opened here for refugee children a new $100000 primary school built by Norris H Trippthe Franciscan Missionary Sisshyters of Our Lady of Sorrows SHEET METAL Mother Leola superior of the J TESER Proporder which has its headquarshy RESIDENTIALters in Beaverton Ore attended

INDUSTRIALthe ceremony COMMERCIAL

253 Cedar St New Bedford WY 3-3222 Montie Plumbing amp

Heating Co Inc

Counci~s Effects Years Away

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The universal effects of the Second Vatican Council will not be recshyognized completely for years to come James Francis Cardinal McIntyre told 2200 Holy Name men here in California

It is entirely impossible to estimate at the present time the effects of the council on the thinking of the world the carshydinal said

These effects have penetrated deeply into the spiritual life of all people not only of the Church alone he told a Holy Name Union Communion breakshy

fast One index of its effects is the

attention the council has comshymanded in the press of the world the cardinal said

Names Two Priests To Federal Board

NEW YOItK (NC) - T w bull priests are on the 30-niember board of directors of the new Sex Information and Education Council of the United Stat~

(SIECUS) formed to foster im- proved study and education oa the role of sex

TheYlre Father George Hag- maier CSP of the Paulist In- stitute for Religious Researc~ and Father John L Thomas SJ St Louis (Mo) University soci ologist

The executive director of the council is Dr Mary Steichen Calderone former medical dishyrector of the Planned Parentshyhood Federationand its presishyident is Wallace C Fulton formshyer presidtDt of the National Coundl on Family Relations

Whites Farm Dairy SPECIAL MilK

From Our Own Tested Herd

Acushnet Mass WY 3-4457 bull Special Milk bull Homogenized Vito 0 Milk bull Buttermilk bull Tropicana Orange Juice bull Coffee and Choc Milk bull Eggs - Butter

FIVE CONVENIENT OFFICES- -TOSERVE YOUReg Master Plumber 2930

GEORGE M MONTlE ONE-STOP BANKING Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET FIRSTmiddotMACHImiddotNISTS Fall ~River OS 5-7497 NATIONAL BAN Ilt

OF TAUNTON Norton W MaIn St-Raynham Rte 44-Taunton Main St

North Dighton Spring St-North Easton Main St_ w H RILEY amp SO~J Inc Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

CITIES SERVICE bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnmbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullDISTRIBUTORS

Gasoline i F L COLLINS amp SONS i Fuel and Range INCORPORATED 1937

OILS bull

GENERAL (ONTRAOORS5bullOIL BURNERS

For prompt delivery 5 and ENGINEERS 5amp Day amp Night Service

bull JAMES H COLLINS CE Pres G E BOILER BURNER UNITS bull Registered Civil and Structural Engineer bull

Rural Bottled Gas Se~ Member National Society Professional Engineers

61 COHANNET ST FRANCIS L COLLINS JR Treas = TAUNTON bull THOMAS Ie COLLINS Secy bull

Attteboro - No Attlebor~ middot =ACADEMY BUILDING FALL RIVER MASS Taunto1

-bullbull

bull 12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Humphreymiddot Becker Write Novels of Reminiscence

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Both William Humphreys The Ordways (Knopf

$595) and Stephen Beckers A Covenant with Death (Athshyeneum $450) are novels of reminiscence Both are laid in the Southwest the former in Texas the latter in an unshyidentified state The narrashytor in the Ordway book is for the most part telling what happened to his greatshygrandparents and his grandparshyents in the Civil War period and at the tum of the century In the Becker book the narrator is in his seventies recalling Ii decisive expeshyrience in his oWn life when he was 29 back in 1923 If there are similarities between the works there are also differences and they are very great

Mr Beckers novel is a Book of-the-Month Club middotselection has already been bought by a movie company for a vast sum and unshydoubtedly will be a roaring popshyular success Mr Humphreys novel will probably have far fewer readers and will bring its author far less money But it is by all odds and in every reshyIJPect the better book

Long-Winded It has one fault that of being

long-winded and at times meandering I just wanted to hear the same old things over and over again the narrator -of The Qrdways says at one point It is evidently presumed that the reader has the same desire and that he will not object to lengthy digressions But repetition and extended parenthetical exercises do become tiring even if as in ~is instance the writing is of a high order

1$ The Ordways really a novel in the Strict sense The pook cOritillns a notice reading A portion of Part One in some- what different form first apshypeared in The Saturday Evening Post

It is quite true that the first seetion could stand alone that the second and third sections could form a story by themshyselves and that only the fourth section depends for intelligibility on what has gone before Noneshytheless there is unity here if not the tight construction of the most effective novel

Family Lore Mr Ordway begins by describshy

ing graveyard working days in the hamlet of Mabry near the town of Clarksville in eastern Texas On that day occurring once a year the descendants or suniivors of those burled in the Mabry cemetery come together to set the place to rights

middotAs they do so they rec~ the histories of the dead and thus the family lore is passed on from generation to generation But it is more than family lore which is conveyed the countrys past is reconstructed and the making of the present

The narrator a boy in the 1930s learns of two decisive episodes in his own family One has to do with Thomas and Ella Ordway who were Tennessee people until 1863 Thomas was an infantryman was horribly wounded and disabled in the batshytle of Shiloh and would have died or at least have been lost to his famIly had it not been for his wifes valor The narrative of her recovering him ann bringshying him back to a ~blance of life is harrowing

Journey to Texas But somethinamp more harrowshy

ing is still to come the account of their six months journey in a wagon drawn by oxen from Tennessee to Texas in the hope of beginning a new and better life The reader not only follows this arduous exodus but makes and suffers it and is haunted by it thereafter

This portion of the book is a storY complete in itself dramatshyic pathetic comic packed with lively incidents and colorful characters some heroic some corrupt some rascally all disshytinctive and engaging

Occasionally the side excurshysions pall a bit as in the depicshytion of stump speaking by polit shyical candidates or of life with a small shabby traveling circus Yet each of these sideshows has something to contribute to the pictUre of emerging Texas

Acute Observations

Mr Humphrey writes extremeshyly well a little less fancily as the book progresses but always vivshyidly and with plentymiddot of power for the high moments His peoshyple are nicely differentiated and come memorably to life He has many acute observations and even authentic wisdom to disshypense and this he does neatly His book rings with truth about human nature and is the work of a highly gifted and skillful artist

Mr Beekers A Covenant with Death on the other hand strikes me as contrJved empty and often obnoxiousmiddot Its nub is a legal stickler What is to be dQne with a man who is convicted of m~rger bought +c the gallows there Gki1ls~e hangman and then is cleareu of the first kill shying ~is poser ismiddot put to the 29shy

year~old judge Ben Lewis He solyes Wby niakiIig law and when confronted with this puzshyzler solves as well a key probshylent in his personal life At one and the same time he becomes at last a real judge and a real man

Precise 3udgment

Or so we are asked to believe Lewis says of himself I passed the crisis of adolescence at the ludicrous age of 29 bull bull bull I was swollen with garbage and bittershyness My own ego was monshystrous mainly because I had never done anything for anyone and could justify my own useshylessness only by assuming that the world was not worth my energies This is a precise judgment

The trouble is that the book is swollen with garbage and bitterness as well as sophistry

Young Lewis conversations with his mother for example They irk by their pretentiousness and they disgust with their obscenishyties The youngmiddot judge is thorshyoughly sophomQric and we are asked to credit his sudden leap into maturity We are asked too much

It is with ill grace that the author scorns small town folk for their prurience It is just this to which most of his book apshypeals When he sneers that Soledad City our wholesome middle-class American town would be lined up three deep for good seats at a murder trial with sensational sexual aspects he apparently forgets that the predictably huge sales of his novel will be in large part to people attracted by itligamineaa

3AMES OGARA

PauiSft CElnter Lists Spe(d~er

James OGara editor of Comshyrronweai magazinEl will be guest speaker in the Christian Culture Series at the Paulist Ce-nter in Boston on Wednesday evening Feb 17 on the topic The Role and Future of Cathshyolic Education

Mr OGara has written numshyerous articles for leading Cathshyolic magazines in middotthis country end Europe and has appeared on many religiow television programs of the National Counshycil Of Catholic Men

Rev Andrew Greeley sociolshyogist and author of many books on social subjects will join Mr O-Gara in the discussion

Monsignor Francis 3 Lally editor of the Pilot will be pr0shy

gram moderator

Deplores Agtncies Poverty Appoach

CHICAGO (NC) -- Catholic charity and welfareillgencies and institutions must drop thebusishyness as usual appreach and get into the actual aIl~na of povshyerty a National Conference of Catholic Charities Dleeting here in Illinois was told

The surge of natilmal concern about poverty is one of the most dramatic and compelling moveshyments in our day rather Robshyert Monticello of DEltroit chairshyman of the conferences program committee told assembled social work executives

His views were echoed by Msgr Raymond 3 Gallagher secretary of the comerence who said that personal service to families and individuals among the poor must be a coriunitment each of us makes dailly

CENTIER Paint and Wldlpaper

Dupont PClint

iiP cor Middle St

422 6lcush Ave

~Qc=t~ New Bedford ~ARKING

Rear of Store

ProtEct What You Hav~

McGO~VAN Insurance J~gency

TEL MYrtle ~1middot8231

188 NORTH MAIN $TREET NORTH ATTU8ORO

Beggars for All the Missions

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen DO

rn the mail last week a package arrived containing several hundred printed and self-addressed envelopes from various begshyging organizations in the United States The good woman who sent the package admitted being neither rich nor comfortable and yet she was flooded with appeals She wanted to know how she became a victim of this deluge The answer is that she is on a mailing list There are hundreds of mailing lists for sale in the United States These can be bought for various amounts depending on the number and quality of the names listed The good woman who wrote us was on at least one of these lists

Never before has it been brought home to us with Such impact how swamped our faithful are with appeals It grieves DB

that we too are beggars but we find some consolation in the fact that the Holy Fathers Society for the Propagation of the Faith has never used such mailing lists

This incident highlightsmiddot an urgent need that the Vatican Council must recognize that of co-ordinating appeals for all these really worthwhile causes especially those of misshysionaries Pius XI said that the method by which each missionary group solicited only for itself did not provide an even distribution of help Some can barely survive others have investments in Wall Street How to know who out of the hundreds who beg are most deservng is not only difficult but almost impossible

We have never liked begging In fact there is too much inshysistence on money in the Church tOday We would like to be unshackled from our tin cup and not add to this confusion But this is our duty Why 1 Because the Holy Father has asked us to be his beggars in the United States for -all the missions of tlie world 2 Becanse it is the glory of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith not to helf) one order or society of the world but the entire world (As a matter of fact 88middot per cent of the appeals in the above-mentioned package received soDie aid from The Society for the Propagation of the Faith) 3 Because being under the direction of the Holy Father The Society for the Propagation of the Faith does not invest any of yoUrmiddot alms Every eent Is distributed by the Holy Father each year The world Is too poor So fOldve us

Oh yes the lady who sent us the package wrote I could not keep 240 missionary appeals because I have not the money Since The -Society for the Propagation of the Faith aids all I send the Holy Father my $100 to be divi4ed as he sees fit

GOD LOVE YOU to Anoafor $5 Here Is Diy poeen valeiI- Une for the poor bullbullbull toMLA for $78 This is whist l diel Ilot spend on eigarettes Somehow I cannot enjoy them auYmore knowing that today 10000 people riD die of ~rntionmiddot

-

Think ahead to Valentines day and order a GOD LOVE YOU medal In classic Florentine gold finish or pure sterling silver this lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of the World is one you would be proud to give or delighted to receive Designed by the world-renouned jeweler Harry Winston and blessed by Bishop Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal may be obtained by sending your request and corresponding offering to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001

$ 2 small sterling silyershy $ 3 small 10k gold filled $ 5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut 01lt ft1Is colUIDn pin your sacrifice to it and maD It te Most Rev Fulton 3 Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York New York 10001 or to your Diocesan Director

Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 368 North Main Street

Fall River Massachusetts

791 PurcIaase Street Betweea

WIUIam bull UnI_ S_

NEW BEDFORD

FIVE CENTS SAVINGS BANK

WE HAVE PLENTY OF MONEY FOR HOME LOANS

If youre buying or building -Ioolc to us CONVENTIONAL GI - FH~ FINANCING

Ca on us anytime aDd talk over your plans

Fathers andmiddot Daughters Will Twirl At Annual Sucordium-Sponsored Hop at SHA Fan River

Dads and daughters win twirl at the annual fathep daughter dance at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River Its scheduled fltgtr 8 tomorrow night in the academy gymshynatorium and is sponsored by the moms and dads and daughters-members of the

SHA Fall River and her team very active Sucordium Club marked its first league debateHomemaker of the year at this season by defeating Case

Holy Family High in New Dartmouth Taunton and PreshyBedford as a result of the annushy vost al Homemaker of Tomorrow test Coyle High was host for a taken by thousands of girls novice tournament of two rounds across the nation is Christian with nine schools competing last Saulnier Shes National Honor weekend and the varsity team Society treasurer and copy edshy last week won three of four iJtor of By Fy Spy the school matches over Bishop Stang paper Bishop Stang was host to Narshy

At Dominican Academy in Fan ragansett League debate last River the top homemaker is week with 12 schools representshyJulia Melvin Senior A president ed each by four man teams Repshysodality vice-prefect and student resenting Stang were John council vice-president Another Golenski Michael Hogan Thomshyfeather in Julias cap is that as Keary and Myles Tillotson shes to represent her school at At the same meeting Bishop the state capitol on Student Feehan was represented by Government Day Francis Detellis Kateri Detellis

Christine Julia and an other Roger Watts and Raymond StafshyDiocesan school winners in the ford They won one debate out homemaker contest are now eli shy of four gible for consideration as state Current Affairs Contest winners Themiddot states highestshy Many Diocesan schools partici shyranking girl will receive a $1500 pated in a current affairs conshyscholarship and will tour Washshy test sponsored by a weekly news ington and New York City this magazine and among top scorers Spring From the state finalists were Janet Gendreau Moniquewill be chosen national winners Boulay and Muriel Raiche at in the homemaking contest and Jesus-Mary and Paula Powersthese girls will have their scholshy Susan Penrose and Mary Kellyarship grants substantially illshy at SIlA Fall River creased Also in the spotlight is 1anice

Benoit of SHA Fall River whosGrac1aatlOIl GOWIl8

received honorable mention for rrs snowy outside but thoughts the Bishop Connolly award preshy

of the seniors at Mt St Mary sented annually to the DioceseAcademy in Fall River are Oft outstanding girl athletethe days of June Theyre curshy Yearbook pictures for Coylerently selecting g r a d u at i 0 Il juniors sophomores and freshshygowns and are making a critical men have been safely taken so survey of ofterings from several another milestone is passed OIl area stores the road to publication

And National Bonot- Society Dominican Academy juniopsmembers have been busy at Sashy and seniors will make a closedcred Hearts Fall River Theyve retreat at the Cenacle Conventwritten to all accredited colleges ill Brighton during their Februshyin the US requesting inforshy ary vacation while the annualmation on admission requireshy school retreat is in progressments and availability of finanshy hOW at Bishop Stangcial aid The gathered informashy The program includes dallytion will augment the guidanee Mass Benediction and confershyfile in the school library ences and retreat masters are

Sevenmiddot new clubs have beeR Rev John OBrien SSCCmiddot andorganized at Tauntons Coyle Rev Andrew Jahn SSCCHigh School They are French An unusual auction was a feashySpanish Stamp and Coin Pep ture of a dance sponsored lastEnglish Literature Chess and weekend by Feehan seniors forPhotography Something theremiddot all their fellow students Eachfor everyone faculty member donated a prize

Four Dominican Academy stushy for the auction including suchdents have passed 120 word tests valuable items as a pass excusingin Gregg shorthand and two a student from detention pershyhave passed 100 word tests On mission to omit a book from anthe bowling scene at DA high outside reading list and a driy scorers include Susan Pacheco ing passAnne Marie FoIster Colleen Auctionmiddot proceeds benefited bullDesrosiers and Patricia Od) shy performance of Leave It tonecky Jane to be produced by the

The junior prom at Bishop Feehan Dramatics Club SundayFeehan High in Attleboro has and Monday Feb 14 and 15been set for Tuesday night April Jeannine Dumont senior class20 In charge ofmiddot arrangements secretary and middotlssistant editor of are Robert Bedard and Carol the school paper at Holy FamilyMiller while committees are al shy High has been accepted at Bosshyready at work on decorations ton College as have classmates e n t e r t a i n men t refreshshy Maureen OBrien Christine Ponshyments tickets and that unher ichtera and John AylwardaIded but all-important chore of Mother McAuley Guild at Mtclean-up St Mary Academy will hold its

annual calendar party WednesshyDebaiioi- Prcmt day night Feb 10 EntertainshyIn the indoor days of Winter ment will reprelC~t each monthdebating holds an honored spot of the year and the decoratedamong extra-curricular activishycakes willbe ~oor prizesties at Diocesan schools At Preshy Class -laeement vost in Fall River the debate

THE ANCHOR-- 13 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Churchmen Favor Johnson School Aid Program

WASHINGTON (NC) shyCatholic and Protestant spokesmen applauded Presishydent Johnsons school aid proposal in a placid Congresshysional bearing where the on~ disagreement came over mi~

technical questions The release from the charged

atmosphere of past hearings w noted all around

A Catholic spokesman smilin~

ly commented that it was a relief not to fear getting out of the

Vour nearescmall box i$ Q Firsf Ilfderal branch office that open 24 hours $ day to make $(lving easy for you No traffic nO parking no leather problem~

Withdrawals ate just as implt taY~ngs paymencS

bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull r fRlE o~middottymiddotmiddot ~ ubullbullh coupon 7bullbull~ trti 0middot

team was victorious over Mt St Marys and Bishop Stang in Narshyragansett League debate but lost to SHA Fall River The varisity also met Coyle during the past week

Mt st Marys debate record stands at 2-2 with Anne Browshynell Linda Mello Susan Jenkinshyson and Nancy Curran defending their school in Narragansett

Tomorrows the day of reckonshying at SHA Fall River Not only will report cards be distributed but a list of all seniorsand their placement in middottheir class for the past four years will be published

Fifteen seniors It DA partici shypated in a French Listening Comprehension Test on Tuesday This supplementary test is ofshyfered by the eollege entrance

PREVOST SCHOLARS High scorers in National Merit Scholarship Examinations at Prevost High School Fall River are Gerard Gltgtu~et left and Paul Nowak

tests in addition to the French Written exams come in March

Also at Feehan where report cards will come tomorrow high honors will be achieved by those with an average of 90 or better honors by those earning 85 or better and honorable mention by those with grades of 80 01 better

Bishop Stang mathematiciana placed first ill the Notre Dame Math Meet held last week at Cardinal Cushing High in South Boston Eighteen schools com~

peted and Stang won by n points Responsible for the vieshytory were John Keavy Paul Roy John De Ciccio Raymond Desrosiers and Alan Roskiewiez Top individual scorer was John DeCiccio

Best Girl Athlete Senior Nancy Vogel of Bishop Stang High School received the Bishop Connolly Award for the best girl athlete of Fall River area Diocesan high schools at a ceremony held last night at Whites restaurant Nancy as shining a star schoshylastically as athletically plays hockey basketball and volley~ ball at the North Dartmouth school She will be the first reshycipient of what is to become an

Influence Declining MADRID (NC)-Castroist inshy

fluence among young people in Latin Ameriea has declined the past two years Luis Garcia Arishyas professor of international law at the University of Saragossa here in Spain said on his return from a tour of Latin America Thursday Feb 1amp

SCHOOL Mainte~ance suppr~

SWEEPERS SOAPS DISINFECTANTS

FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

DAHILL CO 1886 PURCHASE STREET

annual award made by the FaD River Clover Club Also honored at last nights dinner-dance WBI Coach Carlin Lynch of 11M Stang Spartans

Forty Hours devotion was celshyebrated for the first time at Bishop Feehan high scbool starting Sunday and ending Tuesday Seniors Eileen Pashyquette Mary Duffy Nancy Clegg and Susall Ouelle~te aided Sister Mary Kateri of Feehan home economics department III making a cope and humeral veil used for the first time at the ceremonies

And Feehanites celebrated terms end by viewing A Raisin in the Sun

bullbullbullbullbullbull

hearing room alive The major Protestant spokesmen described the bill as an instrument of recshyonciliation Con g res smiddotm e a praised the compromises they saw being made by all sid~

church groups and educators -The President has proposed bull

$12 billion program to improve elementary and secondary schooling from poverty-strickea families

A total of $1 billion wouldge to public school districts in lowshyincome areas Additionally the proposal would spend $100 milshylion for textbooks for all school children and school libraries and another $100 million to create bull system of public-priva~commushynity educational centers to offer cultural enrichment and specitl eourses to all school ehildren

Pittsburgh School Enroll~ent Down

PITSBURGH (NC) - Enroll shyment in the Pittsburgh diocellMl Catholic school system has dro~ ped by 40 pupils Msgr John B McDowell superintendent ball reported

The monsignor said the sliglll drop has been preceded by fo_ years of leveling oft in enrol) ment figures because of enforeet gradual cuts in class size

Since 1960 he said there _ been an increase of only 24 pushypils in the total number of stushydents Elementary and seconda schools last June tallied 129531 pupils a drop of 40 he said

bullbullbullFREEKI _forbullbull~to bull ~-~----- shy _ StampMo _ middot----1

City_middot bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbulliibullbullbullbullbullbullbull WE pAY POSTAGa

(tree po5t-pald~Clddd i-velop ady to mall

FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND lOAN ASSOCIATION

OF FALL RIVER Home OHice 1 North Main St Fall River

Somerset OHice 149 GAR Highway Rte 6 League bouts The team meets exam board and consists of Both Offices Open Friday Evenings until INEW BEDFORDBishop Cassidy of TauntOn Wedshy questions and answers concernshy Sonterset Drive-In Window Open Mon-Thurs til 4 nesday Feb 10 ing subject matter on tape At WY 3-3786 Susan Nunes heads debate 111amp Feeha aiYdentll 1ook Germaa

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Stresses ilroad beep Gulf Between Two Generafions

By John J Kane Ph D What is your opinion of secretive sons and daughters

()f today Our married son and daughter never tell us anyshything Friends and strangers knew they bought a new home before we did My daughters husband knows all the ansshywers and wants no advice from anyone My son is afraid of his wife and she makes all decisions They ask us to visit but hurt our feelshyings when we do by what they say We were raised to reshyspect our elders and ask their advice

You r letter Jean does pose some justifiable complaints But it also seems to make some unshyreasonable deshy

mands Furthershymore amusingshy1y enough you conclude that you were reared to respect your elders and intimate your chil shydren werent If so whom can you blame

I dont know the reason why your children failed to inform you of their intentions to purshyehase a home But I do have some suspicions Do you have a tendency to be critical about what they buy Sometimes parshyents do

Tremendous Inflation Y-oungsters and parents both

make a certain type of mistake when it comes to purchasing of such things as homes cars or expensive appliances So m e young marrieds try to begin at a level their parents only achieved after 10 or 15 years of married life

But some parents do not seem to realize that inflation has been tremendous in the last 20 years When they hear a son or daughshyter is about to buy it home for 20 or 25 thousand dollars they are horrified They remember they paid perhaps 6 8 or 10

thousand dollars when they bought

They also forget credit is a bit easier than in the past that F BA and even the GI Bill help young people today and they may not even have existed when they were shopping for a house Longer te~ mortgages are possible today and lower down payments These of course do mean more interest

Coinmon CourteSY In other words parents should

Dot use the yardstick of economshyic conditions when they were young for the youth of today When they state perhaps with heated emphasis Why your father and I paid 10 thousand for a home the children are understandably irritated

But once having made their decisions com m 0 n courtesy would seem to demand tpat parshyents be told before strangers or at least as soon as friends Your sense -of hurt feelings here is quite understandable

Your complaint that your sons wife makes all the decisions may be true If so I agree that you have reared a Milquetoast But

is it true Are you actually cershytain or are you imagining someshything Are you really sayingshyand I frankly fear youare-that your son listens to his wife more than he listens to you

Mother-in-Law Role Being a mother-in-law is not

an easy role in Anierican soClshyety and many of the stupid

at least not if you wish to be a successful parent

Because most parents do love their children they are eager to help them They feel that their years of experience give them an advantage and this advantage they would extend to their chil shydren

At times this is true At times it is not The gulf between genshyerations is broad and deep Life has changed greatly in the space of one generation and the bench marks of the past may be unshysuitable today There are certain areas of living in which children may have better ideas than their parents Be prepared to admit as much

But within those areas where the maturity and experience of parents can be helpful advice can be given when not reshyquested only indirectly and cautiously Young marrieds misshyconstrue it as an effort to domshyinate which they reject Pershyhaps you can recall when you too felt this way

But it is indeed sad if they hurt your feelings when you do visit them You have not enshylarged on this so it is impossible to determine just what is said or done that annoys you Assuming you are making a correct judgshyment it is at the very least a breach of hospitality

Many of the inter-generational and in-laws problems of today are the result of social changes As one grows older it is less and less easy to change to adopt ways of doing and thinkshying After all if one succeeded under one system there is little motivation to alter it

Life Easier But conditions have changed

and to paraphrase a commercial this is the Pepsi generationbull Today boys and girls get married even wher the boy is unemshyployed This is scarcely advisable but somemake it Boys marry while still in college and their wives work to help put them through This would have been unthinkable 40 years ago

One of the really amazing changes is the use of long term credit The proud boast of years ago was that one didnt owe any money If you said this today youngsters would view you with open amazement and quietly conclude your credit was no good

No doubt some of this is overshydone and can bring about tragic results But if used intelligently it can make life somewhat easier perhaps more pleasant than in the past

These are only a few of the changes that could be listed a complete litany of them would be impossible Now this doesnt mean that parents are old fogeys that their counsel is useshyless It does mean that they must try tomiddot understand their married children better than some do

And incidentally because of these sweeping changes it is more difficult than it was But it isnt impossible an4 when donepays off in much better relationships

Anti-Smut Effort NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Loushy

isiana Knights of Columbus have jokes ]lake it even more diffi- launched a public information cult But parents after having campaign to combat what one reared their children to the best official t e r m e d indifference of their ability must let them go stemming from lack of knowlshyon their own You cannot keep edge about the growing traffic them tied to your apron strings in obscene literature

PRINCE OF THE CHURCH Americas new cardin~l recelyes congratulations from an old friend as Archbishop Patrlck A OBoyle of Washington felicitatesmiddot Lawrence Cardmal Shehan Archbishop of Baltimore on his elevation to the College of Cardinals by Pope Paul vi NC Photo

~Glassand Wire Tiny Foulr-Bell Chime in Bay State Church

Producing Soundof Big Heavy Metal WALTHAM (N C) - The string-shaped length of glass

church-bell of the future may which may be up to a foot i~ bE a ht~le thing of glass and length and a tiny hammer to Wire weighm~ about two grams produce the proper vibrations but reproducmg the sound of These vibrations are converted cast-metal constructions weigh- into an electronic signal which ing more than a ton ~asses through an amplifier is

j Pope Emphasizes Import of Hymns

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul in an audience for more han 1000 priests participating in a convention on pastoral lit shyurgy emphasized the key role of hymn-singing in the liturgy

We are not in a hurry he said

We must raise up a new peoshyple who learn to pray as the Church now prescribes

One of the prescriptions which I believe to be most influshyential and most necessary is singing

The Pope said that hymns inshycluding popular ones lift the soul and nourish it with religious sentiments

Illinois School Joins Expanding ETV Plan

MORTON (NC)-A parochial school here in Dlinois has served as pilot school in a historic edushyeational television experiment

Blessed Sacrament School reshyceived the first experimental transmission of v ide 0 tap e d courses in color from a high freshyquency monidirectional terminal

A 120-foot tower atop the school received signals from a tower on the Bradley University campus 10 miles away Bradley Coordinator Philip Weinburg said he expects an ETV program to be operational in the 1965-66 school year

The Catholic school tower will remain as a permanent inshystallation to serve both as an ETV booster station with a 15shymile radius and a receiver for educational programs in the school next Fall

Changes in Mass EDINBURGH (NC) - Scots

Catholics are busily preparing for the introduction of English and Gaelic into the Mass on March 1 the first Sunday in Lent

bull HYANNIS bull HARWICH PORT bull ~olri YAAMOUTH

--- shy

funeral Service

DoANmiddotSpoundALmiddotAMtS INCOIlPOItATtiD

Glassblower Gerhard B Finkshybeiner of Brandeis University here in Mass lpoundlas installed for the first time in the United States a set of the tiny bells in St Susanna church in Dedham named for the t~tula church in ~ome of ~ostOIl s Richardmiddot Carshydinal Cushmg

Finkbeiner whose small glass bells already al~e making kingshysiZed sounds in 10 churches in Germany and ]~rance has proshyduced a four-bell chime for the Dedham church encased in a metal cabinet only two feet long and weighing a mere 40 pounds In cast metal equivalent sotmdshyproducers would occupy a goodshysized belfry and weigh aboUt 10000 pounds Finbeiner envishysions his discovery as destined for churches which cannot afford regular bells

The new-style bells look like nothing so much as the fa~iliar vacuum tubes found in any nonshytransistor radio but they proshyduce a never-changing high quality sound which is fully comparable to the metallic clang

of the old-fashioned bell shy

Inside each vacuum tube in Finkbeiners system there is a

MON~~GHAN

ACCEF-TANCE CQIRP

JHOMAS F MONAGHAN JR

Trecisurer

142 SECOND STREET

OSborne 5-7856

FALL RIVER

Increased 100000 times and comes out through a ~pecial speaker whose sound most exshyperts cannot tell from a metallic ben

The sound of a heavy metallic bell is one of the most complex of all musical sounds according to Finbeiner but he has been able to dUJlicat~ it through parshyallel ~Udi~ in glassblowing electronics and ~acuum techshyniques

BARDAHL MAKES YOUR

CAR RUN BEnER tAt New Car Dealers and Service Stations

Everywhere -I

With Safety at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK

115 WILLIAM sr NEW BEDFORD MASS

WEBB OIL (OMPANY TEXACO FUEL ()IL$

DOMESTIC amp HFAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS

Sales~SetYce-lnstaDtjon MAINO~FICE~JO ~RFEEmiddot sTREETmiddotfAll ~IVER

Phone OS 5-7484

11

1S --

Views of New Ho~Y TrinitYmiddotmiddot-C-h-~-rc-h-I-W-e-s-t-~-I-a-li-i-ac-h-middotmiddotmiddotI

-

I I

16 THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

Says Pope John Left Cha lIenge To Catholicsmiddot

NORTH PALM BEACH (NC) - Pope John XXIII left Catholics with a chalshylenge to meet the world Bishop Coleman F Carroll of Miami said here

Bishop Carroll said Pope John dared Catholics to meet other Christians and non-Christians and to discuss our common problems and seek by discussion a solution to these problems

This challenge cannot be met by the pope alone or by the bishops and priests alone he said It must be met by all inshycluding-indeed especially-the laymen

-He said laymen must be propshy

erly prepared for this task through study training and spirshyitual preparation In this conshynection he called a closed spirshyitual retreat an absolute must for the lay person

Bishop Carroll spoke to memshybers of the Our Lady of Florida Retreat League at a dinner in his honor at the Passionist Retreat House here

PrelWtes Sc~~dlJ(e

US~ ~f VeCrulall ROME (NC)-The Italian lanshy

guage will be used in Mass throughout I t a I y beginning March 7 the first Sunday of Lent

The Italian Bishops Commitshytee on the Liturgy in announcshying the change specified that the Italian language would be used in Masses on Sundays and holy days and at all Masses attended by a substantial number of the faithful

The parts of the Mass to be said in Italian are the following the Epistle Gospel acclamations salutations and dialogues (inshycluding the prayers at the foot of the altar and the dialogue preshyceding the Preface) the Kyrie Gloria Creed Sanctus-Benedicshytus and Agnus Dei themiddot Patermiddot Noster with its introduction and the formula for the Communion

Peloquin Chorale Televises Hymns

NEW YORK (NC)-Hymns -Yesterday and Today featurshyipg C Alexander Peloquin and members of his popular Peloquin Chorale will be telecast Feb 14 from 1 to 130 PM EST over the ABC-TV network

The latest program in the seshyries Directions 65 - a Catholic Perspective produced by the National Council of Catholic Men and the ABC public affairs department was written by Peloquin and traces the develshyopment of hymnody from the Te Deum of the 4th century to the works of contemporary composers

Stresses Doctrines Substance Remains

DAVENPORT (NC) -Bishop Ralph L Hayes of Davenport adshymonished an interfaith meeting here in Iowa against expecting changes in Catholic doctrine

The (Second Vatican) Counshycil may change the manner of presentation of doctrines but not their substance he said pointing to the liturgy as an exshyample of such a change

We must admit bigotry and misunderstanding on both sides But followers of Christ have Scripture devotion to the Holy Spirit and devotion to Christ in common Why not talk about the things on which we agree he asked

Sisters of Mercy General Asks Personal ST LOUIS (NC)-Weve got

to develop the Sister in depth Thats what the times call for said the mother general of the 7300 American nuns of the Sisshyters of Mercy of the Union

Mother Mary Regina Cunningshyham ending her first six-year term as the head of the widely known teaching social work and hospital nuns was talking about what the Sisters of Mercy are doing to bring themselves fully up to the times

In St Louis Mo to meet with the superiors of the nine Mercy provinces Mother Regina talked about the main vehicle she and her colleagues hope will achieve the transformation

This is the year in the commu- nity for chapter meetings and general meetings of the nuns in

each of the provinces climaxed by a meeting of the general chapter at the orders mothershyhoupse in Bethesda Md she said

Changing Church Results will be ~olnown in Aushy

gust and Mother Regina hopes that they will show her commushynity to be in line with the mind of a rapidly changing Church in the midst of an even faster movshying world

She predicted tlat the chapshyters would have some surprises not only in the deisions but in the way they are organized to give a more representative view of all the Sisters in the order

If one overall phrase had to sum up what Mother Regina and the other planners are looking for in the Mere chapters it

would be personal responsibil shyity she said

A Sister has to have the reshysponsibility to make judgments for herself said the mother general Her superiors have to give her the responsibility to achieve her own role She has to make the decision to take the risks

~And then of course be ready to pay the price for her decishysion said Mother Regina

In Updated Sense Weve gone beyond the day

Papal Count BALTIMORE (NC) - Thomas

W Pangborn a Hagerstown (Md) industrialist and philanshythropist has been named a papal count by Pope Paul

Responsibility of always being safe Some peoshyple want to be sure to have the answer before they move But sometimes that meant they never moved at all she observed

Developing a Sister in depth will mean a lot of things espeshycially an updated sense of her apostolate and the way she works at it For the Mercy nuns in the U S Central and Latin America and in the West Indies it will mean a lot of littie things Mother Regina hinted

Changes might relax regulashytions about home visits dining with others attending night meetings and cultural affairs or traveling with companions

Mother Regina said that we have to plan for more contact with the laity and for more edushycation to understand each other shy

a

lYonderful Meatsbullbullbull Anoth~r Big Reasll Why zltI ~III I bull STAYING ~c~ Z ~

with FIRST NATIONAL it

l~middotmiddotsowll ItmiddotI

IIIIr-All vlu

FACE RUMIP Fine Grained Texture shy

Heavy Steer Beef for Hearty Eating LB

The Perfect Roast for large Families

ROASTL854CAITCHBONE Same [ow Self-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vidnily rNe Reserve Iie Right to Limit Quantitietl

-

I The Parish Parade I SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO bull

Holy Name Society members will receive corporate Communshyion at 7 oclock Mass Sunday morning Feb 14 The unit plans a Valentine dance and supper from 7 to 12 Saturday night Feb 13 in the Elks auditorium on Church Street SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs John DeBettenshycourt president Mrs Arnold Muckerheid vice-president Mrs Nelson J DeBettencourt Jr treasurer Mrs Charles Davis secretary

For the Holy Name SOGiety James Ferreira is president supshyported by Freeman Willoughby vice-president Alfred Metell treasurer Anthony Rebello secshyretary The units next meeting will be Sunday Feb 14 at the parish hall OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a Masquerade Ball Friday night Feb 26 at Wimpys resshytaurantr Osterville Mrs James E Murphy is chairman ST JOSEPH ATTLEBORO

The CYO will sponsor a dance Saturday night Feb 20 with enshytertainment by Mickey Chagnon and the Rivieras Chairmen for the unit include Carolee Desshyrochers membership Judy Roy spiritual Claudette Ouimet culshytural Sue Reynolds publicity Claire Piette social Don Fisher recreational BLESSED SACRAMENT FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will present a fashion fair at an open meeting to be held Wedshynesday Feb 17 in the church basement Planned for April are a rummage sale and a whist party ST JEAN BAPTISTE FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women announces a ham and basket whist party for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 in the lower church hall In charge will be Mrs Napoleon Picard and Mrs Eugene Gagnon aided by a large committee ST STANISLAUS FALL RIVER

Civics Club members of the parochial school will deliver pastry to nursing home patients for Valentines Day Other projshyects include collecting Christmas cards for missionaries and shovshyelling snow to augment the club treasury OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION OSTERVILLE

Mr and Mrs William Dacey will be co-chairmen of a preshyLenten dance to be held Friday night Feb 19 at Wimpys restaushyrant in Osterville under sponsorshyship of the Womens Guild The program will include a buffef and dancing from 9 to to ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

Mrs Lionel J Dulude presishydent of the Sacred Hearts Assoshyciation requests all ladies of the unit who have First Friday Adoration to check their asshysigned times in order that the full quota will be present at all hours

Corporate Communion for members will be held on Sunday at the 815 Mass and the regushylar meeting will be held the same evening at 730 in the Church Hall

The Penny Sale scheduled for Feb 20 will be discussed atthis meeting ST JOSEPH FALLRIVER

The annual mid-Winter Gala is set for Saturday night at Venus de Milo restaurant A buffet supper from 630 to 830 will be followed by dancing a parish reunion and awarding of prizes

ST JOAN OF ARC ORLEANS

Forthcoming events for the Womens Guild include penny sales this month April and next November socials in March and June and Summer fairs in July and August A ham and bean supper is ~cheduled for May ST JAMES NEW BEDFORD

middotMsgr Noon Circle plans a potluck supper for members and their guests Saturday night Feb 20 OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION NEW BEDFORD

Holy Name Society officers inshyclude Severo G Alfama presishydent James P Gonsalves and John Monteiro vice-president Antonio Rocha treasurer John Soares secretary ST GEORGE WESTPORT

Womens Guild members will form the congregation at the TV Mass to be broadcast on channel 6 at 10 Sunday morning Feb 7 Participants will meet at the parish school hall at 9 to travel to New Bedford ST JOHN BAPTIST NEW BEDFORD

Parishioners will hold their annual filhoz supper and penny sale at 530 Sunday evening Feb 21 in the cllurch hall Tickshyets are available from officers of church organizations or at the rectory In charge are Gilbert Brazil and George Ladino ST PIUS X SOUTH YARMOUTH

The WQmens Guild will hold a past presidents dinner Monshyday night March 1 at Armands restaurant_ Hyannis NOTRE DAME FALL RIVER

Cubs and Boy Scouts will at shytend a Communion breakfast Sunday Feb 7 following 815 Mass A blue and gold banquet for the Cubs is set for Sunday Feb 28 in the parish hall with Roger Labonte in charge of arshyrangements

The Council of Catholic Women will hold its installation banquet Monday Feb 22 at Whites resshytaurant under the chairmanship of Mrs Paul Ilmais To be seated are Miss Helena Dumont president Mrs Cecile Barnabe frst vice-president Mrs Gershyard DextTaze second vice-presishydent Mrs Richard Perry treasshyurer Mrs Romeo Parent reshycording secretary Mrs Roger Langlois corresponding secreshytary

The third in a series of cake sales will follow all Masses this Sunday in the lower church Mrs Ferdnand Letendre chairman will be aided by Mrs Robert Phenixco-chairman Cakes can be brought to the lower church from 4 to 5 and 630 to s Saturshyday afternoon and evening SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a potluck supper for members at 630 Tuesday night Feb 16 in the parish hall A silent auction will follow the slipper In charge of arrangeshyments is Mrs Mary Pereira chairman aided by Mrs Mary Gagne The council announces a malassada supper and penny sale open to the public from 530 to 7 Sunday night Feb 21 also in the hall Tickets will be available at the door and chairshymen are Mrs Mary Cabeceiras and Mrs Albina Quintill

A regular meeting is set for 730 Friday night Feb 12 in the hall Installation of officers is planned for later in the month ST MATIDEU FALL RIVER 4

A Valentine whist is planned by the Council of Catholic Womshyen for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 at the parish hall Mrs Raymond Antaya is chairman

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan RIver-Thurs Feb 1l96I rr

GIVE VIEWS ON AID Presenting views on federal aid to education to the House Education sub-committee was this panel representing the Catholic school system left to right Msgr William E McManus Chicago superintendent of the largest Ctholic school system in the country Mr Edward McArdle Washington DC who focussed on the parents view of the childs needs as the father of seven children Msgr Freclerck G Hochwalt Director Education Department NCWC and Msgr John B McDowell sushyperintendent of the Pittsburgh diocesan school system NC Photo

bullSays Church Must Live In Wide World~ Cardinal Hits Ignorance of Our Neighbor

CHICAGO (NC)-An Amerishycan prelate prominent in the Churchs work for Latin Amershyica has told US Catholics there is no excuse for our ignorance of our neighbors the nations of Central and South America

Archbishop Paul L Hallinan of Atlanta chairman of the subshycommittee for inter-American cooperation of the US Bishops Committee for Latin America in a message to the second annual conference of the Catholic IntershyAmerican Cooperation Program SClid the Church today lives in a new world but it must preshypare to live in a wide world

Miles Are Nothing Catholics in tpe United States

with a strong cultural and comshymercial bridge to Europe find Africa a puzzle and Asia an Orshyiental mystery Strangest of all is our ignorance of our own neighbors the nations of Central

E~ual Treatment JERSEY CITY (NC)-Hudson

County parishes here in New Jersey are joining in a countyshywide interfaith appeal seeking pledges of fair housing practices

~T FRANCIS XAVIER IIYANNIS

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a penny sale at 8 Tuesday right Feb 9 in the parish hall A Communion breakfast and fashion show are on the units Spring schedule

ST JOHN BAPTIST CENTRAL VILLAGE

A housewares demonstraticm will follow an open meeting scheduled by the Womens Guild for 8 Thursday night Feb 11 in the church hall In charge of refreshments will be Mrs Matil shyda Shelter Miss Margaret Shay and Miss May Taggart The unit plans a Valentine whist for 3 Saturday night Feb 13 also in the church hall on Main Road Miss Edith Kirby and Mrs Louise Vieira are chairmen ST JOHN POCASSET

The Womens Guild announces a penny sale for Friday Feb 12 Mrs Sprague Spooner will be chairman The units next meetshying will feature slides and a talk by Col Eugene S Clark on the early history of Marthas Vineshyyard It will be held Tuesd~

Feb 16

and South America he deshyclared

The ~rchbishop said 60 years ago there was an excuse-travel communications and cultural knowledge were in their inshylancy But now miles are nothshying since Pope John XXIII brought his message of unity to the world he averred adding

Real Import The CICOP meeting brings

bishops priests and laymen of both hemispheres together for a remarkable in-service training period a healthy learn while you work program We know much of Latin American needs both religious economic and culshytural We are helping in our way to repair these shortcomings But we need even more to share

in this Christian fraternity fIIf background common resources and future hopes Only by free easy association with the repshyresentatives of Latin America can we get the real import

ELECTRICAL Contractors~

~ ~ ~ ~

944 County St ~ New Bedford

ecec~c~ccccee~o

C) LOUlUl~S iiffii~ ~ i middotbull EWrIMA ~- shyg l~

ROMEamp I~-

I SHmNES imiddot ~ OF EUROPE iiI bull ampHOLY LAND ~) C~ 1 bull CATBOLIC PROGRAJ 1965 ~)

ALI~~16 ~I CachoIlcTeI Orrlce ~) c~ WASHINGTON CHICAGOIOMI LONDONI CATHOLtC TRAVEL OFFICE FRM ~------------II -~ Dupont Circle Building WashIngton D C 20036 fali ~ ~ j1ii Please send me your free Illustrated booklet describing in ~ iJl detail the wOrldmiddotcovering pilgrimages

C~ Name iI ~IJ Address ~ C_~ CityIloneState 11 =~~~~~_~_~~_~_ft~ftVw ijrv _ii~middotV

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Teen-agers Outstanding For Prodigal Generosity

By Rev Joseph T McGloin S J Several times in this column Ive had some glowing

words to say about our Mexican neighbors to the south about their friendliness and hospitality- and general likeshyableness And certainly its all true These people busy as they are will go out of their of other peoples is that you canway give you their precious easily give the idea you are sell shytime and attention to see ing all your own countrymen that you enjoy your visit to short And this would be the their country When a Mexican furthest thing from my own says Mi casa es su casa My thoughts house is your Because there is great friendli shyhouse - which ness in our country too - in he invariably varying degrees and manifested

middot does-he means in various ways The Mexican is it F r i end s in general more spontaneous strangers even than we and most of us have to shopkeepshy be approached before we give ers youve never our friendship since an initial II e e n before shyness seems to hold us back will introduce Often enough however this

middotyou to the whole shyness is caused by a national family and inshy superiority complex by a fear vite you to hav~ of not being accepted and by

middotdinner wit h the fear of making fools of ourshymiddot them To put it mildly hospital shy selves in a language we dont ity like this would be impossible know In other words humility to forget or to overlook is an esseatial to friendliness and _ Sometimes you wonder as you hospitality Sometimes we have walk the downtown- streets of it Often we dont CHle of our own cities and as you Hospitable People see pe~ple going their own inshy We Americans are sometimessulated ways if it isnt true that afraid to show our real feelingsas a country we have only a -afraid to show for inst~nce

-head while Mexico has a head our sympathy forthe underdogand a heart We usually make up for t~is

Superiority Complex psychologically by cheering on - This feeling grows on - you the hiss favored side at spe~tator when you visit Mexico and have sports when we should be doingthe misfortunE to encounter the it in the causes of racial justiceAmerican tourist who is bent on and equality of opportunity inshyacting like one It is a crying stead shame that so many Americans We are afraid others usuallyhave to show a superiority com- those very loud others will look

middotplex to those they encounter in down on us if we give public middot other countries seeming to feel support to those who need our that no matter where they go it support the little -people the is not they who are the foreignshy least of Christs and our brethshyers but those they encounter ren

All too often these types seem The fact is though that we to despise the customs and lanshy Americans do have a- heart and guage and even the currency of that once we put aside our sillythe countries they visit apparshy ideas that we are too busy to be ently thinking that anyone can hospitable or that others will understand English if you only look on us as soft and foolish if speak louder and that real we are or that we must not goAmerican money will buy anyshy out of way forour foreign~rs thing even respect because we might make a misshy

Worst of all are those wbo take in speaking their languagebring their aura of racial supeshy -then we can be and are just as riority along with them and hospitable and friendly as anymake little effort to hide it It is peoplein the world undoubtedly true that some of Ideals of Youththis patronizing attitude is partly There are many Americansresponsible (along with Castro~ and fortunately there are gettingeternal vigilance for American to be more who are willing tomistakes and seeming mistakes) stand up publicly and be countedfor the affection with which on the side of right instead ofAmericans are held in some parts - merely clucking in quiet privateof Latin America such as in sympathy There are lots ofPanama Americans who are not jqst

Race Prejudice friendly and hospitable to forshyAnd its tragic that have eigners but who do heroic workwe

to expoFt the most shameful of with the poor and downtrodden our national sins the stupidity and handicapped of their own which is race prejudice We country and their own city as might as well forget in fact well about any good neighbor polshy - Now there are lots of adult icy until we ourselves become Americans of this type But good neighbors when it comes to out-and-out

But even when we are not prodigal generosity it is the snobbish at home we are seldom teens as a rule whohave to be as spontaneous in our friendli shy given first prize ness other peoples The forshy A teen-agel who has not yetas eign students who come to stuay outgrown the honest ideals of at our universities often get youth will give his time and enshylonely and discouraged because ergy unstintingly and with little they have seemingly no friends thought of consequences This

author has instanceThe Negro in his fight for for seen equality (a fight which should kids doing heroic work with the never have been necessary in the very poor and the orphans-notfirst place) very often feels just throwing money into a colshyalone (though decreasingly so) lection box for them but givingwhen even those who know he is them their time and their love getting a raw deal do nothing working with them face to face at least publicly to help him even as Christ did set things right America has a great heart

Which may be one reason the and many Americans are just as Negro American often makes a spontaneous and natural at better ambassador abroad than showing it as any people anyshyother Americans where As a country however

Friendliness Here we still have some distance to But the trouble with extolling go before this sort of generosity

the hospitality and friendlin~ becomes our national image

CHECK COMPARE SAVE

Turkeys 10to11 LIS

Ready-to-Cook 39~ FIR S T Nancy Vogel

daughter of Mr and Mrs SAVE CASH bullbullbull SHOP AampPLeonard J Vogel of Sacred Heart Parish Fall River and a senior at Starg High last night became the first recishypient of the Bishop Connolly award for the outstanding

girl athlete n a Catholic High School The Clover Club of Fall River sponsored the award

Thomas ~Vhalen

In Noviticlte Brother Thomas Whalen son

of Mr and Mrs Thomas Whalen -8 General Cobb St Taunton and a member of the Sacred Heart Parish has received the religshyious habit of the Erothers of the

SMOKED P()RK SHOUlDERS

SUPER-RIGHT SHORT SHANK 6 TO 8 lBS

PICNICS 1829c

CHICKEN LEe or BREAST 33c

QUARTERS l8

SAVE CASH ON THESEHoly Cross at ceremonies conshyducted at St Joseph Novitiate

Valatie NY 6 POUNDS ofi BREAD ONLY 99c Brother John Donoghue CSC

Provincial Superior of the Broshy Whitl Breadp~~~E~ 4 ~6~~~z99c thers of the Holy Cross of the SAVI 20e - REGULAR 59c - 8 INCHEastern Province announced I p 118 8 OZ 39CJANEthat Brother Thomas was one of App I II PARKER IACHthe 14 candidates who is now starting a canonical year of proshy JANI PARKER - SAVlOe REGULAR 9c

bation for the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross bull hB Ck 1 lB 3 OZ 3ftCSpaRIS ar a e EACH i

Following the reception the parents and friends of Brother Thomas were guests at a lunchshyeon at the novitiate

Total Now 430 NEW YORK (NC)-With the

opening of two more parish schools the number of Catholic elementary schools in the New York archdiocese now totals 430

ATWC)OD OIL CO~~PANY

SHEILL HEATIN4 OILS South SeC] Streets Hyannis Tel HY 81

COMPLleTE

Mortgage Service anywhere on Cape Cod

bull RESIDENTIAL bull COMMEI~CIAL

bull CONSTRUCTION bull SEASONAL

Call EX 8-2266

Bass ~iver Savings Bank

SOUTH YARMOUTH Hyannis - Dennis Port

Yarmouth Plaza

Special Donut and Coffee SoleI All THIS weEKI

PLAIN SUGARED CJlNNAMON OR COMBINATION

2 PKGS 4ftltJane Parker Donuts 29cR~~ Of 12

I E 5 ON ON SAVE 4c B~~S SAV 1 c B3~S MILO AND MRLOW COFfil

Eight OClock ~A~ 69c-3 IJ~G 198 RICH FULLmiddotBOOleo

Red Circle CoHee ~A~ 71 c-3 B~G204 VIGOROUS ANO WINEY

lokar Coffe ~A~ 73c-3 B~G210 rice shown In thl ud guiltnteed tlltu Sat Feb

Tobacco products and Items prohibIted by Iaw eKempt from Plaid Stamp Offbullbull amp effective at ALL Aamp Sup Matlcotn thl communll1 and lclnll1

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 8: 02.04.65

8

l

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall liver-Thurs Feb W85

Catholic Press Bears Witness 10 Churchs Spirit of Renewal

By Mary Tinley Daly -Reading habits must be changing in my parish

Mid a priest of our acquaintance Few years ago he ruminated Id go into a horne to make a sick call put my hat on the coffee table on the top of the New Yorker Vogue Look Life and the daily newspaper When Id come downstairs again my hat would be on top of a flock of Catholic m iss ion magazines and the diocesan newspaper The others were all chucked for the time being I was to be imshypressed quite obviously he laughedWhats the change now Father we asked Are the magazines more lurid where you park your hator

And Nowmiddotmiddotmiddot Just the opposite our priest

friend chuckled Theyre not ashamed of the Catholic press any more In the line-up among the popular publiclltions on those living room tables-and usually on top of the heap--are well shythumbed copies of Commonweal America The Sign and others Even the Diocesan paper is out in full view right beside toshynights edition of the city newsshypaper

This priests observation Is D~ all unusual

The Catholic press has made giant strides within the past few years strides which should be noted during this the month of February Catholic Pre s bull Month Why February We dont know Perhaps from the very name of the month derived from Februarius month of exshypiation and purification since en the 15th the Roman festival of expiation and purifi~ation was beld

To our way of thinking this iii appropriate since we believe that the Catholie press should take its place as a gOOd influshyence in the currentmiddot world of journalism To quote the present Pontiff Pope Paul VI Your CatholiC Press is a mirror of toshydays world telling things shythey are-in truth

And how is the Catholie predoing Better thank you

Todays Renewal Reflecting the Catholic layshy

mans view is the sophisticatedCommonweal edited by dedishycated Cafllolic laymen America edited by the Jesuits The Sign magazine of the Passionists and SO many others mirroring mod-middot ern Catholic thinking in our aggiornamento of today enunshyciated first by Pope John XXIII

Fresh air is not only seeping in it is sweeping int9 Catholic journalism

Notre Dame Superior Heads New- Cornmittee

WASHINGTON (NC)-5ister Mary Daniel provincial superior of the Maryland province of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur has been elected chairmaflof the newly formed National Sister Formation Committee

New vice chairman is Mother Mary Borromeo mother general of the Sisters of St Francis Joliet Ill the Sister Formation Conference announced from it headquarters here

Sister Mary Daniel heads a 12-member unit which guides activities of the formation conshyference a 12-year-old cooperashytive movement of U S Sistershyhoods to bolster the spiritual academic and professional trainshying of Sisters

Time was and in the memory of even young readers when a great many Catholic newsshypapers were pretty ho-hum a picture of the bishop on every page notices of sodality meetshyings ham or turkey dinners items which could and should be carried in parish bulletins edishytorials wildly denouncing thisshyand-that-a generally negative and boring experience for readshyers of which there were few

Catholic magazines were only slightly better mediocre articles namby-pamby fiction

Those were the days when out of a sense of loyalty or obedishyence Catholics supported their Catholic press with their subshyscription dollars but not with their attention

Catholic periodicals found their way from the mail slot to the magazine rack for a while then out into the trash Seldom did they appear on a living room table to be picked up for intershyest or enjoyment along with the mass media publications EVeJl less rarely was a Catholic peri shyodical quoted ill the secular press or discussed among intelli shygent Catholics

Fortunately times h a changed The Catholiepress is abreast of world news local news features book film and play r~views entertainment and famshyily pages And nowhere else of course can one get more authorshyitative information on the vital changes within themiddot Church itshyself Vatican Council liturgieal reforms ecumenism -eally alive issues

The change has been long _ coming hindered ~ maD7 r0adshyblocks but its here

Alumae Style Shaw Alumnae and parents of Jesusshy

Mary Academy Fall River wiD sponsor a supper style show at 630 Tuesday night March 2 at Whites restaurant

Sto Francis Resodence

FOR YOUNG WOMEN 196 Whipple St Fall River Conduded by Franciscan

Missionaries of Mary ROOMS - MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALtill Inquire OS 3-2892

bull bull bull bull bull bullbull bull bullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Williams Funeral Home

EST 1870 I Washington Square

NEW BEDFORD Reg Funeral Director CIftd

Embalmer PRIVATE middotPARKING AREA

TEL WY 6-8098

AT RED MASS Luci Baines Johnson daughter of the President attended the annual Red Mass in St Matthew Cathedral Washin~~ton last Sunday in the company of her escort Paul Betz of Washington left President Johnson preeeded the COUplEI into the Oathedral NC Photo

Protestants Must Change Attitude BONN (NC)-German Protesshy the Orthodox Church which

tants have been asked to meet takes a similar stand the spirit of change at the Vatshy He also pointed to the diffi shy

ican council with changes ill culty of solving problems in this their own attitudes area because the Catholic

Lutheran theologian Dr Hanl Church cannot find anyone aushyAsmussen wove his appeal thorized to negotiate for Protesshyaround a strong criticism of tants He said We have no Protestant impatienCE with the branch with which questions of Catholic position on mixed marshy this kind can be regulated in a riages He pointed out that Protshy binding way and we do not waDi estants who are angrr with the to create one either Catholic stand do not criticize

your OVENFRESH

NEIGHBORHOOD~ DAILY STORE

Asks End of Fee In Teaching

PADERBORN (NC)-Dao ligious training should _be more positive at all age levels and the element of all shyxiety and fear should be elimoo inated ill teaching children bull German Catholic churchman aeshyserted here

Archbishop Lorenz Jaeger ell Paderborn in Germany said bull more positive stress requires IEo vision not only of the catechism but also of the rite of confessioDo In line with this approach m said parents in the rearing of their children should stress the dignity of the human person iQoo stead of harping on duties

The prelate a member of 12ie ecumenical councils Secretarial for Promoting Christian Unit was addressing the annual cooshyvention of representatives 01 German Catholic womens ganizations He said that to tain awareness of the dignity all the Christian vocation Chri9shytians must first realize natural virtues and true humanity bull Pope John showed by his exa pIe

Defines ApoStolate Of Catholic Nurse

WICHITA (NC)-Bishop L8 C Byrne defined the CathoHe nurse-one who combines proshyfessional excellence with spa itual excellence to sanctify hetlo self and Christianize society

SpeaKing before the DioeeSRII Counell of Catholic Nurses here Wichitas apostolic administ

tor told 200 nurses Your laP apostolate is nursing Specifi shycally in our age which histolF will describe as the age of tile laity the Catholic nurse must be a shining symbol of both tbe Church and the nursing prof~

sion

~ DEBROSS OIL ( ~ COo

) Heating Oils ( ~ and Burners ~

365 NORTH FRONT STREET ~ NEW BEDFORD ~

~ WYman 2-5534 ~

VinesWill HaveTenderGrapes f Pruned Now Says Gardener

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

One of the few jobs in the garden middotwhich should be done in Winter is that of pruning grape vines By pruning vines now while they are dormant you will avoid a drippy vine when the sap begins to flow Actually the pruning should take place in two steps once now and again in never to be awakened again

late March or April Maybe this is how TV dinnersbegan

Too often grape produc- Now Im as guilty as any other Clon suffers from too little prunshy mother of not wanting four exshyIng As a result vines become tra elbows around me when I am overcrowded and produce small trying to cook and I often have stunted bunches of fruit or at to suppress a scream of anguish best production of fruit is when my last egg hits the floor limited Then I remember my early ef

In pruning a vine the first forts offer a prayer to the thing to do is to remove all Blessed Mother for an extra Winter-killed growth (this is dose of patience and find someshysimple to determine since dead thing for those little hands to eliDes are dry and brittle) These help me with canes should be cut back to the One day last week when my main stem The second step is to patience was at an unusually eut aU thin straggly growth at high peak we had a dolls birthshyleast half way back to the main day party cake mixed and baked stem or until the cane is at least by Meryl and Melissa instrucshythe thickness of a finger The tions read by mother The utter shape of the vine is of no conshy delight on their faces when the eern now since it will be shaped finished cake turned out so well after the second pruning more than paid for any extra

The first pruning should thin effort on my part the vine to approxima~ely twoshy A very young friend of ours thirds of its original bulk Do Christine McGowan of St JoshyDot make the mistake of being sephs parish Fall River was cautious about cutting Rememshy nice enough to give us one of her ber new growth will appear off recipes to pass on to the younger the old growth and unless you set Miss McGowan with the aid are thOrough the vine will be of an understanding mother has overcrowded been baking since a very tender

In late March or April the age ~e shouidbe pruned again duiped and tied First remove

Chrissies Cookies 1 Ie white sugar

any canes which were missed atmiddot 1 C brown sugar packed the fiist pruning or any recently C soft shortening (this III killed canes Other canes to be equal to lb butter or margarshy~moved are those which are old ine) IUld overuown since theywiU 1 t vanilla produce littleif any fruit 3 C flour

Once the thinning out process 1 t baking soda comple~ the canes which t salt are to be kept should be ~ nuts andor raisins to taste back to five or six buds and tied Heat oven to 375 Mix sugars During the tying process the shortening eggs vanilla Sift toshyme can be shaped so that no -gether flour soda salt and stir __0 canes are closer than a foot in Add raisins andor nuts ~d a half apart This is a time- Fo~ balls of about 1 t middotof dough eonsuming job which is very apiece flatten on ungreased ~y to do sloppily with a poor baking sheetallowing room far ~p resulting so t~e a few ~ys to do it properly Above an JIrUlle heavily In the Kitchen On of my older daughters reshy~ests last Christmas was for an electric oven that baked just like monunys I felt that this was a little too grown up for five year old because the temshyperature went up as high as 400 degrees so needless to say this particular item didnt find a place under our ~ris~as tree However I still feel quite guilty about this as I intend to try very hard to encourage any cooking tendencies in my daughters Speaking from personal expeshy

dence I remember the years I ipent getting shoo~d out 9f my mothers kitchen until finally ~y interest in that direction iemained dormant until mar ~age forced me to face squareshy~ the prospect of preparing three meals a day Fortunately hen I did solve this problem liided by many cookbooks I did discover how much I loved to eook but I still wonder how any other girls have had their love of cooking equally squelchshytid by a well-meaning mother

Dorries Patronesses Dames Patronesses of Sacred

Beart Home New Bedford will hold a Valentine party for hOJIle residents at 130 Tuesday aftershynoon Feb 9 Mrs Jean Boutin-is m charge of arrangements The lInits annual meeting is planned for Sunday April 25 and the -tOth anniversary of the group Will be marked with a banquet and dance Wednesday May 5 in New Bedford Hotel Next board meeting will be held at 30 luesday niIht March 11

cookies to spread (Wetting the handS with Cold water keeps dOUgh from sticking to them)

Bake 8middot to 10 miuutes Makes about 60 cookies

Notre Dame Nun Joins Inter-Radal Staff

CHICAGO (NC)-Sister Mary Peter (Traxle~r) of the School Sisters of Notre Dame has joined the staff of the educational -sershyvices department of the National Catholic Conference for Intershyracial Justice here

Raymond M Hilliard confershyence chairman said rapid growth of the agencys services necessi-_ tated staff expansion While doshying graduate work in political

science at Georgetown Univershysity in Washington Sister Mary Peter organized a tutorial proshygram for under-privileged youth

NO JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main OHice and Plant 95 Bridge St Lowell Mass

Tel 458-6333

Auxiliary Plants

BOSTON CAMDEN N J OCEANPORT N J MIAMI PAWTUCKET R L PHILADELPHIA

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ c 9 j

REPRESENT Us CATHOLIC WOMEN The Board of Direct-ors of the National Council of Catholi~ Women is received by Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi Apostolic Delshyegate in the US at the annual meeting in ~ashington Mrs Mar~us Kilch ~oungsto~ Ohio left front is NCCW president and Miss Margaret Mealey nght front 18 executIve director NC Photo

Vatican Pavilion Second Most Popular in Fair NEW YORK(NG) --At

most half of the visitors at the New York World~sFair~

last year stopped off at the Vatican Pavilion making it the second most popular of the Fairs 151 pavilions Average daily attendance was over 75000 giving the pavilion a total at- tendance figure of more than 138 million

The Good Shepherd Chapel was the scene of 1204 Masses

SAVE MONEY ON YOUR OILHEATI bull CfJH n

CHARLES F VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE NEW BEDFORD MASS

IwflkltdeliNlyK

~SS~ HEATING OIL

at whichCo~union was dis- The most popular item at the tributed to ~ie th8ll- 42000 pavilions sales counters was a people POStcard featuring P~pe Paul

gt 1 1

- ~- ~

-_

_ ~~ f y

~ I

NO NONOt

Piggy banks dont pay dividends Put your money in a Fail River Trust Savings Account where generous divishydends are compounded semi-annually Its much safer too 1

FALL RIVER ~~h TRUST CO- V

64J U1t4 ~~ bull~ Fatt ~

-

THE ANCHORshy10 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Prelate Stresses Ecumenism on Spiritual Level

MADEIRA (NC) - Auxshyiliary Bishop Paul F Leishybold of Cincinnati called for a spiritual ecumenism shyprayer and holiness - as the soul of the ecumenical moveshyment

He preached at a special low Mass which he offered at St middotGertrudes church here in Ohio for some 300 Protestants many escorted by Catholic neighbors Many Protestant visitors were guests in homes of Catholic pashyrishioners after the evening Mass which was (lffered at an altar facing the congregation

Bishop Leibold cited five ways in which those who profess Christ can work for Christian unity

1 We must make every effort to avoid expressions judgments

and action~hich do not represhysent the condition of our sepashyrated brethren with truth and faimess

2 DIalogue must be carried on between competent experts from different churches and communities

3 Cooperation among differshyent churches for the common good of humanity

4 A spiritual ecumenismmiddot which he said involves a change of heart holiness of life and public and private prayer for unity

5 All must examine their own faithfulness to Gods will for the Church and accordingly undertake with vigor the task of renewal arid reform

Scores FCC Stand On Religious Test

WASHINGTON (N C) - A middotmember of the Federal Commushynications Commission charged here that the FCC is violating constitutional limits marked out by the Supreme Court by makshy

ing religious broadcasting one test of a broadcasters public service performance

Commissioner Lee Loevinger addressing the National Reli shygious Broadcasters convention said the FCC has gone far beshyyond the limits that have been marked by the Supreme Court as permissible govertiment acshytion in the field of religion

Loevinger noted that the FCC includes religious pro g ram I

among the types of programs considered to be in the public interest on its license application forms He said it made the broadcasting of such programs one of the FCCs tests for detershymining whether a broadcaster operates in the public interest

Pope Paul Thanks Italian Policemen

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI greeted the Italian poshylicemen whose beat is the Vatican and saidit was a great consolation to know they were around

Answering an address of homshyage by Inspector General Oreste Correti who was accompaniel by other officials and members of the force the Pope said he is grateful for the zealous expert generous and selfless work in which you display your integrity as distinguished state officials and your dedication as faithful IOns of the Church

Though members of the Italian force the groups are assigned ~ special guard duties and ~

directing traffic in St Peters iquare and the area surropndinl Vatic~ City

BOSTON (NC)-Richard Card~ inal Cushing touched off a cheershying demonstration by 1300 Jews here when he predicte9 the Secshyond Vatican Council will apshyprove a declaration absolving Jcws of direct blame in the death of Christ

If we dont Im wasting my time talking of brotherhood said the Archbishop of Boston after he was presented withmiddot the annual Good Will Award of Temple Ohabei Shalom Brothershyhood oldest and largest Jewish organization of its kind in the

country He was selected for the award because of his compasshysion generosity love and broth- erhood

Reds Fear Religion The prelate said Ill never forget the Second

Vatican Council I didnt know What they were talking about I had never heard a lecture in Latin and it was all Greek to me I dont know how many others were in the same boat

CEF Head Praises Johnson Proposals

TRAVERSE CITY (NC)-The national president of Citizens for Educational Freedom had praise here in Michigan for Presshyident Johnsons statements in his State-of-the-Union address

Stuart D Hubbell a lawyer lauded the President for his wilshylingness to tr~at all school chil shydren equally He said he sent Mr Johnson a telegram which said in part

While your proposals have not as yet been made specific to the extent that they follow the principle of equality that you outlined in your message you will have made a signifi shycant beginning in developing broad support for educational achievement

bull SEQUIN Truck Body Builders Aluminum or Steel 944 County Street

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2middot6618

DISCUSS PROBLEMS CONFRONTING HOSPITALS Meeting at the 20th annual conclave of Bishops representatives for Catholic hospitals in Scottsdale Ariz are left to right Msgr Harold A Murray director of thE NCWC Bureau of Health and Hospital Hospitals Bishop Francis J t Green of Tucson Bishop Joseph B Brunini episCOgtal burshyeau chairman and Auxiliary of Natchez-Jackson Miss and Father John J Flanagan SJ~ executive director of the Oatholic Hospital Association NC Photo

We Have Come Long ~Way in Short Time Hub Cardinal Sees Church Gains Continuing

~

but I sat between two very ven- around religion He added For crable Italian cardinals They that reason they try to eliminate

knew no English and I knew no Italian All the time they kept calling me Cardinal Spellman or Cardinal Mindzen1y or even Cardinal OConnell (The late William Cardinal OCgtnnell was Cardinal Cushings predecessor as Archbishop of Boston)

In a more serious mood Cardshyinal Cushing said the one great fear communists have centers

Interfaith Service For Church UII1ity

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Byzanshytine Rite Catholics joined with Orthodox and Protestants in a common prayer service for

Christian unity Sunday in Holy Spirit Byzantine rite c hu r c h here

Participants in the vespershytype service includE)d Father Andrew Resetar of Erie Pa Very Rev A Dixon Etollit dean of Trinity Episcopal cathedral here Father GeorgE) Scoulas dean of St Nicholas Greek Orshythodox cathedral in Oakland and Dr Harold R Alert former president of the Pittsburgh Council of Churches

The service was arranged by the Pittsburgh C 0 tI n c i I of Churches and the Pittsburgh Byzantine rite diocesE~

Where A

GOOD NAME

Means A

GREAT DAL

GEO OHARA CHEVROLET

565 MILL 5JREET

HEW BEDFIORD

Open Evenings

it from the lives of their peoplemiddot He revealed he has 25 engageshy

ments to talk to groups of other religious faiths including a lodge of Masons before Easter The Cardinal inquired Who would have thought even five years ago that a Catholic archbislfop would be preaching good will in a Protestant church or in a synshyagogue Or that a rabbi would be addressing other faiths We sure have come a long way in a short time-and its going to get better

Preaching Brotherhood The cardinal also observed I

am not trying to convert Protesshytants to Catholics or Jews to Catholics I never made a conshyvert in my life My only messhysage is one of brotherhood

Sturtevant 6shyHook Est 1897

Builders Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New Bedford WY 6-5661

Deny Dispatch About Ca rdinaI

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Sta_ Departm~nt spokesman her categorically denied a recent press story that there are ~

obstacles to Jozsef Cardinal Mindszentys leaving his refuge in the U S legation in Budapest but that the Primate of HungaI7 ~wants to die a prisoner there

The story (which was released by NANA and published in t~

daily press Jan 20) credited its source a State Deparme~ source in Bonn German~

who has taken part in recent U S-Hungarian negotiations

The State Department spokesshyman here described the story bull completely incorrect

We dont have any Americali official in Bonn who has had anything to do with the Hungar-o ian negotiations he said in an swer to inquiries It doesn1 represent anything that an American official would hold

New Orleans Plans New High Schools

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Arch-t bishop John P CodY of New Orleans has announced plansfOS construction of seven new hip schools in several parts of the archdiocese

Declaring that Catholic educashytion never was so flourishin nor were our Catholic people bull desirous of increasing the num bel of schools and improving t~

methods of teaching The Loushyisiana prelate said we must build so that all the children oil our area may have the blessin of a thorough Catholic educashytion

SERVING FINE ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4-8754bull

TIte Falmoufh NatiOnal Sanlc Falmouth Mass

tilt Villale Ir Sian 1121

WM T MANNING (0 WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE

AND

INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES bull GENERAL TIRES bull DELCOBATTERIES

bull PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS

FALL RIVER - NEW BEDFO~D - HYANNIS - NEWPORT

First Federal Savings AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF ATlLEBORO

4 on ali $avings Accouni

1 Extra on Systematic Bonus~vings

bull bull bull bull bull

11 bull

Portugal Bishops Plan University For Country

LISBON (NO) - Portushygals bishops have announcshyed plans to found this nashytions first Catholic Univershysity

They said in a joint pastoral letter issued after their meeting here that there is an imperative need for a Catholic university for the nations conscience They said the university win have greater freedom greater dynamism and greater flexibil shyity than the present state uni versities

The letter said that the govshyernment will help the bishops in founding the new Catholic university

Last Summer Manuel Cardishynal Goncalves Cerejeira of Lisshybon told a meeting studying the foundation of the Catholic Unishyversity that it would be open to both laymen and the clergy and located in Lisbon instead of the older university town of Coimshybra Earlier efforts were made to restore a theological faculty at Coimbra University The facshyultY was closed following the revolution which made Port~gal a republic in1910

Several years agothe cardinal noted that a Church-sponsored university has been a hope of 1Ihe VI has called on individual Cathshy one part of the Mystical Body of many Latill American counshy~oI1uguese bishops for a long olies to become more aware of Christ to another tries and CICOP itself whichtime ~ut that priorities for the world-wide dimensions and seminanes new churche~ pri- needs of the Church mary schools and Catholic Acshytion organization had delayed Today bull bull bull it is absolutely eoncrete plans indispensable that each pers~n

become aware of the true dishymensions of the Church the

Sees Greater Church Pope declared adding Greater awareness will iead to wideningNeed for Laity Role

LAKE CHARLES (NC) - A Louisiana editor predicts the time will come in the 20th censhytury when laymen wi~ domishynate the clergy in many fields

Msgr Alexander O Sigur edshyitor of the Southwest Louisiana Register diocesan newspaper feels in the present age of scishyence and technology Catholic laymen with specialized knowl- edge of law science and other fiElds must of necessity advise the clergy on the many facets of todays society

He pointed out that the layshymens role has made more progshyress since the opening of the Second Vatican Council than in the previous 10 centuries

But because of centuries of tradition there will be problems for some time connected with evolution of the laymans role in the Church he asserted

British Conversions Continue to Decline

LONDON (NC)-The number of converts to Catholicism in England and Wales continues to decline but the Catholic popushylation shows a steady increase according to the 1965 Catholic Directory published here

The known number of adult conversions for 1963 the most recent year for which statistics are available was 12778 This was a decrease of 552 from the previous year which also showed a considerably lower figure than that for 1961

But the Catholic population increased in 1963 by 129500 to 3956500 and the Catholic popshyulation in Scotland rose by 13shy310 to 812460

Foundation Member NEW YORK (NC) - William

G Ryan presidentmiddot of Seton Htn College Greensburg Pa haa been named a corporate member of the FoundationfOr the arts Religion and culture which win hold its fim meetina laue tomonow

THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

HIGH HONOR FOR K of C HEAD Supreme Knight John W McDevitt of the Knights of Columbus invested as a Knigh t Commander of St Gregory at a testimonial banquet in Boston is with left to right AuxiHary Bishop John F Hackett of H~rtford Archbishop Henry J OBrien of Hartford Bishop Charles P GreltfO Qf Ale~andna La Supreme K of C Chaplain and Bishop William J Smith of Pembroke OntarIO NO Photo

Pope Hail~ US Church Mission Work Says Transfe~ of Energies I Most ~onsoling

CHICAGO (NC)-Pope Paul this transfer of energies from unteers who are serving la

of vitality and fuller realization of the meaning of the name Catholic

Nature of Church Pope Paul made his plea in a

message to the second annual conference of the Catholic Inshyter-American Cooperation Proshygram (CICOP)

The Holy Father coupled his appeal for greater awareness of the worldwide nature vf the

Church with high praise for aid rendered in recent years by US Catholics to the Church in Latin America Prellently he said there are 4091 US priests reshyligious and laymen serving there

Greater Understanding I He called us Catholic proshygrams for Latin America a proshyvidential apostolic ~ovement and said they make up one of the most beautiful pages in the history of the Church in the United States

Particularly in light of the Ecumenical Councils constitushytion on the Church he said it iamost consoling to witness

BEFORE YOU BUY-TRY

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault 67 Middle Street Fairhaven

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICE

lJe singled out for praise US seeks by educational means to promote greater understandingdioceses which have sent 178 of Latin Americas problemsdiocesan priests to mission work

in Latin America US religious among the Catholic millions of the United Statescommunities of men and women

which he said are fulfilling the Urllent Demands engagement they have undershy Pope Paul voiced hope that thetaken of sending a tithe of meeting here would producetheir total memership to Latin many practical results parshyAmerica by 1970 US lay vol~ ticularly a wider and more soshy

licitous collaboration of the Refugee Children United States of America with

the Church in Latin AmericaHONG KONG (NC) - Archshy such as urgent needs dem~ndbishop Joseph Caprio apostolic

internuncio to China opened here for refugee children a new $100000 primary school built by Norris H Trippthe Franciscan Missionary Sisshyters of Our Lady of Sorrows SHEET METAL Mother Leola superior of the J TESER Proporder which has its headquarshy RESIDENTIALters in Beaverton Ore attended

INDUSTRIALthe ceremony COMMERCIAL

253 Cedar St New Bedford WY 3-3222 Montie Plumbing amp

Heating Co Inc

Counci~s Effects Years Away

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The universal effects of the Second Vatican Council will not be recshyognized completely for years to come James Francis Cardinal McIntyre told 2200 Holy Name men here in California

It is entirely impossible to estimate at the present time the effects of the council on the thinking of the world the carshydinal said

These effects have penetrated deeply into the spiritual life of all people not only of the Church alone he told a Holy Name Union Communion breakshy

fast One index of its effects is the

attention the council has comshymanded in the press of the world the cardinal said

Names Two Priests To Federal Board

NEW YOItK (NC) - T w bull priests are on the 30-niember board of directors of the new Sex Information and Education Council of the United Stat~

(SIECUS) formed to foster im- proved study and education oa the role of sex

TheYlre Father George Hag- maier CSP of the Paulist In- stitute for Religious Researc~ and Father John L Thomas SJ St Louis (Mo) University soci ologist

The executive director of the council is Dr Mary Steichen Calderone former medical dishyrector of the Planned Parentshyhood Federationand its presishyident is Wallace C Fulton formshyer presidtDt of the National Coundl on Family Relations

Whites Farm Dairy SPECIAL MilK

From Our Own Tested Herd

Acushnet Mass WY 3-4457 bull Special Milk bull Homogenized Vito 0 Milk bull Buttermilk bull Tropicana Orange Juice bull Coffee and Choc Milk bull Eggs - Butter

FIVE CONVENIENT OFFICES- -TOSERVE YOUReg Master Plumber 2930

GEORGE M MONTlE ONE-STOP BANKING Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET FIRSTmiddotMACHImiddotNISTS Fall ~River OS 5-7497 NATIONAL BAN Ilt

OF TAUNTON Norton W MaIn St-Raynham Rte 44-Taunton Main St

North Dighton Spring St-North Easton Main St_ w H RILEY amp SO~J Inc Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

CITIES SERVICE bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnmbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullDISTRIBUTORS

Gasoline i F L COLLINS amp SONS i Fuel and Range INCORPORATED 1937

OILS bull

GENERAL (ONTRAOORS5bullOIL BURNERS

For prompt delivery 5 and ENGINEERS 5amp Day amp Night Service

bull JAMES H COLLINS CE Pres G E BOILER BURNER UNITS bull Registered Civil and Structural Engineer bull

Rural Bottled Gas Se~ Member National Society Professional Engineers

61 COHANNET ST FRANCIS L COLLINS JR Treas = TAUNTON bull THOMAS Ie COLLINS Secy bull

Attteboro - No Attlebor~ middot =ACADEMY BUILDING FALL RIVER MASS Taunto1

-bullbull

bull 12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Humphreymiddot Becker Write Novels of Reminiscence

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Both William Humphreys The Ordways (Knopf

$595) and Stephen Beckers A Covenant with Death (Athshyeneum $450) are novels of reminiscence Both are laid in the Southwest the former in Texas the latter in an unshyidentified state The narrashytor in the Ordway book is for the most part telling what happened to his greatshygrandparents and his grandparshyents in the Civil War period and at the tum of the century In the Becker book the narrator is in his seventies recalling Ii decisive expeshyrience in his oWn life when he was 29 back in 1923 If there are similarities between the works there are also differences and they are very great

Mr Beckers novel is a Book of-the-Month Club middotselection has already been bought by a movie company for a vast sum and unshydoubtedly will be a roaring popshyular success Mr Humphreys novel will probably have far fewer readers and will bring its author far less money But it is by all odds and in every reshyIJPect the better book

Long-Winded It has one fault that of being

long-winded and at times meandering I just wanted to hear the same old things over and over again the narrator -of The Qrdways says at one point It is evidently presumed that the reader has the same desire and that he will not object to lengthy digressions But repetition and extended parenthetical exercises do become tiring even if as in ~is instance the writing is of a high order

1$ The Ordways really a novel in the Strict sense The pook cOritillns a notice reading A portion of Part One in some- what different form first apshypeared in The Saturday Evening Post

It is quite true that the first seetion could stand alone that the second and third sections could form a story by themshyselves and that only the fourth section depends for intelligibility on what has gone before Noneshytheless there is unity here if not the tight construction of the most effective novel

Family Lore Mr Ordway begins by describshy

ing graveyard working days in the hamlet of Mabry near the town of Clarksville in eastern Texas On that day occurring once a year the descendants or suniivors of those burled in the Mabry cemetery come together to set the place to rights

middotAs they do so they rec~ the histories of the dead and thus the family lore is passed on from generation to generation But it is more than family lore which is conveyed the countrys past is reconstructed and the making of the present

The narrator a boy in the 1930s learns of two decisive episodes in his own family One has to do with Thomas and Ella Ordway who were Tennessee people until 1863 Thomas was an infantryman was horribly wounded and disabled in the batshytle of Shiloh and would have died or at least have been lost to his famIly had it not been for his wifes valor The narrative of her recovering him ann bringshying him back to a ~blance of life is harrowing

Journey to Texas But somethinamp more harrowshy

ing is still to come the account of their six months journey in a wagon drawn by oxen from Tennessee to Texas in the hope of beginning a new and better life The reader not only follows this arduous exodus but makes and suffers it and is haunted by it thereafter

This portion of the book is a storY complete in itself dramatshyic pathetic comic packed with lively incidents and colorful characters some heroic some corrupt some rascally all disshytinctive and engaging

Occasionally the side excurshysions pall a bit as in the depicshytion of stump speaking by polit shyical candidates or of life with a small shabby traveling circus Yet each of these sideshows has something to contribute to the pictUre of emerging Texas

Acute Observations

Mr Humphrey writes extremeshyly well a little less fancily as the book progresses but always vivshyidly and with plentymiddot of power for the high moments His peoshyple are nicely differentiated and come memorably to life He has many acute observations and even authentic wisdom to disshypense and this he does neatly His book rings with truth about human nature and is the work of a highly gifted and skillful artist

Mr Beekers A Covenant with Death on the other hand strikes me as contrJved empty and often obnoxiousmiddot Its nub is a legal stickler What is to be dQne with a man who is convicted of m~rger bought +c the gallows there Gki1ls~e hangman and then is cleareu of the first kill shying ~is poser ismiddot put to the 29shy

year~old judge Ben Lewis He solyes Wby niakiIig law and when confronted with this puzshyzler solves as well a key probshylent in his personal life At one and the same time he becomes at last a real judge and a real man

Precise 3udgment

Or so we are asked to believe Lewis says of himself I passed the crisis of adolescence at the ludicrous age of 29 bull bull bull I was swollen with garbage and bittershyness My own ego was monshystrous mainly because I had never done anything for anyone and could justify my own useshylessness only by assuming that the world was not worth my energies This is a precise judgment

The trouble is that the book is swollen with garbage and bitterness as well as sophistry

Young Lewis conversations with his mother for example They irk by their pretentiousness and they disgust with their obscenishyties The youngmiddot judge is thorshyoughly sophomQric and we are asked to credit his sudden leap into maturity We are asked too much

It is with ill grace that the author scorns small town folk for their prurience It is just this to which most of his book apshypeals When he sneers that Soledad City our wholesome middle-class American town would be lined up three deep for good seats at a murder trial with sensational sexual aspects he apparently forgets that the predictably huge sales of his novel will be in large part to people attracted by itligamineaa

3AMES OGARA

PauiSft CElnter Lists Spe(d~er

James OGara editor of Comshyrronweai magazinEl will be guest speaker in the Christian Culture Series at the Paulist Ce-nter in Boston on Wednesday evening Feb 17 on the topic The Role and Future of Cathshyolic Education

Mr OGara has written numshyerous articles for leading Cathshyolic magazines in middotthis country end Europe and has appeared on many religiow television programs of the National Counshycil Of Catholic Men

Rev Andrew Greeley sociolshyogist and author of many books on social subjects will join Mr O-Gara in the discussion

Monsignor Francis 3 Lally editor of the Pilot will be pr0shy

gram moderator

Deplores Agtncies Poverty Appoach

CHICAGO (NC) -- Catholic charity and welfareillgencies and institutions must drop thebusishyness as usual appreach and get into the actual aIl~na of povshyerty a National Conference of Catholic Charities Dleeting here in Illinois was told

The surge of natilmal concern about poverty is one of the most dramatic and compelling moveshyments in our day rather Robshyert Monticello of DEltroit chairshyman of the conferences program committee told assembled social work executives

His views were echoed by Msgr Raymond 3 Gallagher secretary of the comerence who said that personal service to families and individuals among the poor must be a coriunitment each of us makes dailly

CENTIER Paint and Wldlpaper

Dupont PClint

iiP cor Middle St

422 6lcush Ave

~Qc=t~ New Bedford ~ARKING

Rear of Store

ProtEct What You Hav~

McGO~VAN Insurance J~gency

TEL MYrtle ~1middot8231

188 NORTH MAIN $TREET NORTH ATTU8ORO

Beggars for All the Missions

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen DO

rn the mail last week a package arrived containing several hundred printed and self-addressed envelopes from various begshyging organizations in the United States The good woman who sent the package admitted being neither rich nor comfortable and yet she was flooded with appeals She wanted to know how she became a victim of this deluge The answer is that she is on a mailing list There are hundreds of mailing lists for sale in the United States These can be bought for various amounts depending on the number and quality of the names listed The good woman who wrote us was on at least one of these lists

Never before has it been brought home to us with Such impact how swamped our faithful are with appeals It grieves DB

that we too are beggars but we find some consolation in the fact that the Holy Fathers Society for the Propagation of the Faith has never used such mailing lists

This incident highlightsmiddot an urgent need that the Vatican Council must recognize that of co-ordinating appeals for all these really worthwhile causes especially those of misshysionaries Pius XI said that the method by which each missionary group solicited only for itself did not provide an even distribution of help Some can barely survive others have investments in Wall Street How to know who out of the hundreds who beg are most deservng is not only difficult but almost impossible

We have never liked begging In fact there is too much inshysistence on money in the Church tOday We would like to be unshackled from our tin cup and not add to this confusion But this is our duty Why 1 Because the Holy Father has asked us to be his beggars in the United States for -all the missions of tlie world 2 Becanse it is the glory of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith not to helf) one order or society of the world but the entire world (As a matter of fact 88middot per cent of the appeals in the above-mentioned package received soDie aid from The Society for the Propagation of the Faith) 3 Because being under the direction of the Holy Father The Society for the Propagation of the Faith does not invest any of yoUrmiddot alms Every eent Is distributed by the Holy Father each year The world Is too poor So fOldve us

Oh yes the lady who sent us the package wrote I could not keep 240 missionary appeals because I have not the money Since The -Society for the Propagation of the Faith aids all I send the Holy Father my $100 to be divi4ed as he sees fit

GOD LOVE YOU to Anoafor $5 Here Is Diy poeen valeiI- Une for the poor bullbullbull toMLA for $78 This is whist l diel Ilot spend on eigarettes Somehow I cannot enjoy them auYmore knowing that today 10000 people riD die of ~rntionmiddot

-

Think ahead to Valentines day and order a GOD LOVE YOU medal In classic Florentine gold finish or pure sterling silver this lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of the World is one you would be proud to give or delighted to receive Designed by the world-renouned jeweler Harry Winston and blessed by Bishop Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal may be obtained by sending your request and corresponding offering to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001

$ 2 small sterling silyershy $ 3 small 10k gold filled $ 5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut 01lt ft1Is colUIDn pin your sacrifice to it and maD It te Most Rev Fulton 3 Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York New York 10001 or to your Diocesan Director

Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 368 North Main Street

Fall River Massachusetts

791 PurcIaase Street Betweea

WIUIam bull UnI_ S_

NEW BEDFORD

FIVE CENTS SAVINGS BANK

WE HAVE PLENTY OF MONEY FOR HOME LOANS

If youre buying or building -Ioolc to us CONVENTIONAL GI - FH~ FINANCING

Ca on us anytime aDd talk over your plans

Fathers andmiddot Daughters Will Twirl At Annual Sucordium-Sponsored Hop at SHA Fan River

Dads and daughters win twirl at the annual fathep daughter dance at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River Its scheduled fltgtr 8 tomorrow night in the academy gymshynatorium and is sponsored by the moms and dads and daughters-members of the

SHA Fall River and her team very active Sucordium Club marked its first league debateHomemaker of the year at this season by defeating Case

Holy Family High in New Dartmouth Taunton and PreshyBedford as a result of the annushy vost al Homemaker of Tomorrow test Coyle High was host for a taken by thousands of girls novice tournament of two rounds across the nation is Christian with nine schools competing last Saulnier Shes National Honor weekend and the varsity team Society treasurer and copy edshy last week won three of four iJtor of By Fy Spy the school matches over Bishop Stang paper Bishop Stang was host to Narshy

At Dominican Academy in Fan ragansett League debate last River the top homemaker is week with 12 schools representshyJulia Melvin Senior A president ed each by four man teams Repshysodality vice-prefect and student resenting Stang were John council vice-president Another Golenski Michael Hogan Thomshyfeather in Julias cap is that as Keary and Myles Tillotson shes to represent her school at At the same meeting Bishop the state capitol on Student Feehan was represented by Government Day Francis Detellis Kateri Detellis

Christine Julia and an other Roger Watts and Raymond StafshyDiocesan school winners in the ford They won one debate out homemaker contest are now eli shy of four gible for consideration as state Current Affairs Contest winners Themiddot states highestshy Many Diocesan schools partici shyranking girl will receive a $1500 pated in a current affairs conshyscholarship and will tour Washshy test sponsored by a weekly news ington and New York City this magazine and among top scorers Spring From the state finalists were Janet Gendreau Moniquewill be chosen national winners Boulay and Muriel Raiche at in the homemaking contest and Jesus-Mary and Paula Powersthese girls will have their scholshy Susan Penrose and Mary Kellyarship grants substantially illshy at SIlA Fall River creased Also in the spotlight is 1anice

Benoit of SHA Fall River whosGrac1aatlOIl GOWIl8

received honorable mention for rrs snowy outside but thoughts the Bishop Connolly award preshy

of the seniors at Mt St Mary sented annually to the DioceseAcademy in Fall River are Oft outstanding girl athletethe days of June Theyre curshy Yearbook pictures for Coylerently selecting g r a d u at i 0 Il juniors sophomores and freshshygowns and are making a critical men have been safely taken so survey of ofterings from several another milestone is passed OIl area stores the road to publication

And National Bonot- Society Dominican Academy juniopsmembers have been busy at Sashy and seniors will make a closedcred Hearts Fall River Theyve retreat at the Cenacle Conventwritten to all accredited colleges ill Brighton during their Februshyin the US requesting inforshy ary vacation while the annualmation on admission requireshy school retreat is in progressments and availability of finanshy hOW at Bishop Stangcial aid The gathered informashy The program includes dallytion will augment the guidanee Mass Benediction and confershyfile in the school library ences and retreat masters are

Sevenmiddot new clubs have beeR Rev John OBrien SSCCmiddot andorganized at Tauntons Coyle Rev Andrew Jahn SSCCHigh School They are French An unusual auction was a feashySpanish Stamp and Coin Pep ture of a dance sponsored lastEnglish Literature Chess and weekend by Feehan seniors forPhotography Something theremiddot all their fellow students Eachfor everyone faculty member donated a prize

Four Dominican Academy stushy for the auction including suchdents have passed 120 word tests valuable items as a pass excusingin Gregg shorthand and two a student from detention pershyhave passed 100 word tests On mission to omit a book from anthe bowling scene at DA high outside reading list and a driy scorers include Susan Pacheco ing passAnne Marie FoIster Colleen Auctionmiddot proceeds benefited bullDesrosiers and Patricia Od) shy performance of Leave It tonecky Jane to be produced by the

The junior prom at Bishop Feehan Dramatics Club SundayFeehan High in Attleboro has and Monday Feb 14 and 15been set for Tuesday night April Jeannine Dumont senior class20 In charge ofmiddot arrangements secretary and middotlssistant editor of are Robert Bedard and Carol the school paper at Holy FamilyMiller while committees are al shy High has been accepted at Bosshyready at work on decorations ton College as have classmates e n t e r t a i n men t refreshshy Maureen OBrien Christine Ponshyments tickets and that unher ichtera and John AylwardaIded but all-important chore of Mother McAuley Guild at Mtclean-up St Mary Academy will hold its

annual calendar party WednesshyDebaiioi- Prcmt day night Feb 10 EntertainshyIn the indoor days of Winter ment will reprelC~t each monthdebating holds an honored spot of the year and the decoratedamong extra-curricular activishycakes willbe ~oor prizesties at Diocesan schools At Preshy Class -laeement vost in Fall River the debate

THE ANCHOR-- 13 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Churchmen Favor Johnson School Aid Program

WASHINGTON (NC) shyCatholic and Protestant spokesmen applauded Presishydent Johnsons school aid proposal in a placid Congresshysional bearing where the on~ disagreement came over mi~

technical questions The release from the charged

atmosphere of past hearings w noted all around

A Catholic spokesman smilin~

ly commented that it was a relief not to fear getting out of the

Vour nearescmall box i$ Q Firsf Ilfderal branch office that open 24 hours $ day to make $(lving easy for you No traffic nO parking no leather problem~

Withdrawals ate just as implt taY~ngs paymencS

bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull r fRlE o~middottymiddotmiddot ~ ubullbullh coupon 7bullbull~ trti 0middot

team was victorious over Mt St Marys and Bishop Stang in Narshyragansett League debate but lost to SHA Fall River The varisity also met Coyle during the past week

Mt st Marys debate record stands at 2-2 with Anne Browshynell Linda Mello Susan Jenkinshyson and Nancy Curran defending their school in Narragansett

Tomorrows the day of reckonshying at SHA Fall River Not only will report cards be distributed but a list of all seniorsand their placement in middottheir class for the past four years will be published

Fifteen seniors It DA partici shypated in a French Listening Comprehension Test on Tuesday This supplementary test is ofshyfered by the eollege entrance

PREVOST SCHOLARS High scorers in National Merit Scholarship Examinations at Prevost High School Fall River are Gerard Gltgtu~et left and Paul Nowak

tests in addition to the French Written exams come in March

Also at Feehan where report cards will come tomorrow high honors will be achieved by those with an average of 90 or better honors by those earning 85 or better and honorable mention by those with grades of 80 01 better

Bishop Stang mathematiciana placed first ill the Notre Dame Math Meet held last week at Cardinal Cushing High in South Boston Eighteen schools com~

peted and Stang won by n points Responsible for the vieshytory were John Keavy Paul Roy John De Ciccio Raymond Desrosiers and Alan Roskiewiez Top individual scorer was John DeCiccio

Best Girl Athlete Senior Nancy Vogel of Bishop Stang High School received the Bishop Connolly Award for the best girl athlete of Fall River area Diocesan high schools at a ceremony held last night at Whites restaurant Nancy as shining a star schoshylastically as athletically plays hockey basketball and volley~ ball at the North Dartmouth school She will be the first reshycipient of what is to become an

Influence Declining MADRID (NC)-Castroist inshy

fluence among young people in Latin Ameriea has declined the past two years Luis Garcia Arishyas professor of international law at the University of Saragossa here in Spain said on his return from a tour of Latin America Thursday Feb 1amp

SCHOOL Mainte~ance suppr~

SWEEPERS SOAPS DISINFECTANTS

FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

DAHILL CO 1886 PURCHASE STREET

annual award made by the FaD River Clover Club Also honored at last nights dinner-dance WBI Coach Carlin Lynch of 11M Stang Spartans

Forty Hours devotion was celshyebrated for the first time at Bishop Feehan high scbool starting Sunday and ending Tuesday Seniors Eileen Pashyquette Mary Duffy Nancy Clegg and Susall Ouelle~te aided Sister Mary Kateri of Feehan home economics department III making a cope and humeral veil used for the first time at the ceremonies

And Feehanites celebrated terms end by viewing A Raisin in the Sun

bullbullbullbullbullbull

hearing room alive The major Protestant spokesmen described the bill as an instrument of recshyonciliation Con g res smiddotm e a praised the compromises they saw being made by all sid~

church groups and educators -The President has proposed bull

$12 billion program to improve elementary and secondary schooling from poverty-strickea families

A total of $1 billion wouldge to public school districts in lowshyincome areas Additionally the proposal would spend $100 milshylion for textbooks for all school children and school libraries and another $100 million to create bull system of public-priva~commushynity educational centers to offer cultural enrichment and specitl eourses to all school ehildren

Pittsburgh School Enroll~ent Down

PITSBURGH (NC) - Enroll shyment in the Pittsburgh diocellMl Catholic school system has dro~ ped by 40 pupils Msgr John B McDowell superintendent ball reported

The monsignor said the sliglll drop has been preceded by fo_ years of leveling oft in enrol) ment figures because of enforeet gradual cuts in class size

Since 1960 he said there _ been an increase of only 24 pushypils in the total number of stushydents Elementary and seconda schools last June tallied 129531 pupils a drop of 40 he said

bullbullbullFREEKI _forbullbull~to bull ~-~----- shy _ StampMo _ middot----1

City_middot bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbulliibullbullbullbullbullbullbull WE pAY POSTAGa

(tree po5t-pald~Clddd i-velop ady to mall

FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND lOAN ASSOCIATION

OF FALL RIVER Home OHice 1 North Main St Fall River

Somerset OHice 149 GAR Highway Rte 6 League bouts The team meets exam board and consists of Both Offices Open Friday Evenings until INEW BEDFORDBishop Cassidy of TauntOn Wedshy questions and answers concernshy Sonterset Drive-In Window Open Mon-Thurs til 4 nesday Feb 10 ing subject matter on tape At WY 3-3786 Susan Nunes heads debate 111amp Feeha aiYdentll 1ook Germaa

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Stresses ilroad beep Gulf Between Two Generafions

By John J Kane Ph D What is your opinion of secretive sons and daughters

()f today Our married son and daughter never tell us anyshything Friends and strangers knew they bought a new home before we did My daughters husband knows all the ansshywers and wants no advice from anyone My son is afraid of his wife and she makes all decisions They ask us to visit but hurt our feelshyings when we do by what they say We were raised to reshyspect our elders and ask their advice

You r letter Jean does pose some justifiable complaints But it also seems to make some unshyreasonable deshy

mands Furthershymore amusingshy1y enough you conclude that you were reared to respect your elders and intimate your chil shydren werent If so whom can you blame

I dont know the reason why your children failed to inform you of their intentions to purshyehase a home But I do have some suspicions Do you have a tendency to be critical about what they buy Sometimes parshyents do

Tremendous Inflation Y-oungsters and parents both

make a certain type of mistake when it comes to purchasing of such things as homes cars or expensive appliances So m e young marrieds try to begin at a level their parents only achieved after 10 or 15 years of married life

But some parents do not seem to realize that inflation has been tremendous in the last 20 years When they hear a son or daughshyter is about to buy it home for 20 or 25 thousand dollars they are horrified They remember they paid perhaps 6 8 or 10

thousand dollars when they bought

They also forget credit is a bit easier than in the past that F BA and even the GI Bill help young people today and they may not even have existed when they were shopping for a house Longer te~ mortgages are possible today and lower down payments These of course do mean more interest

Coinmon CourteSY In other words parents should

Dot use the yardstick of economshyic conditions when they were young for the youth of today When they state perhaps with heated emphasis Why your father and I paid 10 thousand for a home the children are understandably irritated

But once having made their decisions com m 0 n courtesy would seem to demand tpat parshyents be told before strangers or at least as soon as friends Your sense -of hurt feelings here is quite understandable

Your complaint that your sons wife makes all the decisions may be true If so I agree that you have reared a Milquetoast But

is it true Are you actually cershytain or are you imagining someshything Are you really sayingshyand I frankly fear youare-that your son listens to his wife more than he listens to you

Mother-in-Law Role Being a mother-in-law is not

an easy role in Anierican soClshyety and many of the stupid

at least not if you wish to be a successful parent

Because most parents do love their children they are eager to help them They feel that their years of experience give them an advantage and this advantage they would extend to their chil shydren

At times this is true At times it is not The gulf between genshyerations is broad and deep Life has changed greatly in the space of one generation and the bench marks of the past may be unshysuitable today There are certain areas of living in which children may have better ideas than their parents Be prepared to admit as much

But within those areas where the maturity and experience of parents can be helpful advice can be given when not reshyquested only indirectly and cautiously Young marrieds misshyconstrue it as an effort to domshyinate which they reject Pershyhaps you can recall when you too felt this way

But it is indeed sad if they hurt your feelings when you do visit them You have not enshylarged on this so it is impossible to determine just what is said or done that annoys you Assuming you are making a correct judgshyment it is at the very least a breach of hospitality

Many of the inter-generational and in-laws problems of today are the result of social changes As one grows older it is less and less easy to change to adopt ways of doing and thinkshying After all if one succeeded under one system there is little motivation to alter it

Life Easier But conditions have changed

and to paraphrase a commercial this is the Pepsi generationbull Today boys and girls get married even wher the boy is unemshyployed This is scarcely advisable but somemake it Boys marry while still in college and their wives work to help put them through This would have been unthinkable 40 years ago

One of the really amazing changes is the use of long term credit The proud boast of years ago was that one didnt owe any money If you said this today youngsters would view you with open amazement and quietly conclude your credit was no good

No doubt some of this is overshydone and can bring about tragic results But if used intelligently it can make life somewhat easier perhaps more pleasant than in the past

These are only a few of the changes that could be listed a complete litany of them would be impossible Now this doesnt mean that parents are old fogeys that their counsel is useshyless It does mean that they must try tomiddot understand their married children better than some do

And incidentally because of these sweeping changes it is more difficult than it was But it isnt impossible an4 when donepays off in much better relationships

Anti-Smut Effort NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Loushy

isiana Knights of Columbus have jokes ]lake it even more diffi- launched a public information cult But parents after having campaign to combat what one reared their children to the best official t e r m e d indifference of their ability must let them go stemming from lack of knowlshyon their own You cannot keep edge about the growing traffic them tied to your apron strings in obscene literature

PRINCE OF THE CHURCH Americas new cardin~l recelyes congratulations from an old friend as Archbishop Patrlck A OBoyle of Washington felicitatesmiddot Lawrence Cardmal Shehan Archbishop of Baltimore on his elevation to the College of Cardinals by Pope Paul vi NC Photo

~Glassand Wire Tiny Foulr-Bell Chime in Bay State Church

Producing Soundof Big Heavy Metal WALTHAM (N C) - The string-shaped length of glass

church-bell of the future may which may be up to a foot i~ bE a ht~le thing of glass and length and a tiny hammer to Wire weighm~ about two grams produce the proper vibrations but reproducmg the sound of These vibrations are converted cast-metal constructions weigh- into an electronic signal which ing more than a ton ~asses through an amplifier is

j Pope Emphasizes Import of Hymns

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul in an audience for more han 1000 priests participating in a convention on pastoral lit shyurgy emphasized the key role of hymn-singing in the liturgy

We are not in a hurry he said

We must raise up a new peoshyple who learn to pray as the Church now prescribes

One of the prescriptions which I believe to be most influshyential and most necessary is singing

The Pope said that hymns inshycluding popular ones lift the soul and nourish it with religious sentiments

Illinois School Joins Expanding ETV Plan

MORTON (NC)-A parochial school here in Dlinois has served as pilot school in a historic edushyeational television experiment

Blessed Sacrament School reshyceived the first experimental transmission of v ide 0 tap e d courses in color from a high freshyquency monidirectional terminal

A 120-foot tower atop the school received signals from a tower on the Bradley University campus 10 miles away Bradley Coordinator Philip Weinburg said he expects an ETV program to be operational in the 1965-66 school year

The Catholic school tower will remain as a permanent inshystallation to serve both as an ETV booster station with a 15shymile radius and a receiver for educational programs in the school next Fall

Changes in Mass EDINBURGH (NC) - Scots

Catholics are busily preparing for the introduction of English and Gaelic into the Mass on March 1 the first Sunday in Lent

bull HYANNIS bull HARWICH PORT bull ~olri YAAMOUTH

--- shy

funeral Service

DoANmiddotSpoundALmiddotAMtS INCOIlPOItATtiD

Glassblower Gerhard B Finkshybeiner of Brandeis University here in Mass lpoundlas installed for the first time in the United States a set of the tiny bells in St Susanna church in Dedham named for the t~tula church in ~ome of ~ostOIl s Richardmiddot Carshydinal Cushmg

Finkbeiner whose small glass bells already al~e making kingshysiZed sounds in 10 churches in Germany and ]~rance has proshyduced a four-bell chime for the Dedham church encased in a metal cabinet only two feet long and weighing a mere 40 pounds In cast metal equivalent sotmdshyproducers would occupy a goodshysized belfry and weigh aboUt 10000 pounds Finbeiner envishysions his discovery as destined for churches which cannot afford regular bells

The new-style bells look like nothing so much as the fa~iliar vacuum tubes found in any nonshytransistor radio but they proshyduce a never-changing high quality sound which is fully comparable to the metallic clang

of the old-fashioned bell shy

Inside each vacuum tube in Finkbeiners system there is a

MON~~GHAN

ACCEF-TANCE CQIRP

JHOMAS F MONAGHAN JR

Trecisurer

142 SECOND STREET

OSborne 5-7856

FALL RIVER

Increased 100000 times and comes out through a ~pecial speaker whose sound most exshyperts cannot tell from a metallic ben

The sound of a heavy metallic bell is one of the most complex of all musical sounds according to Finbeiner but he has been able to dUJlicat~ it through parshyallel ~Udi~ in glassblowing electronics and ~acuum techshyniques

BARDAHL MAKES YOUR

CAR RUN BEnER tAt New Car Dealers and Service Stations

Everywhere -I

With Safety at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK

115 WILLIAM sr NEW BEDFORD MASS

WEBB OIL (OMPANY TEXACO FUEL ()IL$

DOMESTIC amp HFAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS

Sales~SetYce-lnstaDtjon MAINO~FICE~JO ~RFEEmiddot sTREETmiddotfAll ~IVER

Phone OS 5-7484

11

1S --

Views of New Ho~Y TrinitYmiddotmiddot-C-h-~-rc-h-I-W-e-s-t-~-I-a-li-i-ac-h-middotmiddotmiddotI

-

I I

16 THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

Says Pope John Left Cha lIenge To Catholicsmiddot

NORTH PALM BEACH (NC) - Pope John XXIII left Catholics with a chalshylenge to meet the world Bishop Coleman F Carroll of Miami said here

Bishop Carroll said Pope John dared Catholics to meet other Christians and non-Christians and to discuss our common problems and seek by discussion a solution to these problems

This challenge cannot be met by the pope alone or by the bishops and priests alone he said It must be met by all inshycluding-indeed especially-the laymen

-He said laymen must be propshy

erly prepared for this task through study training and spirshyitual preparation In this conshynection he called a closed spirshyitual retreat an absolute must for the lay person

Bishop Carroll spoke to memshybers of the Our Lady of Florida Retreat League at a dinner in his honor at the Passionist Retreat House here

PrelWtes Sc~~dlJ(e

US~ ~f VeCrulall ROME (NC)-The Italian lanshy

guage will be used in Mass throughout I t a I y beginning March 7 the first Sunday of Lent

The Italian Bishops Commitshytee on the Liturgy in announcshying the change specified that the Italian language would be used in Masses on Sundays and holy days and at all Masses attended by a substantial number of the faithful

The parts of the Mass to be said in Italian are the following the Epistle Gospel acclamations salutations and dialogues (inshycluding the prayers at the foot of the altar and the dialogue preshyceding the Preface) the Kyrie Gloria Creed Sanctus-Benedicshytus and Agnus Dei themiddot Patermiddot Noster with its introduction and the formula for the Communion

Peloquin Chorale Televises Hymns

NEW YORK (NC)-Hymns -Yesterday and Today featurshyipg C Alexander Peloquin and members of his popular Peloquin Chorale will be telecast Feb 14 from 1 to 130 PM EST over the ABC-TV network

The latest program in the seshyries Directions 65 - a Catholic Perspective produced by the National Council of Catholic Men and the ABC public affairs department was written by Peloquin and traces the develshyopment of hymnody from the Te Deum of the 4th century to the works of contemporary composers

Stresses Doctrines Substance Remains

DAVENPORT (NC) -Bishop Ralph L Hayes of Davenport adshymonished an interfaith meeting here in Iowa against expecting changes in Catholic doctrine

The (Second Vatican) Counshycil may change the manner of presentation of doctrines but not their substance he said pointing to the liturgy as an exshyample of such a change

We must admit bigotry and misunderstanding on both sides But followers of Christ have Scripture devotion to the Holy Spirit and devotion to Christ in common Why not talk about the things on which we agree he asked

Sisters of Mercy General Asks Personal ST LOUIS (NC)-Weve got

to develop the Sister in depth Thats what the times call for said the mother general of the 7300 American nuns of the Sisshyters of Mercy of the Union

Mother Mary Regina Cunningshyham ending her first six-year term as the head of the widely known teaching social work and hospital nuns was talking about what the Sisters of Mercy are doing to bring themselves fully up to the times

In St Louis Mo to meet with the superiors of the nine Mercy provinces Mother Regina talked about the main vehicle she and her colleagues hope will achieve the transformation

This is the year in the commu- nity for chapter meetings and general meetings of the nuns in

each of the provinces climaxed by a meeting of the general chapter at the orders mothershyhoupse in Bethesda Md she said

Changing Church Results will be ~olnown in Aushy

gust and Mother Regina hopes that they will show her commushynity to be in line with the mind of a rapidly changing Church in the midst of an even faster movshying world

She predicted tlat the chapshyters would have some surprises not only in the deisions but in the way they are organized to give a more representative view of all the Sisters in the order

If one overall phrase had to sum up what Mother Regina and the other planners are looking for in the Mere chapters it

would be personal responsibil shyity she said

A Sister has to have the reshysponsibility to make judgments for herself said the mother general Her superiors have to give her the responsibility to achieve her own role She has to make the decision to take the risks

~And then of course be ready to pay the price for her decishysion said Mother Regina

In Updated Sense Weve gone beyond the day

Papal Count BALTIMORE (NC) - Thomas

W Pangborn a Hagerstown (Md) industrialist and philanshythropist has been named a papal count by Pope Paul

Responsibility of always being safe Some peoshyple want to be sure to have the answer before they move But sometimes that meant they never moved at all she observed

Developing a Sister in depth will mean a lot of things espeshycially an updated sense of her apostolate and the way she works at it For the Mercy nuns in the U S Central and Latin America and in the West Indies it will mean a lot of littie things Mother Regina hinted

Changes might relax regulashytions about home visits dining with others attending night meetings and cultural affairs or traveling with companions

Mother Regina said that we have to plan for more contact with the laity and for more edushycation to understand each other shy

a

lYonderful Meatsbullbullbull Anoth~r Big Reasll Why zltI ~III I bull STAYING ~c~ Z ~

with FIRST NATIONAL it

l~middotmiddotsowll ItmiddotI

IIIIr-All vlu

FACE RUMIP Fine Grained Texture shy

Heavy Steer Beef for Hearty Eating LB

The Perfect Roast for large Families

ROASTL854CAITCHBONE Same [ow Self-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vidnily rNe Reserve Iie Right to Limit Quantitietl

-

I The Parish Parade I SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO bull

Holy Name Society members will receive corporate Communshyion at 7 oclock Mass Sunday morning Feb 14 The unit plans a Valentine dance and supper from 7 to 12 Saturday night Feb 13 in the Elks auditorium on Church Street SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs John DeBettenshycourt president Mrs Arnold Muckerheid vice-president Mrs Nelson J DeBettencourt Jr treasurer Mrs Charles Davis secretary

For the Holy Name SOGiety James Ferreira is president supshyported by Freeman Willoughby vice-president Alfred Metell treasurer Anthony Rebello secshyretary The units next meeting will be Sunday Feb 14 at the parish hall OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a Masquerade Ball Friday night Feb 26 at Wimpys resshytaurantr Osterville Mrs James E Murphy is chairman ST JOSEPH ATTLEBORO

The CYO will sponsor a dance Saturday night Feb 20 with enshytertainment by Mickey Chagnon and the Rivieras Chairmen for the unit include Carolee Desshyrochers membership Judy Roy spiritual Claudette Ouimet culshytural Sue Reynolds publicity Claire Piette social Don Fisher recreational BLESSED SACRAMENT FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will present a fashion fair at an open meeting to be held Wedshynesday Feb 17 in the church basement Planned for April are a rummage sale and a whist party ST JEAN BAPTISTE FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women announces a ham and basket whist party for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 in the lower church hall In charge will be Mrs Napoleon Picard and Mrs Eugene Gagnon aided by a large committee ST STANISLAUS FALL RIVER

Civics Club members of the parochial school will deliver pastry to nursing home patients for Valentines Day Other projshyects include collecting Christmas cards for missionaries and shovshyelling snow to augment the club treasury OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION OSTERVILLE

Mr and Mrs William Dacey will be co-chairmen of a preshyLenten dance to be held Friday night Feb 19 at Wimpys restaushyrant in Osterville under sponsorshyship of the Womens Guild The program will include a buffef and dancing from 9 to to ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

Mrs Lionel J Dulude presishydent of the Sacred Hearts Assoshyciation requests all ladies of the unit who have First Friday Adoration to check their asshysigned times in order that the full quota will be present at all hours

Corporate Communion for members will be held on Sunday at the 815 Mass and the regushylar meeting will be held the same evening at 730 in the Church Hall

The Penny Sale scheduled for Feb 20 will be discussed atthis meeting ST JOSEPH FALLRIVER

The annual mid-Winter Gala is set for Saturday night at Venus de Milo restaurant A buffet supper from 630 to 830 will be followed by dancing a parish reunion and awarding of prizes

ST JOAN OF ARC ORLEANS

Forthcoming events for the Womens Guild include penny sales this month April and next November socials in March and June and Summer fairs in July and August A ham and bean supper is ~cheduled for May ST JAMES NEW BEDFORD

middotMsgr Noon Circle plans a potluck supper for members and their guests Saturday night Feb 20 OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION NEW BEDFORD

Holy Name Society officers inshyclude Severo G Alfama presishydent James P Gonsalves and John Monteiro vice-president Antonio Rocha treasurer John Soares secretary ST GEORGE WESTPORT

Womens Guild members will form the congregation at the TV Mass to be broadcast on channel 6 at 10 Sunday morning Feb 7 Participants will meet at the parish school hall at 9 to travel to New Bedford ST JOHN BAPTIST NEW BEDFORD

Parishioners will hold their annual filhoz supper and penny sale at 530 Sunday evening Feb 21 in the cllurch hall Tickshyets are available from officers of church organizations or at the rectory In charge are Gilbert Brazil and George Ladino ST PIUS X SOUTH YARMOUTH

The WQmens Guild will hold a past presidents dinner Monshyday night March 1 at Armands restaurant_ Hyannis NOTRE DAME FALL RIVER

Cubs and Boy Scouts will at shytend a Communion breakfast Sunday Feb 7 following 815 Mass A blue and gold banquet for the Cubs is set for Sunday Feb 28 in the parish hall with Roger Labonte in charge of arshyrangements

The Council of Catholic Women will hold its installation banquet Monday Feb 22 at Whites resshytaurant under the chairmanship of Mrs Paul Ilmais To be seated are Miss Helena Dumont president Mrs Cecile Barnabe frst vice-president Mrs Gershyard DextTaze second vice-presishydent Mrs Richard Perry treasshyurer Mrs Romeo Parent reshycording secretary Mrs Roger Langlois corresponding secreshytary

The third in a series of cake sales will follow all Masses this Sunday in the lower church Mrs Ferdnand Letendre chairman will be aided by Mrs Robert Phenixco-chairman Cakes can be brought to the lower church from 4 to 5 and 630 to s Saturshyday afternoon and evening SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a potluck supper for members at 630 Tuesday night Feb 16 in the parish hall A silent auction will follow the slipper In charge of arrangeshyments is Mrs Mary Pereira chairman aided by Mrs Mary Gagne The council announces a malassada supper and penny sale open to the public from 530 to 7 Sunday night Feb 21 also in the hall Tickets will be available at the door and chairshymen are Mrs Mary Cabeceiras and Mrs Albina Quintill

A regular meeting is set for 730 Friday night Feb 12 in the hall Installation of officers is planned for later in the month ST MATIDEU FALL RIVER 4

A Valentine whist is planned by the Council of Catholic Womshyen for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 at the parish hall Mrs Raymond Antaya is chairman

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan RIver-Thurs Feb 1l96I rr

GIVE VIEWS ON AID Presenting views on federal aid to education to the House Education sub-committee was this panel representing the Catholic school system left to right Msgr William E McManus Chicago superintendent of the largest Ctholic school system in the country Mr Edward McArdle Washington DC who focussed on the parents view of the childs needs as the father of seven children Msgr Freclerck G Hochwalt Director Education Department NCWC and Msgr John B McDowell sushyperintendent of the Pittsburgh diocesan school system NC Photo

bullSays Church Must Live In Wide World~ Cardinal Hits Ignorance of Our Neighbor

CHICAGO (NC)-An Amerishycan prelate prominent in the Churchs work for Latin Amershyica has told US Catholics there is no excuse for our ignorance of our neighbors the nations of Central and South America

Archbishop Paul L Hallinan of Atlanta chairman of the subshycommittee for inter-American cooperation of the US Bishops Committee for Latin America in a message to the second annual conference of the Catholic IntershyAmerican Cooperation Program SClid the Church today lives in a new world but it must preshypare to live in a wide world

Miles Are Nothing Catholics in tpe United States

with a strong cultural and comshymercial bridge to Europe find Africa a puzzle and Asia an Orshyiental mystery Strangest of all is our ignorance of our own neighbors the nations of Central

E~ual Treatment JERSEY CITY (NC)-Hudson

County parishes here in New Jersey are joining in a countyshywide interfaith appeal seeking pledges of fair housing practices

~T FRANCIS XAVIER IIYANNIS

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a penny sale at 8 Tuesday right Feb 9 in the parish hall A Communion breakfast and fashion show are on the units Spring schedule

ST JOHN BAPTIST CENTRAL VILLAGE

A housewares demonstraticm will follow an open meeting scheduled by the Womens Guild for 8 Thursday night Feb 11 in the church hall In charge of refreshments will be Mrs Matil shyda Shelter Miss Margaret Shay and Miss May Taggart The unit plans a Valentine whist for 3 Saturday night Feb 13 also in the church hall on Main Road Miss Edith Kirby and Mrs Louise Vieira are chairmen ST JOHN POCASSET

The Womens Guild announces a penny sale for Friday Feb 12 Mrs Sprague Spooner will be chairman The units next meetshying will feature slides and a talk by Col Eugene S Clark on the early history of Marthas Vineshyyard It will be held Tuesd~

Feb 16

and South America he deshyclared

The ~rchbishop said 60 years ago there was an excuse-travel communications and cultural knowledge were in their inshylancy But now miles are nothshying since Pope John XXIII brought his message of unity to the world he averred adding

Real Import The CICOP meeting brings

bishops priests and laymen of both hemispheres together for a remarkable in-service training period a healthy learn while you work program We know much of Latin American needs both religious economic and culshytural We are helping in our way to repair these shortcomings But we need even more to share

in this Christian fraternity fIIf background common resources and future hopes Only by free easy association with the repshyresentatives of Latin America can we get the real import

ELECTRICAL Contractors~

~ ~ ~ ~

944 County St ~ New Bedford

ecec~c~ccccee~o

C) LOUlUl~S iiffii~ ~ i middotbull EWrIMA ~- shyg l~

ROMEamp I~-

I SHmNES imiddot ~ OF EUROPE iiI bull ampHOLY LAND ~) C~ 1 bull CATBOLIC PROGRAJ 1965 ~)

ALI~~16 ~I CachoIlcTeI Orrlce ~) c~ WASHINGTON CHICAGOIOMI LONDONI CATHOLtC TRAVEL OFFICE FRM ~------------II -~ Dupont Circle Building WashIngton D C 20036 fali ~ ~ j1ii Please send me your free Illustrated booklet describing in ~ iJl detail the wOrldmiddotcovering pilgrimages

C~ Name iI ~IJ Address ~ C_~ CityIloneState 11 =~~~~~_~_~~_~_ft~ftVw ijrv _ii~middotV

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Teen-agers Outstanding For Prodigal Generosity

By Rev Joseph T McGloin S J Several times in this column Ive had some glowing

words to say about our Mexican neighbors to the south about their friendliness and hospitality- and general likeshyableness And certainly its all true These people busy as they are will go out of their of other peoples is that you canway give you their precious easily give the idea you are sell shytime and attention to see ing all your own countrymen that you enjoy your visit to short And this would be the their country When a Mexican furthest thing from my own says Mi casa es su casa My thoughts house is your Because there is great friendli shyhouse - which ness in our country too - in he invariably varying degrees and manifested

middot does-he means in various ways The Mexican is it F r i end s in general more spontaneous strangers even than we and most of us have to shopkeepshy be approached before we give ers youve never our friendship since an initial II e e n before shyness seems to hold us back will introduce Often enough however this

middotyou to the whole shyness is caused by a national family and inshy superiority complex by a fear vite you to hav~ of not being accepted and by

middotdinner wit h the fear of making fools of ourshymiddot them To put it mildly hospital shy selves in a language we dont ity like this would be impossible know In other words humility to forget or to overlook is an esseatial to friendliness and _ Sometimes you wonder as you hospitality Sometimes we have walk the downtown- streets of it Often we dont CHle of our own cities and as you Hospitable People see pe~ple going their own inshy We Americans are sometimessulated ways if it isnt true that afraid to show our real feelingsas a country we have only a -afraid to show for inst~nce

-head while Mexico has a head our sympathy forthe underdogand a heart We usually make up for t~is

Superiority Complex psychologically by cheering on - This feeling grows on - you the hiss favored side at spe~tator when you visit Mexico and have sports when we should be doingthe misfortunE to encounter the it in the causes of racial justiceAmerican tourist who is bent on and equality of opportunity inshyacting like one It is a crying stead shame that so many Americans We are afraid others usuallyhave to show a superiority com- those very loud others will look

middotplex to those they encounter in down on us if we give public middot other countries seeming to feel support to those who need our that no matter where they go it support the little -people the is not they who are the foreignshy least of Christs and our brethshyers but those they encounter ren

All too often these types seem The fact is though that we to despise the customs and lanshy Americans do have a- heart and guage and even the currency of that once we put aside our sillythe countries they visit apparshy ideas that we are too busy to be ently thinking that anyone can hospitable or that others will understand English if you only look on us as soft and foolish if speak louder and that real we are or that we must not goAmerican money will buy anyshy out of way forour foreign~rs thing even respect because we might make a misshy

Worst of all are those wbo take in speaking their languagebring their aura of racial supeshy -then we can be and are just as riority along with them and hospitable and friendly as anymake little effort to hide it It is peoplein the world undoubtedly true that some of Ideals of Youththis patronizing attitude is partly There are many Americansresponsible (along with Castro~ and fortunately there are gettingeternal vigilance for American to be more who are willing tomistakes and seeming mistakes) stand up publicly and be countedfor the affection with which on the side of right instead ofAmericans are held in some parts - merely clucking in quiet privateof Latin America such as in sympathy There are lots ofPanama Americans who are not jqst

Race Prejudice friendly and hospitable to forshyAnd its tragic that have eigners but who do heroic workwe

to expoFt the most shameful of with the poor and downtrodden our national sins the stupidity and handicapped of their own which is race prejudice We country and their own city as might as well forget in fact well about any good neighbor polshy - Now there are lots of adult icy until we ourselves become Americans of this type But good neighbors when it comes to out-and-out

But even when we are not prodigal generosity it is the snobbish at home we are seldom teens as a rule whohave to be as spontaneous in our friendli shy given first prize ness other peoples The forshy A teen-agel who has not yetas eign students who come to stuay outgrown the honest ideals of at our universities often get youth will give his time and enshylonely and discouraged because ergy unstintingly and with little they have seemingly no friends thought of consequences This

author has instanceThe Negro in his fight for for seen equality (a fight which should kids doing heroic work with the never have been necessary in the very poor and the orphans-notfirst place) very often feels just throwing money into a colshyalone (though decreasingly so) lection box for them but givingwhen even those who know he is them their time and their love getting a raw deal do nothing working with them face to face at least publicly to help him even as Christ did set things right America has a great heart

Which may be one reason the and many Americans are just as Negro American often makes a spontaneous and natural at better ambassador abroad than showing it as any people anyshyother Americans where As a country however

Friendliness Here we still have some distance to But the trouble with extolling go before this sort of generosity

the hospitality and friendlin~ becomes our national image

CHECK COMPARE SAVE

Turkeys 10to11 LIS

Ready-to-Cook 39~ FIR S T Nancy Vogel

daughter of Mr and Mrs SAVE CASH bullbullbull SHOP AampPLeonard J Vogel of Sacred Heart Parish Fall River and a senior at Starg High last night became the first recishypient of the Bishop Connolly award for the outstanding

girl athlete n a Catholic High School The Clover Club of Fall River sponsored the award

Thomas ~Vhalen

In Noviticlte Brother Thomas Whalen son

of Mr and Mrs Thomas Whalen -8 General Cobb St Taunton and a member of the Sacred Heart Parish has received the religshyious habit of the Erothers of the

SMOKED P()RK SHOUlDERS

SUPER-RIGHT SHORT SHANK 6 TO 8 lBS

PICNICS 1829c

CHICKEN LEe or BREAST 33c

QUARTERS l8

SAVE CASH ON THESEHoly Cross at ceremonies conshyducted at St Joseph Novitiate

Valatie NY 6 POUNDS ofi BREAD ONLY 99c Brother John Donoghue CSC

Provincial Superior of the Broshy Whitl Breadp~~~E~ 4 ~6~~~z99c thers of the Holy Cross of the SAVI 20e - REGULAR 59c - 8 INCHEastern Province announced I p 118 8 OZ 39CJANEthat Brother Thomas was one of App I II PARKER IACHthe 14 candidates who is now starting a canonical year of proshy JANI PARKER - SAVlOe REGULAR 9c

bation for the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross bull hB Ck 1 lB 3 OZ 3ftCSpaRIS ar a e EACH i

Following the reception the parents and friends of Brother Thomas were guests at a lunchshyeon at the novitiate

Total Now 430 NEW YORK (NC)-With the

opening of two more parish schools the number of Catholic elementary schools in the New York archdiocese now totals 430

ATWC)OD OIL CO~~PANY

SHEILL HEATIN4 OILS South SeC] Streets Hyannis Tel HY 81

COMPLleTE

Mortgage Service anywhere on Cape Cod

bull RESIDENTIAL bull COMMEI~CIAL

bull CONSTRUCTION bull SEASONAL

Call EX 8-2266

Bass ~iver Savings Bank

SOUTH YARMOUTH Hyannis - Dennis Port

Yarmouth Plaza

Special Donut and Coffee SoleI All THIS weEKI

PLAIN SUGARED CJlNNAMON OR COMBINATION

2 PKGS 4ftltJane Parker Donuts 29cR~~ Of 12

I E 5 ON ON SAVE 4c B~~S SAV 1 c B3~S MILO AND MRLOW COFfil

Eight OClock ~A~ 69c-3 IJ~G 198 RICH FULLmiddotBOOleo

Red Circle CoHee ~A~ 71 c-3 B~G204 VIGOROUS ANO WINEY

lokar Coffe ~A~ 73c-3 B~G210 rice shown In thl ud guiltnteed tlltu Sat Feb

Tobacco products and Items prohibIted by Iaw eKempt from Plaid Stamp Offbullbull amp effective at ALL Aamp Sup Matlcotn thl communll1 and lclnll1

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 9: 02.04.65

VinesWill HaveTenderGrapes f Pruned Now Says Gardener

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

One of the few jobs in the garden middotwhich should be done in Winter is that of pruning grape vines By pruning vines now while they are dormant you will avoid a drippy vine when the sap begins to flow Actually the pruning should take place in two steps once now and again in never to be awakened again

late March or April Maybe this is how TV dinnersbegan

Too often grape produc- Now Im as guilty as any other Clon suffers from too little prunshy mother of not wanting four exshyIng As a result vines become tra elbows around me when I am overcrowded and produce small trying to cook and I often have stunted bunches of fruit or at to suppress a scream of anguish best production of fruit is when my last egg hits the floor limited Then I remember my early ef

In pruning a vine the first forts offer a prayer to the thing to do is to remove all Blessed Mother for an extra Winter-killed growth (this is dose of patience and find someshysimple to determine since dead thing for those little hands to eliDes are dry and brittle) These help me with canes should be cut back to the One day last week when my main stem The second step is to patience was at an unusually eut aU thin straggly growth at high peak we had a dolls birthshyleast half way back to the main day party cake mixed and baked stem or until the cane is at least by Meryl and Melissa instrucshythe thickness of a finger The tions read by mother The utter shape of the vine is of no conshy delight on their faces when the eern now since it will be shaped finished cake turned out so well after the second pruning more than paid for any extra

The first pruning should thin effort on my part the vine to approxima~ely twoshy A very young friend of ours thirds of its original bulk Do Christine McGowan of St JoshyDot make the mistake of being sephs parish Fall River was cautious about cutting Rememshy nice enough to give us one of her ber new growth will appear off recipes to pass on to the younger the old growth and unless you set Miss McGowan with the aid are thOrough the vine will be of an understanding mother has overcrowded been baking since a very tender

In late March or April the age ~e shouidbe pruned again duiped and tied First remove

Chrissies Cookies 1 Ie white sugar

any canes which were missed atmiddot 1 C brown sugar packed the fiist pruning or any recently C soft shortening (this III killed canes Other canes to be equal to lb butter or margarshy~moved are those which are old ine) IUld overuown since theywiU 1 t vanilla produce littleif any fruit 3 C flour

Once the thinning out process 1 t baking soda comple~ the canes which t salt are to be kept should be ~ nuts andor raisins to taste back to five or six buds and tied Heat oven to 375 Mix sugars During the tying process the shortening eggs vanilla Sift toshyme can be shaped so that no -gether flour soda salt and stir __0 canes are closer than a foot in Add raisins andor nuts ~d a half apart This is a time- Fo~ balls of about 1 t middotof dough eonsuming job which is very apiece flatten on ungreased ~y to do sloppily with a poor baking sheetallowing room far ~p resulting so t~e a few ~ys to do it properly Above an JIrUlle heavily In the Kitchen On of my older daughters reshy~ests last Christmas was for an electric oven that baked just like monunys I felt that this was a little too grown up for five year old because the temshyperature went up as high as 400 degrees so needless to say this particular item didnt find a place under our ~ris~as tree However I still feel quite guilty about this as I intend to try very hard to encourage any cooking tendencies in my daughters Speaking from personal expeshy

dence I remember the years I ipent getting shoo~d out 9f my mothers kitchen until finally ~y interest in that direction iemained dormant until mar ~age forced me to face squareshy~ the prospect of preparing three meals a day Fortunately hen I did solve this problem liided by many cookbooks I did discover how much I loved to eook but I still wonder how any other girls have had their love of cooking equally squelchshytid by a well-meaning mother

Dorries Patronesses Dames Patronesses of Sacred

Beart Home New Bedford will hold a Valentine party for hOJIle residents at 130 Tuesday aftershynoon Feb 9 Mrs Jean Boutin-is m charge of arrangements The lInits annual meeting is planned for Sunday April 25 and the -tOth anniversary of the group Will be marked with a banquet and dance Wednesday May 5 in New Bedford Hotel Next board meeting will be held at 30 luesday niIht March 11

cookies to spread (Wetting the handS with Cold water keeps dOUgh from sticking to them)

Bake 8middot to 10 miuutes Makes about 60 cookies

Notre Dame Nun Joins Inter-Radal Staff

CHICAGO (NC)-Sister Mary Peter (Traxle~r) of the School Sisters of Notre Dame has joined the staff of the educational -sershyvices department of the National Catholic Conference for Intershyracial Justice here

Raymond M Hilliard confershyence chairman said rapid growth of the agencys services necessi-_ tated staff expansion While doshying graduate work in political

science at Georgetown Univershysity in Washington Sister Mary Peter organized a tutorial proshygram for under-privileged youth

NO JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main OHice and Plant 95 Bridge St Lowell Mass

Tel 458-6333

Auxiliary Plants

BOSTON CAMDEN N J OCEANPORT N J MIAMI PAWTUCKET R L PHILADELPHIA

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ c 9 j

REPRESENT Us CATHOLIC WOMEN The Board of Direct-ors of the National Council of Catholi~ Women is received by Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi Apostolic Delshyegate in the US at the annual meeting in ~ashington Mrs Mar~us Kilch ~oungsto~ Ohio left front is NCCW president and Miss Margaret Mealey nght front 18 executIve director NC Photo

Vatican Pavilion Second Most Popular in Fair NEW YORK(NG) --At

most half of the visitors at the New York World~sFair~

last year stopped off at the Vatican Pavilion making it the second most popular of the Fairs 151 pavilions Average daily attendance was over 75000 giving the pavilion a total at- tendance figure of more than 138 million

The Good Shepherd Chapel was the scene of 1204 Masses

SAVE MONEY ON YOUR OILHEATI bull CfJH n

CHARLES F VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE NEW BEDFORD MASS

IwflkltdeliNlyK

~SS~ HEATING OIL

at whichCo~union was dis- The most popular item at the tributed to ~ie th8ll- 42000 pavilions sales counters was a people POStcard featuring P~pe Paul

gt 1 1

- ~- ~

-_

_ ~~ f y

~ I

NO NONOt

Piggy banks dont pay dividends Put your money in a Fail River Trust Savings Account where generous divishydends are compounded semi-annually Its much safer too 1

FALL RIVER ~~h TRUST CO- V

64J U1t4 ~~ bull~ Fatt ~

-

THE ANCHORshy10 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Prelate Stresses Ecumenism on Spiritual Level

MADEIRA (NC) - Auxshyiliary Bishop Paul F Leishybold of Cincinnati called for a spiritual ecumenism shyprayer and holiness - as the soul of the ecumenical moveshyment

He preached at a special low Mass which he offered at St middotGertrudes church here in Ohio for some 300 Protestants many escorted by Catholic neighbors Many Protestant visitors were guests in homes of Catholic pashyrishioners after the evening Mass which was (lffered at an altar facing the congregation

Bishop Leibold cited five ways in which those who profess Christ can work for Christian unity

1 We must make every effort to avoid expressions judgments

and action~hich do not represhysent the condition of our sepashyrated brethren with truth and faimess

2 DIalogue must be carried on between competent experts from different churches and communities

3 Cooperation among differshyent churches for the common good of humanity

4 A spiritual ecumenismmiddot which he said involves a change of heart holiness of life and public and private prayer for unity

5 All must examine their own faithfulness to Gods will for the Church and accordingly undertake with vigor the task of renewal arid reform

Scores FCC Stand On Religious Test

WASHINGTON (N C) - A middotmember of the Federal Commushynications Commission charged here that the FCC is violating constitutional limits marked out by the Supreme Court by makshy

ing religious broadcasting one test of a broadcasters public service performance

Commissioner Lee Loevinger addressing the National Reli shygious Broadcasters convention said the FCC has gone far beshyyond the limits that have been marked by the Supreme Court as permissible govertiment acshytion in the field of religion

Loevinger noted that the FCC includes religious pro g ram I

among the types of programs considered to be in the public interest on its license application forms He said it made the broadcasting of such programs one of the FCCs tests for detershymining whether a broadcaster operates in the public interest

Pope Paul Thanks Italian Policemen

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI greeted the Italian poshylicemen whose beat is the Vatican and saidit was a great consolation to know they were around

Answering an address of homshyage by Inspector General Oreste Correti who was accompaniel by other officials and members of the force the Pope said he is grateful for the zealous expert generous and selfless work in which you display your integrity as distinguished state officials and your dedication as faithful IOns of the Church

Though members of the Italian force the groups are assigned ~ special guard duties and ~

directing traffic in St Peters iquare and the area surropndinl Vatic~ City

BOSTON (NC)-Richard Card~ inal Cushing touched off a cheershying demonstration by 1300 Jews here when he predicte9 the Secshyond Vatican Council will apshyprove a declaration absolving Jcws of direct blame in the death of Christ

If we dont Im wasting my time talking of brotherhood said the Archbishop of Boston after he was presented withmiddot the annual Good Will Award of Temple Ohabei Shalom Brothershyhood oldest and largest Jewish organization of its kind in the

country He was selected for the award because of his compasshysion generosity love and broth- erhood

Reds Fear Religion The prelate said Ill never forget the Second

Vatican Council I didnt know What they were talking about I had never heard a lecture in Latin and it was all Greek to me I dont know how many others were in the same boat

CEF Head Praises Johnson Proposals

TRAVERSE CITY (NC)-The national president of Citizens for Educational Freedom had praise here in Michigan for Presshyident Johnsons statements in his State-of-the-Union address

Stuart D Hubbell a lawyer lauded the President for his wilshylingness to tr~at all school chil shydren equally He said he sent Mr Johnson a telegram which said in part

While your proposals have not as yet been made specific to the extent that they follow the principle of equality that you outlined in your message you will have made a signifi shycant beginning in developing broad support for educational achievement

bull SEQUIN Truck Body Builders Aluminum or Steel 944 County Street

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2middot6618

DISCUSS PROBLEMS CONFRONTING HOSPITALS Meeting at the 20th annual conclave of Bishops representatives for Catholic hospitals in Scottsdale Ariz are left to right Msgr Harold A Murray director of thE NCWC Bureau of Health and Hospital Hospitals Bishop Francis J t Green of Tucson Bishop Joseph B Brunini episCOgtal burshyeau chairman and Auxiliary of Natchez-Jackson Miss and Father John J Flanagan SJ~ executive director of the Oatholic Hospital Association NC Photo

We Have Come Long ~Way in Short Time Hub Cardinal Sees Church Gains Continuing

~

but I sat between two very ven- around religion He added For crable Italian cardinals They that reason they try to eliminate

knew no English and I knew no Italian All the time they kept calling me Cardinal Spellman or Cardinal Mindzen1y or even Cardinal OConnell (The late William Cardinal OCgtnnell was Cardinal Cushings predecessor as Archbishop of Boston)

In a more serious mood Cardshyinal Cushing said the one great fear communists have centers

Interfaith Service For Church UII1ity

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Byzanshytine Rite Catholics joined with Orthodox and Protestants in a common prayer service for

Christian unity Sunday in Holy Spirit Byzantine rite c hu r c h here

Participants in the vespershytype service includE)d Father Andrew Resetar of Erie Pa Very Rev A Dixon Etollit dean of Trinity Episcopal cathedral here Father GeorgE) Scoulas dean of St Nicholas Greek Orshythodox cathedral in Oakland and Dr Harold R Alert former president of the Pittsburgh Council of Churches

The service was arranged by the Pittsburgh C 0 tI n c i I of Churches and the Pittsburgh Byzantine rite diocesE~

Where A

GOOD NAME

Means A

GREAT DAL

GEO OHARA CHEVROLET

565 MILL 5JREET

HEW BEDFIORD

Open Evenings

it from the lives of their peoplemiddot He revealed he has 25 engageshy

ments to talk to groups of other religious faiths including a lodge of Masons before Easter The Cardinal inquired Who would have thought even five years ago that a Catholic archbislfop would be preaching good will in a Protestant church or in a synshyagogue Or that a rabbi would be addressing other faiths We sure have come a long way in a short time-and its going to get better

Preaching Brotherhood The cardinal also observed I

am not trying to convert Protesshytants to Catholics or Jews to Catholics I never made a conshyvert in my life My only messhysage is one of brotherhood

Sturtevant 6shyHook Est 1897

Builders Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New Bedford WY 6-5661

Deny Dispatch About Ca rdinaI

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Sta_ Departm~nt spokesman her categorically denied a recent press story that there are ~

obstacles to Jozsef Cardinal Mindszentys leaving his refuge in the U S legation in Budapest but that the Primate of HungaI7 ~wants to die a prisoner there

The story (which was released by NANA and published in t~

daily press Jan 20) credited its source a State Deparme~ source in Bonn German~

who has taken part in recent U S-Hungarian negotiations

The State Department spokesshyman here described the story bull completely incorrect

We dont have any Americali official in Bonn who has had anything to do with the Hungar-o ian negotiations he said in an swer to inquiries It doesn1 represent anything that an American official would hold

New Orleans Plans New High Schools

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Arch-t bishop John P CodY of New Orleans has announced plansfOS construction of seven new hip schools in several parts of the archdiocese

Declaring that Catholic educashytion never was so flourishin nor were our Catholic people bull desirous of increasing the num bel of schools and improving t~

methods of teaching The Loushyisiana prelate said we must build so that all the children oil our area may have the blessin of a thorough Catholic educashytion

SERVING FINE ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4-8754bull

TIte Falmoufh NatiOnal Sanlc Falmouth Mass

tilt Villale Ir Sian 1121

WM T MANNING (0 WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE

AND

INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES bull GENERAL TIRES bull DELCOBATTERIES

bull PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS

FALL RIVER - NEW BEDFO~D - HYANNIS - NEWPORT

First Federal Savings AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF ATlLEBORO

4 on ali $avings Accouni

1 Extra on Systematic Bonus~vings

bull bull bull bull bull

11 bull

Portugal Bishops Plan University For Country

LISBON (NO) - Portushygals bishops have announcshyed plans to found this nashytions first Catholic Univershysity

They said in a joint pastoral letter issued after their meeting here that there is an imperative need for a Catholic university for the nations conscience They said the university win have greater freedom greater dynamism and greater flexibil shyity than the present state uni versities

The letter said that the govshyernment will help the bishops in founding the new Catholic university

Last Summer Manuel Cardishynal Goncalves Cerejeira of Lisshybon told a meeting studying the foundation of the Catholic Unishyversity that it would be open to both laymen and the clergy and located in Lisbon instead of the older university town of Coimshybra Earlier efforts were made to restore a theological faculty at Coimbra University The facshyultY was closed following the revolution which made Port~gal a republic in1910

Several years agothe cardinal noted that a Church-sponsored university has been a hope of 1Ihe VI has called on individual Cathshy one part of the Mystical Body of many Latill American counshy~oI1uguese bishops for a long olies to become more aware of Christ to another tries and CICOP itself whichtime ~ut that priorities for the world-wide dimensions and seminanes new churche~ pri- needs of the Church mary schools and Catholic Acshytion organization had delayed Today bull bull bull it is absolutely eoncrete plans indispensable that each pers~n

become aware of the true dishymensions of the Church the

Sees Greater Church Pope declared adding Greater awareness will iead to wideningNeed for Laity Role

LAKE CHARLES (NC) - A Louisiana editor predicts the time will come in the 20th censhytury when laymen wi~ domishynate the clergy in many fields

Msgr Alexander O Sigur edshyitor of the Southwest Louisiana Register diocesan newspaper feels in the present age of scishyence and technology Catholic laymen with specialized knowl- edge of law science and other fiElds must of necessity advise the clergy on the many facets of todays society

He pointed out that the layshymens role has made more progshyress since the opening of the Second Vatican Council than in the previous 10 centuries

But because of centuries of tradition there will be problems for some time connected with evolution of the laymans role in the Church he asserted

British Conversions Continue to Decline

LONDON (NC)-The number of converts to Catholicism in England and Wales continues to decline but the Catholic popushylation shows a steady increase according to the 1965 Catholic Directory published here

The known number of adult conversions for 1963 the most recent year for which statistics are available was 12778 This was a decrease of 552 from the previous year which also showed a considerably lower figure than that for 1961

But the Catholic population increased in 1963 by 129500 to 3956500 and the Catholic popshyulation in Scotland rose by 13shy310 to 812460

Foundation Member NEW YORK (NC) - William

G Ryan presidentmiddot of Seton Htn College Greensburg Pa haa been named a corporate member of the FoundationfOr the arts Religion and culture which win hold its fim meetina laue tomonow

THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

HIGH HONOR FOR K of C HEAD Supreme Knight John W McDevitt of the Knights of Columbus invested as a Knigh t Commander of St Gregory at a testimonial banquet in Boston is with left to right AuxiHary Bishop John F Hackett of H~rtford Archbishop Henry J OBrien of Hartford Bishop Charles P GreltfO Qf Ale~andna La Supreme K of C Chaplain and Bishop William J Smith of Pembroke OntarIO NO Photo

Pope Hail~ US Church Mission Work Says Transfe~ of Energies I Most ~onsoling

CHICAGO (NC)-Pope Paul this transfer of energies from unteers who are serving la

of vitality and fuller realization of the meaning of the name Catholic

Nature of Church Pope Paul made his plea in a

message to the second annual conference of the Catholic Inshyter-American Cooperation Proshygram (CICOP)

The Holy Father coupled his appeal for greater awareness of the worldwide nature vf the

Church with high praise for aid rendered in recent years by US Catholics to the Church in Latin America Prellently he said there are 4091 US priests reshyligious and laymen serving there

Greater Understanding I He called us Catholic proshygrams for Latin America a proshyvidential apostolic ~ovement and said they make up one of the most beautiful pages in the history of the Church in the United States

Particularly in light of the Ecumenical Councils constitushytion on the Church he said it iamost consoling to witness

BEFORE YOU BUY-TRY

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault 67 Middle Street Fairhaven

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICE

lJe singled out for praise US seeks by educational means to promote greater understandingdioceses which have sent 178 of Latin Americas problemsdiocesan priests to mission work

in Latin America US religious among the Catholic millions of the United Statescommunities of men and women

which he said are fulfilling the Urllent Demands engagement they have undershy Pope Paul voiced hope that thetaken of sending a tithe of meeting here would producetheir total memership to Latin many practical results parshyAmerica by 1970 US lay vol~ ticularly a wider and more soshy

licitous collaboration of the Refugee Children United States of America with

the Church in Latin AmericaHONG KONG (NC) - Archshy such as urgent needs dem~ndbishop Joseph Caprio apostolic

internuncio to China opened here for refugee children a new $100000 primary school built by Norris H Trippthe Franciscan Missionary Sisshyters of Our Lady of Sorrows SHEET METAL Mother Leola superior of the J TESER Proporder which has its headquarshy RESIDENTIALters in Beaverton Ore attended

INDUSTRIALthe ceremony COMMERCIAL

253 Cedar St New Bedford WY 3-3222 Montie Plumbing amp

Heating Co Inc

Counci~s Effects Years Away

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The universal effects of the Second Vatican Council will not be recshyognized completely for years to come James Francis Cardinal McIntyre told 2200 Holy Name men here in California

It is entirely impossible to estimate at the present time the effects of the council on the thinking of the world the carshydinal said

These effects have penetrated deeply into the spiritual life of all people not only of the Church alone he told a Holy Name Union Communion breakshy

fast One index of its effects is the

attention the council has comshymanded in the press of the world the cardinal said

Names Two Priests To Federal Board

NEW YOItK (NC) - T w bull priests are on the 30-niember board of directors of the new Sex Information and Education Council of the United Stat~

(SIECUS) formed to foster im- proved study and education oa the role of sex

TheYlre Father George Hag- maier CSP of the Paulist In- stitute for Religious Researc~ and Father John L Thomas SJ St Louis (Mo) University soci ologist

The executive director of the council is Dr Mary Steichen Calderone former medical dishyrector of the Planned Parentshyhood Federationand its presishyident is Wallace C Fulton formshyer presidtDt of the National Coundl on Family Relations

Whites Farm Dairy SPECIAL MilK

From Our Own Tested Herd

Acushnet Mass WY 3-4457 bull Special Milk bull Homogenized Vito 0 Milk bull Buttermilk bull Tropicana Orange Juice bull Coffee and Choc Milk bull Eggs - Butter

FIVE CONVENIENT OFFICES- -TOSERVE YOUReg Master Plumber 2930

GEORGE M MONTlE ONE-STOP BANKING Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET FIRSTmiddotMACHImiddotNISTS Fall ~River OS 5-7497 NATIONAL BAN Ilt

OF TAUNTON Norton W MaIn St-Raynham Rte 44-Taunton Main St

North Dighton Spring St-North Easton Main St_ w H RILEY amp SO~J Inc Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

CITIES SERVICE bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnmbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullDISTRIBUTORS

Gasoline i F L COLLINS amp SONS i Fuel and Range INCORPORATED 1937

OILS bull

GENERAL (ONTRAOORS5bullOIL BURNERS

For prompt delivery 5 and ENGINEERS 5amp Day amp Night Service

bull JAMES H COLLINS CE Pres G E BOILER BURNER UNITS bull Registered Civil and Structural Engineer bull

Rural Bottled Gas Se~ Member National Society Professional Engineers

61 COHANNET ST FRANCIS L COLLINS JR Treas = TAUNTON bull THOMAS Ie COLLINS Secy bull

Attteboro - No Attlebor~ middot =ACADEMY BUILDING FALL RIVER MASS Taunto1

-bullbull

bull 12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Humphreymiddot Becker Write Novels of Reminiscence

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Both William Humphreys The Ordways (Knopf

$595) and Stephen Beckers A Covenant with Death (Athshyeneum $450) are novels of reminiscence Both are laid in the Southwest the former in Texas the latter in an unshyidentified state The narrashytor in the Ordway book is for the most part telling what happened to his greatshygrandparents and his grandparshyents in the Civil War period and at the tum of the century In the Becker book the narrator is in his seventies recalling Ii decisive expeshyrience in his oWn life when he was 29 back in 1923 If there are similarities between the works there are also differences and they are very great

Mr Beckers novel is a Book of-the-Month Club middotselection has already been bought by a movie company for a vast sum and unshydoubtedly will be a roaring popshyular success Mr Humphreys novel will probably have far fewer readers and will bring its author far less money But it is by all odds and in every reshyIJPect the better book

Long-Winded It has one fault that of being

long-winded and at times meandering I just wanted to hear the same old things over and over again the narrator -of The Qrdways says at one point It is evidently presumed that the reader has the same desire and that he will not object to lengthy digressions But repetition and extended parenthetical exercises do become tiring even if as in ~is instance the writing is of a high order

1$ The Ordways really a novel in the Strict sense The pook cOritillns a notice reading A portion of Part One in some- what different form first apshypeared in The Saturday Evening Post

It is quite true that the first seetion could stand alone that the second and third sections could form a story by themshyselves and that only the fourth section depends for intelligibility on what has gone before Noneshytheless there is unity here if not the tight construction of the most effective novel

Family Lore Mr Ordway begins by describshy

ing graveyard working days in the hamlet of Mabry near the town of Clarksville in eastern Texas On that day occurring once a year the descendants or suniivors of those burled in the Mabry cemetery come together to set the place to rights

middotAs they do so they rec~ the histories of the dead and thus the family lore is passed on from generation to generation But it is more than family lore which is conveyed the countrys past is reconstructed and the making of the present

The narrator a boy in the 1930s learns of two decisive episodes in his own family One has to do with Thomas and Ella Ordway who were Tennessee people until 1863 Thomas was an infantryman was horribly wounded and disabled in the batshytle of Shiloh and would have died or at least have been lost to his famIly had it not been for his wifes valor The narrative of her recovering him ann bringshying him back to a ~blance of life is harrowing

Journey to Texas But somethinamp more harrowshy

ing is still to come the account of their six months journey in a wagon drawn by oxen from Tennessee to Texas in the hope of beginning a new and better life The reader not only follows this arduous exodus but makes and suffers it and is haunted by it thereafter

This portion of the book is a storY complete in itself dramatshyic pathetic comic packed with lively incidents and colorful characters some heroic some corrupt some rascally all disshytinctive and engaging

Occasionally the side excurshysions pall a bit as in the depicshytion of stump speaking by polit shyical candidates or of life with a small shabby traveling circus Yet each of these sideshows has something to contribute to the pictUre of emerging Texas

Acute Observations

Mr Humphrey writes extremeshyly well a little less fancily as the book progresses but always vivshyidly and with plentymiddot of power for the high moments His peoshyple are nicely differentiated and come memorably to life He has many acute observations and even authentic wisdom to disshypense and this he does neatly His book rings with truth about human nature and is the work of a highly gifted and skillful artist

Mr Beekers A Covenant with Death on the other hand strikes me as contrJved empty and often obnoxiousmiddot Its nub is a legal stickler What is to be dQne with a man who is convicted of m~rger bought +c the gallows there Gki1ls~e hangman and then is cleareu of the first kill shying ~is poser ismiddot put to the 29shy

year~old judge Ben Lewis He solyes Wby niakiIig law and when confronted with this puzshyzler solves as well a key probshylent in his personal life At one and the same time he becomes at last a real judge and a real man

Precise 3udgment

Or so we are asked to believe Lewis says of himself I passed the crisis of adolescence at the ludicrous age of 29 bull bull bull I was swollen with garbage and bittershyness My own ego was monshystrous mainly because I had never done anything for anyone and could justify my own useshylessness only by assuming that the world was not worth my energies This is a precise judgment

The trouble is that the book is swollen with garbage and bitterness as well as sophistry

Young Lewis conversations with his mother for example They irk by their pretentiousness and they disgust with their obscenishyties The youngmiddot judge is thorshyoughly sophomQric and we are asked to credit his sudden leap into maturity We are asked too much

It is with ill grace that the author scorns small town folk for their prurience It is just this to which most of his book apshypeals When he sneers that Soledad City our wholesome middle-class American town would be lined up three deep for good seats at a murder trial with sensational sexual aspects he apparently forgets that the predictably huge sales of his novel will be in large part to people attracted by itligamineaa

3AMES OGARA

PauiSft CElnter Lists Spe(d~er

James OGara editor of Comshyrronweai magazinEl will be guest speaker in the Christian Culture Series at the Paulist Ce-nter in Boston on Wednesday evening Feb 17 on the topic The Role and Future of Cathshyolic Education

Mr OGara has written numshyerous articles for leading Cathshyolic magazines in middotthis country end Europe and has appeared on many religiow television programs of the National Counshycil Of Catholic Men

Rev Andrew Greeley sociolshyogist and author of many books on social subjects will join Mr O-Gara in the discussion

Monsignor Francis 3 Lally editor of the Pilot will be pr0shy

gram moderator

Deplores Agtncies Poverty Appoach

CHICAGO (NC) -- Catholic charity and welfareillgencies and institutions must drop thebusishyness as usual appreach and get into the actual aIl~na of povshyerty a National Conference of Catholic Charities Dleeting here in Illinois was told

The surge of natilmal concern about poverty is one of the most dramatic and compelling moveshyments in our day rather Robshyert Monticello of DEltroit chairshyman of the conferences program committee told assembled social work executives

His views were echoed by Msgr Raymond 3 Gallagher secretary of the comerence who said that personal service to families and individuals among the poor must be a coriunitment each of us makes dailly

CENTIER Paint and Wldlpaper

Dupont PClint

iiP cor Middle St

422 6lcush Ave

~Qc=t~ New Bedford ~ARKING

Rear of Store

ProtEct What You Hav~

McGO~VAN Insurance J~gency

TEL MYrtle ~1middot8231

188 NORTH MAIN $TREET NORTH ATTU8ORO

Beggars for All the Missions

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen DO

rn the mail last week a package arrived containing several hundred printed and self-addressed envelopes from various begshyging organizations in the United States The good woman who sent the package admitted being neither rich nor comfortable and yet she was flooded with appeals She wanted to know how she became a victim of this deluge The answer is that she is on a mailing list There are hundreds of mailing lists for sale in the United States These can be bought for various amounts depending on the number and quality of the names listed The good woman who wrote us was on at least one of these lists

Never before has it been brought home to us with Such impact how swamped our faithful are with appeals It grieves DB

that we too are beggars but we find some consolation in the fact that the Holy Fathers Society for the Propagation of the Faith has never used such mailing lists

This incident highlightsmiddot an urgent need that the Vatican Council must recognize that of co-ordinating appeals for all these really worthwhile causes especially those of misshysionaries Pius XI said that the method by which each missionary group solicited only for itself did not provide an even distribution of help Some can barely survive others have investments in Wall Street How to know who out of the hundreds who beg are most deservng is not only difficult but almost impossible

We have never liked begging In fact there is too much inshysistence on money in the Church tOday We would like to be unshackled from our tin cup and not add to this confusion But this is our duty Why 1 Because the Holy Father has asked us to be his beggars in the United States for -all the missions of tlie world 2 Becanse it is the glory of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith not to helf) one order or society of the world but the entire world (As a matter of fact 88middot per cent of the appeals in the above-mentioned package received soDie aid from The Society for the Propagation of the Faith) 3 Because being under the direction of the Holy Father The Society for the Propagation of the Faith does not invest any of yoUrmiddot alms Every eent Is distributed by the Holy Father each year The world Is too poor So fOldve us

Oh yes the lady who sent us the package wrote I could not keep 240 missionary appeals because I have not the money Since The -Society for the Propagation of the Faith aids all I send the Holy Father my $100 to be divi4ed as he sees fit

GOD LOVE YOU to Anoafor $5 Here Is Diy poeen valeiI- Une for the poor bullbullbull toMLA for $78 This is whist l diel Ilot spend on eigarettes Somehow I cannot enjoy them auYmore knowing that today 10000 people riD die of ~rntionmiddot

-

Think ahead to Valentines day and order a GOD LOVE YOU medal In classic Florentine gold finish or pure sterling silver this lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of the World is one you would be proud to give or delighted to receive Designed by the world-renouned jeweler Harry Winston and blessed by Bishop Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal may be obtained by sending your request and corresponding offering to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001

$ 2 small sterling silyershy $ 3 small 10k gold filled $ 5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut 01lt ft1Is colUIDn pin your sacrifice to it and maD It te Most Rev Fulton 3 Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York New York 10001 or to your Diocesan Director

Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 368 North Main Street

Fall River Massachusetts

791 PurcIaase Street Betweea

WIUIam bull UnI_ S_

NEW BEDFORD

FIVE CENTS SAVINGS BANK

WE HAVE PLENTY OF MONEY FOR HOME LOANS

If youre buying or building -Ioolc to us CONVENTIONAL GI - FH~ FINANCING

Ca on us anytime aDd talk over your plans

Fathers andmiddot Daughters Will Twirl At Annual Sucordium-Sponsored Hop at SHA Fan River

Dads and daughters win twirl at the annual fathep daughter dance at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River Its scheduled fltgtr 8 tomorrow night in the academy gymshynatorium and is sponsored by the moms and dads and daughters-members of the

SHA Fall River and her team very active Sucordium Club marked its first league debateHomemaker of the year at this season by defeating Case

Holy Family High in New Dartmouth Taunton and PreshyBedford as a result of the annushy vost al Homemaker of Tomorrow test Coyle High was host for a taken by thousands of girls novice tournament of two rounds across the nation is Christian with nine schools competing last Saulnier Shes National Honor weekend and the varsity team Society treasurer and copy edshy last week won three of four iJtor of By Fy Spy the school matches over Bishop Stang paper Bishop Stang was host to Narshy

At Dominican Academy in Fan ragansett League debate last River the top homemaker is week with 12 schools representshyJulia Melvin Senior A president ed each by four man teams Repshysodality vice-prefect and student resenting Stang were John council vice-president Another Golenski Michael Hogan Thomshyfeather in Julias cap is that as Keary and Myles Tillotson shes to represent her school at At the same meeting Bishop the state capitol on Student Feehan was represented by Government Day Francis Detellis Kateri Detellis

Christine Julia and an other Roger Watts and Raymond StafshyDiocesan school winners in the ford They won one debate out homemaker contest are now eli shy of four gible for consideration as state Current Affairs Contest winners Themiddot states highestshy Many Diocesan schools partici shyranking girl will receive a $1500 pated in a current affairs conshyscholarship and will tour Washshy test sponsored by a weekly news ington and New York City this magazine and among top scorers Spring From the state finalists were Janet Gendreau Moniquewill be chosen national winners Boulay and Muriel Raiche at in the homemaking contest and Jesus-Mary and Paula Powersthese girls will have their scholshy Susan Penrose and Mary Kellyarship grants substantially illshy at SIlA Fall River creased Also in the spotlight is 1anice

Benoit of SHA Fall River whosGrac1aatlOIl GOWIl8

received honorable mention for rrs snowy outside but thoughts the Bishop Connolly award preshy

of the seniors at Mt St Mary sented annually to the DioceseAcademy in Fall River are Oft outstanding girl athletethe days of June Theyre curshy Yearbook pictures for Coylerently selecting g r a d u at i 0 Il juniors sophomores and freshshygowns and are making a critical men have been safely taken so survey of ofterings from several another milestone is passed OIl area stores the road to publication

And National Bonot- Society Dominican Academy juniopsmembers have been busy at Sashy and seniors will make a closedcred Hearts Fall River Theyve retreat at the Cenacle Conventwritten to all accredited colleges ill Brighton during their Februshyin the US requesting inforshy ary vacation while the annualmation on admission requireshy school retreat is in progressments and availability of finanshy hOW at Bishop Stangcial aid The gathered informashy The program includes dallytion will augment the guidanee Mass Benediction and confershyfile in the school library ences and retreat masters are

Sevenmiddot new clubs have beeR Rev John OBrien SSCCmiddot andorganized at Tauntons Coyle Rev Andrew Jahn SSCCHigh School They are French An unusual auction was a feashySpanish Stamp and Coin Pep ture of a dance sponsored lastEnglish Literature Chess and weekend by Feehan seniors forPhotography Something theremiddot all their fellow students Eachfor everyone faculty member donated a prize

Four Dominican Academy stushy for the auction including suchdents have passed 120 word tests valuable items as a pass excusingin Gregg shorthand and two a student from detention pershyhave passed 100 word tests On mission to omit a book from anthe bowling scene at DA high outside reading list and a driy scorers include Susan Pacheco ing passAnne Marie FoIster Colleen Auctionmiddot proceeds benefited bullDesrosiers and Patricia Od) shy performance of Leave It tonecky Jane to be produced by the

The junior prom at Bishop Feehan Dramatics Club SundayFeehan High in Attleboro has and Monday Feb 14 and 15been set for Tuesday night April Jeannine Dumont senior class20 In charge ofmiddot arrangements secretary and middotlssistant editor of are Robert Bedard and Carol the school paper at Holy FamilyMiller while committees are al shy High has been accepted at Bosshyready at work on decorations ton College as have classmates e n t e r t a i n men t refreshshy Maureen OBrien Christine Ponshyments tickets and that unher ichtera and John AylwardaIded but all-important chore of Mother McAuley Guild at Mtclean-up St Mary Academy will hold its

annual calendar party WednesshyDebaiioi- Prcmt day night Feb 10 EntertainshyIn the indoor days of Winter ment will reprelC~t each monthdebating holds an honored spot of the year and the decoratedamong extra-curricular activishycakes willbe ~oor prizesties at Diocesan schools At Preshy Class -laeement vost in Fall River the debate

THE ANCHOR-- 13 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Churchmen Favor Johnson School Aid Program

WASHINGTON (NC) shyCatholic and Protestant spokesmen applauded Presishydent Johnsons school aid proposal in a placid Congresshysional bearing where the on~ disagreement came over mi~

technical questions The release from the charged

atmosphere of past hearings w noted all around

A Catholic spokesman smilin~

ly commented that it was a relief not to fear getting out of the

Vour nearescmall box i$ Q Firsf Ilfderal branch office that open 24 hours $ day to make $(lving easy for you No traffic nO parking no leather problem~

Withdrawals ate just as implt taY~ngs paymencS

bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull r fRlE o~middottymiddotmiddot ~ ubullbullh coupon 7bullbull~ trti 0middot

team was victorious over Mt St Marys and Bishop Stang in Narshyragansett League debate but lost to SHA Fall River The varisity also met Coyle during the past week

Mt st Marys debate record stands at 2-2 with Anne Browshynell Linda Mello Susan Jenkinshyson and Nancy Curran defending their school in Narragansett

Tomorrows the day of reckonshying at SHA Fall River Not only will report cards be distributed but a list of all seniorsand their placement in middottheir class for the past four years will be published

Fifteen seniors It DA partici shypated in a French Listening Comprehension Test on Tuesday This supplementary test is ofshyfered by the eollege entrance

PREVOST SCHOLARS High scorers in National Merit Scholarship Examinations at Prevost High School Fall River are Gerard Gltgtu~et left and Paul Nowak

tests in addition to the French Written exams come in March

Also at Feehan where report cards will come tomorrow high honors will be achieved by those with an average of 90 or better honors by those earning 85 or better and honorable mention by those with grades of 80 01 better

Bishop Stang mathematiciana placed first ill the Notre Dame Math Meet held last week at Cardinal Cushing High in South Boston Eighteen schools com~

peted and Stang won by n points Responsible for the vieshytory were John Keavy Paul Roy John De Ciccio Raymond Desrosiers and Alan Roskiewiez Top individual scorer was John DeCiccio

Best Girl Athlete Senior Nancy Vogel of Bishop Stang High School received the Bishop Connolly Award for the best girl athlete of Fall River area Diocesan high schools at a ceremony held last night at Whites restaurant Nancy as shining a star schoshylastically as athletically plays hockey basketball and volley~ ball at the North Dartmouth school She will be the first reshycipient of what is to become an

Influence Declining MADRID (NC)-Castroist inshy

fluence among young people in Latin Ameriea has declined the past two years Luis Garcia Arishyas professor of international law at the University of Saragossa here in Spain said on his return from a tour of Latin America Thursday Feb 1amp

SCHOOL Mainte~ance suppr~

SWEEPERS SOAPS DISINFECTANTS

FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

DAHILL CO 1886 PURCHASE STREET

annual award made by the FaD River Clover Club Also honored at last nights dinner-dance WBI Coach Carlin Lynch of 11M Stang Spartans

Forty Hours devotion was celshyebrated for the first time at Bishop Feehan high scbool starting Sunday and ending Tuesday Seniors Eileen Pashyquette Mary Duffy Nancy Clegg and Susall Ouelle~te aided Sister Mary Kateri of Feehan home economics department III making a cope and humeral veil used for the first time at the ceremonies

And Feehanites celebrated terms end by viewing A Raisin in the Sun

bullbullbullbullbullbull

hearing room alive The major Protestant spokesmen described the bill as an instrument of recshyonciliation Con g res smiddotm e a praised the compromises they saw being made by all sid~

church groups and educators -The President has proposed bull

$12 billion program to improve elementary and secondary schooling from poverty-strickea families

A total of $1 billion wouldge to public school districts in lowshyincome areas Additionally the proposal would spend $100 milshylion for textbooks for all school children and school libraries and another $100 million to create bull system of public-priva~commushynity educational centers to offer cultural enrichment and specitl eourses to all school ehildren

Pittsburgh School Enroll~ent Down

PITSBURGH (NC) - Enroll shyment in the Pittsburgh diocellMl Catholic school system has dro~ ped by 40 pupils Msgr John B McDowell superintendent ball reported

The monsignor said the sliglll drop has been preceded by fo_ years of leveling oft in enrol) ment figures because of enforeet gradual cuts in class size

Since 1960 he said there _ been an increase of only 24 pushypils in the total number of stushydents Elementary and seconda schools last June tallied 129531 pupils a drop of 40 he said

bullbullbullFREEKI _forbullbull~to bull ~-~----- shy _ StampMo _ middot----1

City_middot bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbulliibullbullbullbullbullbullbull WE pAY POSTAGa

(tree po5t-pald~Clddd i-velop ady to mall

FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND lOAN ASSOCIATION

OF FALL RIVER Home OHice 1 North Main St Fall River

Somerset OHice 149 GAR Highway Rte 6 League bouts The team meets exam board and consists of Both Offices Open Friday Evenings until INEW BEDFORDBishop Cassidy of TauntOn Wedshy questions and answers concernshy Sonterset Drive-In Window Open Mon-Thurs til 4 nesday Feb 10 ing subject matter on tape At WY 3-3786 Susan Nunes heads debate 111amp Feeha aiYdentll 1ook Germaa

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Stresses ilroad beep Gulf Between Two Generafions

By John J Kane Ph D What is your opinion of secretive sons and daughters

()f today Our married son and daughter never tell us anyshything Friends and strangers knew they bought a new home before we did My daughters husband knows all the ansshywers and wants no advice from anyone My son is afraid of his wife and she makes all decisions They ask us to visit but hurt our feelshyings when we do by what they say We were raised to reshyspect our elders and ask their advice

You r letter Jean does pose some justifiable complaints But it also seems to make some unshyreasonable deshy

mands Furthershymore amusingshy1y enough you conclude that you were reared to respect your elders and intimate your chil shydren werent If so whom can you blame

I dont know the reason why your children failed to inform you of their intentions to purshyehase a home But I do have some suspicions Do you have a tendency to be critical about what they buy Sometimes parshyents do

Tremendous Inflation Y-oungsters and parents both

make a certain type of mistake when it comes to purchasing of such things as homes cars or expensive appliances So m e young marrieds try to begin at a level their parents only achieved after 10 or 15 years of married life

But some parents do not seem to realize that inflation has been tremendous in the last 20 years When they hear a son or daughshyter is about to buy it home for 20 or 25 thousand dollars they are horrified They remember they paid perhaps 6 8 or 10

thousand dollars when they bought

They also forget credit is a bit easier than in the past that F BA and even the GI Bill help young people today and they may not even have existed when they were shopping for a house Longer te~ mortgages are possible today and lower down payments These of course do mean more interest

Coinmon CourteSY In other words parents should

Dot use the yardstick of economshyic conditions when they were young for the youth of today When they state perhaps with heated emphasis Why your father and I paid 10 thousand for a home the children are understandably irritated

But once having made their decisions com m 0 n courtesy would seem to demand tpat parshyents be told before strangers or at least as soon as friends Your sense -of hurt feelings here is quite understandable

Your complaint that your sons wife makes all the decisions may be true If so I agree that you have reared a Milquetoast But

is it true Are you actually cershytain or are you imagining someshything Are you really sayingshyand I frankly fear youare-that your son listens to his wife more than he listens to you

Mother-in-Law Role Being a mother-in-law is not

an easy role in Anierican soClshyety and many of the stupid

at least not if you wish to be a successful parent

Because most parents do love their children they are eager to help them They feel that their years of experience give them an advantage and this advantage they would extend to their chil shydren

At times this is true At times it is not The gulf between genshyerations is broad and deep Life has changed greatly in the space of one generation and the bench marks of the past may be unshysuitable today There are certain areas of living in which children may have better ideas than their parents Be prepared to admit as much

But within those areas where the maturity and experience of parents can be helpful advice can be given when not reshyquested only indirectly and cautiously Young marrieds misshyconstrue it as an effort to domshyinate which they reject Pershyhaps you can recall when you too felt this way

But it is indeed sad if they hurt your feelings when you do visit them You have not enshylarged on this so it is impossible to determine just what is said or done that annoys you Assuming you are making a correct judgshyment it is at the very least a breach of hospitality

Many of the inter-generational and in-laws problems of today are the result of social changes As one grows older it is less and less easy to change to adopt ways of doing and thinkshying After all if one succeeded under one system there is little motivation to alter it

Life Easier But conditions have changed

and to paraphrase a commercial this is the Pepsi generationbull Today boys and girls get married even wher the boy is unemshyployed This is scarcely advisable but somemake it Boys marry while still in college and their wives work to help put them through This would have been unthinkable 40 years ago

One of the really amazing changes is the use of long term credit The proud boast of years ago was that one didnt owe any money If you said this today youngsters would view you with open amazement and quietly conclude your credit was no good

No doubt some of this is overshydone and can bring about tragic results But if used intelligently it can make life somewhat easier perhaps more pleasant than in the past

These are only a few of the changes that could be listed a complete litany of them would be impossible Now this doesnt mean that parents are old fogeys that their counsel is useshyless It does mean that they must try tomiddot understand their married children better than some do

And incidentally because of these sweeping changes it is more difficult than it was But it isnt impossible an4 when donepays off in much better relationships

Anti-Smut Effort NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Loushy

isiana Knights of Columbus have jokes ]lake it even more diffi- launched a public information cult But parents after having campaign to combat what one reared their children to the best official t e r m e d indifference of their ability must let them go stemming from lack of knowlshyon their own You cannot keep edge about the growing traffic them tied to your apron strings in obscene literature

PRINCE OF THE CHURCH Americas new cardin~l recelyes congratulations from an old friend as Archbishop Patrlck A OBoyle of Washington felicitatesmiddot Lawrence Cardmal Shehan Archbishop of Baltimore on his elevation to the College of Cardinals by Pope Paul vi NC Photo

~Glassand Wire Tiny Foulr-Bell Chime in Bay State Church

Producing Soundof Big Heavy Metal WALTHAM (N C) - The string-shaped length of glass

church-bell of the future may which may be up to a foot i~ bE a ht~le thing of glass and length and a tiny hammer to Wire weighm~ about two grams produce the proper vibrations but reproducmg the sound of These vibrations are converted cast-metal constructions weigh- into an electronic signal which ing more than a ton ~asses through an amplifier is

j Pope Emphasizes Import of Hymns

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul in an audience for more han 1000 priests participating in a convention on pastoral lit shyurgy emphasized the key role of hymn-singing in the liturgy

We are not in a hurry he said

We must raise up a new peoshyple who learn to pray as the Church now prescribes

One of the prescriptions which I believe to be most influshyential and most necessary is singing

The Pope said that hymns inshycluding popular ones lift the soul and nourish it with religious sentiments

Illinois School Joins Expanding ETV Plan

MORTON (NC)-A parochial school here in Dlinois has served as pilot school in a historic edushyeational television experiment

Blessed Sacrament School reshyceived the first experimental transmission of v ide 0 tap e d courses in color from a high freshyquency monidirectional terminal

A 120-foot tower atop the school received signals from a tower on the Bradley University campus 10 miles away Bradley Coordinator Philip Weinburg said he expects an ETV program to be operational in the 1965-66 school year

The Catholic school tower will remain as a permanent inshystallation to serve both as an ETV booster station with a 15shymile radius and a receiver for educational programs in the school next Fall

Changes in Mass EDINBURGH (NC) - Scots

Catholics are busily preparing for the introduction of English and Gaelic into the Mass on March 1 the first Sunday in Lent

bull HYANNIS bull HARWICH PORT bull ~olri YAAMOUTH

--- shy

funeral Service

DoANmiddotSpoundALmiddotAMtS INCOIlPOItATtiD

Glassblower Gerhard B Finkshybeiner of Brandeis University here in Mass lpoundlas installed for the first time in the United States a set of the tiny bells in St Susanna church in Dedham named for the t~tula church in ~ome of ~ostOIl s Richardmiddot Carshydinal Cushmg

Finkbeiner whose small glass bells already al~e making kingshysiZed sounds in 10 churches in Germany and ]~rance has proshyduced a four-bell chime for the Dedham church encased in a metal cabinet only two feet long and weighing a mere 40 pounds In cast metal equivalent sotmdshyproducers would occupy a goodshysized belfry and weigh aboUt 10000 pounds Finbeiner envishysions his discovery as destined for churches which cannot afford regular bells

The new-style bells look like nothing so much as the fa~iliar vacuum tubes found in any nonshytransistor radio but they proshyduce a never-changing high quality sound which is fully comparable to the metallic clang

of the old-fashioned bell shy

Inside each vacuum tube in Finkbeiners system there is a

MON~~GHAN

ACCEF-TANCE CQIRP

JHOMAS F MONAGHAN JR

Trecisurer

142 SECOND STREET

OSborne 5-7856

FALL RIVER

Increased 100000 times and comes out through a ~pecial speaker whose sound most exshyperts cannot tell from a metallic ben

The sound of a heavy metallic bell is one of the most complex of all musical sounds according to Finbeiner but he has been able to dUJlicat~ it through parshyallel ~Udi~ in glassblowing electronics and ~acuum techshyniques

BARDAHL MAKES YOUR

CAR RUN BEnER tAt New Car Dealers and Service Stations

Everywhere -I

With Safety at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK

115 WILLIAM sr NEW BEDFORD MASS

WEBB OIL (OMPANY TEXACO FUEL ()IL$

DOMESTIC amp HFAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS

Sales~SetYce-lnstaDtjon MAINO~FICE~JO ~RFEEmiddot sTREETmiddotfAll ~IVER

Phone OS 5-7484

11

1S --

Views of New Ho~Y TrinitYmiddotmiddot-C-h-~-rc-h-I-W-e-s-t-~-I-a-li-i-ac-h-middotmiddotmiddotI

-

I I

16 THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

Says Pope John Left Cha lIenge To Catholicsmiddot

NORTH PALM BEACH (NC) - Pope John XXIII left Catholics with a chalshylenge to meet the world Bishop Coleman F Carroll of Miami said here

Bishop Carroll said Pope John dared Catholics to meet other Christians and non-Christians and to discuss our common problems and seek by discussion a solution to these problems

This challenge cannot be met by the pope alone or by the bishops and priests alone he said It must be met by all inshycluding-indeed especially-the laymen

-He said laymen must be propshy

erly prepared for this task through study training and spirshyitual preparation In this conshynection he called a closed spirshyitual retreat an absolute must for the lay person

Bishop Carroll spoke to memshybers of the Our Lady of Florida Retreat League at a dinner in his honor at the Passionist Retreat House here

PrelWtes Sc~~dlJ(e

US~ ~f VeCrulall ROME (NC)-The Italian lanshy

guage will be used in Mass throughout I t a I y beginning March 7 the first Sunday of Lent

The Italian Bishops Commitshytee on the Liturgy in announcshying the change specified that the Italian language would be used in Masses on Sundays and holy days and at all Masses attended by a substantial number of the faithful

The parts of the Mass to be said in Italian are the following the Epistle Gospel acclamations salutations and dialogues (inshycluding the prayers at the foot of the altar and the dialogue preshyceding the Preface) the Kyrie Gloria Creed Sanctus-Benedicshytus and Agnus Dei themiddot Patermiddot Noster with its introduction and the formula for the Communion

Peloquin Chorale Televises Hymns

NEW YORK (NC)-Hymns -Yesterday and Today featurshyipg C Alexander Peloquin and members of his popular Peloquin Chorale will be telecast Feb 14 from 1 to 130 PM EST over the ABC-TV network

The latest program in the seshyries Directions 65 - a Catholic Perspective produced by the National Council of Catholic Men and the ABC public affairs department was written by Peloquin and traces the develshyopment of hymnody from the Te Deum of the 4th century to the works of contemporary composers

Stresses Doctrines Substance Remains

DAVENPORT (NC) -Bishop Ralph L Hayes of Davenport adshymonished an interfaith meeting here in Iowa against expecting changes in Catholic doctrine

The (Second Vatican) Counshycil may change the manner of presentation of doctrines but not their substance he said pointing to the liturgy as an exshyample of such a change

We must admit bigotry and misunderstanding on both sides But followers of Christ have Scripture devotion to the Holy Spirit and devotion to Christ in common Why not talk about the things on which we agree he asked

Sisters of Mercy General Asks Personal ST LOUIS (NC)-Weve got

to develop the Sister in depth Thats what the times call for said the mother general of the 7300 American nuns of the Sisshyters of Mercy of the Union

Mother Mary Regina Cunningshyham ending her first six-year term as the head of the widely known teaching social work and hospital nuns was talking about what the Sisters of Mercy are doing to bring themselves fully up to the times

In St Louis Mo to meet with the superiors of the nine Mercy provinces Mother Regina talked about the main vehicle she and her colleagues hope will achieve the transformation

This is the year in the commu- nity for chapter meetings and general meetings of the nuns in

each of the provinces climaxed by a meeting of the general chapter at the orders mothershyhoupse in Bethesda Md she said

Changing Church Results will be ~olnown in Aushy

gust and Mother Regina hopes that they will show her commushynity to be in line with the mind of a rapidly changing Church in the midst of an even faster movshying world

She predicted tlat the chapshyters would have some surprises not only in the deisions but in the way they are organized to give a more representative view of all the Sisters in the order

If one overall phrase had to sum up what Mother Regina and the other planners are looking for in the Mere chapters it

would be personal responsibil shyity she said

A Sister has to have the reshysponsibility to make judgments for herself said the mother general Her superiors have to give her the responsibility to achieve her own role She has to make the decision to take the risks

~And then of course be ready to pay the price for her decishysion said Mother Regina

In Updated Sense Weve gone beyond the day

Papal Count BALTIMORE (NC) - Thomas

W Pangborn a Hagerstown (Md) industrialist and philanshythropist has been named a papal count by Pope Paul

Responsibility of always being safe Some peoshyple want to be sure to have the answer before they move But sometimes that meant they never moved at all she observed

Developing a Sister in depth will mean a lot of things espeshycially an updated sense of her apostolate and the way she works at it For the Mercy nuns in the U S Central and Latin America and in the West Indies it will mean a lot of littie things Mother Regina hinted

Changes might relax regulashytions about home visits dining with others attending night meetings and cultural affairs or traveling with companions

Mother Regina said that we have to plan for more contact with the laity and for more edushycation to understand each other shy

a

lYonderful Meatsbullbullbull Anoth~r Big Reasll Why zltI ~III I bull STAYING ~c~ Z ~

with FIRST NATIONAL it

l~middotmiddotsowll ItmiddotI

IIIIr-All vlu

FACE RUMIP Fine Grained Texture shy

Heavy Steer Beef for Hearty Eating LB

The Perfect Roast for large Families

ROASTL854CAITCHBONE Same [ow Self-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vidnily rNe Reserve Iie Right to Limit Quantitietl

-

I The Parish Parade I SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO bull

Holy Name Society members will receive corporate Communshyion at 7 oclock Mass Sunday morning Feb 14 The unit plans a Valentine dance and supper from 7 to 12 Saturday night Feb 13 in the Elks auditorium on Church Street SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs John DeBettenshycourt president Mrs Arnold Muckerheid vice-president Mrs Nelson J DeBettencourt Jr treasurer Mrs Charles Davis secretary

For the Holy Name SOGiety James Ferreira is president supshyported by Freeman Willoughby vice-president Alfred Metell treasurer Anthony Rebello secshyretary The units next meeting will be Sunday Feb 14 at the parish hall OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a Masquerade Ball Friday night Feb 26 at Wimpys resshytaurantr Osterville Mrs James E Murphy is chairman ST JOSEPH ATTLEBORO

The CYO will sponsor a dance Saturday night Feb 20 with enshytertainment by Mickey Chagnon and the Rivieras Chairmen for the unit include Carolee Desshyrochers membership Judy Roy spiritual Claudette Ouimet culshytural Sue Reynolds publicity Claire Piette social Don Fisher recreational BLESSED SACRAMENT FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will present a fashion fair at an open meeting to be held Wedshynesday Feb 17 in the church basement Planned for April are a rummage sale and a whist party ST JEAN BAPTISTE FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women announces a ham and basket whist party for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 in the lower church hall In charge will be Mrs Napoleon Picard and Mrs Eugene Gagnon aided by a large committee ST STANISLAUS FALL RIVER

Civics Club members of the parochial school will deliver pastry to nursing home patients for Valentines Day Other projshyects include collecting Christmas cards for missionaries and shovshyelling snow to augment the club treasury OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION OSTERVILLE

Mr and Mrs William Dacey will be co-chairmen of a preshyLenten dance to be held Friday night Feb 19 at Wimpys restaushyrant in Osterville under sponsorshyship of the Womens Guild The program will include a buffef and dancing from 9 to to ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

Mrs Lionel J Dulude presishydent of the Sacred Hearts Assoshyciation requests all ladies of the unit who have First Friday Adoration to check their asshysigned times in order that the full quota will be present at all hours

Corporate Communion for members will be held on Sunday at the 815 Mass and the regushylar meeting will be held the same evening at 730 in the Church Hall

The Penny Sale scheduled for Feb 20 will be discussed atthis meeting ST JOSEPH FALLRIVER

The annual mid-Winter Gala is set for Saturday night at Venus de Milo restaurant A buffet supper from 630 to 830 will be followed by dancing a parish reunion and awarding of prizes

ST JOAN OF ARC ORLEANS

Forthcoming events for the Womens Guild include penny sales this month April and next November socials in March and June and Summer fairs in July and August A ham and bean supper is ~cheduled for May ST JAMES NEW BEDFORD

middotMsgr Noon Circle plans a potluck supper for members and their guests Saturday night Feb 20 OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION NEW BEDFORD

Holy Name Society officers inshyclude Severo G Alfama presishydent James P Gonsalves and John Monteiro vice-president Antonio Rocha treasurer John Soares secretary ST GEORGE WESTPORT

Womens Guild members will form the congregation at the TV Mass to be broadcast on channel 6 at 10 Sunday morning Feb 7 Participants will meet at the parish school hall at 9 to travel to New Bedford ST JOHN BAPTIST NEW BEDFORD

Parishioners will hold their annual filhoz supper and penny sale at 530 Sunday evening Feb 21 in the cllurch hall Tickshyets are available from officers of church organizations or at the rectory In charge are Gilbert Brazil and George Ladino ST PIUS X SOUTH YARMOUTH

The WQmens Guild will hold a past presidents dinner Monshyday night March 1 at Armands restaurant_ Hyannis NOTRE DAME FALL RIVER

Cubs and Boy Scouts will at shytend a Communion breakfast Sunday Feb 7 following 815 Mass A blue and gold banquet for the Cubs is set for Sunday Feb 28 in the parish hall with Roger Labonte in charge of arshyrangements

The Council of Catholic Women will hold its installation banquet Monday Feb 22 at Whites resshytaurant under the chairmanship of Mrs Paul Ilmais To be seated are Miss Helena Dumont president Mrs Cecile Barnabe frst vice-president Mrs Gershyard DextTaze second vice-presishydent Mrs Richard Perry treasshyurer Mrs Romeo Parent reshycording secretary Mrs Roger Langlois corresponding secreshytary

The third in a series of cake sales will follow all Masses this Sunday in the lower church Mrs Ferdnand Letendre chairman will be aided by Mrs Robert Phenixco-chairman Cakes can be brought to the lower church from 4 to 5 and 630 to s Saturshyday afternoon and evening SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a potluck supper for members at 630 Tuesday night Feb 16 in the parish hall A silent auction will follow the slipper In charge of arrangeshyments is Mrs Mary Pereira chairman aided by Mrs Mary Gagne The council announces a malassada supper and penny sale open to the public from 530 to 7 Sunday night Feb 21 also in the hall Tickets will be available at the door and chairshymen are Mrs Mary Cabeceiras and Mrs Albina Quintill

A regular meeting is set for 730 Friday night Feb 12 in the hall Installation of officers is planned for later in the month ST MATIDEU FALL RIVER 4

A Valentine whist is planned by the Council of Catholic Womshyen for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 at the parish hall Mrs Raymond Antaya is chairman

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan RIver-Thurs Feb 1l96I rr

GIVE VIEWS ON AID Presenting views on federal aid to education to the House Education sub-committee was this panel representing the Catholic school system left to right Msgr William E McManus Chicago superintendent of the largest Ctholic school system in the country Mr Edward McArdle Washington DC who focussed on the parents view of the childs needs as the father of seven children Msgr Freclerck G Hochwalt Director Education Department NCWC and Msgr John B McDowell sushyperintendent of the Pittsburgh diocesan school system NC Photo

bullSays Church Must Live In Wide World~ Cardinal Hits Ignorance of Our Neighbor

CHICAGO (NC)-An Amerishycan prelate prominent in the Churchs work for Latin Amershyica has told US Catholics there is no excuse for our ignorance of our neighbors the nations of Central and South America

Archbishop Paul L Hallinan of Atlanta chairman of the subshycommittee for inter-American cooperation of the US Bishops Committee for Latin America in a message to the second annual conference of the Catholic IntershyAmerican Cooperation Program SClid the Church today lives in a new world but it must preshypare to live in a wide world

Miles Are Nothing Catholics in tpe United States

with a strong cultural and comshymercial bridge to Europe find Africa a puzzle and Asia an Orshyiental mystery Strangest of all is our ignorance of our own neighbors the nations of Central

E~ual Treatment JERSEY CITY (NC)-Hudson

County parishes here in New Jersey are joining in a countyshywide interfaith appeal seeking pledges of fair housing practices

~T FRANCIS XAVIER IIYANNIS

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a penny sale at 8 Tuesday right Feb 9 in the parish hall A Communion breakfast and fashion show are on the units Spring schedule

ST JOHN BAPTIST CENTRAL VILLAGE

A housewares demonstraticm will follow an open meeting scheduled by the Womens Guild for 8 Thursday night Feb 11 in the church hall In charge of refreshments will be Mrs Matil shyda Shelter Miss Margaret Shay and Miss May Taggart The unit plans a Valentine whist for 3 Saturday night Feb 13 also in the church hall on Main Road Miss Edith Kirby and Mrs Louise Vieira are chairmen ST JOHN POCASSET

The Womens Guild announces a penny sale for Friday Feb 12 Mrs Sprague Spooner will be chairman The units next meetshying will feature slides and a talk by Col Eugene S Clark on the early history of Marthas Vineshyyard It will be held Tuesd~

Feb 16

and South America he deshyclared

The ~rchbishop said 60 years ago there was an excuse-travel communications and cultural knowledge were in their inshylancy But now miles are nothshying since Pope John XXIII brought his message of unity to the world he averred adding

Real Import The CICOP meeting brings

bishops priests and laymen of both hemispheres together for a remarkable in-service training period a healthy learn while you work program We know much of Latin American needs both religious economic and culshytural We are helping in our way to repair these shortcomings But we need even more to share

in this Christian fraternity fIIf background common resources and future hopes Only by free easy association with the repshyresentatives of Latin America can we get the real import

ELECTRICAL Contractors~

~ ~ ~ ~

944 County St ~ New Bedford

ecec~c~ccccee~o

C) LOUlUl~S iiffii~ ~ i middotbull EWrIMA ~- shyg l~

ROMEamp I~-

I SHmNES imiddot ~ OF EUROPE iiI bull ampHOLY LAND ~) C~ 1 bull CATBOLIC PROGRAJ 1965 ~)

ALI~~16 ~I CachoIlcTeI Orrlce ~) c~ WASHINGTON CHICAGOIOMI LONDONI CATHOLtC TRAVEL OFFICE FRM ~------------II -~ Dupont Circle Building WashIngton D C 20036 fali ~ ~ j1ii Please send me your free Illustrated booklet describing in ~ iJl detail the wOrldmiddotcovering pilgrimages

C~ Name iI ~IJ Address ~ C_~ CityIloneState 11 =~~~~~_~_~~_~_ft~ftVw ijrv _ii~middotV

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Teen-agers Outstanding For Prodigal Generosity

By Rev Joseph T McGloin S J Several times in this column Ive had some glowing

words to say about our Mexican neighbors to the south about their friendliness and hospitality- and general likeshyableness And certainly its all true These people busy as they are will go out of their of other peoples is that you canway give you their precious easily give the idea you are sell shytime and attention to see ing all your own countrymen that you enjoy your visit to short And this would be the their country When a Mexican furthest thing from my own says Mi casa es su casa My thoughts house is your Because there is great friendli shyhouse - which ness in our country too - in he invariably varying degrees and manifested

middot does-he means in various ways The Mexican is it F r i end s in general more spontaneous strangers even than we and most of us have to shopkeepshy be approached before we give ers youve never our friendship since an initial II e e n before shyness seems to hold us back will introduce Often enough however this

middotyou to the whole shyness is caused by a national family and inshy superiority complex by a fear vite you to hav~ of not being accepted and by

middotdinner wit h the fear of making fools of ourshymiddot them To put it mildly hospital shy selves in a language we dont ity like this would be impossible know In other words humility to forget or to overlook is an esseatial to friendliness and _ Sometimes you wonder as you hospitality Sometimes we have walk the downtown- streets of it Often we dont CHle of our own cities and as you Hospitable People see pe~ple going their own inshy We Americans are sometimessulated ways if it isnt true that afraid to show our real feelingsas a country we have only a -afraid to show for inst~nce

-head while Mexico has a head our sympathy forthe underdogand a heart We usually make up for t~is

Superiority Complex psychologically by cheering on - This feeling grows on - you the hiss favored side at spe~tator when you visit Mexico and have sports when we should be doingthe misfortunE to encounter the it in the causes of racial justiceAmerican tourist who is bent on and equality of opportunity inshyacting like one It is a crying stead shame that so many Americans We are afraid others usuallyhave to show a superiority com- those very loud others will look

middotplex to those they encounter in down on us if we give public middot other countries seeming to feel support to those who need our that no matter where they go it support the little -people the is not they who are the foreignshy least of Christs and our brethshyers but those they encounter ren

All too often these types seem The fact is though that we to despise the customs and lanshy Americans do have a- heart and guage and even the currency of that once we put aside our sillythe countries they visit apparshy ideas that we are too busy to be ently thinking that anyone can hospitable or that others will understand English if you only look on us as soft and foolish if speak louder and that real we are or that we must not goAmerican money will buy anyshy out of way forour foreign~rs thing even respect because we might make a misshy

Worst of all are those wbo take in speaking their languagebring their aura of racial supeshy -then we can be and are just as riority along with them and hospitable and friendly as anymake little effort to hide it It is peoplein the world undoubtedly true that some of Ideals of Youththis patronizing attitude is partly There are many Americansresponsible (along with Castro~ and fortunately there are gettingeternal vigilance for American to be more who are willing tomistakes and seeming mistakes) stand up publicly and be countedfor the affection with which on the side of right instead ofAmericans are held in some parts - merely clucking in quiet privateof Latin America such as in sympathy There are lots ofPanama Americans who are not jqst

Race Prejudice friendly and hospitable to forshyAnd its tragic that have eigners but who do heroic workwe

to expoFt the most shameful of with the poor and downtrodden our national sins the stupidity and handicapped of their own which is race prejudice We country and their own city as might as well forget in fact well about any good neighbor polshy - Now there are lots of adult icy until we ourselves become Americans of this type But good neighbors when it comes to out-and-out

But even when we are not prodigal generosity it is the snobbish at home we are seldom teens as a rule whohave to be as spontaneous in our friendli shy given first prize ness other peoples The forshy A teen-agel who has not yetas eign students who come to stuay outgrown the honest ideals of at our universities often get youth will give his time and enshylonely and discouraged because ergy unstintingly and with little they have seemingly no friends thought of consequences This

author has instanceThe Negro in his fight for for seen equality (a fight which should kids doing heroic work with the never have been necessary in the very poor and the orphans-notfirst place) very often feels just throwing money into a colshyalone (though decreasingly so) lection box for them but givingwhen even those who know he is them their time and their love getting a raw deal do nothing working with them face to face at least publicly to help him even as Christ did set things right America has a great heart

Which may be one reason the and many Americans are just as Negro American often makes a spontaneous and natural at better ambassador abroad than showing it as any people anyshyother Americans where As a country however

Friendliness Here we still have some distance to But the trouble with extolling go before this sort of generosity

the hospitality and friendlin~ becomes our national image

CHECK COMPARE SAVE

Turkeys 10to11 LIS

Ready-to-Cook 39~ FIR S T Nancy Vogel

daughter of Mr and Mrs SAVE CASH bullbullbull SHOP AampPLeonard J Vogel of Sacred Heart Parish Fall River and a senior at Starg High last night became the first recishypient of the Bishop Connolly award for the outstanding

girl athlete n a Catholic High School The Clover Club of Fall River sponsored the award

Thomas ~Vhalen

In Noviticlte Brother Thomas Whalen son

of Mr and Mrs Thomas Whalen -8 General Cobb St Taunton and a member of the Sacred Heart Parish has received the religshyious habit of the Erothers of the

SMOKED P()RK SHOUlDERS

SUPER-RIGHT SHORT SHANK 6 TO 8 lBS

PICNICS 1829c

CHICKEN LEe or BREAST 33c

QUARTERS l8

SAVE CASH ON THESEHoly Cross at ceremonies conshyducted at St Joseph Novitiate

Valatie NY 6 POUNDS ofi BREAD ONLY 99c Brother John Donoghue CSC

Provincial Superior of the Broshy Whitl Breadp~~~E~ 4 ~6~~~z99c thers of the Holy Cross of the SAVI 20e - REGULAR 59c - 8 INCHEastern Province announced I p 118 8 OZ 39CJANEthat Brother Thomas was one of App I II PARKER IACHthe 14 candidates who is now starting a canonical year of proshy JANI PARKER - SAVlOe REGULAR 9c

bation for the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross bull hB Ck 1 lB 3 OZ 3ftCSpaRIS ar a e EACH i

Following the reception the parents and friends of Brother Thomas were guests at a lunchshyeon at the novitiate

Total Now 430 NEW YORK (NC)-With the

opening of two more parish schools the number of Catholic elementary schools in the New York archdiocese now totals 430

ATWC)OD OIL CO~~PANY

SHEILL HEATIN4 OILS South SeC] Streets Hyannis Tel HY 81

COMPLleTE

Mortgage Service anywhere on Cape Cod

bull RESIDENTIAL bull COMMEI~CIAL

bull CONSTRUCTION bull SEASONAL

Call EX 8-2266

Bass ~iver Savings Bank

SOUTH YARMOUTH Hyannis - Dennis Port

Yarmouth Plaza

Special Donut and Coffee SoleI All THIS weEKI

PLAIN SUGARED CJlNNAMON OR COMBINATION

2 PKGS 4ftltJane Parker Donuts 29cR~~ Of 12

I E 5 ON ON SAVE 4c B~~S SAV 1 c B3~S MILO AND MRLOW COFfil

Eight OClock ~A~ 69c-3 IJ~G 198 RICH FULLmiddotBOOleo

Red Circle CoHee ~A~ 71 c-3 B~G204 VIGOROUS ANO WINEY

lokar Coffe ~A~ 73c-3 B~G210 rice shown In thl ud guiltnteed tlltu Sat Feb

Tobacco products and Items prohibIted by Iaw eKempt from Plaid Stamp Offbullbull amp effective at ALL Aamp Sup Matlcotn thl communll1 and lclnll1

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 10: 02.04.65

THE ANCHORshy10 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Prelate Stresses Ecumenism on Spiritual Level

MADEIRA (NC) - Auxshyiliary Bishop Paul F Leishybold of Cincinnati called for a spiritual ecumenism shyprayer and holiness - as the soul of the ecumenical moveshyment

He preached at a special low Mass which he offered at St middotGertrudes church here in Ohio for some 300 Protestants many escorted by Catholic neighbors Many Protestant visitors were guests in homes of Catholic pashyrishioners after the evening Mass which was (lffered at an altar facing the congregation

Bishop Leibold cited five ways in which those who profess Christ can work for Christian unity

1 We must make every effort to avoid expressions judgments

and action~hich do not represhysent the condition of our sepashyrated brethren with truth and faimess

2 DIalogue must be carried on between competent experts from different churches and communities

3 Cooperation among differshyent churches for the common good of humanity

4 A spiritual ecumenismmiddot which he said involves a change of heart holiness of life and public and private prayer for unity

5 All must examine their own faithfulness to Gods will for the Church and accordingly undertake with vigor the task of renewal arid reform

Scores FCC Stand On Religious Test

WASHINGTON (N C) - A middotmember of the Federal Commushynications Commission charged here that the FCC is violating constitutional limits marked out by the Supreme Court by makshy

ing religious broadcasting one test of a broadcasters public service performance

Commissioner Lee Loevinger addressing the National Reli shygious Broadcasters convention said the FCC has gone far beshyyond the limits that have been marked by the Supreme Court as permissible govertiment acshytion in the field of religion

Loevinger noted that the FCC includes religious pro g ram I

among the types of programs considered to be in the public interest on its license application forms He said it made the broadcasting of such programs one of the FCCs tests for detershymining whether a broadcaster operates in the public interest

Pope Paul Thanks Italian Policemen

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI greeted the Italian poshylicemen whose beat is the Vatican and saidit was a great consolation to know they were around

Answering an address of homshyage by Inspector General Oreste Correti who was accompaniel by other officials and members of the force the Pope said he is grateful for the zealous expert generous and selfless work in which you display your integrity as distinguished state officials and your dedication as faithful IOns of the Church

Though members of the Italian force the groups are assigned ~ special guard duties and ~

directing traffic in St Peters iquare and the area surropndinl Vatic~ City

BOSTON (NC)-Richard Card~ inal Cushing touched off a cheershying demonstration by 1300 Jews here when he predicte9 the Secshyond Vatican Council will apshyprove a declaration absolving Jcws of direct blame in the death of Christ

If we dont Im wasting my time talking of brotherhood said the Archbishop of Boston after he was presented withmiddot the annual Good Will Award of Temple Ohabei Shalom Brothershyhood oldest and largest Jewish organization of its kind in the

country He was selected for the award because of his compasshysion generosity love and broth- erhood

Reds Fear Religion The prelate said Ill never forget the Second

Vatican Council I didnt know What they were talking about I had never heard a lecture in Latin and it was all Greek to me I dont know how many others were in the same boat

CEF Head Praises Johnson Proposals

TRAVERSE CITY (NC)-The national president of Citizens for Educational Freedom had praise here in Michigan for Presshyident Johnsons statements in his State-of-the-Union address

Stuart D Hubbell a lawyer lauded the President for his wilshylingness to tr~at all school chil shydren equally He said he sent Mr Johnson a telegram which said in part

While your proposals have not as yet been made specific to the extent that they follow the principle of equality that you outlined in your message you will have made a signifi shycant beginning in developing broad support for educational achievement

bull SEQUIN Truck Body Builders Aluminum or Steel 944 County Street

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2middot6618

DISCUSS PROBLEMS CONFRONTING HOSPITALS Meeting at the 20th annual conclave of Bishops representatives for Catholic hospitals in Scottsdale Ariz are left to right Msgr Harold A Murray director of thE NCWC Bureau of Health and Hospital Hospitals Bishop Francis J t Green of Tucson Bishop Joseph B Brunini episCOgtal burshyeau chairman and Auxiliary of Natchez-Jackson Miss and Father John J Flanagan SJ~ executive director of the Oatholic Hospital Association NC Photo

We Have Come Long ~Way in Short Time Hub Cardinal Sees Church Gains Continuing

~

but I sat between two very ven- around religion He added For crable Italian cardinals They that reason they try to eliminate

knew no English and I knew no Italian All the time they kept calling me Cardinal Spellman or Cardinal Mindzen1y or even Cardinal OConnell (The late William Cardinal OCgtnnell was Cardinal Cushings predecessor as Archbishop of Boston)

In a more serious mood Cardshyinal Cushing said the one great fear communists have centers

Interfaith Service For Church UII1ity

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Byzanshytine Rite Catholics joined with Orthodox and Protestants in a common prayer service for

Christian unity Sunday in Holy Spirit Byzantine rite c hu r c h here

Participants in the vespershytype service includE)d Father Andrew Resetar of Erie Pa Very Rev A Dixon Etollit dean of Trinity Episcopal cathedral here Father GeorgE) Scoulas dean of St Nicholas Greek Orshythodox cathedral in Oakland and Dr Harold R Alert former president of the Pittsburgh Council of Churches

The service was arranged by the Pittsburgh C 0 tI n c i I of Churches and the Pittsburgh Byzantine rite diocesE~

Where A

GOOD NAME

Means A

GREAT DAL

GEO OHARA CHEVROLET

565 MILL 5JREET

HEW BEDFIORD

Open Evenings

it from the lives of their peoplemiddot He revealed he has 25 engageshy

ments to talk to groups of other religious faiths including a lodge of Masons before Easter The Cardinal inquired Who would have thought even five years ago that a Catholic archbislfop would be preaching good will in a Protestant church or in a synshyagogue Or that a rabbi would be addressing other faiths We sure have come a long way in a short time-and its going to get better

Preaching Brotherhood The cardinal also observed I

am not trying to convert Protesshytants to Catholics or Jews to Catholics I never made a conshyvert in my life My only messhysage is one of brotherhood

Sturtevant 6shyHook Est 1897

Builders Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New Bedford WY 6-5661

Deny Dispatch About Ca rdinaI

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Sta_ Departm~nt spokesman her categorically denied a recent press story that there are ~

obstacles to Jozsef Cardinal Mindszentys leaving his refuge in the U S legation in Budapest but that the Primate of HungaI7 ~wants to die a prisoner there

The story (which was released by NANA and published in t~

daily press Jan 20) credited its source a State Deparme~ source in Bonn German~

who has taken part in recent U S-Hungarian negotiations

The State Department spokesshyman here described the story bull completely incorrect

We dont have any Americali official in Bonn who has had anything to do with the Hungar-o ian negotiations he said in an swer to inquiries It doesn1 represent anything that an American official would hold

New Orleans Plans New High Schools

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Arch-t bishop John P CodY of New Orleans has announced plansfOS construction of seven new hip schools in several parts of the archdiocese

Declaring that Catholic educashytion never was so flourishin nor were our Catholic people bull desirous of increasing the num bel of schools and improving t~

methods of teaching The Loushyisiana prelate said we must build so that all the children oil our area may have the blessin of a thorough Catholic educashytion

SERVING FINE ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4-8754bull

TIte Falmoufh NatiOnal Sanlc Falmouth Mass

tilt Villale Ir Sian 1121

WM T MANNING (0 WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE

AND

INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES bull GENERAL TIRES bull DELCOBATTERIES

bull PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS

FALL RIVER - NEW BEDFO~D - HYANNIS - NEWPORT

First Federal Savings AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF ATlLEBORO

4 on ali $avings Accouni

1 Extra on Systematic Bonus~vings

bull bull bull bull bull

11 bull

Portugal Bishops Plan University For Country

LISBON (NO) - Portushygals bishops have announcshyed plans to found this nashytions first Catholic Univershysity

They said in a joint pastoral letter issued after their meeting here that there is an imperative need for a Catholic university for the nations conscience They said the university win have greater freedom greater dynamism and greater flexibil shyity than the present state uni versities

The letter said that the govshyernment will help the bishops in founding the new Catholic university

Last Summer Manuel Cardishynal Goncalves Cerejeira of Lisshybon told a meeting studying the foundation of the Catholic Unishyversity that it would be open to both laymen and the clergy and located in Lisbon instead of the older university town of Coimshybra Earlier efforts were made to restore a theological faculty at Coimbra University The facshyultY was closed following the revolution which made Port~gal a republic in1910

Several years agothe cardinal noted that a Church-sponsored university has been a hope of 1Ihe VI has called on individual Cathshy one part of the Mystical Body of many Latill American counshy~oI1uguese bishops for a long olies to become more aware of Christ to another tries and CICOP itself whichtime ~ut that priorities for the world-wide dimensions and seminanes new churche~ pri- needs of the Church mary schools and Catholic Acshytion organization had delayed Today bull bull bull it is absolutely eoncrete plans indispensable that each pers~n

become aware of the true dishymensions of the Church the

Sees Greater Church Pope declared adding Greater awareness will iead to wideningNeed for Laity Role

LAKE CHARLES (NC) - A Louisiana editor predicts the time will come in the 20th censhytury when laymen wi~ domishynate the clergy in many fields

Msgr Alexander O Sigur edshyitor of the Southwest Louisiana Register diocesan newspaper feels in the present age of scishyence and technology Catholic laymen with specialized knowl- edge of law science and other fiElds must of necessity advise the clergy on the many facets of todays society

He pointed out that the layshymens role has made more progshyress since the opening of the Second Vatican Council than in the previous 10 centuries

But because of centuries of tradition there will be problems for some time connected with evolution of the laymans role in the Church he asserted

British Conversions Continue to Decline

LONDON (NC)-The number of converts to Catholicism in England and Wales continues to decline but the Catholic popushylation shows a steady increase according to the 1965 Catholic Directory published here

The known number of adult conversions for 1963 the most recent year for which statistics are available was 12778 This was a decrease of 552 from the previous year which also showed a considerably lower figure than that for 1961

But the Catholic population increased in 1963 by 129500 to 3956500 and the Catholic popshyulation in Scotland rose by 13shy310 to 812460

Foundation Member NEW YORK (NC) - William

G Ryan presidentmiddot of Seton Htn College Greensburg Pa haa been named a corporate member of the FoundationfOr the arts Religion and culture which win hold its fim meetina laue tomonow

THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

HIGH HONOR FOR K of C HEAD Supreme Knight John W McDevitt of the Knights of Columbus invested as a Knigh t Commander of St Gregory at a testimonial banquet in Boston is with left to right AuxiHary Bishop John F Hackett of H~rtford Archbishop Henry J OBrien of Hartford Bishop Charles P GreltfO Qf Ale~andna La Supreme K of C Chaplain and Bishop William J Smith of Pembroke OntarIO NO Photo

Pope Hail~ US Church Mission Work Says Transfe~ of Energies I Most ~onsoling

CHICAGO (NC)-Pope Paul this transfer of energies from unteers who are serving la

of vitality and fuller realization of the meaning of the name Catholic

Nature of Church Pope Paul made his plea in a

message to the second annual conference of the Catholic Inshyter-American Cooperation Proshygram (CICOP)

The Holy Father coupled his appeal for greater awareness of the worldwide nature vf the

Church with high praise for aid rendered in recent years by US Catholics to the Church in Latin America Prellently he said there are 4091 US priests reshyligious and laymen serving there

Greater Understanding I He called us Catholic proshygrams for Latin America a proshyvidential apostolic ~ovement and said they make up one of the most beautiful pages in the history of the Church in the United States

Particularly in light of the Ecumenical Councils constitushytion on the Church he said it iamost consoling to witness

BEFORE YOU BUY-TRY

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault 67 Middle Street Fairhaven

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICE

lJe singled out for praise US seeks by educational means to promote greater understandingdioceses which have sent 178 of Latin Americas problemsdiocesan priests to mission work

in Latin America US religious among the Catholic millions of the United Statescommunities of men and women

which he said are fulfilling the Urllent Demands engagement they have undershy Pope Paul voiced hope that thetaken of sending a tithe of meeting here would producetheir total memership to Latin many practical results parshyAmerica by 1970 US lay vol~ ticularly a wider and more soshy

licitous collaboration of the Refugee Children United States of America with

the Church in Latin AmericaHONG KONG (NC) - Archshy such as urgent needs dem~ndbishop Joseph Caprio apostolic

internuncio to China opened here for refugee children a new $100000 primary school built by Norris H Trippthe Franciscan Missionary Sisshyters of Our Lady of Sorrows SHEET METAL Mother Leola superior of the J TESER Proporder which has its headquarshy RESIDENTIALters in Beaverton Ore attended

INDUSTRIALthe ceremony COMMERCIAL

253 Cedar St New Bedford WY 3-3222 Montie Plumbing amp

Heating Co Inc

Counci~s Effects Years Away

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The universal effects of the Second Vatican Council will not be recshyognized completely for years to come James Francis Cardinal McIntyre told 2200 Holy Name men here in California

It is entirely impossible to estimate at the present time the effects of the council on the thinking of the world the carshydinal said

These effects have penetrated deeply into the spiritual life of all people not only of the Church alone he told a Holy Name Union Communion breakshy

fast One index of its effects is the

attention the council has comshymanded in the press of the world the cardinal said

Names Two Priests To Federal Board

NEW YOItK (NC) - T w bull priests are on the 30-niember board of directors of the new Sex Information and Education Council of the United Stat~

(SIECUS) formed to foster im- proved study and education oa the role of sex

TheYlre Father George Hag- maier CSP of the Paulist In- stitute for Religious Researc~ and Father John L Thomas SJ St Louis (Mo) University soci ologist

The executive director of the council is Dr Mary Steichen Calderone former medical dishyrector of the Planned Parentshyhood Federationand its presishyident is Wallace C Fulton formshyer presidtDt of the National Coundl on Family Relations

Whites Farm Dairy SPECIAL MilK

From Our Own Tested Herd

Acushnet Mass WY 3-4457 bull Special Milk bull Homogenized Vito 0 Milk bull Buttermilk bull Tropicana Orange Juice bull Coffee and Choc Milk bull Eggs - Butter

FIVE CONVENIENT OFFICES- -TOSERVE YOUReg Master Plumber 2930

GEORGE M MONTlE ONE-STOP BANKING Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET FIRSTmiddotMACHImiddotNISTS Fall ~River OS 5-7497 NATIONAL BAN Ilt

OF TAUNTON Norton W MaIn St-Raynham Rte 44-Taunton Main St

North Dighton Spring St-North Easton Main St_ w H RILEY amp SO~J Inc Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

CITIES SERVICE bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnmbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullDISTRIBUTORS

Gasoline i F L COLLINS amp SONS i Fuel and Range INCORPORATED 1937

OILS bull

GENERAL (ONTRAOORS5bullOIL BURNERS

For prompt delivery 5 and ENGINEERS 5amp Day amp Night Service

bull JAMES H COLLINS CE Pres G E BOILER BURNER UNITS bull Registered Civil and Structural Engineer bull

Rural Bottled Gas Se~ Member National Society Professional Engineers

61 COHANNET ST FRANCIS L COLLINS JR Treas = TAUNTON bull THOMAS Ie COLLINS Secy bull

Attteboro - No Attlebor~ middot =ACADEMY BUILDING FALL RIVER MASS Taunto1

-bullbull

bull 12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Humphreymiddot Becker Write Novels of Reminiscence

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Both William Humphreys The Ordways (Knopf

$595) and Stephen Beckers A Covenant with Death (Athshyeneum $450) are novels of reminiscence Both are laid in the Southwest the former in Texas the latter in an unshyidentified state The narrashytor in the Ordway book is for the most part telling what happened to his greatshygrandparents and his grandparshyents in the Civil War period and at the tum of the century In the Becker book the narrator is in his seventies recalling Ii decisive expeshyrience in his oWn life when he was 29 back in 1923 If there are similarities between the works there are also differences and they are very great

Mr Beckers novel is a Book of-the-Month Club middotselection has already been bought by a movie company for a vast sum and unshydoubtedly will be a roaring popshyular success Mr Humphreys novel will probably have far fewer readers and will bring its author far less money But it is by all odds and in every reshyIJPect the better book

Long-Winded It has one fault that of being

long-winded and at times meandering I just wanted to hear the same old things over and over again the narrator -of The Qrdways says at one point It is evidently presumed that the reader has the same desire and that he will not object to lengthy digressions But repetition and extended parenthetical exercises do become tiring even if as in ~is instance the writing is of a high order

1$ The Ordways really a novel in the Strict sense The pook cOritillns a notice reading A portion of Part One in some- what different form first apshypeared in The Saturday Evening Post

It is quite true that the first seetion could stand alone that the second and third sections could form a story by themshyselves and that only the fourth section depends for intelligibility on what has gone before Noneshytheless there is unity here if not the tight construction of the most effective novel

Family Lore Mr Ordway begins by describshy

ing graveyard working days in the hamlet of Mabry near the town of Clarksville in eastern Texas On that day occurring once a year the descendants or suniivors of those burled in the Mabry cemetery come together to set the place to rights

middotAs they do so they rec~ the histories of the dead and thus the family lore is passed on from generation to generation But it is more than family lore which is conveyed the countrys past is reconstructed and the making of the present

The narrator a boy in the 1930s learns of two decisive episodes in his own family One has to do with Thomas and Ella Ordway who were Tennessee people until 1863 Thomas was an infantryman was horribly wounded and disabled in the batshytle of Shiloh and would have died or at least have been lost to his famIly had it not been for his wifes valor The narrative of her recovering him ann bringshying him back to a ~blance of life is harrowing

Journey to Texas But somethinamp more harrowshy

ing is still to come the account of their six months journey in a wagon drawn by oxen from Tennessee to Texas in the hope of beginning a new and better life The reader not only follows this arduous exodus but makes and suffers it and is haunted by it thereafter

This portion of the book is a storY complete in itself dramatshyic pathetic comic packed with lively incidents and colorful characters some heroic some corrupt some rascally all disshytinctive and engaging

Occasionally the side excurshysions pall a bit as in the depicshytion of stump speaking by polit shyical candidates or of life with a small shabby traveling circus Yet each of these sideshows has something to contribute to the pictUre of emerging Texas

Acute Observations

Mr Humphrey writes extremeshyly well a little less fancily as the book progresses but always vivshyidly and with plentymiddot of power for the high moments His peoshyple are nicely differentiated and come memorably to life He has many acute observations and even authentic wisdom to disshypense and this he does neatly His book rings with truth about human nature and is the work of a highly gifted and skillful artist

Mr Beekers A Covenant with Death on the other hand strikes me as contrJved empty and often obnoxiousmiddot Its nub is a legal stickler What is to be dQne with a man who is convicted of m~rger bought +c the gallows there Gki1ls~e hangman and then is cleareu of the first kill shying ~is poser ismiddot put to the 29shy

year~old judge Ben Lewis He solyes Wby niakiIig law and when confronted with this puzshyzler solves as well a key probshylent in his personal life At one and the same time he becomes at last a real judge and a real man

Precise 3udgment

Or so we are asked to believe Lewis says of himself I passed the crisis of adolescence at the ludicrous age of 29 bull bull bull I was swollen with garbage and bittershyness My own ego was monshystrous mainly because I had never done anything for anyone and could justify my own useshylessness only by assuming that the world was not worth my energies This is a precise judgment

The trouble is that the book is swollen with garbage and bitterness as well as sophistry

Young Lewis conversations with his mother for example They irk by their pretentiousness and they disgust with their obscenishyties The youngmiddot judge is thorshyoughly sophomQric and we are asked to credit his sudden leap into maturity We are asked too much

It is with ill grace that the author scorns small town folk for their prurience It is just this to which most of his book apshypeals When he sneers that Soledad City our wholesome middle-class American town would be lined up three deep for good seats at a murder trial with sensational sexual aspects he apparently forgets that the predictably huge sales of his novel will be in large part to people attracted by itligamineaa

3AMES OGARA

PauiSft CElnter Lists Spe(d~er

James OGara editor of Comshyrronweai magazinEl will be guest speaker in the Christian Culture Series at the Paulist Ce-nter in Boston on Wednesday evening Feb 17 on the topic The Role and Future of Cathshyolic Education

Mr OGara has written numshyerous articles for leading Cathshyolic magazines in middotthis country end Europe and has appeared on many religiow television programs of the National Counshycil Of Catholic Men

Rev Andrew Greeley sociolshyogist and author of many books on social subjects will join Mr O-Gara in the discussion

Monsignor Francis 3 Lally editor of the Pilot will be pr0shy

gram moderator

Deplores Agtncies Poverty Appoach

CHICAGO (NC) -- Catholic charity and welfareillgencies and institutions must drop thebusishyness as usual appreach and get into the actual aIl~na of povshyerty a National Conference of Catholic Charities Dleeting here in Illinois was told

The surge of natilmal concern about poverty is one of the most dramatic and compelling moveshyments in our day rather Robshyert Monticello of DEltroit chairshyman of the conferences program committee told assembled social work executives

His views were echoed by Msgr Raymond 3 Gallagher secretary of the comerence who said that personal service to families and individuals among the poor must be a coriunitment each of us makes dailly

CENTIER Paint and Wldlpaper

Dupont PClint

iiP cor Middle St

422 6lcush Ave

~Qc=t~ New Bedford ~ARKING

Rear of Store

ProtEct What You Hav~

McGO~VAN Insurance J~gency

TEL MYrtle ~1middot8231

188 NORTH MAIN $TREET NORTH ATTU8ORO

Beggars for All the Missions

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen DO

rn the mail last week a package arrived containing several hundred printed and self-addressed envelopes from various begshyging organizations in the United States The good woman who sent the package admitted being neither rich nor comfortable and yet she was flooded with appeals She wanted to know how she became a victim of this deluge The answer is that she is on a mailing list There are hundreds of mailing lists for sale in the United States These can be bought for various amounts depending on the number and quality of the names listed The good woman who wrote us was on at least one of these lists

Never before has it been brought home to us with Such impact how swamped our faithful are with appeals It grieves DB

that we too are beggars but we find some consolation in the fact that the Holy Fathers Society for the Propagation of the Faith has never used such mailing lists

This incident highlightsmiddot an urgent need that the Vatican Council must recognize that of co-ordinating appeals for all these really worthwhile causes especially those of misshysionaries Pius XI said that the method by which each missionary group solicited only for itself did not provide an even distribution of help Some can barely survive others have investments in Wall Street How to know who out of the hundreds who beg are most deservng is not only difficult but almost impossible

We have never liked begging In fact there is too much inshysistence on money in the Church tOday We would like to be unshackled from our tin cup and not add to this confusion But this is our duty Why 1 Because the Holy Father has asked us to be his beggars in the United States for -all the missions of tlie world 2 Becanse it is the glory of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith not to helf) one order or society of the world but the entire world (As a matter of fact 88middot per cent of the appeals in the above-mentioned package received soDie aid from The Society for the Propagation of the Faith) 3 Because being under the direction of the Holy Father The Society for the Propagation of the Faith does not invest any of yoUrmiddot alms Every eent Is distributed by the Holy Father each year The world Is too poor So fOldve us

Oh yes the lady who sent us the package wrote I could not keep 240 missionary appeals because I have not the money Since The -Society for the Propagation of the Faith aids all I send the Holy Father my $100 to be divi4ed as he sees fit

GOD LOVE YOU to Anoafor $5 Here Is Diy poeen valeiI- Une for the poor bullbullbull toMLA for $78 This is whist l diel Ilot spend on eigarettes Somehow I cannot enjoy them auYmore knowing that today 10000 people riD die of ~rntionmiddot

-

Think ahead to Valentines day and order a GOD LOVE YOU medal In classic Florentine gold finish or pure sterling silver this lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of the World is one you would be proud to give or delighted to receive Designed by the world-renouned jeweler Harry Winston and blessed by Bishop Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal may be obtained by sending your request and corresponding offering to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001

$ 2 small sterling silyershy $ 3 small 10k gold filled $ 5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut 01lt ft1Is colUIDn pin your sacrifice to it and maD It te Most Rev Fulton 3 Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York New York 10001 or to your Diocesan Director

Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 368 North Main Street

Fall River Massachusetts

791 PurcIaase Street Betweea

WIUIam bull UnI_ S_

NEW BEDFORD

FIVE CENTS SAVINGS BANK

WE HAVE PLENTY OF MONEY FOR HOME LOANS

If youre buying or building -Ioolc to us CONVENTIONAL GI - FH~ FINANCING

Ca on us anytime aDd talk over your plans

Fathers andmiddot Daughters Will Twirl At Annual Sucordium-Sponsored Hop at SHA Fan River

Dads and daughters win twirl at the annual fathep daughter dance at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River Its scheduled fltgtr 8 tomorrow night in the academy gymshynatorium and is sponsored by the moms and dads and daughters-members of the

SHA Fall River and her team very active Sucordium Club marked its first league debateHomemaker of the year at this season by defeating Case

Holy Family High in New Dartmouth Taunton and PreshyBedford as a result of the annushy vost al Homemaker of Tomorrow test Coyle High was host for a taken by thousands of girls novice tournament of two rounds across the nation is Christian with nine schools competing last Saulnier Shes National Honor weekend and the varsity team Society treasurer and copy edshy last week won three of four iJtor of By Fy Spy the school matches over Bishop Stang paper Bishop Stang was host to Narshy

At Dominican Academy in Fan ragansett League debate last River the top homemaker is week with 12 schools representshyJulia Melvin Senior A president ed each by four man teams Repshysodality vice-prefect and student resenting Stang were John council vice-president Another Golenski Michael Hogan Thomshyfeather in Julias cap is that as Keary and Myles Tillotson shes to represent her school at At the same meeting Bishop the state capitol on Student Feehan was represented by Government Day Francis Detellis Kateri Detellis

Christine Julia and an other Roger Watts and Raymond StafshyDiocesan school winners in the ford They won one debate out homemaker contest are now eli shy of four gible for consideration as state Current Affairs Contest winners Themiddot states highestshy Many Diocesan schools partici shyranking girl will receive a $1500 pated in a current affairs conshyscholarship and will tour Washshy test sponsored by a weekly news ington and New York City this magazine and among top scorers Spring From the state finalists were Janet Gendreau Moniquewill be chosen national winners Boulay and Muriel Raiche at in the homemaking contest and Jesus-Mary and Paula Powersthese girls will have their scholshy Susan Penrose and Mary Kellyarship grants substantially illshy at SIlA Fall River creased Also in the spotlight is 1anice

Benoit of SHA Fall River whosGrac1aatlOIl GOWIl8

received honorable mention for rrs snowy outside but thoughts the Bishop Connolly award preshy

of the seniors at Mt St Mary sented annually to the DioceseAcademy in Fall River are Oft outstanding girl athletethe days of June Theyre curshy Yearbook pictures for Coylerently selecting g r a d u at i 0 Il juniors sophomores and freshshygowns and are making a critical men have been safely taken so survey of ofterings from several another milestone is passed OIl area stores the road to publication

And National Bonot- Society Dominican Academy juniopsmembers have been busy at Sashy and seniors will make a closedcred Hearts Fall River Theyve retreat at the Cenacle Conventwritten to all accredited colleges ill Brighton during their Februshyin the US requesting inforshy ary vacation while the annualmation on admission requireshy school retreat is in progressments and availability of finanshy hOW at Bishop Stangcial aid The gathered informashy The program includes dallytion will augment the guidanee Mass Benediction and confershyfile in the school library ences and retreat masters are

Sevenmiddot new clubs have beeR Rev John OBrien SSCCmiddot andorganized at Tauntons Coyle Rev Andrew Jahn SSCCHigh School They are French An unusual auction was a feashySpanish Stamp and Coin Pep ture of a dance sponsored lastEnglish Literature Chess and weekend by Feehan seniors forPhotography Something theremiddot all their fellow students Eachfor everyone faculty member donated a prize

Four Dominican Academy stushy for the auction including suchdents have passed 120 word tests valuable items as a pass excusingin Gregg shorthand and two a student from detention pershyhave passed 100 word tests On mission to omit a book from anthe bowling scene at DA high outside reading list and a driy scorers include Susan Pacheco ing passAnne Marie FoIster Colleen Auctionmiddot proceeds benefited bullDesrosiers and Patricia Od) shy performance of Leave It tonecky Jane to be produced by the

The junior prom at Bishop Feehan Dramatics Club SundayFeehan High in Attleboro has and Monday Feb 14 and 15been set for Tuesday night April Jeannine Dumont senior class20 In charge ofmiddot arrangements secretary and middotlssistant editor of are Robert Bedard and Carol the school paper at Holy FamilyMiller while committees are al shy High has been accepted at Bosshyready at work on decorations ton College as have classmates e n t e r t a i n men t refreshshy Maureen OBrien Christine Ponshyments tickets and that unher ichtera and John AylwardaIded but all-important chore of Mother McAuley Guild at Mtclean-up St Mary Academy will hold its

annual calendar party WednesshyDebaiioi- Prcmt day night Feb 10 EntertainshyIn the indoor days of Winter ment will reprelC~t each monthdebating holds an honored spot of the year and the decoratedamong extra-curricular activishycakes willbe ~oor prizesties at Diocesan schools At Preshy Class -laeement vost in Fall River the debate

THE ANCHOR-- 13 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Churchmen Favor Johnson School Aid Program

WASHINGTON (NC) shyCatholic and Protestant spokesmen applauded Presishydent Johnsons school aid proposal in a placid Congresshysional bearing where the on~ disagreement came over mi~

technical questions The release from the charged

atmosphere of past hearings w noted all around

A Catholic spokesman smilin~

ly commented that it was a relief not to fear getting out of the

Vour nearescmall box i$ Q Firsf Ilfderal branch office that open 24 hours $ day to make $(lving easy for you No traffic nO parking no leather problem~

Withdrawals ate just as implt taY~ngs paymencS

bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull r fRlE o~middottymiddotmiddot ~ ubullbullh coupon 7bullbull~ trti 0middot

team was victorious over Mt St Marys and Bishop Stang in Narshyragansett League debate but lost to SHA Fall River The varisity also met Coyle during the past week

Mt st Marys debate record stands at 2-2 with Anne Browshynell Linda Mello Susan Jenkinshyson and Nancy Curran defending their school in Narragansett

Tomorrows the day of reckonshying at SHA Fall River Not only will report cards be distributed but a list of all seniorsand their placement in middottheir class for the past four years will be published

Fifteen seniors It DA partici shypated in a French Listening Comprehension Test on Tuesday This supplementary test is ofshyfered by the eollege entrance

PREVOST SCHOLARS High scorers in National Merit Scholarship Examinations at Prevost High School Fall River are Gerard Gltgtu~et left and Paul Nowak

tests in addition to the French Written exams come in March

Also at Feehan where report cards will come tomorrow high honors will be achieved by those with an average of 90 or better honors by those earning 85 or better and honorable mention by those with grades of 80 01 better

Bishop Stang mathematiciana placed first ill the Notre Dame Math Meet held last week at Cardinal Cushing High in South Boston Eighteen schools com~

peted and Stang won by n points Responsible for the vieshytory were John Keavy Paul Roy John De Ciccio Raymond Desrosiers and Alan Roskiewiez Top individual scorer was John DeCiccio

Best Girl Athlete Senior Nancy Vogel of Bishop Stang High School received the Bishop Connolly Award for the best girl athlete of Fall River area Diocesan high schools at a ceremony held last night at Whites restaurant Nancy as shining a star schoshylastically as athletically plays hockey basketball and volley~ ball at the North Dartmouth school She will be the first reshycipient of what is to become an

Influence Declining MADRID (NC)-Castroist inshy

fluence among young people in Latin Ameriea has declined the past two years Luis Garcia Arishyas professor of international law at the University of Saragossa here in Spain said on his return from a tour of Latin America Thursday Feb 1amp

SCHOOL Mainte~ance suppr~

SWEEPERS SOAPS DISINFECTANTS

FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

DAHILL CO 1886 PURCHASE STREET

annual award made by the FaD River Clover Club Also honored at last nights dinner-dance WBI Coach Carlin Lynch of 11M Stang Spartans

Forty Hours devotion was celshyebrated for the first time at Bishop Feehan high scbool starting Sunday and ending Tuesday Seniors Eileen Pashyquette Mary Duffy Nancy Clegg and Susall Ouelle~te aided Sister Mary Kateri of Feehan home economics department III making a cope and humeral veil used for the first time at the ceremonies

And Feehanites celebrated terms end by viewing A Raisin in the Sun

bullbullbullbullbullbull

hearing room alive The major Protestant spokesmen described the bill as an instrument of recshyonciliation Con g res smiddotm e a praised the compromises they saw being made by all sid~

church groups and educators -The President has proposed bull

$12 billion program to improve elementary and secondary schooling from poverty-strickea families

A total of $1 billion wouldge to public school districts in lowshyincome areas Additionally the proposal would spend $100 milshylion for textbooks for all school children and school libraries and another $100 million to create bull system of public-priva~commushynity educational centers to offer cultural enrichment and specitl eourses to all school ehildren

Pittsburgh School Enroll~ent Down

PITSBURGH (NC) - Enroll shyment in the Pittsburgh diocellMl Catholic school system has dro~ ped by 40 pupils Msgr John B McDowell superintendent ball reported

The monsignor said the sliglll drop has been preceded by fo_ years of leveling oft in enrol) ment figures because of enforeet gradual cuts in class size

Since 1960 he said there _ been an increase of only 24 pushypils in the total number of stushydents Elementary and seconda schools last June tallied 129531 pupils a drop of 40 he said

bullbullbullFREEKI _forbullbull~to bull ~-~----- shy _ StampMo _ middot----1

City_middot bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbulliibullbullbullbullbullbullbull WE pAY POSTAGa

(tree po5t-pald~Clddd i-velop ady to mall

FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND lOAN ASSOCIATION

OF FALL RIVER Home OHice 1 North Main St Fall River

Somerset OHice 149 GAR Highway Rte 6 League bouts The team meets exam board and consists of Both Offices Open Friday Evenings until INEW BEDFORDBishop Cassidy of TauntOn Wedshy questions and answers concernshy Sonterset Drive-In Window Open Mon-Thurs til 4 nesday Feb 10 ing subject matter on tape At WY 3-3786 Susan Nunes heads debate 111amp Feeha aiYdentll 1ook Germaa

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Stresses ilroad beep Gulf Between Two Generafions

By John J Kane Ph D What is your opinion of secretive sons and daughters

()f today Our married son and daughter never tell us anyshything Friends and strangers knew they bought a new home before we did My daughters husband knows all the ansshywers and wants no advice from anyone My son is afraid of his wife and she makes all decisions They ask us to visit but hurt our feelshyings when we do by what they say We were raised to reshyspect our elders and ask their advice

You r letter Jean does pose some justifiable complaints But it also seems to make some unshyreasonable deshy

mands Furthershymore amusingshy1y enough you conclude that you were reared to respect your elders and intimate your chil shydren werent If so whom can you blame

I dont know the reason why your children failed to inform you of their intentions to purshyehase a home But I do have some suspicions Do you have a tendency to be critical about what they buy Sometimes parshyents do

Tremendous Inflation Y-oungsters and parents both

make a certain type of mistake when it comes to purchasing of such things as homes cars or expensive appliances So m e young marrieds try to begin at a level their parents only achieved after 10 or 15 years of married life

But some parents do not seem to realize that inflation has been tremendous in the last 20 years When they hear a son or daughshyter is about to buy it home for 20 or 25 thousand dollars they are horrified They remember they paid perhaps 6 8 or 10

thousand dollars when they bought

They also forget credit is a bit easier than in the past that F BA and even the GI Bill help young people today and they may not even have existed when they were shopping for a house Longer te~ mortgages are possible today and lower down payments These of course do mean more interest

Coinmon CourteSY In other words parents should

Dot use the yardstick of economshyic conditions when they were young for the youth of today When they state perhaps with heated emphasis Why your father and I paid 10 thousand for a home the children are understandably irritated

But once having made their decisions com m 0 n courtesy would seem to demand tpat parshyents be told before strangers or at least as soon as friends Your sense -of hurt feelings here is quite understandable

Your complaint that your sons wife makes all the decisions may be true If so I agree that you have reared a Milquetoast But

is it true Are you actually cershytain or are you imagining someshything Are you really sayingshyand I frankly fear youare-that your son listens to his wife more than he listens to you

Mother-in-Law Role Being a mother-in-law is not

an easy role in Anierican soClshyety and many of the stupid

at least not if you wish to be a successful parent

Because most parents do love their children they are eager to help them They feel that their years of experience give them an advantage and this advantage they would extend to their chil shydren

At times this is true At times it is not The gulf between genshyerations is broad and deep Life has changed greatly in the space of one generation and the bench marks of the past may be unshysuitable today There are certain areas of living in which children may have better ideas than their parents Be prepared to admit as much

But within those areas where the maturity and experience of parents can be helpful advice can be given when not reshyquested only indirectly and cautiously Young marrieds misshyconstrue it as an effort to domshyinate which they reject Pershyhaps you can recall when you too felt this way

But it is indeed sad if they hurt your feelings when you do visit them You have not enshylarged on this so it is impossible to determine just what is said or done that annoys you Assuming you are making a correct judgshyment it is at the very least a breach of hospitality

Many of the inter-generational and in-laws problems of today are the result of social changes As one grows older it is less and less easy to change to adopt ways of doing and thinkshying After all if one succeeded under one system there is little motivation to alter it

Life Easier But conditions have changed

and to paraphrase a commercial this is the Pepsi generationbull Today boys and girls get married even wher the boy is unemshyployed This is scarcely advisable but somemake it Boys marry while still in college and their wives work to help put them through This would have been unthinkable 40 years ago

One of the really amazing changes is the use of long term credit The proud boast of years ago was that one didnt owe any money If you said this today youngsters would view you with open amazement and quietly conclude your credit was no good

No doubt some of this is overshydone and can bring about tragic results But if used intelligently it can make life somewhat easier perhaps more pleasant than in the past

These are only a few of the changes that could be listed a complete litany of them would be impossible Now this doesnt mean that parents are old fogeys that their counsel is useshyless It does mean that they must try tomiddot understand their married children better than some do

And incidentally because of these sweeping changes it is more difficult than it was But it isnt impossible an4 when donepays off in much better relationships

Anti-Smut Effort NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Loushy

isiana Knights of Columbus have jokes ]lake it even more diffi- launched a public information cult But parents after having campaign to combat what one reared their children to the best official t e r m e d indifference of their ability must let them go stemming from lack of knowlshyon their own You cannot keep edge about the growing traffic them tied to your apron strings in obscene literature

PRINCE OF THE CHURCH Americas new cardin~l recelyes congratulations from an old friend as Archbishop Patrlck A OBoyle of Washington felicitatesmiddot Lawrence Cardmal Shehan Archbishop of Baltimore on his elevation to the College of Cardinals by Pope Paul vi NC Photo

~Glassand Wire Tiny Foulr-Bell Chime in Bay State Church

Producing Soundof Big Heavy Metal WALTHAM (N C) - The string-shaped length of glass

church-bell of the future may which may be up to a foot i~ bE a ht~le thing of glass and length and a tiny hammer to Wire weighm~ about two grams produce the proper vibrations but reproducmg the sound of These vibrations are converted cast-metal constructions weigh- into an electronic signal which ing more than a ton ~asses through an amplifier is

j Pope Emphasizes Import of Hymns

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul in an audience for more han 1000 priests participating in a convention on pastoral lit shyurgy emphasized the key role of hymn-singing in the liturgy

We are not in a hurry he said

We must raise up a new peoshyple who learn to pray as the Church now prescribes

One of the prescriptions which I believe to be most influshyential and most necessary is singing

The Pope said that hymns inshycluding popular ones lift the soul and nourish it with religious sentiments

Illinois School Joins Expanding ETV Plan

MORTON (NC)-A parochial school here in Dlinois has served as pilot school in a historic edushyeational television experiment

Blessed Sacrament School reshyceived the first experimental transmission of v ide 0 tap e d courses in color from a high freshyquency monidirectional terminal

A 120-foot tower atop the school received signals from a tower on the Bradley University campus 10 miles away Bradley Coordinator Philip Weinburg said he expects an ETV program to be operational in the 1965-66 school year

The Catholic school tower will remain as a permanent inshystallation to serve both as an ETV booster station with a 15shymile radius and a receiver for educational programs in the school next Fall

Changes in Mass EDINBURGH (NC) - Scots

Catholics are busily preparing for the introduction of English and Gaelic into the Mass on March 1 the first Sunday in Lent

bull HYANNIS bull HARWICH PORT bull ~olri YAAMOUTH

--- shy

funeral Service

DoANmiddotSpoundALmiddotAMtS INCOIlPOItATtiD

Glassblower Gerhard B Finkshybeiner of Brandeis University here in Mass lpoundlas installed for the first time in the United States a set of the tiny bells in St Susanna church in Dedham named for the t~tula church in ~ome of ~ostOIl s Richardmiddot Carshydinal Cushmg

Finkbeiner whose small glass bells already al~e making kingshysiZed sounds in 10 churches in Germany and ]~rance has proshyduced a four-bell chime for the Dedham church encased in a metal cabinet only two feet long and weighing a mere 40 pounds In cast metal equivalent sotmdshyproducers would occupy a goodshysized belfry and weigh aboUt 10000 pounds Finbeiner envishysions his discovery as destined for churches which cannot afford regular bells

The new-style bells look like nothing so much as the fa~iliar vacuum tubes found in any nonshytransistor radio but they proshyduce a never-changing high quality sound which is fully comparable to the metallic clang

of the old-fashioned bell shy

Inside each vacuum tube in Finkbeiners system there is a

MON~~GHAN

ACCEF-TANCE CQIRP

JHOMAS F MONAGHAN JR

Trecisurer

142 SECOND STREET

OSborne 5-7856

FALL RIVER

Increased 100000 times and comes out through a ~pecial speaker whose sound most exshyperts cannot tell from a metallic ben

The sound of a heavy metallic bell is one of the most complex of all musical sounds according to Finbeiner but he has been able to dUJlicat~ it through parshyallel ~Udi~ in glassblowing electronics and ~acuum techshyniques

BARDAHL MAKES YOUR

CAR RUN BEnER tAt New Car Dealers and Service Stations

Everywhere -I

With Safety at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK

115 WILLIAM sr NEW BEDFORD MASS

WEBB OIL (OMPANY TEXACO FUEL ()IL$

DOMESTIC amp HFAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS

Sales~SetYce-lnstaDtjon MAINO~FICE~JO ~RFEEmiddot sTREETmiddotfAll ~IVER

Phone OS 5-7484

11

1S --

Views of New Ho~Y TrinitYmiddotmiddot-C-h-~-rc-h-I-W-e-s-t-~-I-a-li-i-ac-h-middotmiddotmiddotI

-

I I

16 THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

Says Pope John Left Cha lIenge To Catholicsmiddot

NORTH PALM BEACH (NC) - Pope John XXIII left Catholics with a chalshylenge to meet the world Bishop Coleman F Carroll of Miami said here

Bishop Carroll said Pope John dared Catholics to meet other Christians and non-Christians and to discuss our common problems and seek by discussion a solution to these problems

This challenge cannot be met by the pope alone or by the bishops and priests alone he said It must be met by all inshycluding-indeed especially-the laymen

-He said laymen must be propshy

erly prepared for this task through study training and spirshyitual preparation In this conshynection he called a closed spirshyitual retreat an absolute must for the lay person

Bishop Carroll spoke to memshybers of the Our Lady of Florida Retreat League at a dinner in his honor at the Passionist Retreat House here

PrelWtes Sc~~dlJ(e

US~ ~f VeCrulall ROME (NC)-The Italian lanshy

guage will be used in Mass throughout I t a I y beginning March 7 the first Sunday of Lent

The Italian Bishops Commitshytee on the Liturgy in announcshying the change specified that the Italian language would be used in Masses on Sundays and holy days and at all Masses attended by a substantial number of the faithful

The parts of the Mass to be said in Italian are the following the Epistle Gospel acclamations salutations and dialogues (inshycluding the prayers at the foot of the altar and the dialogue preshyceding the Preface) the Kyrie Gloria Creed Sanctus-Benedicshytus and Agnus Dei themiddot Patermiddot Noster with its introduction and the formula for the Communion

Peloquin Chorale Televises Hymns

NEW YORK (NC)-Hymns -Yesterday and Today featurshyipg C Alexander Peloquin and members of his popular Peloquin Chorale will be telecast Feb 14 from 1 to 130 PM EST over the ABC-TV network

The latest program in the seshyries Directions 65 - a Catholic Perspective produced by the National Council of Catholic Men and the ABC public affairs department was written by Peloquin and traces the develshyopment of hymnody from the Te Deum of the 4th century to the works of contemporary composers

Stresses Doctrines Substance Remains

DAVENPORT (NC) -Bishop Ralph L Hayes of Davenport adshymonished an interfaith meeting here in Iowa against expecting changes in Catholic doctrine

The (Second Vatican) Counshycil may change the manner of presentation of doctrines but not their substance he said pointing to the liturgy as an exshyample of such a change

We must admit bigotry and misunderstanding on both sides But followers of Christ have Scripture devotion to the Holy Spirit and devotion to Christ in common Why not talk about the things on which we agree he asked

Sisters of Mercy General Asks Personal ST LOUIS (NC)-Weve got

to develop the Sister in depth Thats what the times call for said the mother general of the 7300 American nuns of the Sisshyters of Mercy of the Union

Mother Mary Regina Cunningshyham ending her first six-year term as the head of the widely known teaching social work and hospital nuns was talking about what the Sisters of Mercy are doing to bring themselves fully up to the times

In St Louis Mo to meet with the superiors of the nine Mercy provinces Mother Regina talked about the main vehicle she and her colleagues hope will achieve the transformation

This is the year in the commu- nity for chapter meetings and general meetings of the nuns in

each of the provinces climaxed by a meeting of the general chapter at the orders mothershyhoupse in Bethesda Md she said

Changing Church Results will be ~olnown in Aushy

gust and Mother Regina hopes that they will show her commushynity to be in line with the mind of a rapidly changing Church in the midst of an even faster movshying world

She predicted tlat the chapshyters would have some surprises not only in the deisions but in the way they are organized to give a more representative view of all the Sisters in the order

If one overall phrase had to sum up what Mother Regina and the other planners are looking for in the Mere chapters it

would be personal responsibil shyity she said

A Sister has to have the reshysponsibility to make judgments for herself said the mother general Her superiors have to give her the responsibility to achieve her own role She has to make the decision to take the risks

~And then of course be ready to pay the price for her decishysion said Mother Regina

In Updated Sense Weve gone beyond the day

Papal Count BALTIMORE (NC) - Thomas

W Pangborn a Hagerstown (Md) industrialist and philanshythropist has been named a papal count by Pope Paul

Responsibility of always being safe Some peoshyple want to be sure to have the answer before they move But sometimes that meant they never moved at all she observed

Developing a Sister in depth will mean a lot of things espeshycially an updated sense of her apostolate and the way she works at it For the Mercy nuns in the U S Central and Latin America and in the West Indies it will mean a lot of littie things Mother Regina hinted

Changes might relax regulashytions about home visits dining with others attending night meetings and cultural affairs or traveling with companions

Mother Regina said that we have to plan for more contact with the laity and for more edushycation to understand each other shy

a

lYonderful Meatsbullbullbull Anoth~r Big Reasll Why zltI ~III I bull STAYING ~c~ Z ~

with FIRST NATIONAL it

l~middotmiddotsowll ItmiddotI

IIIIr-All vlu

FACE RUMIP Fine Grained Texture shy

Heavy Steer Beef for Hearty Eating LB

The Perfect Roast for large Families

ROASTL854CAITCHBONE Same [ow Self-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vidnily rNe Reserve Iie Right to Limit Quantitietl

-

I The Parish Parade I SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO bull

Holy Name Society members will receive corporate Communshyion at 7 oclock Mass Sunday morning Feb 14 The unit plans a Valentine dance and supper from 7 to 12 Saturday night Feb 13 in the Elks auditorium on Church Street SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs John DeBettenshycourt president Mrs Arnold Muckerheid vice-president Mrs Nelson J DeBettencourt Jr treasurer Mrs Charles Davis secretary

For the Holy Name SOGiety James Ferreira is president supshyported by Freeman Willoughby vice-president Alfred Metell treasurer Anthony Rebello secshyretary The units next meeting will be Sunday Feb 14 at the parish hall OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a Masquerade Ball Friday night Feb 26 at Wimpys resshytaurantr Osterville Mrs James E Murphy is chairman ST JOSEPH ATTLEBORO

The CYO will sponsor a dance Saturday night Feb 20 with enshytertainment by Mickey Chagnon and the Rivieras Chairmen for the unit include Carolee Desshyrochers membership Judy Roy spiritual Claudette Ouimet culshytural Sue Reynolds publicity Claire Piette social Don Fisher recreational BLESSED SACRAMENT FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will present a fashion fair at an open meeting to be held Wedshynesday Feb 17 in the church basement Planned for April are a rummage sale and a whist party ST JEAN BAPTISTE FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women announces a ham and basket whist party for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 in the lower church hall In charge will be Mrs Napoleon Picard and Mrs Eugene Gagnon aided by a large committee ST STANISLAUS FALL RIVER

Civics Club members of the parochial school will deliver pastry to nursing home patients for Valentines Day Other projshyects include collecting Christmas cards for missionaries and shovshyelling snow to augment the club treasury OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION OSTERVILLE

Mr and Mrs William Dacey will be co-chairmen of a preshyLenten dance to be held Friday night Feb 19 at Wimpys restaushyrant in Osterville under sponsorshyship of the Womens Guild The program will include a buffef and dancing from 9 to to ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

Mrs Lionel J Dulude presishydent of the Sacred Hearts Assoshyciation requests all ladies of the unit who have First Friday Adoration to check their asshysigned times in order that the full quota will be present at all hours

Corporate Communion for members will be held on Sunday at the 815 Mass and the regushylar meeting will be held the same evening at 730 in the Church Hall

The Penny Sale scheduled for Feb 20 will be discussed atthis meeting ST JOSEPH FALLRIVER

The annual mid-Winter Gala is set for Saturday night at Venus de Milo restaurant A buffet supper from 630 to 830 will be followed by dancing a parish reunion and awarding of prizes

ST JOAN OF ARC ORLEANS

Forthcoming events for the Womens Guild include penny sales this month April and next November socials in March and June and Summer fairs in July and August A ham and bean supper is ~cheduled for May ST JAMES NEW BEDFORD

middotMsgr Noon Circle plans a potluck supper for members and their guests Saturday night Feb 20 OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION NEW BEDFORD

Holy Name Society officers inshyclude Severo G Alfama presishydent James P Gonsalves and John Monteiro vice-president Antonio Rocha treasurer John Soares secretary ST GEORGE WESTPORT

Womens Guild members will form the congregation at the TV Mass to be broadcast on channel 6 at 10 Sunday morning Feb 7 Participants will meet at the parish school hall at 9 to travel to New Bedford ST JOHN BAPTIST NEW BEDFORD

Parishioners will hold their annual filhoz supper and penny sale at 530 Sunday evening Feb 21 in the cllurch hall Tickshyets are available from officers of church organizations or at the rectory In charge are Gilbert Brazil and George Ladino ST PIUS X SOUTH YARMOUTH

The WQmens Guild will hold a past presidents dinner Monshyday night March 1 at Armands restaurant_ Hyannis NOTRE DAME FALL RIVER

Cubs and Boy Scouts will at shytend a Communion breakfast Sunday Feb 7 following 815 Mass A blue and gold banquet for the Cubs is set for Sunday Feb 28 in the parish hall with Roger Labonte in charge of arshyrangements

The Council of Catholic Women will hold its installation banquet Monday Feb 22 at Whites resshytaurant under the chairmanship of Mrs Paul Ilmais To be seated are Miss Helena Dumont president Mrs Cecile Barnabe frst vice-president Mrs Gershyard DextTaze second vice-presishydent Mrs Richard Perry treasshyurer Mrs Romeo Parent reshycording secretary Mrs Roger Langlois corresponding secreshytary

The third in a series of cake sales will follow all Masses this Sunday in the lower church Mrs Ferdnand Letendre chairman will be aided by Mrs Robert Phenixco-chairman Cakes can be brought to the lower church from 4 to 5 and 630 to s Saturshyday afternoon and evening SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a potluck supper for members at 630 Tuesday night Feb 16 in the parish hall A silent auction will follow the slipper In charge of arrangeshyments is Mrs Mary Pereira chairman aided by Mrs Mary Gagne The council announces a malassada supper and penny sale open to the public from 530 to 7 Sunday night Feb 21 also in the hall Tickets will be available at the door and chairshymen are Mrs Mary Cabeceiras and Mrs Albina Quintill

A regular meeting is set for 730 Friday night Feb 12 in the hall Installation of officers is planned for later in the month ST MATIDEU FALL RIVER 4

A Valentine whist is planned by the Council of Catholic Womshyen for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 at the parish hall Mrs Raymond Antaya is chairman

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan RIver-Thurs Feb 1l96I rr

GIVE VIEWS ON AID Presenting views on federal aid to education to the House Education sub-committee was this panel representing the Catholic school system left to right Msgr William E McManus Chicago superintendent of the largest Ctholic school system in the country Mr Edward McArdle Washington DC who focussed on the parents view of the childs needs as the father of seven children Msgr Freclerck G Hochwalt Director Education Department NCWC and Msgr John B McDowell sushyperintendent of the Pittsburgh diocesan school system NC Photo

bullSays Church Must Live In Wide World~ Cardinal Hits Ignorance of Our Neighbor

CHICAGO (NC)-An Amerishycan prelate prominent in the Churchs work for Latin Amershyica has told US Catholics there is no excuse for our ignorance of our neighbors the nations of Central and South America

Archbishop Paul L Hallinan of Atlanta chairman of the subshycommittee for inter-American cooperation of the US Bishops Committee for Latin America in a message to the second annual conference of the Catholic IntershyAmerican Cooperation Program SClid the Church today lives in a new world but it must preshypare to live in a wide world

Miles Are Nothing Catholics in tpe United States

with a strong cultural and comshymercial bridge to Europe find Africa a puzzle and Asia an Orshyiental mystery Strangest of all is our ignorance of our own neighbors the nations of Central

E~ual Treatment JERSEY CITY (NC)-Hudson

County parishes here in New Jersey are joining in a countyshywide interfaith appeal seeking pledges of fair housing practices

~T FRANCIS XAVIER IIYANNIS

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a penny sale at 8 Tuesday right Feb 9 in the parish hall A Communion breakfast and fashion show are on the units Spring schedule

ST JOHN BAPTIST CENTRAL VILLAGE

A housewares demonstraticm will follow an open meeting scheduled by the Womens Guild for 8 Thursday night Feb 11 in the church hall In charge of refreshments will be Mrs Matil shyda Shelter Miss Margaret Shay and Miss May Taggart The unit plans a Valentine whist for 3 Saturday night Feb 13 also in the church hall on Main Road Miss Edith Kirby and Mrs Louise Vieira are chairmen ST JOHN POCASSET

The Womens Guild announces a penny sale for Friday Feb 12 Mrs Sprague Spooner will be chairman The units next meetshying will feature slides and a talk by Col Eugene S Clark on the early history of Marthas Vineshyyard It will be held Tuesd~

Feb 16

and South America he deshyclared

The ~rchbishop said 60 years ago there was an excuse-travel communications and cultural knowledge were in their inshylancy But now miles are nothshying since Pope John XXIII brought his message of unity to the world he averred adding

Real Import The CICOP meeting brings

bishops priests and laymen of both hemispheres together for a remarkable in-service training period a healthy learn while you work program We know much of Latin American needs both religious economic and culshytural We are helping in our way to repair these shortcomings But we need even more to share

in this Christian fraternity fIIf background common resources and future hopes Only by free easy association with the repshyresentatives of Latin America can we get the real import

ELECTRICAL Contractors~

~ ~ ~ ~

944 County St ~ New Bedford

ecec~c~ccccee~o

C) LOUlUl~S iiffii~ ~ i middotbull EWrIMA ~- shyg l~

ROMEamp I~-

I SHmNES imiddot ~ OF EUROPE iiI bull ampHOLY LAND ~) C~ 1 bull CATBOLIC PROGRAJ 1965 ~)

ALI~~16 ~I CachoIlcTeI Orrlce ~) c~ WASHINGTON CHICAGOIOMI LONDONI CATHOLtC TRAVEL OFFICE FRM ~------------II -~ Dupont Circle Building WashIngton D C 20036 fali ~ ~ j1ii Please send me your free Illustrated booklet describing in ~ iJl detail the wOrldmiddotcovering pilgrimages

C~ Name iI ~IJ Address ~ C_~ CityIloneState 11 =~~~~~_~_~~_~_ft~ftVw ijrv _ii~middotV

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Teen-agers Outstanding For Prodigal Generosity

By Rev Joseph T McGloin S J Several times in this column Ive had some glowing

words to say about our Mexican neighbors to the south about their friendliness and hospitality- and general likeshyableness And certainly its all true These people busy as they are will go out of their of other peoples is that you canway give you their precious easily give the idea you are sell shytime and attention to see ing all your own countrymen that you enjoy your visit to short And this would be the their country When a Mexican furthest thing from my own says Mi casa es su casa My thoughts house is your Because there is great friendli shyhouse - which ness in our country too - in he invariably varying degrees and manifested

middot does-he means in various ways The Mexican is it F r i end s in general more spontaneous strangers even than we and most of us have to shopkeepshy be approached before we give ers youve never our friendship since an initial II e e n before shyness seems to hold us back will introduce Often enough however this

middotyou to the whole shyness is caused by a national family and inshy superiority complex by a fear vite you to hav~ of not being accepted and by

middotdinner wit h the fear of making fools of ourshymiddot them To put it mildly hospital shy selves in a language we dont ity like this would be impossible know In other words humility to forget or to overlook is an esseatial to friendliness and _ Sometimes you wonder as you hospitality Sometimes we have walk the downtown- streets of it Often we dont CHle of our own cities and as you Hospitable People see pe~ple going their own inshy We Americans are sometimessulated ways if it isnt true that afraid to show our real feelingsas a country we have only a -afraid to show for inst~nce

-head while Mexico has a head our sympathy forthe underdogand a heart We usually make up for t~is

Superiority Complex psychologically by cheering on - This feeling grows on - you the hiss favored side at spe~tator when you visit Mexico and have sports when we should be doingthe misfortunE to encounter the it in the causes of racial justiceAmerican tourist who is bent on and equality of opportunity inshyacting like one It is a crying stead shame that so many Americans We are afraid others usuallyhave to show a superiority com- those very loud others will look

middotplex to those they encounter in down on us if we give public middot other countries seeming to feel support to those who need our that no matter where they go it support the little -people the is not they who are the foreignshy least of Christs and our brethshyers but those they encounter ren

All too often these types seem The fact is though that we to despise the customs and lanshy Americans do have a- heart and guage and even the currency of that once we put aside our sillythe countries they visit apparshy ideas that we are too busy to be ently thinking that anyone can hospitable or that others will understand English if you only look on us as soft and foolish if speak louder and that real we are or that we must not goAmerican money will buy anyshy out of way forour foreign~rs thing even respect because we might make a misshy

Worst of all are those wbo take in speaking their languagebring their aura of racial supeshy -then we can be and are just as riority along with them and hospitable and friendly as anymake little effort to hide it It is peoplein the world undoubtedly true that some of Ideals of Youththis patronizing attitude is partly There are many Americansresponsible (along with Castro~ and fortunately there are gettingeternal vigilance for American to be more who are willing tomistakes and seeming mistakes) stand up publicly and be countedfor the affection with which on the side of right instead ofAmericans are held in some parts - merely clucking in quiet privateof Latin America such as in sympathy There are lots ofPanama Americans who are not jqst

Race Prejudice friendly and hospitable to forshyAnd its tragic that have eigners but who do heroic workwe

to expoFt the most shameful of with the poor and downtrodden our national sins the stupidity and handicapped of their own which is race prejudice We country and their own city as might as well forget in fact well about any good neighbor polshy - Now there are lots of adult icy until we ourselves become Americans of this type But good neighbors when it comes to out-and-out

But even when we are not prodigal generosity it is the snobbish at home we are seldom teens as a rule whohave to be as spontaneous in our friendli shy given first prize ness other peoples The forshy A teen-agel who has not yetas eign students who come to stuay outgrown the honest ideals of at our universities often get youth will give his time and enshylonely and discouraged because ergy unstintingly and with little they have seemingly no friends thought of consequences This

author has instanceThe Negro in his fight for for seen equality (a fight which should kids doing heroic work with the never have been necessary in the very poor and the orphans-notfirst place) very often feels just throwing money into a colshyalone (though decreasingly so) lection box for them but givingwhen even those who know he is them their time and their love getting a raw deal do nothing working with them face to face at least publicly to help him even as Christ did set things right America has a great heart

Which may be one reason the and many Americans are just as Negro American often makes a spontaneous and natural at better ambassador abroad than showing it as any people anyshyother Americans where As a country however

Friendliness Here we still have some distance to But the trouble with extolling go before this sort of generosity

the hospitality and friendlin~ becomes our national image

CHECK COMPARE SAVE

Turkeys 10to11 LIS

Ready-to-Cook 39~ FIR S T Nancy Vogel

daughter of Mr and Mrs SAVE CASH bullbullbull SHOP AampPLeonard J Vogel of Sacred Heart Parish Fall River and a senior at Starg High last night became the first recishypient of the Bishop Connolly award for the outstanding

girl athlete n a Catholic High School The Clover Club of Fall River sponsored the award

Thomas ~Vhalen

In Noviticlte Brother Thomas Whalen son

of Mr and Mrs Thomas Whalen -8 General Cobb St Taunton and a member of the Sacred Heart Parish has received the religshyious habit of the Erothers of the

SMOKED P()RK SHOUlDERS

SUPER-RIGHT SHORT SHANK 6 TO 8 lBS

PICNICS 1829c

CHICKEN LEe or BREAST 33c

QUARTERS l8

SAVE CASH ON THESEHoly Cross at ceremonies conshyducted at St Joseph Novitiate

Valatie NY 6 POUNDS ofi BREAD ONLY 99c Brother John Donoghue CSC

Provincial Superior of the Broshy Whitl Breadp~~~E~ 4 ~6~~~z99c thers of the Holy Cross of the SAVI 20e - REGULAR 59c - 8 INCHEastern Province announced I p 118 8 OZ 39CJANEthat Brother Thomas was one of App I II PARKER IACHthe 14 candidates who is now starting a canonical year of proshy JANI PARKER - SAVlOe REGULAR 9c

bation for the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross bull hB Ck 1 lB 3 OZ 3ftCSpaRIS ar a e EACH i

Following the reception the parents and friends of Brother Thomas were guests at a lunchshyeon at the novitiate

Total Now 430 NEW YORK (NC)-With the

opening of two more parish schools the number of Catholic elementary schools in the New York archdiocese now totals 430

ATWC)OD OIL CO~~PANY

SHEILL HEATIN4 OILS South SeC] Streets Hyannis Tel HY 81

COMPLleTE

Mortgage Service anywhere on Cape Cod

bull RESIDENTIAL bull COMMEI~CIAL

bull CONSTRUCTION bull SEASONAL

Call EX 8-2266

Bass ~iver Savings Bank

SOUTH YARMOUTH Hyannis - Dennis Port

Yarmouth Plaza

Special Donut and Coffee SoleI All THIS weEKI

PLAIN SUGARED CJlNNAMON OR COMBINATION

2 PKGS 4ftltJane Parker Donuts 29cR~~ Of 12

I E 5 ON ON SAVE 4c B~~S SAV 1 c B3~S MILO AND MRLOW COFfil

Eight OClock ~A~ 69c-3 IJ~G 198 RICH FULLmiddotBOOleo

Red Circle CoHee ~A~ 71 c-3 B~G204 VIGOROUS ANO WINEY

lokar Coffe ~A~ 73c-3 B~G210 rice shown In thl ud guiltnteed tlltu Sat Feb

Tobacco products and Items prohibIted by Iaw eKempt from Plaid Stamp Offbullbull amp effective at ALL Aamp Sup Matlcotn thl communll1 and lclnll1

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 11: 02.04.65

bull bull bull bull bull

11 bull

Portugal Bishops Plan University For Country

LISBON (NO) - Portushygals bishops have announcshyed plans to found this nashytions first Catholic Univershysity

They said in a joint pastoral letter issued after their meeting here that there is an imperative need for a Catholic university for the nations conscience They said the university win have greater freedom greater dynamism and greater flexibil shyity than the present state uni versities

The letter said that the govshyernment will help the bishops in founding the new Catholic university

Last Summer Manuel Cardishynal Goncalves Cerejeira of Lisshybon told a meeting studying the foundation of the Catholic Unishyversity that it would be open to both laymen and the clergy and located in Lisbon instead of the older university town of Coimshybra Earlier efforts were made to restore a theological faculty at Coimbra University The facshyultY was closed following the revolution which made Port~gal a republic in1910

Several years agothe cardinal noted that a Church-sponsored university has been a hope of 1Ihe VI has called on individual Cathshy one part of the Mystical Body of many Latill American counshy~oI1uguese bishops for a long olies to become more aware of Christ to another tries and CICOP itself whichtime ~ut that priorities for the world-wide dimensions and seminanes new churche~ pri- needs of the Church mary schools and Catholic Acshytion organization had delayed Today bull bull bull it is absolutely eoncrete plans indispensable that each pers~n

become aware of the true dishymensions of the Church the

Sees Greater Church Pope declared adding Greater awareness will iead to wideningNeed for Laity Role

LAKE CHARLES (NC) - A Louisiana editor predicts the time will come in the 20th censhytury when laymen wi~ domishynate the clergy in many fields

Msgr Alexander O Sigur edshyitor of the Southwest Louisiana Register diocesan newspaper feels in the present age of scishyence and technology Catholic laymen with specialized knowl- edge of law science and other fiElds must of necessity advise the clergy on the many facets of todays society

He pointed out that the layshymens role has made more progshyress since the opening of the Second Vatican Council than in the previous 10 centuries

But because of centuries of tradition there will be problems for some time connected with evolution of the laymans role in the Church he asserted

British Conversions Continue to Decline

LONDON (NC)-The number of converts to Catholicism in England and Wales continues to decline but the Catholic popushylation shows a steady increase according to the 1965 Catholic Directory published here

The known number of adult conversions for 1963 the most recent year for which statistics are available was 12778 This was a decrease of 552 from the previous year which also showed a considerably lower figure than that for 1961

But the Catholic population increased in 1963 by 129500 to 3956500 and the Catholic popshyulation in Scotland rose by 13shy310 to 812460

Foundation Member NEW YORK (NC) - William

G Ryan presidentmiddot of Seton Htn College Greensburg Pa haa been named a corporate member of the FoundationfOr the arts Religion and culture which win hold its fim meetina laue tomonow

THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

HIGH HONOR FOR K of C HEAD Supreme Knight John W McDevitt of the Knights of Columbus invested as a Knigh t Commander of St Gregory at a testimonial banquet in Boston is with left to right AuxiHary Bishop John F Hackett of H~rtford Archbishop Henry J OBrien of Hartford Bishop Charles P GreltfO Qf Ale~andna La Supreme K of C Chaplain and Bishop William J Smith of Pembroke OntarIO NO Photo

Pope Hail~ US Church Mission Work Says Transfe~ of Energies I Most ~onsoling

CHICAGO (NC)-Pope Paul this transfer of energies from unteers who are serving la

of vitality and fuller realization of the meaning of the name Catholic

Nature of Church Pope Paul made his plea in a

message to the second annual conference of the Catholic Inshyter-American Cooperation Proshygram (CICOP)

The Holy Father coupled his appeal for greater awareness of the worldwide nature vf the

Church with high praise for aid rendered in recent years by US Catholics to the Church in Latin America Prellently he said there are 4091 US priests reshyligious and laymen serving there

Greater Understanding I He called us Catholic proshygrams for Latin America a proshyvidential apostolic ~ovement and said they make up one of the most beautiful pages in the history of the Church in the United States

Particularly in light of the Ecumenical Councils constitushytion on the Church he said it iamost consoling to witness

BEFORE YOU BUY-TRY

PARK MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault 67 Middle Street Fairhaven

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICE

lJe singled out for praise US seeks by educational means to promote greater understandingdioceses which have sent 178 of Latin Americas problemsdiocesan priests to mission work

in Latin America US religious among the Catholic millions of the United Statescommunities of men and women

which he said are fulfilling the Urllent Demands engagement they have undershy Pope Paul voiced hope that thetaken of sending a tithe of meeting here would producetheir total memership to Latin many practical results parshyAmerica by 1970 US lay vol~ ticularly a wider and more soshy

licitous collaboration of the Refugee Children United States of America with

the Church in Latin AmericaHONG KONG (NC) - Archshy such as urgent needs dem~ndbishop Joseph Caprio apostolic

internuncio to China opened here for refugee children a new $100000 primary school built by Norris H Trippthe Franciscan Missionary Sisshyters of Our Lady of Sorrows SHEET METAL Mother Leola superior of the J TESER Proporder which has its headquarshy RESIDENTIALters in Beaverton Ore attended

INDUSTRIALthe ceremony COMMERCIAL

253 Cedar St New Bedford WY 3-3222 Montie Plumbing amp

Heating Co Inc

Counci~s Effects Years Away

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The universal effects of the Second Vatican Council will not be recshyognized completely for years to come James Francis Cardinal McIntyre told 2200 Holy Name men here in California

It is entirely impossible to estimate at the present time the effects of the council on the thinking of the world the carshydinal said

These effects have penetrated deeply into the spiritual life of all people not only of the Church alone he told a Holy Name Union Communion breakshy

fast One index of its effects is the

attention the council has comshymanded in the press of the world the cardinal said

Names Two Priests To Federal Board

NEW YOItK (NC) - T w bull priests are on the 30-niember board of directors of the new Sex Information and Education Council of the United Stat~

(SIECUS) formed to foster im- proved study and education oa the role of sex

TheYlre Father George Hag- maier CSP of the Paulist In- stitute for Religious Researc~ and Father John L Thomas SJ St Louis (Mo) University soci ologist

The executive director of the council is Dr Mary Steichen Calderone former medical dishyrector of the Planned Parentshyhood Federationand its presishyident is Wallace C Fulton formshyer presidtDt of the National Coundl on Family Relations

Whites Farm Dairy SPECIAL MilK

From Our Own Tested Herd

Acushnet Mass WY 3-4457 bull Special Milk bull Homogenized Vito 0 Milk bull Buttermilk bull Tropicana Orange Juice bull Coffee and Choc Milk bull Eggs - Butter

FIVE CONVENIENT OFFICES- -TOSERVE YOUReg Master Plumber 2930

GEORGE M MONTlE ONE-STOP BANKING Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET FIRSTmiddotMACHImiddotNISTS Fall ~River OS 5-7497 NATIONAL BAN Ilt

OF TAUNTON Norton W MaIn St-Raynham Rte 44-Taunton Main St

North Dighton Spring St-North Easton Main St_ w H RILEY amp SO~J Inc Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

CITIES SERVICE bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnmbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullDISTRIBUTORS

Gasoline i F L COLLINS amp SONS i Fuel and Range INCORPORATED 1937

OILS bull

GENERAL (ONTRAOORS5bullOIL BURNERS

For prompt delivery 5 and ENGINEERS 5amp Day amp Night Service

bull JAMES H COLLINS CE Pres G E BOILER BURNER UNITS bull Registered Civil and Structural Engineer bull

Rural Bottled Gas Se~ Member National Society Professional Engineers

61 COHANNET ST FRANCIS L COLLINS JR Treas = TAUNTON bull THOMAS Ie COLLINS Secy bull

Attteboro - No Attlebor~ middot =ACADEMY BUILDING FALL RIVER MASS Taunto1

-bullbull

bull 12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Humphreymiddot Becker Write Novels of Reminiscence

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Both William Humphreys The Ordways (Knopf

$595) and Stephen Beckers A Covenant with Death (Athshyeneum $450) are novels of reminiscence Both are laid in the Southwest the former in Texas the latter in an unshyidentified state The narrashytor in the Ordway book is for the most part telling what happened to his greatshygrandparents and his grandparshyents in the Civil War period and at the tum of the century In the Becker book the narrator is in his seventies recalling Ii decisive expeshyrience in his oWn life when he was 29 back in 1923 If there are similarities between the works there are also differences and they are very great

Mr Beckers novel is a Book of-the-Month Club middotselection has already been bought by a movie company for a vast sum and unshydoubtedly will be a roaring popshyular success Mr Humphreys novel will probably have far fewer readers and will bring its author far less money But it is by all odds and in every reshyIJPect the better book

Long-Winded It has one fault that of being

long-winded and at times meandering I just wanted to hear the same old things over and over again the narrator -of The Qrdways says at one point It is evidently presumed that the reader has the same desire and that he will not object to lengthy digressions But repetition and extended parenthetical exercises do become tiring even if as in ~is instance the writing is of a high order

1$ The Ordways really a novel in the Strict sense The pook cOritillns a notice reading A portion of Part One in some- what different form first apshypeared in The Saturday Evening Post

It is quite true that the first seetion could stand alone that the second and third sections could form a story by themshyselves and that only the fourth section depends for intelligibility on what has gone before Noneshytheless there is unity here if not the tight construction of the most effective novel

Family Lore Mr Ordway begins by describshy

ing graveyard working days in the hamlet of Mabry near the town of Clarksville in eastern Texas On that day occurring once a year the descendants or suniivors of those burled in the Mabry cemetery come together to set the place to rights

middotAs they do so they rec~ the histories of the dead and thus the family lore is passed on from generation to generation But it is more than family lore which is conveyed the countrys past is reconstructed and the making of the present

The narrator a boy in the 1930s learns of two decisive episodes in his own family One has to do with Thomas and Ella Ordway who were Tennessee people until 1863 Thomas was an infantryman was horribly wounded and disabled in the batshytle of Shiloh and would have died or at least have been lost to his famIly had it not been for his wifes valor The narrative of her recovering him ann bringshying him back to a ~blance of life is harrowing

Journey to Texas But somethinamp more harrowshy

ing is still to come the account of their six months journey in a wagon drawn by oxen from Tennessee to Texas in the hope of beginning a new and better life The reader not only follows this arduous exodus but makes and suffers it and is haunted by it thereafter

This portion of the book is a storY complete in itself dramatshyic pathetic comic packed with lively incidents and colorful characters some heroic some corrupt some rascally all disshytinctive and engaging

Occasionally the side excurshysions pall a bit as in the depicshytion of stump speaking by polit shyical candidates or of life with a small shabby traveling circus Yet each of these sideshows has something to contribute to the pictUre of emerging Texas

Acute Observations

Mr Humphrey writes extremeshyly well a little less fancily as the book progresses but always vivshyidly and with plentymiddot of power for the high moments His peoshyple are nicely differentiated and come memorably to life He has many acute observations and even authentic wisdom to disshypense and this he does neatly His book rings with truth about human nature and is the work of a highly gifted and skillful artist

Mr Beekers A Covenant with Death on the other hand strikes me as contrJved empty and often obnoxiousmiddot Its nub is a legal stickler What is to be dQne with a man who is convicted of m~rger bought +c the gallows there Gki1ls~e hangman and then is cleareu of the first kill shying ~is poser ismiddot put to the 29shy

year~old judge Ben Lewis He solyes Wby niakiIig law and when confronted with this puzshyzler solves as well a key probshylent in his personal life At one and the same time he becomes at last a real judge and a real man

Precise 3udgment

Or so we are asked to believe Lewis says of himself I passed the crisis of adolescence at the ludicrous age of 29 bull bull bull I was swollen with garbage and bittershyness My own ego was monshystrous mainly because I had never done anything for anyone and could justify my own useshylessness only by assuming that the world was not worth my energies This is a precise judgment

The trouble is that the book is swollen with garbage and bitterness as well as sophistry

Young Lewis conversations with his mother for example They irk by their pretentiousness and they disgust with their obscenishyties The youngmiddot judge is thorshyoughly sophomQric and we are asked to credit his sudden leap into maturity We are asked too much

It is with ill grace that the author scorns small town folk for their prurience It is just this to which most of his book apshypeals When he sneers that Soledad City our wholesome middle-class American town would be lined up three deep for good seats at a murder trial with sensational sexual aspects he apparently forgets that the predictably huge sales of his novel will be in large part to people attracted by itligamineaa

3AMES OGARA

PauiSft CElnter Lists Spe(d~er

James OGara editor of Comshyrronweai magazinEl will be guest speaker in the Christian Culture Series at the Paulist Ce-nter in Boston on Wednesday evening Feb 17 on the topic The Role and Future of Cathshyolic Education

Mr OGara has written numshyerous articles for leading Cathshyolic magazines in middotthis country end Europe and has appeared on many religiow television programs of the National Counshycil Of Catholic Men

Rev Andrew Greeley sociolshyogist and author of many books on social subjects will join Mr O-Gara in the discussion

Monsignor Francis 3 Lally editor of the Pilot will be pr0shy

gram moderator

Deplores Agtncies Poverty Appoach

CHICAGO (NC) -- Catholic charity and welfareillgencies and institutions must drop thebusishyness as usual appreach and get into the actual aIl~na of povshyerty a National Conference of Catholic Charities Dleeting here in Illinois was told

The surge of natilmal concern about poverty is one of the most dramatic and compelling moveshyments in our day rather Robshyert Monticello of DEltroit chairshyman of the conferences program committee told assembled social work executives

His views were echoed by Msgr Raymond 3 Gallagher secretary of the comerence who said that personal service to families and individuals among the poor must be a coriunitment each of us makes dailly

CENTIER Paint and Wldlpaper

Dupont PClint

iiP cor Middle St

422 6lcush Ave

~Qc=t~ New Bedford ~ARKING

Rear of Store

ProtEct What You Hav~

McGO~VAN Insurance J~gency

TEL MYrtle ~1middot8231

188 NORTH MAIN $TREET NORTH ATTU8ORO

Beggars for All the Missions

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen DO

rn the mail last week a package arrived containing several hundred printed and self-addressed envelopes from various begshyging organizations in the United States The good woman who sent the package admitted being neither rich nor comfortable and yet she was flooded with appeals She wanted to know how she became a victim of this deluge The answer is that she is on a mailing list There are hundreds of mailing lists for sale in the United States These can be bought for various amounts depending on the number and quality of the names listed The good woman who wrote us was on at least one of these lists

Never before has it been brought home to us with Such impact how swamped our faithful are with appeals It grieves DB

that we too are beggars but we find some consolation in the fact that the Holy Fathers Society for the Propagation of the Faith has never used such mailing lists

This incident highlightsmiddot an urgent need that the Vatican Council must recognize that of co-ordinating appeals for all these really worthwhile causes especially those of misshysionaries Pius XI said that the method by which each missionary group solicited only for itself did not provide an even distribution of help Some can barely survive others have investments in Wall Street How to know who out of the hundreds who beg are most deservng is not only difficult but almost impossible

We have never liked begging In fact there is too much inshysistence on money in the Church tOday We would like to be unshackled from our tin cup and not add to this confusion But this is our duty Why 1 Because the Holy Father has asked us to be his beggars in the United States for -all the missions of tlie world 2 Becanse it is the glory of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith not to helf) one order or society of the world but the entire world (As a matter of fact 88middot per cent of the appeals in the above-mentioned package received soDie aid from The Society for the Propagation of the Faith) 3 Because being under the direction of the Holy Father The Society for the Propagation of the Faith does not invest any of yoUrmiddot alms Every eent Is distributed by the Holy Father each year The world Is too poor So fOldve us

Oh yes the lady who sent us the package wrote I could not keep 240 missionary appeals because I have not the money Since The -Society for the Propagation of the Faith aids all I send the Holy Father my $100 to be divi4ed as he sees fit

GOD LOVE YOU to Anoafor $5 Here Is Diy poeen valeiI- Une for the poor bullbullbull toMLA for $78 This is whist l diel Ilot spend on eigarettes Somehow I cannot enjoy them auYmore knowing that today 10000 people riD die of ~rntionmiddot

-

Think ahead to Valentines day and order a GOD LOVE YOU medal In classic Florentine gold finish or pure sterling silver this lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of the World is one you would be proud to give or delighted to receive Designed by the world-renouned jeweler Harry Winston and blessed by Bishop Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal may be obtained by sending your request and corresponding offering to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001

$ 2 small sterling silyershy $ 3 small 10k gold filled $ 5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut 01lt ft1Is colUIDn pin your sacrifice to it and maD It te Most Rev Fulton 3 Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York New York 10001 or to your Diocesan Director

Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 368 North Main Street

Fall River Massachusetts

791 PurcIaase Street Betweea

WIUIam bull UnI_ S_

NEW BEDFORD

FIVE CENTS SAVINGS BANK

WE HAVE PLENTY OF MONEY FOR HOME LOANS

If youre buying or building -Ioolc to us CONVENTIONAL GI - FH~ FINANCING

Ca on us anytime aDd talk over your plans

Fathers andmiddot Daughters Will Twirl At Annual Sucordium-Sponsored Hop at SHA Fan River

Dads and daughters win twirl at the annual fathep daughter dance at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River Its scheduled fltgtr 8 tomorrow night in the academy gymshynatorium and is sponsored by the moms and dads and daughters-members of the

SHA Fall River and her team very active Sucordium Club marked its first league debateHomemaker of the year at this season by defeating Case

Holy Family High in New Dartmouth Taunton and PreshyBedford as a result of the annushy vost al Homemaker of Tomorrow test Coyle High was host for a taken by thousands of girls novice tournament of two rounds across the nation is Christian with nine schools competing last Saulnier Shes National Honor weekend and the varsity team Society treasurer and copy edshy last week won three of four iJtor of By Fy Spy the school matches over Bishop Stang paper Bishop Stang was host to Narshy

At Dominican Academy in Fan ragansett League debate last River the top homemaker is week with 12 schools representshyJulia Melvin Senior A president ed each by four man teams Repshysodality vice-prefect and student resenting Stang were John council vice-president Another Golenski Michael Hogan Thomshyfeather in Julias cap is that as Keary and Myles Tillotson shes to represent her school at At the same meeting Bishop the state capitol on Student Feehan was represented by Government Day Francis Detellis Kateri Detellis

Christine Julia and an other Roger Watts and Raymond StafshyDiocesan school winners in the ford They won one debate out homemaker contest are now eli shy of four gible for consideration as state Current Affairs Contest winners Themiddot states highestshy Many Diocesan schools partici shyranking girl will receive a $1500 pated in a current affairs conshyscholarship and will tour Washshy test sponsored by a weekly news ington and New York City this magazine and among top scorers Spring From the state finalists were Janet Gendreau Moniquewill be chosen national winners Boulay and Muriel Raiche at in the homemaking contest and Jesus-Mary and Paula Powersthese girls will have their scholshy Susan Penrose and Mary Kellyarship grants substantially illshy at SIlA Fall River creased Also in the spotlight is 1anice

Benoit of SHA Fall River whosGrac1aatlOIl GOWIl8

received honorable mention for rrs snowy outside but thoughts the Bishop Connolly award preshy

of the seniors at Mt St Mary sented annually to the DioceseAcademy in Fall River are Oft outstanding girl athletethe days of June Theyre curshy Yearbook pictures for Coylerently selecting g r a d u at i 0 Il juniors sophomores and freshshygowns and are making a critical men have been safely taken so survey of ofterings from several another milestone is passed OIl area stores the road to publication

And National Bonot- Society Dominican Academy juniopsmembers have been busy at Sashy and seniors will make a closedcred Hearts Fall River Theyve retreat at the Cenacle Conventwritten to all accredited colleges ill Brighton during their Februshyin the US requesting inforshy ary vacation while the annualmation on admission requireshy school retreat is in progressments and availability of finanshy hOW at Bishop Stangcial aid The gathered informashy The program includes dallytion will augment the guidanee Mass Benediction and confershyfile in the school library ences and retreat masters are

Sevenmiddot new clubs have beeR Rev John OBrien SSCCmiddot andorganized at Tauntons Coyle Rev Andrew Jahn SSCCHigh School They are French An unusual auction was a feashySpanish Stamp and Coin Pep ture of a dance sponsored lastEnglish Literature Chess and weekend by Feehan seniors forPhotography Something theremiddot all their fellow students Eachfor everyone faculty member donated a prize

Four Dominican Academy stushy for the auction including suchdents have passed 120 word tests valuable items as a pass excusingin Gregg shorthand and two a student from detention pershyhave passed 100 word tests On mission to omit a book from anthe bowling scene at DA high outside reading list and a driy scorers include Susan Pacheco ing passAnne Marie FoIster Colleen Auctionmiddot proceeds benefited bullDesrosiers and Patricia Od) shy performance of Leave It tonecky Jane to be produced by the

The junior prom at Bishop Feehan Dramatics Club SundayFeehan High in Attleboro has and Monday Feb 14 and 15been set for Tuesday night April Jeannine Dumont senior class20 In charge ofmiddot arrangements secretary and middotlssistant editor of are Robert Bedard and Carol the school paper at Holy FamilyMiller while committees are al shy High has been accepted at Bosshyready at work on decorations ton College as have classmates e n t e r t a i n men t refreshshy Maureen OBrien Christine Ponshyments tickets and that unher ichtera and John AylwardaIded but all-important chore of Mother McAuley Guild at Mtclean-up St Mary Academy will hold its

annual calendar party WednesshyDebaiioi- Prcmt day night Feb 10 EntertainshyIn the indoor days of Winter ment will reprelC~t each monthdebating holds an honored spot of the year and the decoratedamong extra-curricular activishycakes willbe ~oor prizesties at Diocesan schools At Preshy Class -laeement vost in Fall River the debate

THE ANCHOR-- 13 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Churchmen Favor Johnson School Aid Program

WASHINGTON (NC) shyCatholic and Protestant spokesmen applauded Presishydent Johnsons school aid proposal in a placid Congresshysional bearing where the on~ disagreement came over mi~

technical questions The release from the charged

atmosphere of past hearings w noted all around

A Catholic spokesman smilin~

ly commented that it was a relief not to fear getting out of the

Vour nearescmall box i$ Q Firsf Ilfderal branch office that open 24 hours $ day to make $(lving easy for you No traffic nO parking no leather problem~

Withdrawals ate just as implt taY~ngs paymencS

bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull r fRlE o~middottymiddotmiddot ~ ubullbullh coupon 7bullbull~ trti 0middot

team was victorious over Mt St Marys and Bishop Stang in Narshyragansett League debate but lost to SHA Fall River The varisity also met Coyle during the past week

Mt st Marys debate record stands at 2-2 with Anne Browshynell Linda Mello Susan Jenkinshyson and Nancy Curran defending their school in Narragansett

Tomorrows the day of reckonshying at SHA Fall River Not only will report cards be distributed but a list of all seniorsand their placement in middottheir class for the past four years will be published

Fifteen seniors It DA partici shypated in a French Listening Comprehension Test on Tuesday This supplementary test is ofshyfered by the eollege entrance

PREVOST SCHOLARS High scorers in National Merit Scholarship Examinations at Prevost High School Fall River are Gerard Gltgtu~et left and Paul Nowak

tests in addition to the French Written exams come in March

Also at Feehan where report cards will come tomorrow high honors will be achieved by those with an average of 90 or better honors by those earning 85 or better and honorable mention by those with grades of 80 01 better

Bishop Stang mathematiciana placed first ill the Notre Dame Math Meet held last week at Cardinal Cushing High in South Boston Eighteen schools com~

peted and Stang won by n points Responsible for the vieshytory were John Keavy Paul Roy John De Ciccio Raymond Desrosiers and Alan Roskiewiez Top individual scorer was John DeCiccio

Best Girl Athlete Senior Nancy Vogel of Bishop Stang High School received the Bishop Connolly Award for the best girl athlete of Fall River area Diocesan high schools at a ceremony held last night at Whites restaurant Nancy as shining a star schoshylastically as athletically plays hockey basketball and volley~ ball at the North Dartmouth school She will be the first reshycipient of what is to become an

Influence Declining MADRID (NC)-Castroist inshy

fluence among young people in Latin Ameriea has declined the past two years Luis Garcia Arishyas professor of international law at the University of Saragossa here in Spain said on his return from a tour of Latin America Thursday Feb 1amp

SCHOOL Mainte~ance suppr~

SWEEPERS SOAPS DISINFECTANTS

FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

DAHILL CO 1886 PURCHASE STREET

annual award made by the FaD River Clover Club Also honored at last nights dinner-dance WBI Coach Carlin Lynch of 11M Stang Spartans

Forty Hours devotion was celshyebrated for the first time at Bishop Feehan high scbool starting Sunday and ending Tuesday Seniors Eileen Pashyquette Mary Duffy Nancy Clegg and Susall Ouelle~te aided Sister Mary Kateri of Feehan home economics department III making a cope and humeral veil used for the first time at the ceremonies

And Feehanites celebrated terms end by viewing A Raisin in the Sun

bullbullbullbullbullbull

hearing room alive The major Protestant spokesmen described the bill as an instrument of recshyonciliation Con g res smiddotm e a praised the compromises they saw being made by all sid~

church groups and educators -The President has proposed bull

$12 billion program to improve elementary and secondary schooling from poverty-strickea families

A total of $1 billion wouldge to public school districts in lowshyincome areas Additionally the proposal would spend $100 milshylion for textbooks for all school children and school libraries and another $100 million to create bull system of public-priva~commushynity educational centers to offer cultural enrichment and specitl eourses to all school ehildren

Pittsburgh School Enroll~ent Down

PITSBURGH (NC) - Enroll shyment in the Pittsburgh diocellMl Catholic school system has dro~ ped by 40 pupils Msgr John B McDowell superintendent ball reported

The monsignor said the sliglll drop has been preceded by fo_ years of leveling oft in enrol) ment figures because of enforeet gradual cuts in class size

Since 1960 he said there _ been an increase of only 24 pushypils in the total number of stushydents Elementary and seconda schools last June tallied 129531 pupils a drop of 40 he said

bullbullbullFREEKI _forbullbull~to bull ~-~----- shy _ StampMo _ middot----1

City_middot bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbulliibullbullbullbullbullbullbull WE pAY POSTAGa

(tree po5t-pald~Clddd i-velop ady to mall

FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND lOAN ASSOCIATION

OF FALL RIVER Home OHice 1 North Main St Fall River

Somerset OHice 149 GAR Highway Rte 6 League bouts The team meets exam board and consists of Both Offices Open Friday Evenings until INEW BEDFORDBishop Cassidy of TauntOn Wedshy questions and answers concernshy Sonterset Drive-In Window Open Mon-Thurs til 4 nesday Feb 10 ing subject matter on tape At WY 3-3786 Susan Nunes heads debate 111amp Feeha aiYdentll 1ook Germaa

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Stresses ilroad beep Gulf Between Two Generafions

By John J Kane Ph D What is your opinion of secretive sons and daughters

()f today Our married son and daughter never tell us anyshything Friends and strangers knew they bought a new home before we did My daughters husband knows all the ansshywers and wants no advice from anyone My son is afraid of his wife and she makes all decisions They ask us to visit but hurt our feelshyings when we do by what they say We were raised to reshyspect our elders and ask their advice

You r letter Jean does pose some justifiable complaints But it also seems to make some unshyreasonable deshy

mands Furthershymore amusingshy1y enough you conclude that you were reared to respect your elders and intimate your chil shydren werent If so whom can you blame

I dont know the reason why your children failed to inform you of their intentions to purshyehase a home But I do have some suspicions Do you have a tendency to be critical about what they buy Sometimes parshyents do

Tremendous Inflation Y-oungsters and parents both

make a certain type of mistake when it comes to purchasing of such things as homes cars or expensive appliances So m e young marrieds try to begin at a level their parents only achieved after 10 or 15 years of married life

But some parents do not seem to realize that inflation has been tremendous in the last 20 years When they hear a son or daughshyter is about to buy it home for 20 or 25 thousand dollars they are horrified They remember they paid perhaps 6 8 or 10

thousand dollars when they bought

They also forget credit is a bit easier than in the past that F BA and even the GI Bill help young people today and they may not even have existed when they were shopping for a house Longer te~ mortgages are possible today and lower down payments These of course do mean more interest

Coinmon CourteSY In other words parents should

Dot use the yardstick of economshyic conditions when they were young for the youth of today When they state perhaps with heated emphasis Why your father and I paid 10 thousand for a home the children are understandably irritated

But once having made their decisions com m 0 n courtesy would seem to demand tpat parshyents be told before strangers or at least as soon as friends Your sense -of hurt feelings here is quite understandable

Your complaint that your sons wife makes all the decisions may be true If so I agree that you have reared a Milquetoast But

is it true Are you actually cershytain or are you imagining someshything Are you really sayingshyand I frankly fear youare-that your son listens to his wife more than he listens to you

Mother-in-Law Role Being a mother-in-law is not

an easy role in Anierican soClshyety and many of the stupid

at least not if you wish to be a successful parent

Because most parents do love their children they are eager to help them They feel that their years of experience give them an advantage and this advantage they would extend to their chil shydren

At times this is true At times it is not The gulf between genshyerations is broad and deep Life has changed greatly in the space of one generation and the bench marks of the past may be unshysuitable today There are certain areas of living in which children may have better ideas than their parents Be prepared to admit as much

But within those areas where the maturity and experience of parents can be helpful advice can be given when not reshyquested only indirectly and cautiously Young marrieds misshyconstrue it as an effort to domshyinate which they reject Pershyhaps you can recall when you too felt this way

But it is indeed sad if they hurt your feelings when you do visit them You have not enshylarged on this so it is impossible to determine just what is said or done that annoys you Assuming you are making a correct judgshyment it is at the very least a breach of hospitality

Many of the inter-generational and in-laws problems of today are the result of social changes As one grows older it is less and less easy to change to adopt ways of doing and thinkshying After all if one succeeded under one system there is little motivation to alter it

Life Easier But conditions have changed

and to paraphrase a commercial this is the Pepsi generationbull Today boys and girls get married even wher the boy is unemshyployed This is scarcely advisable but somemake it Boys marry while still in college and their wives work to help put them through This would have been unthinkable 40 years ago

One of the really amazing changes is the use of long term credit The proud boast of years ago was that one didnt owe any money If you said this today youngsters would view you with open amazement and quietly conclude your credit was no good

No doubt some of this is overshydone and can bring about tragic results But if used intelligently it can make life somewhat easier perhaps more pleasant than in the past

These are only a few of the changes that could be listed a complete litany of them would be impossible Now this doesnt mean that parents are old fogeys that their counsel is useshyless It does mean that they must try tomiddot understand their married children better than some do

And incidentally because of these sweeping changes it is more difficult than it was But it isnt impossible an4 when donepays off in much better relationships

Anti-Smut Effort NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Loushy

isiana Knights of Columbus have jokes ]lake it even more diffi- launched a public information cult But parents after having campaign to combat what one reared their children to the best official t e r m e d indifference of their ability must let them go stemming from lack of knowlshyon their own You cannot keep edge about the growing traffic them tied to your apron strings in obscene literature

PRINCE OF THE CHURCH Americas new cardin~l recelyes congratulations from an old friend as Archbishop Patrlck A OBoyle of Washington felicitatesmiddot Lawrence Cardmal Shehan Archbishop of Baltimore on his elevation to the College of Cardinals by Pope Paul vi NC Photo

~Glassand Wire Tiny Foulr-Bell Chime in Bay State Church

Producing Soundof Big Heavy Metal WALTHAM (N C) - The string-shaped length of glass

church-bell of the future may which may be up to a foot i~ bE a ht~le thing of glass and length and a tiny hammer to Wire weighm~ about two grams produce the proper vibrations but reproducmg the sound of These vibrations are converted cast-metal constructions weigh- into an electronic signal which ing more than a ton ~asses through an amplifier is

j Pope Emphasizes Import of Hymns

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul in an audience for more han 1000 priests participating in a convention on pastoral lit shyurgy emphasized the key role of hymn-singing in the liturgy

We are not in a hurry he said

We must raise up a new peoshyple who learn to pray as the Church now prescribes

One of the prescriptions which I believe to be most influshyential and most necessary is singing

The Pope said that hymns inshycluding popular ones lift the soul and nourish it with religious sentiments

Illinois School Joins Expanding ETV Plan

MORTON (NC)-A parochial school here in Dlinois has served as pilot school in a historic edushyeational television experiment

Blessed Sacrament School reshyceived the first experimental transmission of v ide 0 tap e d courses in color from a high freshyquency monidirectional terminal

A 120-foot tower atop the school received signals from a tower on the Bradley University campus 10 miles away Bradley Coordinator Philip Weinburg said he expects an ETV program to be operational in the 1965-66 school year

The Catholic school tower will remain as a permanent inshystallation to serve both as an ETV booster station with a 15shymile radius and a receiver for educational programs in the school next Fall

Changes in Mass EDINBURGH (NC) - Scots

Catholics are busily preparing for the introduction of English and Gaelic into the Mass on March 1 the first Sunday in Lent

bull HYANNIS bull HARWICH PORT bull ~olri YAAMOUTH

--- shy

funeral Service

DoANmiddotSpoundALmiddotAMtS INCOIlPOItATtiD

Glassblower Gerhard B Finkshybeiner of Brandeis University here in Mass lpoundlas installed for the first time in the United States a set of the tiny bells in St Susanna church in Dedham named for the t~tula church in ~ome of ~ostOIl s Richardmiddot Carshydinal Cushmg

Finkbeiner whose small glass bells already al~e making kingshysiZed sounds in 10 churches in Germany and ]~rance has proshyduced a four-bell chime for the Dedham church encased in a metal cabinet only two feet long and weighing a mere 40 pounds In cast metal equivalent sotmdshyproducers would occupy a goodshysized belfry and weigh aboUt 10000 pounds Finbeiner envishysions his discovery as destined for churches which cannot afford regular bells

The new-style bells look like nothing so much as the fa~iliar vacuum tubes found in any nonshytransistor radio but they proshyduce a never-changing high quality sound which is fully comparable to the metallic clang

of the old-fashioned bell shy

Inside each vacuum tube in Finkbeiners system there is a

MON~~GHAN

ACCEF-TANCE CQIRP

JHOMAS F MONAGHAN JR

Trecisurer

142 SECOND STREET

OSborne 5-7856

FALL RIVER

Increased 100000 times and comes out through a ~pecial speaker whose sound most exshyperts cannot tell from a metallic ben

The sound of a heavy metallic bell is one of the most complex of all musical sounds according to Finbeiner but he has been able to dUJlicat~ it through parshyallel ~Udi~ in glassblowing electronics and ~acuum techshyniques

BARDAHL MAKES YOUR

CAR RUN BEnER tAt New Car Dealers and Service Stations

Everywhere -I

With Safety at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK

115 WILLIAM sr NEW BEDFORD MASS

WEBB OIL (OMPANY TEXACO FUEL ()IL$

DOMESTIC amp HFAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS

Sales~SetYce-lnstaDtjon MAINO~FICE~JO ~RFEEmiddot sTREETmiddotfAll ~IVER

Phone OS 5-7484

11

1S --

Views of New Ho~Y TrinitYmiddotmiddot-C-h-~-rc-h-I-W-e-s-t-~-I-a-li-i-ac-h-middotmiddotmiddotI

-

I I

16 THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

Says Pope John Left Cha lIenge To Catholicsmiddot

NORTH PALM BEACH (NC) - Pope John XXIII left Catholics with a chalshylenge to meet the world Bishop Coleman F Carroll of Miami said here

Bishop Carroll said Pope John dared Catholics to meet other Christians and non-Christians and to discuss our common problems and seek by discussion a solution to these problems

This challenge cannot be met by the pope alone or by the bishops and priests alone he said It must be met by all inshycluding-indeed especially-the laymen

-He said laymen must be propshy

erly prepared for this task through study training and spirshyitual preparation In this conshynection he called a closed spirshyitual retreat an absolute must for the lay person

Bishop Carroll spoke to memshybers of the Our Lady of Florida Retreat League at a dinner in his honor at the Passionist Retreat House here

PrelWtes Sc~~dlJ(e

US~ ~f VeCrulall ROME (NC)-The Italian lanshy

guage will be used in Mass throughout I t a I y beginning March 7 the first Sunday of Lent

The Italian Bishops Commitshytee on the Liturgy in announcshying the change specified that the Italian language would be used in Masses on Sundays and holy days and at all Masses attended by a substantial number of the faithful

The parts of the Mass to be said in Italian are the following the Epistle Gospel acclamations salutations and dialogues (inshycluding the prayers at the foot of the altar and the dialogue preshyceding the Preface) the Kyrie Gloria Creed Sanctus-Benedicshytus and Agnus Dei themiddot Patermiddot Noster with its introduction and the formula for the Communion

Peloquin Chorale Televises Hymns

NEW YORK (NC)-Hymns -Yesterday and Today featurshyipg C Alexander Peloquin and members of his popular Peloquin Chorale will be telecast Feb 14 from 1 to 130 PM EST over the ABC-TV network

The latest program in the seshyries Directions 65 - a Catholic Perspective produced by the National Council of Catholic Men and the ABC public affairs department was written by Peloquin and traces the develshyopment of hymnody from the Te Deum of the 4th century to the works of contemporary composers

Stresses Doctrines Substance Remains

DAVENPORT (NC) -Bishop Ralph L Hayes of Davenport adshymonished an interfaith meeting here in Iowa against expecting changes in Catholic doctrine

The (Second Vatican) Counshycil may change the manner of presentation of doctrines but not their substance he said pointing to the liturgy as an exshyample of such a change

We must admit bigotry and misunderstanding on both sides But followers of Christ have Scripture devotion to the Holy Spirit and devotion to Christ in common Why not talk about the things on which we agree he asked

Sisters of Mercy General Asks Personal ST LOUIS (NC)-Weve got

to develop the Sister in depth Thats what the times call for said the mother general of the 7300 American nuns of the Sisshyters of Mercy of the Union

Mother Mary Regina Cunningshyham ending her first six-year term as the head of the widely known teaching social work and hospital nuns was talking about what the Sisters of Mercy are doing to bring themselves fully up to the times

In St Louis Mo to meet with the superiors of the nine Mercy provinces Mother Regina talked about the main vehicle she and her colleagues hope will achieve the transformation

This is the year in the commu- nity for chapter meetings and general meetings of the nuns in

each of the provinces climaxed by a meeting of the general chapter at the orders mothershyhoupse in Bethesda Md she said

Changing Church Results will be ~olnown in Aushy

gust and Mother Regina hopes that they will show her commushynity to be in line with the mind of a rapidly changing Church in the midst of an even faster movshying world

She predicted tlat the chapshyters would have some surprises not only in the deisions but in the way they are organized to give a more representative view of all the Sisters in the order

If one overall phrase had to sum up what Mother Regina and the other planners are looking for in the Mere chapters it

would be personal responsibil shyity she said

A Sister has to have the reshysponsibility to make judgments for herself said the mother general Her superiors have to give her the responsibility to achieve her own role She has to make the decision to take the risks

~And then of course be ready to pay the price for her decishysion said Mother Regina

In Updated Sense Weve gone beyond the day

Papal Count BALTIMORE (NC) - Thomas

W Pangborn a Hagerstown (Md) industrialist and philanshythropist has been named a papal count by Pope Paul

Responsibility of always being safe Some peoshyple want to be sure to have the answer before they move But sometimes that meant they never moved at all she observed

Developing a Sister in depth will mean a lot of things espeshycially an updated sense of her apostolate and the way she works at it For the Mercy nuns in the U S Central and Latin America and in the West Indies it will mean a lot of littie things Mother Regina hinted

Changes might relax regulashytions about home visits dining with others attending night meetings and cultural affairs or traveling with companions

Mother Regina said that we have to plan for more contact with the laity and for more edushycation to understand each other shy

a

lYonderful Meatsbullbullbull Anoth~r Big Reasll Why zltI ~III I bull STAYING ~c~ Z ~

with FIRST NATIONAL it

l~middotmiddotsowll ItmiddotI

IIIIr-All vlu

FACE RUMIP Fine Grained Texture shy

Heavy Steer Beef for Hearty Eating LB

The Perfect Roast for large Families

ROASTL854CAITCHBONE Same [ow Self-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vidnily rNe Reserve Iie Right to Limit Quantitietl

-

I The Parish Parade I SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO bull

Holy Name Society members will receive corporate Communshyion at 7 oclock Mass Sunday morning Feb 14 The unit plans a Valentine dance and supper from 7 to 12 Saturday night Feb 13 in the Elks auditorium on Church Street SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs John DeBettenshycourt president Mrs Arnold Muckerheid vice-president Mrs Nelson J DeBettencourt Jr treasurer Mrs Charles Davis secretary

For the Holy Name SOGiety James Ferreira is president supshyported by Freeman Willoughby vice-president Alfred Metell treasurer Anthony Rebello secshyretary The units next meeting will be Sunday Feb 14 at the parish hall OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a Masquerade Ball Friday night Feb 26 at Wimpys resshytaurantr Osterville Mrs James E Murphy is chairman ST JOSEPH ATTLEBORO

The CYO will sponsor a dance Saturday night Feb 20 with enshytertainment by Mickey Chagnon and the Rivieras Chairmen for the unit include Carolee Desshyrochers membership Judy Roy spiritual Claudette Ouimet culshytural Sue Reynolds publicity Claire Piette social Don Fisher recreational BLESSED SACRAMENT FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will present a fashion fair at an open meeting to be held Wedshynesday Feb 17 in the church basement Planned for April are a rummage sale and a whist party ST JEAN BAPTISTE FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women announces a ham and basket whist party for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 in the lower church hall In charge will be Mrs Napoleon Picard and Mrs Eugene Gagnon aided by a large committee ST STANISLAUS FALL RIVER

Civics Club members of the parochial school will deliver pastry to nursing home patients for Valentines Day Other projshyects include collecting Christmas cards for missionaries and shovshyelling snow to augment the club treasury OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION OSTERVILLE

Mr and Mrs William Dacey will be co-chairmen of a preshyLenten dance to be held Friday night Feb 19 at Wimpys restaushyrant in Osterville under sponsorshyship of the Womens Guild The program will include a buffef and dancing from 9 to to ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

Mrs Lionel J Dulude presishydent of the Sacred Hearts Assoshyciation requests all ladies of the unit who have First Friday Adoration to check their asshysigned times in order that the full quota will be present at all hours

Corporate Communion for members will be held on Sunday at the 815 Mass and the regushylar meeting will be held the same evening at 730 in the Church Hall

The Penny Sale scheduled for Feb 20 will be discussed atthis meeting ST JOSEPH FALLRIVER

The annual mid-Winter Gala is set for Saturday night at Venus de Milo restaurant A buffet supper from 630 to 830 will be followed by dancing a parish reunion and awarding of prizes

ST JOAN OF ARC ORLEANS

Forthcoming events for the Womens Guild include penny sales this month April and next November socials in March and June and Summer fairs in July and August A ham and bean supper is ~cheduled for May ST JAMES NEW BEDFORD

middotMsgr Noon Circle plans a potluck supper for members and their guests Saturday night Feb 20 OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION NEW BEDFORD

Holy Name Society officers inshyclude Severo G Alfama presishydent James P Gonsalves and John Monteiro vice-president Antonio Rocha treasurer John Soares secretary ST GEORGE WESTPORT

Womens Guild members will form the congregation at the TV Mass to be broadcast on channel 6 at 10 Sunday morning Feb 7 Participants will meet at the parish school hall at 9 to travel to New Bedford ST JOHN BAPTIST NEW BEDFORD

Parishioners will hold their annual filhoz supper and penny sale at 530 Sunday evening Feb 21 in the cllurch hall Tickshyets are available from officers of church organizations or at the rectory In charge are Gilbert Brazil and George Ladino ST PIUS X SOUTH YARMOUTH

The WQmens Guild will hold a past presidents dinner Monshyday night March 1 at Armands restaurant_ Hyannis NOTRE DAME FALL RIVER

Cubs and Boy Scouts will at shytend a Communion breakfast Sunday Feb 7 following 815 Mass A blue and gold banquet for the Cubs is set for Sunday Feb 28 in the parish hall with Roger Labonte in charge of arshyrangements

The Council of Catholic Women will hold its installation banquet Monday Feb 22 at Whites resshytaurant under the chairmanship of Mrs Paul Ilmais To be seated are Miss Helena Dumont president Mrs Cecile Barnabe frst vice-president Mrs Gershyard DextTaze second vice-presishydent Mrs Richard Perry treasshyurer Mrs Romeo Parent reshycording secretary Mrs Roger Langlois corresponding secreshytary

The third in a series of cake sales will follow all Masses this Sunday in the lower church Mrs Ferdnand Letendre chairman will be aided by Mrs Robert Phenixco-chairman Cakes can be brought to the lower church from 4 to 5 and 630 to s Saturshyday afternoon and evening SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a potluck supper for members at 630 Tuesday night Feb 16 in the parish hall A silent auction will follow the slipper In charge of arrangeshyments is Mrs Mary Pereira chairman aided by Mrs Mary Gagne The council announces a malassada supper and penny sale open to the public from 530 to 7 Sunday night Feb 21 also in the hall Tickets will be available at the door and chairshymen are Mrs Mary Cabeceiras and Mrs Albina Quintill

A regular meeting is set for 730 Friday night Feb 12 in the hall Installation of officers is planned for later in the month ST MATIDEU FALL RIVER 4

A Valentine whist is planned by the Council of Catholic Womshyen for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 at the parish hall Mrs Raymond Antaya is chairman

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan RIver-Thurs Feb 1l96I rr

GIVE VIEWS ON AID Presenting views on federal aid to education to the House Education sub-committee was this panel representing the Catholic school system left to right Msgr William E McManus Chicago superintendent of the largest Ctholic school system in the country Mr Edward McArdle Washington DC who focussed on the parents view of the childs needs as the father of seven children Msgr Freclerck G Hochwalt Director Education Department NCWC and Msgr John B McDowell sushyperintendent of the Pittsburgh diocesan school system NC Photo

bullSays Church Must Live In Wide World~ Cardinal Hits Ignorance of Our Neighbor

CHICAGO (NC)-An Amerishycan prelate prominent in the Churchs work for Latin Amershyica has told US Catholics there is no excuse for our ignorance of our neighbors the nations of Central and South America

Archbishop Paul L Hallinan of Atlanta chairman of the subshycommittee for inter-American cooperation of the US Bishops Committee for Latin America in a message to the second annual conference of the Catholic IntershyAmerican Cooperation Program SClid the Church today lives in a new world but it must preshypare to live in a wide world

Miles Are Nothing Catholics in tpe United States

with a strong cultural and comshymercial bridge to Europe find Africa a puzzle and Asia an Orshyiental mystery Strangest of all is our ignorance of our own neighbors the nations of Central

E~ual Treatment JERSEY CITY (NC)-Hudson

County parishes here in New Jersey are joining in a countyshywide interfaith appeal seeking pledges of fair housing practices

~T FRANCIS XAVIER IIYANNIS

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a penny sale at 8 Tuesday right Feb 9 in the parish hall A Communion breakfast and fashion show are on the units Spring schedule

ST JOHN BAPTIST CENTRAL VILLAGE

A housewares demonstraticm will follow an open meeting scheduled by the Womens Guild for 8 Thursday night Feb 11 in the church hall In charge of refreshments will be Mrs Matil shyda Shelter Miss Margaret Shay and Miss May Taggart The unit plans a Valentine whist for 3 Saturday night Feb 13 also in the church hall on Main Road Miss Edith Kirby and Mrs Louise Vieira are chairmen ST JOHN POCASSET

The Womens Guild announces a penny sale for Friday Feb 12 Mrs Sprague Spooner will be chairman The units next meetshying will feature slides and a talk by Col Eugene S Clark on the early history of Marthas Vineshyyard It will be held Tuesd~

Feb 16

and South America he deshyclared

The ~rchbishop said 60 years ago there was an excuse-travel communications and cultural knowledge were in their inshylancy But now miles are nothshying since Pope John XXIII brought his message of unity to the world he averred adding

Real Import The CICOP meeting brings

bishops priests and laymen of both hemispheres together for a remarkable in-service training period a healthy learn while you work program We know much of Latin American needs both religious economic and culshytural We are helping in our way to repair these shortcomings But we need even more to share

in this Christian fraternity fIIf background common resources and future hopes Only by free easy association with the repshyresentatives of Latin America can we get the real import

ELECTRICAL Contractors~

~ ~ ~ ~

944 County St ~ New Bedford

ecec~c~ccccee~o

C) LOUlUl~S iiffii~ ~ i middotbull EWrIMA ~- shyg l~

ROMEamp I~-

I SHmNES imiddot ~ OF EUROPE iiI bull ampHOLY LAND ~) C~ 1 bull CATBOLIC PROGRAJ 1965 ~)

ALI~~16 ~I CachoIlcTeI Orrlce ~) c~ WASHINGTON CHICAGOIOMI LONDONI CATHOLtC TRAVEL OFFICE FRM ~------------II -~ Dupont Circle Building WashIngton D C 20036 fali ~ ~ j1ii Please send me your free Illustrated booklet describing in ~ iJl detail the wOrldmiddotcovering pilgrimages

C~ Name iI ~IJ Address ~ C_~ CityIloneState 11 =~~~~~_~_~~_~_ft~ftVw ijrv _ii~middotV

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Teen-agers Outstanding For Prodigal Generosity

By Rev Joseph T McGloin S J Several times in this column Ive had some glowing

words to say about our Mexican neighbors to the south about their friendliness and hospitality- and general likeshyableness And certainly its all true These people busy as they are will go out of their of other peoples is that you canway give you their precious easily give the idea you are sell shytime and attention to see ing all your own countrymen that you enjoy your visit to short And this would be the their country When a Mexican furthest thing from my own says Mi casa es su casa My thoughts house is your Because there is great friendli shyhouse - which ness in our country too - in he invariably varying degrees and manifested

middot does-he means in various ways The Mexican is it F r i end s in general more spontaneous strangers even than we and most of us have to shopkeepshy be approached before we give ers youve never our friendship since an initial II e e n before shyness seems to hold us back will introduce Often enough however this

middotyou to the whole shyness is caused by a national family and inshy superiority complex by a fear vite you to hav~ of not being accepted and by

middotdinner wit h the fear of making fools of ourshymiddot them To put it mildly hospital shy selves in a language we dont ity like this would be impossible know In other words humility to forget or to overlook is an esseatial to friendliness and _ Sometimes you wonder as you hospitality Sometimes we have walk the downtown- streets of it Often we dont CHle of our own cities and as you Hospitable People see pe~ple going their own inshy We Americans are sometimessulated ways if it isnt true that afraid to show our real feelingsas a country we have only a -afraid to show for inst~nce

-head while Mexico has a head our sympathy forthe underdogand a heart We usually make up for t~is

Superiority Complex psychologically by cheering on - This feeling grows on - you the hiss favored side at spe~tator when you visit Mexico and have sports when we should be doingthe misfortunE to encounter the it in the causes of racial justiceAmerican tourist who is bent on and equality of opportunity inshyacting like one It is a crying stead shame that so many Americans We are afraid others usuallyhave to show a superiority com- those very loud others will look

middotplex to those they encounter in down on us if we give public middot other countries seeming to feel support to those who need our that no matter where they go it support the little -people the is not they who are the foreignshy least of Christs and our brethshyers but those they encounter ren

All too often these types seem The fact is though that we to despise the customs and lanshy Americans do have a- heart and guage and even the currency of that once we put aside our sillythe countries they visit apparshy ideas that we are too busy to be ently thinking that anyone can hospitable or that others will understand English if you only look on us as soft and foolish if speak louder and that real we are or that we must not goAmerican money will buy anyshy out of way forour foreign~rs thing even respect because we might make a misshy

Worst of all are those wbo take in speaking their languagebring their aura of racial supeshy -then we can be and are just as riority along with them and hospitable and friendly as anymake little effort to hide it It is peoplein the world undoubtedly true that some of Ideals of Youththis patronizing attitude is partly There are many Americansresponsible (along with Castro~ and fortunately there are gettingeternal vigilance for American to be more who are willing tomistakes and seeming mistakes) stand up publicly and be countedfor the affection with which on the side of right instead ofAmericans are held in some parts - merely clucking in quiet privateof Latin America such as in sympathy There are lots ofPanama Americans who are not jqst

Race Prejudice friendly and hospitable to forshyAnd its tragic that have eigners but who do heroic workwe

to expoFt the most shameful of with the poor and downtrodden our national sins the stupidity and handicapped of their own which is race prejudice We country and their own city as might as well forget in fact well about any good neighbor polshy - Now there are lots of adult icy until we ourselves become Americans of this type But good neighbors when it comes to out-and-out

But even when we are not prodigal generosity it is the snobbish at home we are seldom teens as a rule whohave to be as spontaneous in our friendli shy given first prize ness other peoples The forshy A teen-agel who has not yetas eign students who come to stuay outgrown the honest ideals of at our universities often get youth will give his time and enshylonely and discouraged because ergy unstintingly and with little they have seemingly no friends thought of consequences This

author has instanceThe Negro in his fight for for seen equality (a fight which should kids doing heroic work with the never have been necessary in the very poor and the orphans-notfirst place) very often feels just throwing money into a colshyalone (though decreasingly so) lection box for them but givingwhen even those who know he is them their time and their love getting a raw deal do nothing working with them face to face at least publicly to help him even as Christ did set things right America has a great heart

Which may be one reason the and many Americans are just as Negro American often makes a spontaneous and natural at better ambassador abroad than showing it as any people anyshyother Americans where As a country however

Friendliness Here we still have some distance to But the trouble with extolling go before this sort of generosity

the hospitality and friendlin~ becomes our national image

CHECK COMPARE SAVE

Turkeys 10to11 LIS

Ready-to-Cook 39~ FIR S T Nancy Vogel

daughter of Mr and Mrs SAVE CASH bullbullbull SHOP AampPLeonard J Vogel of Sacred Heart Parish Fall River and a senior at Starg High last night became the first recishypient of the Bishop Connolly award for the outstanding

girl athlete n a Catholic High School The Clover Club of Fall River sponsored the award

Thomas ~Vhalen

In Noviticlte Brother Thomas Whalen son

of Mr and Mrs Thomas Whalen -8 General Cobb St Taunton and a member of the Sacred Heart Parish has received the religshyious habit of the Erothers of the

SMOKED P()RK SHOUlDERS

SUPER-RIGHT SHORT SHANK 6 TO 8 lBS

PICNICS 1829c

CHICKEN LEe or BREAST 33c

QUARTERS l8

SAVE CASH ON THESEHoly Cross at ceremonies conshyducted at St Joseph Novitiate

Valatie NY 6 POUNDS ofi BREAD ONLY 99c Brother John Donoghue CSC

Provincial Superior of the Broshy Whitl Breadp~~~E~ 4 ~6~~~z99c thers of the Holy Cross of the SAVI 20e - REGULAR 59c - 8 INCHEastern Province announced I p 118 8 OZ 39CJANEthat Brother Thomas was one of App I II PARKER IACHthe 14 candidates who is now starting a canonical year of proshy JANI PARKER - SAVlOe REGULAR 9c

bation for the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross bull hB Ck 1 lB 3 OZ 3ftCSpaRIS ar a e EACH i

Following the reception the parents and friends of Brother Thomas were guests at a lunchshyeon at the novitiate

Total Now 430 NEW YORK (NC)-With the

opening of two more parish schools the number of Catholic elementary schools in the New York archdiocese now totals 430

ATWC)OD OIL CO~~PANY

SHEILL HEATIN4 OILS South SeC] Streets Hyannis Tel HY 81

COMPLleTE

Mortgage Service anywhere on Cape Cod

bull RESIDENTIAL bull COMMEI~CIAL

bull CONSTRUCTION bull SEASONAL

Call EX 8-2266

Bass ~iver Savings Bank

SOUTH YARMOUTH Hyannis - Dennis Port

Yarmouth Plaza

Special Donut and Coffee SoleI All THIS weEKI

PLAIN SUGARED CJlNNAMON OR COMBINATION

2 PKGS 4ftltJane Parker Donuts 29cR~~ Of 12

I E 5 ON ON SAVE 4c B~~S SAV 1 c B3~S MILO AND MRLOW COFfil

Eight OClock ~A~ 69c-3 IJ~G 198 RICH FULLmiddotBOOleo

Red Circle CoHee ~A~ 71 c-3 B~G204 VIGOROUS ANO WINEY

lokar Coffe ~A~ 73c-3 B~G210 rice shown In thl ud guiltnteed tlltu Sat Feb

Tobacco products and Items prohibIted by Iaw eKempt from Plaid Stamp Offbullbull amp effective at ALL Aamp Sup Matlcotn thl communll1 and lclnll1

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 12: 02.04.65

bull 12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Humphreymiddot Becker Write Novels of Reminiscence

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Both William Humphreys The Ordways (Knopf

$595) and Stephen Beckers A Covenant with Death (Athshyeneum $450) are novels of reminiscence Both are laid in the Southwest the former in Texas the latter in an unshyidentified state The narrashytor in the Ordway book is for the most part telling what happened to his greatshygrandparents and his grandparshyents in the Civil War period and at the tum of the century In the Becker book the narrator is in his seventies recalling Ii decisive expeshyrience in his oWn life when he was 29 back in 1923 If there are similarities between the works there are also differences and they are very great

Mr Beckers novel is a Book of-the-Month Club middotselection has already been bought by a movie company for a vast sum and unshydoubtedly will be a roaring popshyular success Mr Humphreys novel will probably have far fewer readers and will bring its author far less money But it is by all odds and in every reshyIJPect the better book

Long-Winded It has one fault that of being

long-winded and at times meandering I just wanted to hear the same old things over and over again the narrator -of The Qrdways says at one point It is evidently presumed that the reader has the same desire and that he will not object to lengthy digressions But repetition and extended parenthetical exercises do become tiring even if as in ~is instance the writing is of a high order

1$ The Ordways really a novel in the Strict sense The pook cOritillns a notice reading A portion of Part One in some- what different form first apshypeared in The Saturday Evening Post

It is quite true that the first seetion could stand alone that the second and third sections could form a story by themshyselves and that only the fourth section depends for intelligibility on what has gone before Noneshytheless there is unity here if not the tight construction of the most effective novel

Family Lore Mr Ordway begins by describshy

ing graveyard working days in the hamlet of Mabry near the town of Clarksville in eastern Texas On that day occurring once a year the descendants or suniivors of those burled in the Mabry cemetery come together to set the place to rights

middotAs they do so they rec~ the histories of the dead and thus the family lore is passed on from generation to generation But it is more than family lore which is conveyed the countrys past is reconstructed and the making of the present

The narrator a boy in the 1930s learns of two decisive episodes in his own family One has to do with Thomas and Ella Ordway who were Tennessee people until 1863 Thomas was an infantryman was horribly wounded and disabled in the batshytle of Shiloh and would have died or at least have been lost to his famIly had it not been for his wifes valor The narrative of her recovering him ann bringshying him back to a ~blance of life is harrowing

Journey to Texas But somethinamp more harrowshy

ing is still to come the account of their six months journey in a wagon drawn by oxen from Tennessee to Texas in the hope of beginning a new and better life The reader not only follows this arduous exodus but makes and suffers it and is haunted by it thereafter

This portion of the book is a storY complete in itself dramatshyic pathetic comic packed with lively incidents and colorful characters some heroic some corrupt some rascally all disshytinctive and engaging

Occasionally the side excurshysions pall a bit as in the depicshytion of stump speaking by polit shyical candidates or of life with a small shabby traveling circus Yet each of these sideshows has something to contribute to the pictUre of emerging Texas

Acute Observations

Mr Humphrey writes extremeshyly well a little less fancily as the book progresses but always vivshyidly and with plentymiddot of power for the high moments His peoshyple are nicely differentiated and come memorably to life He has many acute observations and even authentic wisdom to disshypense and this he does neatly His book rings with truth about human nature and is the work of a highly gifted and skillful artist

Mr Beekers A Covenant with Death on the other hand strikes me as contrJved empty and often obnoxiousmiddot Its nub is a legal stickler What is to be dQne with a man who is convicted of m~rger bought +c the gallows there Gki1ls~e hangman and then is cleareu of the first kill shying ~is poser ismiddot put to the 29shy

year~old judge Ben Lewis He solyes Wby niakiIig law and when confronted with this puzshyzler solves as well a key probshylent in his personal life At one and the same time he becomes at last a real judge and a real man

Precise 3udgment

Or so we are asked to believe Lewis says of himself I passed the crisis of adolescence at the ludicrous age of 29 bull bull bull I was swollen with garbage and bittershyness My own ego was monshystrous mainly because I had never done anything for anyone and could justify my own useshylessness only by assuming that the world was not worth my energies This is a precise judgment

The trouble is that the book is swollen with garbage and bitterness as well as sophistry

Young Lewis conversations with his mother for example They irk by their pretentiousness and they disgust with their obscenishyties The youngmiddot judge is thorshyoughly sophomQric and we are asked to credit his sudden leap into maturity We are asked too much

It is with ill grace that the author scorns small town folk for their prurience It is just this to which most of his book apshypeals When he sneers that Soledad City our wholesome middle-class American town would be lined up three deep for good seats at a murder trial with sensational sexual aspects he apparently forgets that the predictably huge sales of his novel will be in large part to people attracted by itligamineaa

3AMES OGARA

PauiSft CElnter Lists Spe(d~er

James OGara editor of Comshyrronweai magazinEl will be guest speaker in the Christian Culture Series at the Paulist Ce-nter in Boston on Wednesday evening Feb 17 on the topic The Role and Future of Cathshyolic Education

Mr OGara has written numshyerous articles for leading Cathshyolic magazines in middotthis country end Europe and has appeared on many religiow television programs of the National Counshycil Of Catholic Men

Rev Andrew Greeley sociolshyogist and author of many books on social subjects will join Mr O-Gara in the discussion

Monsignor Francis 3 Lally editor of the Pilot will be pr0shy

gram moderator

Deplores Agtncies Poverty Appoach

CHICAGO (NC) -- Catholic charity and welfareillgencies and institutions must drop thebusishyness as usual appreach and get into the actual aIl~na of povshyerty a National Conference of Catholic Charities Dleeting here in Illinois was told

The surge of natilmal concern about poverty is one of the most dramatic and compelling moveshyments in our day rather Robshyert Monticello of DEltroit chairshyman of the conferences program committee told assembled social work executives

His views were echoed by Msgr Raymond 3 Gallagher secretary of the comerence who said that personal service to families and individuals among the poor must be a coriunitment each of us makes dailly

CENTIER Paint and Wldlpaper

Dupont PClint

iiP cor Middle St

422 6lcush Ave

~Qc=t~ New Bedford ~ARKING

Rear of Store

ProtEct What You Hav~

McGO~VAN Insurance J~gency

TEL MYrtle ~1middot8231

188 NORTH MAIN $TREET NORTH ATTU8ORO

Beggars for All the Missions

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen DO

rn the mail last week a package arrived containing several hundred printed and self-addressed envelopes from various begshyging organizations in the United States The good woman who sent the package admitted being neither rich nor comfortable and yet she was flooded with appeals She wanted to know how she became a victim of this deluge The answer is that she is on a mailing list There are hundreds of mailing lists for sale in the United States These can be bought for various amounts depending on the number and quality of the names listed The good woman who wrote us was on at least one of these lists

Never before has it been brought home to us with Such impact how swamped our faithful are with appeals It grieves DB

that we too are beggars but we find some consolation in the fact that the Holy Fathers Society for the Propagation of the Faith has never used such mailing lists

This incident highlightsmiddot an urgent need that the Vatican Council must recognize that of co-ordinating appeals for all these really worthwhile causes especially those of misshysionaries Pius XI said that the method by which each missionary group solicited only for itself did not provide an even distribution of help Some can barely survive others have investments in Wall Street How to know who out of the hundreds who beg are most deservng is not only difficult but almost impossible

We have never liked begging In fact there is too much inshysistence on money in the Church tOday We would like to be unshackled from our tin cup and not add to this confusion But this is our duty Why 1 Because the Holy Father has asked us to be his beggars in the United States for -all the missions of tlie world 2 Becanse it is the glory of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith not to helf) one order or society of the world but the entire world (As a matter of fact 88middot per cent of the appeals in the above-mentioned package received soDie aid from The Society for the Propagation of the Faith) 3 Because being under the direction of the Holy Father The Society for the Propagation of the Faith does not invest any of yoUrmiddot alms Every eent Is distributed by the Holy Father each year The world Is too poor So fOldve us

Oh yes the lady who sent us the package wrote I could not keep 240 missionary appeals because I have not the money Since The -Society for the Propagation of the Faith aids all I send the Holy Father my $100 to be divi4ed as he sees fit

GOD LOVE YOU to Anoafor $5 Here Is Diy poeen valeiI- Une for the poor bullbullbull toMLA for $78 This is whist l diel Ilot spend on eigarettes Somehow I cannot enjoy them auYmore knowing that today 10000 people riD die of ~rntionmiddot

-

Think ahead to Valentines day and order a GOD LOVE YOU medal In classic Florentine gold finish or pure sterling silver this lovely cameo medal of the Madonna of the World is one you would be proud to give or delighted to receive Designed by the world-renouned jeweler Harry Winston and blessed by Bishop Sheen the GOD LOVE YOU medal may be obtained by sending your request and corresponding offering to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001

$ 2 small sterling silyershy $ 3 small 10k gold filled $ 5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled

Cut 01lt ft1Is colUIDn pin your sacrifice to it and maD It te Most Rev Fulton 3 Sheen National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York New York 10001 or to your Diocesan Director

Rt Rev Msgr Raymond T Considine 368 North Main Street

Fall River Massachusetts

791 PurcIaase Street Betweea

WIUIam bull UnI_ S_

NEW BEDFORD

FIVE CENTS SAVINGS BANK

WE HAVE PLENTY OF MONEY FOR HOME LOANS

If youre buying or building -Ioolc to us CONVENTIONAL GI - FH~ FINANCING

Ca on us anytime aDd talk over your plans

Fathers andmiddot Daughters Will Twirl At Annual Sucordium-Sponsored Hop at SHA Fan River

Dads and daughters win twirl at the annual fathep daughter dance at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River Its scheduled fltgtr 8 tomorrow night in the academy gymshynatorium and is sponsored by the moms and dads and daughters-members of the

SHA Fall River and her team very active Sucordium Club marked its first league debateHomemaker of the year at this season by defeating Case

Holy Family High in New Dartmouth Taunton and PreshyBedford as a result of the annushy vost al Homemaker of Tomorrow test Coyle High was host for a taken by thousands of girls novice tournament of two rounds across the nation is Christian with nine schools competing last Saulnier Shes National Honor weekend and the varsity team Society treasurer and copy edshy last week won three of four iJtor of By Fy Spy the school matches over Bishop Stang paper Bishop Stang was host to Narshy

At Dominican Academy in Fan ragansett League debate last River the top homemaker is week with 12 schools representshyJulia Melvin Senior A president ed each by four man teams Repshysodality vice-prefect and student resenting Stang were John council vice-president Another Golenski Michael Hogan Thomshyfeather in Julias cap is that as Keary and Myles Tillotson shes to represent her school at At the same meeting Bishop the state capitol on Student Feehan was represented by Government Day Francis Detellis Kateri Detellis

Christine Julia and an other Roger Watts and Raymond StafshyDiocesan school winners in the ford They won one debate out homemaker contest are now eli shy of four gible for consideration as state Current Affairs Contest winners Themiddot states highestshy Many Diocesan schools partici shyranking girl will receive a $1500 pated in a current affairs conshyscholarship and will tour Washshy test sponsored by a weekly news ington and New York City this magazine and among top scorers Spring From the state finalists were Janet Gendreau Moniquewill be chosen national winners Boulay and Muriel Raiche at in the homemaking contest and Jesus-Mary and Paula Powersthese girls will have their scholshy Susan Penrose and Mary Kellyarship grants substantially illshy at SIlA Fall River creased Also in the spotlight is 1anice

Benoit of SHA Fall River whosGrac1aatlOIl GOWIl8

received honorable mention for rrs snowy outside but thoughts the Bishop Connolly award preshy

of the seniors at Mt St Mary sented annually to the DioceseAcademy in Fall River are Oft outstanding girl athletethe days of June Theyre curshy Yearbook pictures for Coylerently selecting g r a d u at i 0 Il juniors sophomores and freshshygowns and are making a critical men have been safely taken so survey of ofterings from several another milestone is passed OIl area stores the road to publication

And National Bonot- Society Dominican Academy juniopsmembers have been busy at Sashy and seniors will make a closedcred Hearts Fall River Theyve retreat at the Cenacle Conventwritten to all accredited colleges ill Brighton during their Februshyin the US requesting inforshy ary vacation while the annualmation on admission requireshy school retreat is in progressments and availability of finanshy hOW at Bishop Stangcial aid The gathered informashy The program includes dallytion will augment the guidanee Mass Benediction and confershyfile in the school library ences and retreat masters are

Sevenmiddot new clubs have beeR Rev John OBrien SSCCmiddot andorganized at Tauntons Coyle Rev Andrew Jahn SSCCHigh School They are French An unusual auction was a feashySpanish Stamp and Coin Pep ture of a dance sponsored lastEnglish Literature Chess and weekend by Feehan seniors forPhotography Something theremiddot all their fellow students Eachfor everyone faculty member donated a prize

Four Dominican Academy stushy for the auction including suchdents have passed 120 word tests valuable items as a pass excusingin Gregg shorthand and two a student from detention pershyhave passed 100 word tests On mission to omit a book from anthe bowling scene at DA high outside reading list and a driy scorers include Susan Pacheco ing passAnne Marie FoIster Colleen Auctionmiddot proceeds benefited bullDesrosiers and Patricia Od) shy performance of Leave It tonecky Jane to be produced by the

The junior prom at Bishop Feehan Dramatics Club SundayFeehan High in Attleboro has and Monday Feb 14 and 15been set for Tuesday night April Jeannine Dumont senior class20 In charge ofmiddot arrangements secretary and middotlssistant editor of are Robert Bedard and Carol the school paper at Holy FamilyMiller while committees are al shy High has been accepted at Bosshyready at work on decorations ton College as have classmates e n t e r t a i n men t refreshshy Maureen OBrien Christine Ponshyments tickets and that unher ichtera and John AylwardaIded but all-important chore of Mother McAuley Guild at Mtclean-up St Mary Academy will hold its

annual calendar party WednesshyDebaiioi- Prcmt day night Feb 10 EntertainshyIn the indoor days of Winter ment will reprelC~t each monthdebating holds an honored spot of the year and the decoratedamong extra-curricular activishycakes willbe ~oor prizesties at Diocesan schools At Preshy Class -laeement vost in Fall River the debate

THE ANCHOR-- 13 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Churchmen Favor Johnson School Aid Program

WASHINGTON (NC) shyCatholic and Protestant spokesmen applauded Presishydent Johnsons school aid proposal in a placid Congresshysional bearing where the on~ disagreement came over mi~

technical questions The release from the charged

atmosphere of past hearings w noted all around

A Catholic spokesman smilin~

ly commented that it was a relief not to fear getting out of the

Vour nearescmall box i$ Q Firsf Ilfderal branch office that open 24 hours $ day to make $(lving easy for you No traffic nO parking no leather problem~

Withdrawals ate just as implt taY~ngs paymencS

bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull r fRlE o~middottymiddotmiddot ~ ubullbullh coupon 7bullbull~ trti 0middot

team was victorious over Mt St Marys and Bishop Stang in Narshyragansett League debate but lost to SHA Fall River The varisity also met Coyle during the past week

Mt st Marys debate record stands at 2-2 with Anne Browshynell Linda Mello Susan Jenkinshyson and Nancy Curran defending their school in Narragansett

Tomorrows the day of reckonshying at SHA Fall River Not only will report cards be distributed but a list of all seniorsand their placement in middottheir class for the past four years will be published

Fifteen seniors It DA partici shypated in a French Listening Comprehension Test on Tuesday This supplementary test is ofshyfered by the eollege entrance

PREVOST SCHOLARS High scorers in National Merit Scholarship Examinations at Prevost High School Fall River are Gerard Gltgtu~et left and Paul Nowak

tests in addition to the French Written exams come in March

Also at Feehan where report cards will come tomorrow high honors will be achieved by those with an average of 90 or better honors by those earning 85 or better and honorable mention by those with grades of 80 01 better

Bishop Stang mathematiciana placed first ill the Notre Dame Math Meet held last week at Cardinal Cushing High in South Boston Eighteen schools com~

peted and Stang won by n points Responsible for the vieshytory were John Keavy Paul Roy John De Ciccio Raymond Desrosiers and Alan Roskiewiez Top individual scorer was John DeCiccio

Best Girl Athlete Senior Nancy Vogel of Bishop Stang High School received the Bishop Connolly Award for the best girl athlete of Fall River area Diocesan high schools at a ceremony held last night at Whites restaurant Nancy as shining a star schoshylastically as athletically plays hockey basketball and volley~ ball at the North Dartmouth school She will be the first reshycipient of what is to become an

Influence Declining MADRID (NC)-Castroist inshy

fluence among young people in Latin Ameriea has declined the past two years Luis Garcia Arishyas professor of international law at the University of Saragossa here in Spain said on his return from a tour of Latin America Thursday Feb 1amp

SCHOOL Mainte~ance suppr~

SWEEPERS SOAPS DISINFECTANTS

FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

DAHILL CO 1886 PURCHASE STREET

annual award made by the FaD River Clover Club Also honored at last nights dinner-dance WBI Coach Carlin Lynch of 11M Stang Spartans

Forty Hours devotion was celshyebrated for the first time at Bishop Feehan high scbool starting Sunday and ending Tuesday Seniors Eileen Pashyquette Mary Duffy Nancy Clegg and Susall Ouelle~te aided Sister Mary Kateri of Feehan home economics department III making a cope and humeral veil used for the first time at the ceremonies

And Feehanites celebrated terms end by viewing A Raisin in the Sun

bullbullbullbullbullbull

hearing room alive The major Protestant spokesmen described the bill as an instrument of recshyonciliation Con g res smiddotm e a praised the compromises they saw being made by all sid~

church groups and educators -The President has proposed bull

$12 billion program to improve elementary and secondary schooling from poverty-strickea families

A total of $1 billion wouldge to public school districts in lowshyincome areas Additionally the proposal would spend $100 milshylion for textbooks for all school children and school libraries and another $100 million to create bull system of public-priva~commushynity educational centers to offer cultural enrichment and specitl eourses to all school ehildren

Pittsburgh School Enroll~ent Down

PITSBURGH (NC) - Enroll shyment in the Pittsburgh diocellMl Catholic school system has dro~ ped by 40 pupils Msgr John B McDowell superintendent ball reported

The monsignor said the sliglll drop has been preceded by fo_ years of leveling oft in enrol) ment figures because of enforeet gradual cuts in class size

Since 1960 he said there _ been an increase of only 24 pushypils in the total number of stushydents Elementary and seconda schools last June tallied 129531 pupils a drop of 40 he said

bullbullbullFREEKI _forbullbull~to bull ~-~----- shy _ StampMo _ middot----1

City_middot bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbulliibullbullbullbullbullbullbull WE pAY POSTAGa

(tree po5t-pald~Clddd i-velop ady to mall

FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND lOAN ASSOCIATION

OF FALL RIVER Home OHice 1 North Main St Fall River

Somerset OHice 149 GAR Highway Rte 6 League bouts The team meets exam board and consists of Both Offices Open Friday Evenings until INEW BEDFORDBishop Cassidy of TauntOn Wedshy questions and answers concernshy Sonterset Drive-In Window Open Mon-Thurs til 4 nesday Feb 10 ing subject matter on tape At WY 3-3786 Susan Nunes heads debate 111amp Feeha aiYdentll 1ook Germaa

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Stresses ilroad beep Gulf Between Two Generafions

By John J Kane Ph D What is your opinion of secretive sons and daughters

()f today Our married son and daughter never tell us anyshything Friends and strangers knew they bought a new home before we did My daughters husband knows all the ansshywers and wants no advice from anyone My son is afraid of his wife and she makes all decisions They ask us to visit but hurt our feelshyings when we do by what they say We were raised to reshyspect our elders and ask their advice

You r letter Jean does pose some justifiable complaints But it also seems to make some unshyreasonable deshy

mands Furthershymore amusingshy1y enough you conclude that you were reared to respect your elders and intimate your chil shydren werent If so whom can you blame

I dont know the reason why your children failed to inform you of their intentions to purshyehase a home But I do have some suspicions Do you have a tendency to be critical about what they buy Sometimes parshyents do

Tremendous Inflation Y-oungsters and parents both

make a certain type of mistake when it comes to purchasing of such things as homes cars or expensive appliances So m e young marrieds try to begin at a level their parents only achieved after 10 or 15 years of married life

But some parents do not seem to realize that inflation has been tremendous in the last 20 years When they hear a son or daughshyter is about to buy it home for 20 or 25 thousand dollars they are horrified They remember they paid perhaps 6 8 or 10

thousand dollars when they bought

They also forget credit is a bit easier than in the past that F BA and even the GI Bill help young people today and they may not even have existed when they were shopping for a house Longer te~ mortgages are possible today and lower down payments These of course do mean more interest

Coinmon CourteSY In other words parents should

Dot use the yardstick of economshyic conditions when they were young for the youth of today When they state perhaps with heated emphasis Why your father and I paid 10 thousand for a home the children are understandably irritated

But once having made their decisions com m 0 n courtesy would seem to demand tpat parshyents be told before strangers or at least as soon as friends Your sense -of hurt feelings here is quite understandable

Your complaint that your sons wife makes all the decisions may be true If so I agree that you have reared a Milquetoast But

is it true Are you actually cershytain or are you imagining someshything Are you really sayingshyand I frankly fear youare-that your son listens to his wife more than he listens to you

Mother-in-Law Role Being a mother-in-law is not

an easy role in Anierican soClshyety and many of the stupid

at least not if you wish to be a successful parent

Because most parents do love their children they are eager to help them They feel that their years of experience give them an advantage and this advantage they would extend to their chil shydren

At times this is true At times it is not The gulf between genshyerations is broad and deep Life has changed greatly in the space of one generation and the bench marks of the past may be unshysuitable today There are certain areas of living in which children may have better ideas than their parents Be prepared to admit as much

But within those areas where the maturity and experience of parents can be helpful advice can be given when not reshyquested only indirectly and cautiously Young marrieds misshyconstrue it as an effort to domshyinate which they reject Pershyhaps you can recall when you too felt this way

But it is indeed sad if they hurt your feelings when you do visit them You have not enshylarged on this so it is impossible to determine just what is said or done that annoys you Assuming you are making a correct judgshyment it is at the very least a breach of hospitality

Many of the inter-generational and in-laws problems of today are the result of social changes As one grows older it is less and less easy to change to adopt ways of doing and thinkshying After all if one succeeded under one system there is little motivation to alter it

Life Easier But conditions have changed

and to paraphrase a commercial this is the Pepsi generationbull Today boys and girls get married even wher the boy is unemshyployed This is scarcely advisable but somemake it Boys marry while still in college and their wives work to help put them through This would have been unthinkable 40 years ago

One of the really amazing changes is the use of long term credit The proud boast of years ago was that one didnt owe any money If you said this today youngsters would view you with open amazement and quietly conclude your credit was no good

No doubt some of this is overshydone and can bring about tragic results But if used intelligently it can make life somewhat easier perhaps more pleasant than in the past

These are only a few of the changes that could be listed a complete litany of them would be impossible Now this doesnt mean that parents are old fogeys that their counsel is useshyless It does mean that they must try tomiddot understand their married children better than some do

And incidentally because of these sweeping changes it is more difficult than it was But it isnt impossible an4 when donepays off in much better relationships

Anti-Smut Effort NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Loushy

isiana Knights of Columbus have jokes ]lake it even more diffi- launched a public information cult But parents after having campaign to combat what one reared their children to the best official t e r m e d indifference of their ability must let them go stemming from lack of knowlshyon their own You cannot keep edge about the growing traffic them tied to your apron strings in obscene literature

PRINCE OF THE CHURCH Americas new cardin~l recelyes congratulations from an old friend as Archbishop Patrlck A OBoyle of Washington felicitatesmiddot Lawrence Cardmal Shehan Archbishop of Baltimore on his elevation to the College of Cardinals by Pope Paul vi NC Photo

~Glassand Wire Tiny Foulr-Bell Chime in Bay State Church

Producing Soundof Big Heavy Metal WALTHAM (N C) - The string-shaped length of glass

church-bell of the future may which may be up to a foot i~ bE a ht~le thing of glass and length and a tiny hammer to Wire weighm~ about two grams produce the proper vibrations but reproducmg the sound of These vibrations are converted cast-metal constructions weigh- into an electronic signal which ing more than a ton ~asses through an amplifier is

j Pope Emphasizes Import of Hymns

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul in an audience for more han 1000 priests participating in a convention on pastoral lit shyurgy emphasized the key role of hymn-singing in the liturgy

We are not in a hurry he said

We must raise up a new peoshyple who learn to pray as the Church now prescribes

One of the prescriptions which I believe to be most influshyential and most necessary is singing

The Pope said that hymns inshycluding popular ones lift the soul and nourish it with religious sentiments

Illinois School Joins Expanding ETV Plan

MORTON (NC)-A parochial school here in Dlinois has served as pilot school in a historic edushyeational television experiment

Blessed Sacrament School reshyceived the first experimental transmission of v ide 0 tap e d courses in color from a high freshyquency monidirectional terminal

A 120-foot tower atop the school received signals from a tower on the Bradley University campus 10 miles away Bradley Coordinator Philip Weinburg said he expects an ETV program to be operational in the 1965-66 school year

The Catholic school tower will remain as a permanent inshystallation to serve both as an ETV booster station with a 15shymile radius and a receiver for educational programs in the school next Fall

Changes in Mass EDINBURGH (NC) - Scots

Catholics are busily preparing for the introduction of English and Gaelic into the Mass on March 1 the first Sunday in Lent

bull HYANNIS bull HARWICH PORT bull ~olri YAAMOUTH

--- shy

funeral Service

DoANmiddotSpoundALmiddotAMtS INCOIlPOItATtiD

Glassblower Gerhard B Finkshybeiner of Brandeis University here in Mass lpoundlas installed for the first time in the United States a set of the tiny bells in St Susanna church in Dedham named for the t~tula church in ~ome of ~ostOIl s Richardmiddot Carshydinal Cushmg

Finkbeiner whose small glass bells already al~e making kingshysiZed sounds in 10 churches in Germany and ]~rance has proshyduced a four-bell chime for the Dedham church encased in a metal cabinet only two feet long and weighing a mere 40 pounds In cast metal equivalent sotmdshyproducers would occupy a goodshysized belfry and weigh aboUt 10000 pounds Finbeiner envishysions his discovery as destined for churches which cannot afford regular bells

The new-style bells look like nothing so much as the fa~iliar vacuum tubes found in any nonshytransistor radio but they proshyduce a never-changing high quality sound which is fully comparable to the metallic clang

of the old-fashioned bell shy

Inside each vacuum tube in Finkbeiners system there is a

MON~~GHAN

ACCEF-TANCE CQIRP

JHOMAS F MONAGHAN JR

Trecisurer

142 SECOND STREET

OSborne 5-7856

FALL RIVER

Increased 100000 times and comes out through a ~pecial speaker whose sound most exshyperts cannot tell from a metallic ben

The sound of a heavy metallic bell is one of the most complex of all musical sounds according to Finbeiner but he has been able to dUJlicat~ it through parshyallel ~Udi~ in glassblowing electronics and ~acuum techshyniques

BARDAHL MAKES YOUR

CAR RUN BEnER tAt New Car Dealers and Service Stations

Everywhere -I

With Safety at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK

115 WILLIAM sr NEW BEDFORD MASS

WEBB OIL (OMPANY TEXACO FUEL ()IL$

DOMESTIC amp HFAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS

Sales~SetYce-lnstaDtjon MAINO~FICE~JO ~RFEEmiddot sTREETmiddotfAll ~IVER

Phone OS 5-7484

11

1S --

Views of New Ho~Y TrinitYmiddotmiddot-C-h-~-rc-h-I-W-e-s-t-~-I-a-li-i-ac-h-middotmiddotmiddotI

-

I I

16 THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

Says Pope John Left Cha lIenge To Catholicsmiddot

NORTH PALM BEACH (NC) - Pope John XXIII left Catholics with a chalshylenge to meet the world Bishop Coleman F Carroll of Miami said here

Bishop Carroll said Pope John dared Catholics to meet other Christians and non-Christians and to discuss our common problems and seek by discussion a solution to these problems

This challenge cannot be met by the pope alone or by the bishops and priests alone he said It must be met by all inshycluding-indeed especially-the laymen

-He said laymen must be propshy

erly prepared for this task through study training and spirshyitual preparation In this conshynection he called a closed spirshyitual retreat an absolute must for the lay person

Bishop Carroll spoke to memshybers of the Our Lady of Florida Retreat League at a dinner in his honor at the Passionist Retreat House here

PrelWtes Sc~~dlJ(e

US~ ~f VeCrulall ROME (NC)-The Italian lanshy

guage will be used in Mass throughout I t a I y beginning March 7 the first Sunday of Lent

The Italian Bishops Commitshytee on the Liturgy in announcshying the change specified that the Italian language would be used in Masses on Sundays and holy days and at all Masses attended by a substantial number of the faithful

The parts of the Mass to be said in Italian are the following the Epistle Gospel acclamations salutations and dialogues (inshycluding the prayers at the foot of the altar and the dialogue preshyceding the Preface) the Kyrie Gloria Creed Sanctus-Benedicshytus and Agnus Dei themiddot Patermiddot Noster with its introduction and the formula for the Communion

Peloquin Chorale Televises Hymns

NEW YORK (NC)-Hymns -Yesterday and Today featurshyipg C Alexander Peloquin and members of his popular Peloquin Chorale will be telecast Feb 14 from 1 to 130 PM EST over the ABC-TV network

The latest program in the seshyries Directions 65 - a Catholic Perspective produced by the National Council of Catholic Men and the ABC public affairs department was written by Peloquin and traces the develshyopment of hymnody from the Te Deum of the 4th century to the works of contemporary composers

Stresses Doctrines Substance Remains

DAVENPORT (NC) -Bishop Ralph L Hayes of Davenport adshymonished an interfaith meeting here in Iowa against expecting changes in Catholic doctrine

The (Second Vatican) Counshycil may change the manner of presentation of doctrines but not their substance he said pointing to the liturgy as an exshyample of such a change

We must admit bigotry and misunderstanding on both sides But followers of Christ have Scripture devotion to the Holy Spirit and devotion to Christ in common Why not talk about the things on which we agree he asked

Sisters of Mercy General Asks Personal ST LOUIS (NC)-Weve got

to develop the Sister in depth Thats what the times call for said the mother general of the 7300 American nuns of the Sisshyters of Mercy of the Union

Mother Mary Regina Cunningshyham ending her first six-year term as the head of the widely known teaching social work and hospital nuns was talking about what the Sisters of Mercy are doing to bring themselves fully up to the times

In St Louis Mo to meet with the superiors of the nine Mercy provinces Mother Regina talked about the main vehicle she and her colleagues hope will achieve the transformation

This is the year in the commu- nity for chapter meetings and general meetings of the nuns in

each of the provinces climaxed by a meeting of the general chapter at the orders mothershyhoupse in Bethesda Md she said

Changing Church Results will be ~olnown in Aushy

gust and Mother Regina hopes that they will show her commushynity to be in line with the mind of a rapidly changing Church in the midst of an even faster movshying world

She predicted tlat the chapshyters would have some surprises not only in the deisions but in the way they are organized to give a more representative view of all the Sisters in the order

If one overall phrase had to sum up what Mother Regina and the other planners are looking for in the Mere chapters it

would be personal responsibil shyity she said

A Sister has to have the reshysponsibility to make judgments for herself said the mother general Her superiors have to give her the responsibility to achieve her own role She has to make the decision to take the risks

~And then of course be ready to pay the price for her decishysion said Mother Regina

In Updated Sense Weve gone beyond the day

Papal Count BALTIMORE (NC) - Thomas

W Pangborn a Hagerstown (Md) industrialist and philanshythropist has been named a papal count by Pope Paul

Responsibility of always being safe Some peoshyple want to be sure to have the answer before they move But sometimes that meant they never moved at all she observed

Developing a Sister in depth will mean a lot of things espeshycially an updated sense of her apostolate and the way she works at it For the Mercy nuns in the U S Central and Latin America and in the West Indies it will mean a lot of littie things Mother Regina hinted

Changes might relax regulashytions about home visits dining with others attending night meetings and cultural affairs or traveling with companions

Mother Regina said that we have to plan for more contact with the laity and for more edushycation to understand each other shy

a

lYonderful Meatsbullbullbull Anoth~r Big Reasll Why zltI ~III I bull STAYING ~c~ Z ~

with FIRST NATIONAL it

l~middotmiddotsowll ItmiddotI

IIIIr-All vlu

FACE RUMIP Fine Grained Texture shy

Heavy Steer Beef for Hearty Eating LB

The Perfect Roast for large Families

ROASTL854CAITCHBONE Same [ow Self-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vidnily rNe Reserve Iie Right to Limit Quantitietl

-

I The Parish Parade I SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO bull

Holy Name Society members will receive corporate Communshyion at 7 oclock Mass Sunday morning Feb 14 The unit plans a Valentine dance and supper from 7 to 12 Saturday night Feb 13 in the Elks auditorium on Church Street SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs John DeBettenshycourt president Mrs Arnold Muckerheid vice-president Mrs Nelson J DeBettencourt Jr treasurer Mrs Charles Davis secretary

For the Holy Name SOGiety James Ferreira is president supshyported by Freeman Willoughby vice-president Alfred Metell treasurer Anthony Rebello secshyretary The units next meeting will be Sunday Feb 14 at the parish hall OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a Masquerade Ball Friday night Feb 26 at Wimpys resshytaurantr Osterville Mrs James E Murphy is chairman ST JOSEPH ATTLEBORO

The CYO will sponsor a dance Saturday night Feb 20 with enshytertainment by Mickey Chagnon and the Rivieras Chairmen for the unit include Carolee Desshyrochers membership Judy Roy spiritual Claudette Ouimet culshytural Sue Reynolds publicity Claire Piette social Don Fisher recreational BLESSED SACRAMENT FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will present a fashion fair at an open meeting to be held Wedshynesday Feb 17 in the church basement Planned for April are a rummage sale and a whist party ST JEAN BAPTISTE FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women announces a ham and basket whist party for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 in the lower church hall In charge will be Mrs Napoleon Picard and Mrs Eugene Gagnon aided by a large committee ST STANISLAUS FALL RIVER

Civics Club members of the parochial school will deliver pastry to nursing home patients for Valentines Day Other projshyects include collecting Christmas cards for missionaries and shovshyelling snow to augment the club treasury OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION OSTERVILLE

Mr and Mrs William Dacey will be co-chairmen of a preshyLenten dance to be held Friday night Feb 19 at Wimpys restaushyrant in Osterville under sponsorshyship of the Womens Guild The program will include a buffef and dancing from 9 to to ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

Mrs Lionel J Dulude presishydent of the Sacred Hearts Assoshyciation requests all ladies of the unit who have First Friday Adoration to check their asshysigned times in order that the full quota will be present at all hours

Corporate Communion for members will be held on Sunday at the 815 Mass and the regushylar meeting will be held the same evening at 730 in the Church Hall

The Penny Sale scheduled for Feb 20 will be discussed atthis meeting ST JOSEPH FALLRIVER

The annual mid-Winter Gala is set for Saturday night at Venus de Milo restaurant A buffet supper from 630 to 830 will be followed by dancing a parish reunion and awarding of prizes

ST JOAN OF ARC ORLEANS

Forthcoming events for the Womens Guild include penny sales this month April and next November socials in March and June and Summer fairs in July and August A ham and bean supper is ~cheduled for May ST JAMES NEW BEDFORD

middotMsgr Noon Circle plans a potluck supper for members and their guests Saturday night Feb 20 OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION NEW BEDFORD

Holy Name Society officers inshyclude Severo G Alfama presishydent James P Gonsalves and John Monteiro vice-president Antonio Rocha treasurer John Soares secretary ST GEORGE WESTPORT

Womens Guild members will form the congregation at the TV Mass to be broadcast on channel 6 at 10 Sunday morning Feb 7 Participants will meet at the parish school hall at 9 to travel to New Bedford ST JOHN BAPTIST NEW BEDFORD

Parishioners will hold their annual filhoz supper and penny sale at 530 Sunday evening Feb 21 in the cllurch hall Tickshyets are available from officers of church organizations or at the rectory In charge are Gilbert Brazil and George Ladino ST PIUS X SOUTH YARMOUTH

The WQmens Guild will hold a past presidents dinner Monshyday night March 1 at Armands restaurant_ Hyannis NOTRE DAME FALL RIVER

Cubs and Boy Scouts will at shytend a Communion breakfast Sunday Feb 7 following 815 Mass A blue and gold banquet for the Cubs is set for Sunday Feb 28 in the parish hall with Roger Labonte in charge of arshyrangements

The Council of Catholic Women will hold its installation banquet Monday Feb 22 at Whites resshytaurant under the chairmanship of Mrs Paul Ilmais To be seated are Miss Helena Dumont president Mrs Cecile Barnabe frst vice-president Mrs Gershyard DextTaze second vice-presishydent Mrs Richard Perry treasshyurer Mrs Romeo Parent reshycording secretary Mrs Roger Langlois corresponding secreshytary

The third in a series of cake sales will follow all Masses this Sunday in the lower church Mrs Ferdnand Letendre chairman will be aided by Mrs Robert Phenixco-chairman Cakes can be brought to the lower church from 4 to 5 and 630 to s Saturshyday afternoon and evening SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a potluck supper for members at 630 Tuesday night Feb 16 in the parish hall A silent auction will follow the slipper In charge of arrangeshyments is Mrs Mary Pereira chairman aided by Mrs Mary Gagne The council announces a malassada supper and penny sale open to the public from 530 to 7 Sunday night Feb 21 also in the hall Tickets will be available at the door and chairshymen are Mrs Mary Cabeceiras and Mrs Albina Quintill

A regular meeting is set for 730 Friday night Feb 12 in the hall Installation of officers is planned for later in the month ST MATIDEU FALL RIVER 4

A Valentine whist is planned by the Council of Catholic Womshyen for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 at the parish hall Mrs Raymond Antaya is chairman

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan RIver-Thurs Feb 1l96I rr

GIVE VIEWS ON AID Presenting views on federal aid to education to the House Education sub-committee was this panel representing the Catholic school system left to right Msgr William E McManus Chicago superintendent of the largest Ctholic school system in the country Mr Edward McArdle Washington DC who focussed on the parents view of the childs needs as the father of seven children Msgr Freclerck G Hochwalt Director Education Department NCWC and Msgr John B McDowell sushyperintendent of the Pittsburgh diocesan school system NC Photo

bullSays Church Must Live In Wide World~ Cardinal Hits Ignorance of Our Neighbor

CHICAGO (NC)-An Amerishycan prelate prominent in the Churchs work for Latin Amershyica has told US Catholics there is no excuse for our ignorance of our neighbors the nations of Central and South America

Archbishop Paul L Hallinan of Atlanta chairman of the subshycommittee for inter-American cooperation of the US Bishops Committee for Latin America in a message to the second annual conference of the Catholic IntershyAmerican Cooperation Program SClid the Church today lives in a new world but it must preshypare to live in a wide world

Miles Are Nothing Catholics in tpe United States

with a strong cultural and comshymercial bridge to Europe find Africa a puzzle and Asia an Orshyiental mystery Strangest of all is our ignorance of our own neighbors the nations of Central

E~ual Treatment JERSEY CITY (NC)-Hudson

County parishes here in New Jersey are joining in a countyshywide interfaith appeal seeking pledges of fair housing practices

~T FRANCIS XAVIER IIYANNIS

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a penny sale at 8 Tuesday right Feb 9 in the parish hall A Communion breakfast and fashion show are on the units Spring schedule

ST JOHN BAPTIST CENTRAL VILLAGE

A housewares demonstraticm will follow an open meeting scheduled by the Womens Guild for 8 Thursday night Feb 11 in the church hall In charge of refreshments will be Mrs Matil shyda Shelter Miss Margaret Shay and Miss May Taggart The unit plans a Valentine whist for 3 Saturday night Feb 13 also in the church hall on Main Road Miss Edith Kirby and Mrs Louise Vieira are chairmen ST JOHN POCASSET

The Womens Guild announces a penny sale for Friday Feb 12 Mrs Sprague Spooner will be chairman The units next meetshying will feature slides and a talk by Col Eugene S Clark on the early history of Marthas Vineshyyard It will be held Tuesd~

Feb 16

and South America he deshyclared

The ~rchbishop said 60 years ago there was an excuse-travel communications and cultural knowledge were in their inshylancy But now miles are nothshying since Pope John XXIII brought his message of unity to the world he averred adding

Real Import The CICOP meeting brings

bishops priests and laymen of both hemispheres together for a remarkable in-service training period a healthy learn while you work program We know much of Latin American needs both religious economic and culshytural We are helping in our way to repair these shortcomings But we need even more to share

in this Christian fraternity fIIf background common resources and future hopes Only by free easy association with the repshyresentatives of Latin America can we get the real import

ELECTRICAL Contractors~

~ ~ ~ ~

944 County St ~ New Bedford

ecec~c~ccccee~o

C) LOUlUl~S iiffii~ ~ i middotbull EWrIMA ~- shyg l~

ROMEamp I~-

I SHmNES imiddot ~ OF EUROPE iiI bull ampHOLY LAND ~) C~ 1 bull CATBOLIC PROGRAJ 1965 ~)

ALI~~16 ~I CachoIlcTeI Orrlce ~) c~ WASHINGTON CHICAGOIOMI LONDONI CATHOLtC TRAVEL OFFICE FRM ~------------II -~ Dupont Circle Building WashIngton D C 20036 fali ~ ~ j1ii Please send me your free Illustrated booklet describing in ~ iJl detail the wOrldmiddotcovering pilgrimages

C~ Name iI ~IJ Address ~ C_~ CityIloneState 11 =~~~~~_~_~~_~_ft~ftVw ijrv _ii~middotV

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Teen-agers Outstanding For Prodigal Generosity

By Rev Joseph T McGloin S J Several times in this column Ive had some glowing

words to say about our Mexican neighbors to the south about their friendliness and hospitality- and general likeshyableness And certainly its all true These people busy as they are will go out of their of other peoples is that you canway give you their precious easily give the idea you are sell shytime and attention to see ing all your own countrymen that you enjoy your visit to short And this would be the their country When a Mexican furthest thing from my own says Mi casa es su casa My thoughts house is your Because there is great friendli shyhouse - which ness in our country too - in he invariably varying degrees and manifested

middot does-he means in various ways The Mexican is it F r i end s in general more spontaneous strangers even than we and most of us have to shopkeepshy be approached before we give ers youve never our friendship since an initial II e e n before shyness seems to hold us back will introduce Often enough however this

middotyou to the whole shyness is caused by a national family and inshy superiority complex by a fear vite you to hav~ of not being accepted and by

middotdinner wit h the fear of making fools of ourshymiddot them To put it mildly hospital shy selves in a language we dont ity like this would be impossible know In other words humility to forget or to overlook is an esseatial to friendliness and _ Sometimes you wonder as you hospitality Sometimes we have walk the downtown- streets of it Often we dont CHle of our own cities and as you Hospitable People see pe~ple going their own inshy We Americans are sometimessulated ways if it isnt true that afraid to show our real feelingsas a country we have only a -afraid to show for inst~nce

-head while Mexico has a head our sympathy forthe underdogand a heart We usually make up for t~is

Superiority Complex psychologically by cheering on - This feeling grows on - you the hiss favored side at spe~tator when you visit Mexico and have sports when we should be doingthe misfortunE to encounter the it in the causes of racial justiceAmerican tourist who is bent on and equality of opportunity inshyacting like one It is a crying stead shame that so many Americans We are afraid others usuallyhave to show a superiority com- those very loud others will look

middotplex to those they encounter in down on us if we give public middot other countries seeming to feel support to those who need our that no matter where they go it support the little -people the is not they who are the foreignshy least of Christs and our brethshyers but those they encounter ren

All too often these types seem The fact is though that we to despise the customs and lanshy Americans do have a- heart and guage and even the currency of that once we put aside our sillythe countries they visit apparshy ideas that we are too busy to be ently thinking that anyone can hospitable or that others will understand English if you only look on us as soft and foolish if speak louder and that real we are or that we must not goAmerican money will buy anyshy out of way forour foreign~rs thing even respect because we might make a misshy

Worst of all are those wbo take in speaking their languagebring their aura of racial supeshy -then we can be and are just as riority along with them and hospitable and friendly as anymake little effort to hide it It is peoplein the world undoubtedly true that some of Ideals of Youththis patronizing attitude is partly There are many Americansresponsible (along with Castro~ and fortunately there are gettingeternal vigilance for American to be more who are willing tomistakes and seeming mistakes) stand up publicly and be countedfor the affection with which on the side of right instead ofAmericans are held in some parts - merely clucking in quiet privateof Latin America such as in sympathy There are lots ofPanama Americans who are not jqst

Race Prejudice friendly and hospitable to forshyAnd its tragic that have eigners but who do heroic workwe

to expoFt the most shameful of with the poor and downtrodden our national sins the stupidity and handicapped of their own which is race prejudice We country and their own city as might as well forget in fact well about any good neighbor polshy - Now there are lots of adult icy until we ourselves become Americans of this type But good neighbors when it comes to out-and-out

But even when we are not prodigal generosity it is the snobbish at home we are seldom teens as a rule whohave to be as spontaneous in our friendli shy given first prize ness other peoples The forshy A teen-agel who has not yetas eign students who come to stuay outgrown the honest ideals of at our universities often get youth will give his time and enshylonely and discouraged because ergy unstintingly and with little they have seemingly no friends thought of consequences This

author has instanceThe Negro in his fight for for seen equality (a fight which should kids doing heroic work with the never have been necessary in the very poor and the orphans-notfirst place) very often feels just throwing money into a colshyalone (though decreasingly so) lection box for them but givingwhen even those who know he is them their time and their love getting a raw deal do nothing working with them face to face at least publicly to help him even as Christ did set things right America has a great heart

Which may be one reason the and many Americans are just as Negro American often makes a spontaneous and natural at better ambassador abroad than showing it as any people anyshyother Americans where As a country however

Friendliness Here we still have some distance to But the trouble with extolling go before this sort of generosity

the hospitality and friendlin~ becomes our national image

CHECK COMPARE SAVE

Turkeys 10to11 LIS

Ready-to-Cook 39~ FIR S T Nancy Vogel

daughter of Mr and Mrs SAVE CASH bullbullbull SHOP AampPLeonard J Vogel of Sacred Heart Parish Fall River and a senior at Starg High last night became the first recishypient of the Bishop Connolly award for the outstanding

girl athlete n a Catholic High School The Clover Club of Fall River sponsored the award

Thomas ~Vhalen

In Noviticlte Brother Thomas Whalen son

of Mr and Mrs Thomas Whalen -8 General Cobb St Taunton and a member of the Sacred Heart Parish has received the religshyious habit of the Erothers of the

SMOKED P()RK SHOUlDERS

SUPER-RIGHT SHORT SHANK 6 TO 8 lBS

PICNICS 1829c

CHICKEN LEe or BREAST 33c

QUARTERS l8

SAVE CASH ON THESEHoly Cross at ceremonies conshyducted at St Joseph Novitiate

Valatie NY 6 POUNDS ofi BREAD ONLY 99c Brother John Donoghue CSC

Provincial Superior of the Broshy Whitl Breadp~~~E~ 4 ~6~~~z99c thers of the Holy Cross of the SAVI 20e - REGULAR 59c - 8 INCHEastern Province announced I p 118 8 OZ 39CJANEthat Brother Thomas was one of App I II PARKER IACHthe 14 candidates who is now starting a canonical year of proshy JANI PARKER - SAVlOe REGULAR 9c

bation for the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross bull hB Ck 1 lB 3 OZ 3ftCSpaRIS ar a e EACH i

Following the reception the parents and friends of Brother Thomas were guests at a lunchshyeon at the novitiate

Total Now 430 NEW YORK (NC)-With the

opening of two more parish schools the number of Catholic elementary schools in the New York archdiocese now totals 430

ATWC)OD OIL CO~~PANY

SHEILL HEATIN4 OILS South SeC] Streets Hyannis Tel HY 81

COMPLleTE

Mortgage Service anywhere on Cape Cod

bull RESIDENTIAL bull COMMEI~CIAL

bull CONSTRUCTION bull SEASONAL

Call EX 8-2266

Bass ~iver Savings Bank

SOUTH YARMOUTH Hyannis - Dennis Port

Yarmouth Plaza

Special Donut and Coffee SoleI All THIS weEKI

PLAIN SUGARED CJlNNAMON OR COMBINATION

2 PKGS 4ftltJane Parker Donuts 29cR~~ Of 12

I E 5 ON ON SAVE 4c B~~S SAV 1 c B3~S MILO AND MRLOW COFfil

Eight OClock ~A~ 69c-3 IJ~G 198 RICH FULLmiddotBOOleo

Red Circle CoHee ~A~ 71 c-3 B~G204 VIGOROUS ANO WINEY

lokar Coffe ~A~ 73c-3 B~G210 rice shown In thl ud guiltnteed tlltu Sat Feb

Tobacco products and Items prohibIted by Iaw eKempt from Plaid Stamp Offbullbull amp effective at ALL Aamp Sup Matlcotn thl communll1 and lclnll1

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 13: 02.04.65

Fathers andmiddot Daughters Will Twirl At Annual Sucordium-Sponsored Hop at SHA Fan River

Dads and daughters win twirl at the annual fathep daughter dance at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River Its scheduled fltgtr 8 tomorrow night in the academy gymshynatorium and is sponsored by the moms and dads and daughters-members of the

SHA Fall River and her team very active Sucordium Club marked its first league debateHomemaker of the year at this season by defeating Case

Holy Family High in New Dartmouth Taunton and PreshyBedford as a result of the annushy vost al Homemaker of Tomorrow test Coyle High was host for a taken by thousands of girls novice tournament of two rounds across the nation is Christian with nine schools competing last Saulnier Shes National Honor weekend and the varsity team Society treasurer and copy edshy last week won three of four iJtor of By Fy Spy the school matches over Bishop Stang paper Bishop Stang was host to Narshy

At Dominican Academy in Fan ragansett League debate last River the top homemaker is week with 12 schools representshyJulia Melvin Senior A president ed each by four man teams Repshysodality vice-prefect and student resenting Stang were John council vice-president Another Golenski Michael Hogan Thomshyfeather in Julias cap is that as Keary and Myles Tillotson shes to represent her school at At the same meeting Bishop the state capitol on Student Feehan was represented by Government Day Francis Detellis Kateri Detellis

Christine Julia and an other Roger Watts and Raymond StafshyDiocesan school winners in the ford They won one debate out homemaker contest are now eli shy of four gible for consideration as state Current Affairs Contest winners Themiddot states highestshy Many Diocesan schools partici shyranking girl will receive a $1500 pated in a current affairs conshyscholarship and will tour Washshy test sponsored by a weekly news ington and New York City this magazine and among top scorers Spring From the state finalists were Janet Gendreau Moniquewill be chosen national winners Boulay and Muriel Raiche at in the homemaking contest and Jesus-Mary and Paula Powersthese girls will have their scholshy Susan Penrose and Mary Kellyarship grants substantially illshy at SIlA Fall River creased Also in the spotlight is 1anice

Benoit of SHA Fall River whosGrac1aatlOIl GOWIl8

received honorable mention for rrs snowy outside but thoughts the Bishop Connolly award preshy

of the seniors at Mt St Mary sented annually to the DioceseAcademy in Fall River are Oft outstanding girl athletethe days of June Theyre curshy Yearbook pictures for Coylerently selecting g r a d u at i 0 Il juniors sophomores and freshshygowns and are making a critical men have been safely taken so survey of ofterings from several another milestone is passed OIl area stores the road to publication

And National Bonot- Society Dominican Academy juniopsmembers have been busy at Sashy and seniors will make a closedcred Hearts Fall River Theyve retreat at the Cenacle Conventwritten to all accredited colleges ill Brighton during their Februshyin the US requesting inforshy ary vacation while the annualmation on admission requireshy school retreat is in progressments and availability of finanshy hOW at Bishop Stangcial aid The gathered informashy The program includes dallytion will augment the guidanee Mass Benediction and confershyfile in the school library ences and retreat masters are

Sevenmiddot new clubs have beeR Rev John OBrien SSCCmiddot andorganized at Tauntons Coyle Rev Andrew Jahn SSCCHigh School They are French An unusual auction was a feashySpanish Stamp and Coin Pep ture of a dance sponsored lastEnglish Literature Chess and weekend by Feehan seniors forPhotography Something theremiddot all their fellow students Eachfor everyone faculty member donated a prize

Four Dominican Academy stushy for the auction including suchdents have passed 120 word tests valuable items as a pass excusingin Gregg shorthand and two a student from detention pershyhave passed 100 word tests On mission to omit a book from anthe bowling scene at DA high outside reading list and a driy scorers include Susan Pacheco ing passAnne Marie FoIster Colleen Auctionmiddot proceeds benefited bullDesrosiers and Patricia Od) shy performance of Leave It tonecky Jane to be produced by the

The junior prom at Bishop Feehan Dramatics Club SundayFeehan High in Attleboro has and Monday Feb 14 and 15been set for Tuesday night April Jeannine Dumont senior class20 In charge ofmiddot arrangements secretary and middotlssistant editor of are Robert Bedard and Carol the school paper at Holy FamilyMiller while committees are al shy High has been accepted at Bosshyready at work on decorations ton College as have classmates e n t e r t a i n men t refreshshy Maureen OBrien Christine Ponshyments tickets and that unher ichtera and John AylwardaIded but all-important chore of Mother McAuley Guild at Mtclean-up St Mary Academy will hold its

annual calendar party WednesshyDebaiioi- Prcmt day night Feb 10 EntertainshyIn the indoor days of Winter ment will reprelC~t each monthdebating holds an honored spot of the year and the decoratedamong extra-curricular activishycakes willbe ~oor prizesties at Diocesan schools At Preshy Class -laeement vost in Fall River the debate

THE ANCHOR-- 13 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Churchmen Favor Johnson School Aid Program

WASHINGTON (NC) shyCatholic and Protestant spokesmen applauded Presishydent Johnsons school aid proposal in a placid Congresshysional bearing where the on~ disagreement came over mi~

technical questions The release from the charged

atmosphere of past hearings w noted all around

A Catholic spokesman smilin~

ly commented that it was a relief not to fear getting out of the

Vour nearescmall box i$ Q Firsf Ilfderal branch office that open 24 hours $ day to make $(lving easy for you No traffic nO parking no leather problem~

Withdrawals ate just as implt taY~ngs paymencS

bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull r fRlE o~middottymiddotmiddot ~ ubullbullh coupon 7bullbull~ trti 0middot

team was victorious over Mt St Marys and Bishop Stang in Narshyragansett League debate but lost to SHA Fall River The varisity also met Coyle during the past week

Mt st Marys debate record stands at 2-2 with Anne Browshynell Linda Mello Susan Jenkinshyson and Nancy Curran defending their school in Narragansett

Tomorrows the day of reckonshying at SHA Fall River Not only will report cards be distributed but a list of all seniorsand their placement in middottheir class for the past four years will be published

Fifteen seniors It DA partici shypated in a French Listening Comprehension Test on Tuesday This supplementary test is ofshyfered by the eollege entrance

PREVOST SCHOLARS High scorers in National Merit Scholarship Examinations at Prevost High School Fall River are Gerard Gltgtu~et left and Paul Nowak

tests in addition to the French Written exams come in March

Also at Feehan where report cards will come tomorrow high honors will be achieved by those with an average of 90 or better honors by those earning 85 or better and honorable mention by those with grades of 80 01 better

Bishop Stang mathematiciana placed first ill the Notre Dame Math Meet held last week at Cardinal Cushing High in South Boston Eighteen schools com~

peted and Stang won by n points Responsible for the vieshytory were John Keavy Paul Roy John De Ciccio Raymond Desrosiers and Alan Roskiewiez Top individual scorer was John DeCiccio

Best Girl Athlete Senior Nancy Vogel of Bishop Stang High School received the Bishop Connolly Award for the best girl athlete of Fall River area Diocesan high schools at a ceremony held last night at Whites restaurant Nancy as shining a star schoshylastically as athletically plays hockey basketball and volley~ ball at the North Dartmouth school She will be the first reshycipient of what is to become an

Influence Declining MADRID (NC)-Castroist inshy

fluence among young people in Latin Ameriea has declined the past two years Luis Garcia Arishyas professor of international law at the University of Saragossa here in Spain said on his return from a tour of Latin America Thursday Feb 1amp

SCHOOL Mainte~ance suppr~

SWEEPERS SOAPS DISINFECTANTS

FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

DAHILL CO 1886 PURCHASE STREET

annual award made by the FaD River Clover Club Also honored at last nights dinner-dance WBI Coach Carlin Lynch of 11M Stang Spartans

Forty Hours devotion was celshyebrated for the first time at Bishop Feehan high scbool starting Sunday and ending Tuesday Seniors Eileen Pashyquette Mary Duffy Nancy Clegg and Susall Ouelle~te aided Sister Mary Kateri of Feehan home economics department III making a cope and humeral veil used for the first time at the ceremonies

And Feehanites celebrated terms end by viewing A Raisin in the Sun

bullbullbullbullbullbull

hearing room alive The major Protestant spokesmen described the bill as an instrument of recshyonciliation Con g res smiddotm e a praised the compromises they saw being made by all sid~

church groups and educators -The President has proposed bull

$12 billion program to improve elementary and secondary schooling from poverty-strickea families

A total of $1 billion wouldge to public school districts in lowshyincome areas Additionally the proposal would spend $100 milshylion for textbooks for all school children and school libraries and another $100 million to create bull system of public-priva~commushynity educational centers to offer cultural enrichment and specitl eourses to all school ehildren

Pittsburgh School Enroll~ent Down

PITSBURGH (NC) - Enroll shyment in the Pittsburgh diocellMl Catholic school system has dro~ ped by 40 pupils Msgr John B McDowell superintendent ball reported

The monsignor said the sliglll drop has been preceded by fo_ years of leveling oft in enrol) ment figures because of enforeet gradual cuts in class size

Since 1960 he said there _ been an increase of only 24 pushypils in the total number of stushydents Elementary and seconda schools last June tallied 129531 pupils a drop of 40 he said

bullbullbullFREEKI _forbullbull~to bull ~-~----- shy _ StampMo _ middot----1

City_middot bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbulliibullbullbullbullbullbullbull WE pAY POSTAGa

(tree po5t-pald~Clddd i-velop ady to mall

FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND lOAN ASSOCIATION

OF FALL RIVER Home OHice 1 North Main St Fall River

Somerset OHice 149 GAR Highway Rte 6 League bouts The team meets exam board and consists of Both Offices Open Friday Evenings until INEW BEDFORDBishop Cassidy of TauntOn Wedshy questions and answers concernshy Sonterset Drive-In Window Open Mon-Thurs til 4 nesday Feb 10 ing subject matter on tape At WY 3-3786 Susan Nunes heads debate 111amp Feeha aiYdentll 1ook Germaa

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Stresses ilroad beep Gulf Between Two Generafions

By John J Kane Ph D What is your opinion of secretive sons and daughters

()f today Our married son and daughter never tell us anyshything Friends and strangers knew they bought a new home before we did My daughters husband knows all the ansshywers and wants no advice from anyone My son is afraid of his wife and she makes all decisions They ask us to visit but hurt our feelshyings when we do by what they say We were raised to reshyspect our elders and ask their advice

You r letter Jean does pose some justifiable complaints But it also seems to make some unshyreasonable deshy

mands Furthershymore amusingshy1y enough you conclude that you were reared to respect your elders and intimate your chil shydren werent If so whom can you blame

I dont know the reason why your children failed to inform you of their intentions to purshyehase a home But I do have some suspicions Do you have a tendency to be critical about what they buy Sometimes parshyents do

Tremendous Inflation Y-oungsters and parents both

make a certain type of mistake when it comes to purchasing of such things as homes cars or expensive appliances So m e young marrieds try to begin at a level their parents only achieved after 10 or 15 years of married life

But some parents do not seem to realize that inflation has been tremendous in the last 20 years When they hear a son or daughshyter is about to buy it home for 20 or 25 thousand dollars they are horrified They remember they paid perhaps 6 8 or 10

thousand dollars when they bought

They also forget credit is a bit easier than in the past that F BA and even the GI Bill help young people today and they may not even have existed when they were shopping for a house Longer te~ mortgages are possible today and lower down payments These of course do mean more interest

Coinmon CourteSY In other words parents should

Dot use the yardstick of economshyic conditions when they were young for the youth of today When they state perhaps with heated emphasis Why your father and I paid 10 thousand for a home the children are understandably irritated

But once having made their decisions com m 0 n courtesy would seem to demand tpat parshyents be told before strangers or at least as soon as friends Your sense -of hurt feelings here is quite understandable

Your complaint that your sons wife makes all the decisions may be true If so I agree that you have reared a Milquetoast But

is it true Are you actually cershytain or are you imagining someshything Are you really sayingshyand I frankly fear youare-that your son listens to his wife more than he listens to you

Mother-in-Law Role Being a mother-in-law is not

an easy role in Anierican soClshyety and many of the stupid

at least not if you wish to be a successful parent

Because most parents do love their children they are eager to help them They feel that their years of experience give them an advantage and this advantage they would extend to their chil shydren

At times this is true At times it is not The gulf between genshyerations is broad and deep Life has changed greatly in the space of one generation and the bench marks of the past may be unshysuitable today There are certain areas of living in which children may have better ideas than their parents Be prepared to admit as much

But within those areas where the maturity and experience of parents can be helpful advice can be given when not reshyquested only indirectly and cautiously Young marrieds misshyconstrue it as an effort to domshyinate which they reject Pershyhaps you can recall when you too felt this way

But it is indeed sad if they hurt your feelings when you do visit them You have not enshylarged on this so it is impossible to determine just what is said or done that annoys you Assuming you are making a correct judgshyment it is at the very least a breach of hospitality

Many of the inter-generational and in-laws problems of today are the result of social changes As one grows older it is less and less easy to change to adopt ways of doing and thinkshying After all if one succeeded under one system there is little motivation to alter it

Life Easier But conditions have changed

and to paraphrase a commercial this is the Pepsi generationbull Today boys and girls get married even wher the boy is unemshyployed This is scarcely advisable but somemake it Boys marry while still in college and their wives work to help put them through This would have been unthinkable 40 years ago

One of the really amazing changes is the use of long term credit The proud boast of years ago was that one didnt owe any money If you said this today youngsters would view you with open amazement and quietly conclude your credit was no good

No doubt some of this is overshydone and can bring about tragic results But if used intelligently it can make life somewhat easier perhaps more pleasant than in the past

These are only a few of the changes that could be listed a complete litany of them would be impossible Now this doesnt mean that parents are old fogeys that their counsel is useshyless It does mean that they must try tomiddot understand their married children better than some do

And incidentally because of these sweeping changes it is more difficult than it was But it isnt impossible an4 when donepays off in much better relationships

Anti-Smut Effort NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Loushy

isiana Knights of Columbus have jokes ]lake it even more diffi- launched a public information cult But parents after having campaign to combat what one reared their children to the best official t e r m e d indifference of their ability must let them go stemming from lack of knowlshyon their own You cannot keep edge about the growing traffic them tied to your apron strings in obscene literature

PRINCE OF THE CHURCH Americas new cardin~l recelyes congratulations from an old friend as Archbishop Patrlck A OBoyle of Washington felicitatesmiddot Lawrence Cardmal Shehan Archbishop of Baltimore on his elevation to the College of Cardinals by Pope Paul vi NC Photo

~Glassand Wire Tiny Foulr-Bell Chime in Bay State Church

Producing Soundof Big Heavy Metal WALTHAM (N C) - The string-shaped length of glass

church-bell of the future may which may be up to a foot i~ bE a ht~le thing of glass and length and a tiny hammer to Wire weighm~ about two grams produce the proper vibrations but reproducmg the sound of These vibrations are converted cast-metal constructions weigh- into an electronic signal which ing more than a ton ~asses through an amplifier is

j Pope Emphasizes Import of Hymns

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul in an audience for more han 1000 priests participating in a convention on pastoral lit shyurgy emphasized the key role of hymn-singing in the liturgy

We are not in a hurry he said

We must raise up a new peoshyple who learn to pray as the Church now prescribes

One of the prescriptions which I believe to be most influshyential and most necessary is singing

The Pope said that hymns inshycluding popular ones lift the soul and nourish it with religious sentiments

Illinois School Joins Expanding ETV Plan

MORTON (NC)-A parochial school here in Dlinois has served as pilot school in a historic edushyeational television experiment

Blessed Sacrament School reshyceived the first experimental transmission of v ide 0 tap e d courses in color from a high freshyquency monidirectional terminal

A 120-foot tower atop the school received signals from a tower on the Bradley University campus 10 miles away Bradley Coordinator Philip Weinburg said he expects an ETV program to be operational in the 1965-66 school year

The Catholic school tower will remain as a permanent inshystallation to serve both as an ETV booster station with a 15shymile radius and a receiver for educational programs in the school next Fall

Changes in Mass EDINBURGH (NC) - Scots

Catholics are busily preparing for the introduction of English and Gaelic into the Mass on March 1 the first Sunday in Lent

bull HYANNIS bull HARWICH PORT bull ~olri YAAMOUTH

--- shy

funeral Service

DoANmiddotSpoundALmiddotAMtS INCOIlPOItATtiD

Glassblower Gerhard B Finkshybeiner of Brandeis University here in Mass lpoundlas installed for the first time in the United States a set of the tiny bells in St Susanna church in Dedham named for the t~tula church in ~ome of ~ostOIl s Richardmiddot Carshydinal Cushmg

Finkbeiner whose small glass bells already al~e making kingshysiZed sounds in 10 churches in Germany and ]~rance has proshyduced a four-bell chime for the Dedham church encased in a metal cabinet only two feet long and weighing a mere 40 pounds In cast metal equivalent sotmdshyproducers would occupy a goodshysized belfry and weigh aboUt 10000 pounds Finbeiner envishysions his discovery as destined for churches which cannot afford regular bells

The new-style bells look like nothing so much as the fa~iliar vacuum tubes found in any nonshytransistor radio but they proshyduce a never-changing high quality sound which is fully comparable to the metallic clang

of the old-fashioned bell shy

Inside each vacuum tube in Finkbeiners system there is a

MON~~GHAN

ACCEF-TANCE CQIRP

JHOMAS F MONAGHAN JR

Trecisurer

142 SECOND STREET

OSborne 5-7856

FALL RIVER

Increased 100000 times and comes out through a ~pecial speaker whose sound most exshyperts cannot tell from a metallic ben

The sound of a heavy metallic bell is one of the most complex of all musical sounds according to Finbeiner but he has been able to dUJlicat~ it through parshyallel ~Udi~ in glassblowing electronics and ~acuum techshyniques

BARDAHL MAKES YOUR

CAR RUN BEnER tAt New Car Dealers and Service Stations

Everywhere -I

With Safety at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK

115 WILLIAM sr NEW BEDFORD MASS

WEBB OIL (OMPANY TEXACO FUEL ()IL$

DOMESTIC amp HFAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS

Sales~SetYce-lnstaDtjon MAINO~FICE~JO ~RFEEmiddot sTREETmiddotfAll ~IVER

Phone OS 5-7484

11

1S --

Views of New Ho~Y TrinitYmiddotmiddot-C-h-~-rc-h-I-W-e-s-t-~-I-a-li-i-ac-h-middotmiddotmiddotI

-

I I

16 THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

Says Pope John Left Cha lIenge To Catholicsmiddot

NORTH PALM BEACH (NC) - Pope John XXIII left Catholics with a chalshylenge to meet the world Bishop Coleman F Carroll of Miami said here

Bishop Carroll said Pope John dared Catholics to meet other Christians and non-Christians and to discuss our common problems and seek by discussion a solution to these problems

This challenge cannot be met by the pope alone or by the bishops and priests alone he said It must be met by all inshycluding-indeed especially-the laymen

-He said laymen must be propshy

erly prepared for this task through study training and spirshyitual preparation In this conshynection he called a closed spirshyitual retreat an absolute must for the lay person

Bishop Carroll spoke to memshybers of the Our Lady of Florida Retreat League at a dinner in his honor at the Passionist Retreat House here

PrelWtes Sc~~dlJ(e

US~ ~f VeCrulall ROME (NC)-The Italian lanshy

guage will be used in Mass throughout I t a I y beginning March 7 the first Sunday of Lent

The Italian Bishops Commitshytee on the Liturgy in announcshying the change specified that the Italian language would be used in Masses on Sundays and holy days and at all Masses attended by a substantial number of the faithful

The parts of the Mass to be said in Italian are the following the Epistle Gospel acclamations salutations and dialogues (inshycluding the prayers at the foot of the altar and the dialogue preshyceding the Preface) the Kyrie Gloria Creed Sanctus-Benedicshytus and Agnus Dei themiddot Patermiddot Noster with its introduction and the formula for the Communion

Peloquin Chorale Televises Hymns

NEW YORK (NC)-Hymns -Yesterday and Today featurshyipg C Alexander Peloquin and members of his popular Peloquin Chorale will be telecast Feb 14 from 1 to 130 PM EST over the ABC-TV network

The latest program in the seshyries Directions 65 - a Catholic Perspective produced by the National Council of Catholic Men and the ABC public affairs department was written by Peloquin and traces the develshyopment of hymnody from the Te Deum of the 4th century to the works of contemporary composers

Stresses Doctrines Substance Remains

DAVENPORT (NC) -Bishop Ralph L Hayes of Davenport adshymonished an interfaith meeting here in Iowa against expecting changes in Catholic doctrine

The (Second Vatican) Counshycil may change the manner of presentation of doctrines but not their substance he said pointing to the liturgy as an exshyample of such a change

We must admit bigotry and misunderstanding on both sides But followers of Christ have Scripture devotion to the Holy Spirit and devotion to Christ in common Why not talk about the things on which we agree he asked

Sisters of Mercy General Asks Personal ST LOUIS (NC)-Weve got

to develop the Sister in depth Thats what the times call for said the mother general of the 7300 American nuns of the Sisshyters of Mercy of the Union

Mother Mary Regina Cunningshyham ending her first six-year term as the head of the widely known teaching social work and hospital nuns was talking about what the Sisters of Mercy are doing to bring themselves fully up to the times

In St Louis Mo to meet with the superiors of the nine Mercy provinces Mother Regina talked about the main vehicle she and her colleagues hope will achieve the transformation

This is the year in the commu- nity for chapter meetings and general meetings of the nuns in

each of the provinces climaxed by a meeting of the general chapter at the orders mothershyhoupse in Bethesda Md she said

Changing Church Results will be ~olnown in Aushy

gust and Mother Regina hopes that they will show her commushynity to be in line with the mind of a rapidly changing Church in the midst of an even faster movshying world

She predicted tlat the chapshyters would have some surprises not only in the deisions but in the way they are organized to give a more representative view of all the Sisters in the order

If one overall phrase had to sum up what Mother Regina and the other planners are looking for in the Mere chapters it

would be personal responsibil shyity she said

A Sister has to have the reshysponsibility to make judgments for herself said the mother general Her superiors have to give her the responsibility to achieve her own role She has to make the decision to take the risks

~And then of course be ready to pay the price for her decishysion said Mother Regina

In Updated Sense Weve gone beyond the day

Papal Count BALTIMORE (NC) - Thomas

W Pangborn a Hagerstown (Md) industrialist and philanshythropist has been named a papal count by Pope Paul

Responsibility of always being safe Some peoshyple want to be sure to have the answer before they move But sometimes that meant they never moved at all she observed

Developing a Sister in depth will mean a lot of things espeshycially an updated sense of her apostolate and the way she works at it For the Mercy nuns in the U S Central and Latin America and in the West Indies it will mean a lot of littie things Mother Regina hinted

Changes might relax regulashytions about home visits dining with others attending night meetings and cultural affairs or traveling with companions

Mother Regina said that we have to plan for more contact with the laity and for more edushycation to understand each other shy

a

lYonderful Meatsbullbullbull Anoth~r Big Reasll Why zltI ~III I bull STAYING ~c~ Z ~

with FIRST NATIONAL it

l~middotmiddotsowll ItmiddotI

IIIIr-All vlu

FACE RUMIP Fine Grained Texture shy

Heavy Steer Beef for Hearty Eating LB

The Perfect Roast for large Families

ROASTL854CAITCHBONE Same [ow Self-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vidnily rNe Reserve Iie Right to Limit Quantitietl

-

I The Parish Parade I SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO bull

Holy Name Society members will receive corporate Communshyion at 7 oclock Mass Sunday morning Feb 14 The unit plans a Valentine dance and supper from 7 to 12 Saturday night Feb 13 in the Elks auditorium on Church Street SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs John DeBettenshycourt president Mrs Arnold Muckerheid vice-president Mrs Nelson J DeBettencourt Jr treasurer Mrs Charles Davis secretary

For the Holy Name SOGiety James Ferreira is president supshyported by Freeman Willoughby vice-president Alfred Metell treasurer Anthony Rebello secshyretary The units next meeting will be Sunday Feb 14 at the parish hall OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a Masquerade Ball Friday night Feb 26 at Wimpys resshytaurantr Osterville Mrs James E Murphy is chairman ST JOSEPH ATTLEBORO

The CYO will sponsor a dance Saturday night Feb 20 with enshytertainment by Mickey Chagnon and the Rivieras Chairmen for the unit include Carolee Desshyrochers membership Judy Roy spiritual Claudette Ouimet culshytural Sue Reynolds publicity Claire Piette social Don Fisher recreational BLESSED SACRAMENT FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will present a fashion fair at an open meeting to be held Wedshynesday Feb 17 in the church basement Planned for April are a rummage sale and a whist party ST JEAN BAPTISTE FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women announces a ham and basket whist party for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 in the lower church hall In charge will be Mrs Napoleon Picard and Mrs Eugene Gagnon aided by a large committee ST STANISLAUS FALL RIVER

Civics Club members of the parochial school will deliver pastry to nursing home patients for Valentines Day Other projshyects include collecting Christmas cards for missionaries and shovshyelling snow to augment the club treasury OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION OSTERVILLE

Mr and Mrs William Dacey will be co-chairmen of a preshyLenten dance to be held Friday night Feb 19 at Wimpys restaushyrant in Osterville under sponsorshyship of the Womens Guild The program will include a buffef and dancing from 9 to to ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

Mrs Lionel J Dulude presishydent of the Sacred Hearts Assoshyciation requests all ladies of the unit who have First Friday Adoration to check their asshysigned times in order that the full quota will be present at all hours

Corporate Communion for members will be held on Sunday at the 815 Mass and the regushylar meeting will be held the same evening at 730 in the Church Hall

The Penny Sale scheduled for Feb 20 will be discussed atthis meeting ST JOSEPH FALLRIVER

The annual mid-Winter Gala is set for Saturday night at Venus de Milo restaurant A buffet supper from 630 to 830 will be followed by dancing a parish reunion and awarding of prizes

ST JOAN OF ARC ORLEANS

Forthcoming events for the Womens Guild include penny sales this month April and next November socials in March and June and Summer fairs in July and August A ham and bean supper is ~cheduled for May ST JAMES NEW BEDFORD

middotMsgr Noon Circle plans a potluck supper for members and their guests Saturday night Feb 20 OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION NEW BEDFORD

Holy Name Society officers inshyclude Severo G Alfama presishydent James P Gonsalves and John Monteiro vice-president Antonio Rocha treasurer John Soares secretary ST GEORGE WESTPORT

Womens Guild members will form the congregation at the TV Mass to be broadcast on channel 6 at 10 Sunday morning Feb 7 Participants will meet at the parish school hall at 9 to travel to New Bedford ST JOHN BAPTIST NEW BEDFORD

Parishioners will hold their annual filhoz supper and penny sale at 530 Sunday evening Feb 21 in the cllurch hall Tickshyets are available from officers of church organizations or at the rectory In charge are Gilbert Brazil and George Ladino ST PIUS X SOUTH YARMOUTH

The WQmens Guild will hold a past presidents dinner Monshyday night March 1 at Armands restaurant_ Hyannis NOTRE DAME FALL RIVER

Cubs and Boy Scouts will at shytend a Communion breakfast Sunday Feb 7 following 815 Mass A blue and gold banquet for the Cubs is set for Sunday Feb 28 in the parish hall with Roger Labonte in charge of arshyrangements

The Council of Catholic Women will hold its installation banquet Monday Feb 22 at Whites resshytaurant under the chairmanship of Mrs Paul Ilmais To be seated are Miss Helena Dumont president Mrs Cecile Barnabe frst vice-president Mrs Gershyard DextTaze second vice-presishydent Mrs Richard Perry treasshyurer Mrs Romeo Parent reshycording secretary Mrs Roger Langlois corresponding secreshytary

The third in a series of cake sales will follow all Masses this Sunday in the lower church Mrs Ferdnand Letendre chairman will be aided by Mrs Robert Phenixco-chairman Cakes can be brought to the lower church from 4 to 5 and 630 to s Saturshyday afternoon and evening SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a potluck supper for members at 630 Tuesday night Feb 16 in the parish hall A silent auction will follow the slipper In charge of arrangeshyments is Mrs Mary Pereira chairman aided by Mrs Mary Gagne The council announces a malassada supper and penny sale open to the public from 530 to 7 Sunday night Feb 21 also in the hall Tickets will be available at the door and chairshymen are Mrs Mary Cabeceiras and Mrs Albina Quintill

A regular meeting is set for 730 Friday night Feb 12 in the hall Installation of officers is planned for later in the month ST MATIDEU FALL RIVER 4

A Valentine whist is planned by the Council of Catholic Womshyen for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 at the parish hall Mrs Raymond Antaya is chairman

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan RIver-Thurs Feb 1l96I rr

GIVE VIEWS ON AID Presenting views on federal aid to education to the House Education sub-committee was this panel representing the Catholic school system left to right Msgr William E McManus Chicago superintendent of the largest Ctholic school system in the country Mr Edward McArdle Washington DC who focussed on the parents view of the childs needs as the father of seven children Msgr Freclerck G Hochwalt Director Education Department NCWC and Msgr John B McDowell sushyperintendent of the Pittsburgh diocesan school system NC Photo

bullSays Church Must Live In Wide World~ Cardinal Hits Ignorance of Our Neighbor

CHICAGO (NC)-An Amerishycan prelate prominent in the Churchs work for Latin Amershyica has told US Catholics there is no excuse for our ignorance of our neighbors the nations of Central and South America

Archbishop Paul L Hallinan of Atlanta chairman of the subshycommittee for inter-American cooperation of the US Bishops Committee for Latin America in a message to the second annual conference of the Catholic IntershyAmerican Cooperation Program SClid the Church today lives in a new world but it must preshypare to live in a wide world

Miles Are Nothing Catholics in tpe United States

with a strong cultural and comshymercial bridge to Europe find Africa a puzzle and Asia an Orshyiental mystery Strangest of all is our ignorance of our own neighbors the nations of Central

E~ual Treatment JERSEY CITY (NC)-Hudson

County parishes here in New Jersey are joining in a countyshywide interfaith appeal seeking pledges of fair housing practices

~T FRANCIS XAVIER IIYANNIS

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a penny sale at 8 Tuesday right Feb 9 in the parish hall A Communion breakfast and fashion show are on the units Spring schedule

ST JOHN BAPTIST CENTRAL VILLAGE

A housewares demonstraticm will follow an open meeting scheduled by the Womens Guild for 8 Thursday night Feb 11 in the church hall In charge of refreshments will be Mrs Matil shyda Shelter Miss Margaret Shay and Miss May Taggart The unit plans a Valentine whist for 3 Saturday night Feb 13 also in the church hall on Main Road Miss Edith Kirby and Mrs Louise Vieira are chairmen ST JOHN POCASSET

The Womens Guild announces a penny sale for Friday Feb 12 Mrs Sprague Spooner will be chairman The units next meetshying will feature slides and a talk by Col Eugene S Clark on the early history of Marthas Vineshyyard It will be held Tuesd~

Feb 16

and South America he deshyclared

The ~rchbishop said 60 years ago there was an excuse-travel communications and cultural knowledge were in their inshylancy But now miles are nothshying since Pope John XXIII brought his message of unity to the world he averred adding

Real Import The CICOP meeting brings

bishops priests and laymen of both hemispheres together for a remarkable in-service training period a healthy learn while you work program We know much of Latin American needs both religious economic and culshytural We are helping in our way to repair these shortcomings But we need even more to share

in this Christian fraternity fIIf background common resources and future hopes Only by free easy association with the repshyresentatives of Latin America can we get the real import

ELECTRICAL Contractors~

~ ~ ~ ~

944 County St ~ New Bedford

ecec~c~ccccee~o

C) LOUlUl~S iiffii~ ~ i middotbull EWrIMA ~- shyg l~

ROMEamp I~-

I SHmNES imiddot ~ OF EUROPE iiI bull ampHOLY LAND ~) C~ 1 bull CATBOLIC PROGRAJ 1965 ~)

ALI~~16 ~I CachoIlcTeI Orrlce ~) c~ WASHINGTON CHICAGOIOMI LONDONI CATHOLtC TRAVEL OFFICE FRM ~------------II -~ Dupont Circle Building WashIngton D C 20036 fali ~ ~ j1ii Please send me your free Illustrated booklet describing in ~ iJl detail the wOrldmiddotcovering pilgrimages

C~ Name iI ~IJ Address ~ C_~ CityIloneState 11 =~~~~~_~_~~_~_ft~ftVw ijrv _ii~middotV

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Teen-agers Outstanding For Prodigal Generosity

By Rev Joseph T McGloin S J Several times in this column Ive had some glowing

words to say about our Mexican neighbors to the south about their friendliness and hospitality- and general likeshyableness And certainly its all true These people busy as they are will go out of their of other peoples is that you canway give you their precious easily give the idea you are sell shytime and attention to see ing all your own countrymen that you enjoy your visit to short And this would be the their country When a Mexican furthest thing from my own says Mi casa es su casa My thoughts house is your Because there is great friendli shyhouse - which ness in our country too - in he invariably varying degrees and manifested

middot does-he means in various ways The Mexican is it F r i end s in general more spontaneous strangers even than we and most of us have to shopkeepshy be approached before we give ers youve never our friendship since an initial II e e n before shyness seems to hold us back will introduce Often enough however this

middotyou to the whole shyness is caused by a national family and inshy superiority complex by a fear vite you to hav~ of not being accepted and by

middotdinner wit h the fear of making fools of ourshymiddot them To put it mildly hospital shy selves in a language we dont ity like this would be impossible know In other words humility to forget or to overlook is an esseatial to friendliness and _ Sometimes you wonder as you hospitality Sometimes we have walk the downtown- streets of it Often we dont CHle of our own cities and as you Hospitable People see pe~ple going their own inshy We Americans are sometimessulated ways if it isnt true that afraid to show our real feelingsas a country we have only a -afraid to show for inst~nce

-head while Mexico has a head our sympathy forthe underdogand a heart We usually make up for t~is

Superiority Complex psychologically by cheering on - This feeling grows on - you the hiss favored side at spe~tator when you visit Mexico and have sports when we should be doingthe misfortunE to encounter the it in the causes of racial justiceAmerican tourist who is bent on and equality of opportunity inshyacting like one It is a crying stead shame that so many Americans We are afraid others usuallyhave to show a superiority com- those very loud others will look

middotplex to those they encounter in down on us if we give public middot other countries seeming to feel support to those who need our that no matter where they go it support the little -people the is not they who are the foreignshy least of Christs and our brethshyers but those they encounter ren

All too often these types seem The fact is though that we to despise the customs and lanshy Americans do have a- heart and guage and even the currency of that once we put aside our sillythe countries they visit apparshy ideas that we are too busy to be ently thinking that anyone can hospitable or that others will understand English if you only look on us as soft and foolish if speak louder and that real we are or that we must not goAmerican money will buy anyshy out of way forour foreign~rs thing even respect because we might make a misshy

Worst of all are those wbo take in speaking their languagebring their aura of racial supeshy -then we can be and are just as riority along with them and hospitable and friendly as anymake little effort to hide it It is peoplein the world undoubtedly true that some of Ideals of Youththis patronizing attitude is partly There are many Americansresponsible (along with Castro~ and fortunately there are gettingeternal vigilance for American to be more who are willing tomistakes and seeming mistakes) stand up publicly and be countedfor the affection with which on the side of right instead ofAmericans are held in some parts - merely clucking in quiet privateof Latin America such as in sympathy There are lots ofPanama Americans who are not jqst

Race Prejudice friendly and hospitable to forshyAnd its tragic that have eigners but who do heroic workwe

to expoFt the most shameful of with the poor and downtrodden our national sins the stupidity and handicapped of their own which is race prejudice We country and their own city as might as well forget in fact well about any good neighbor polshy - Now there are lots of adult icy until we ourselves become Americans of this type But good neighbors when it comes to out-and-out

But even when we are not prodigal generosity it is the snobbish at home we are seldom teens as a rule whohave to be as spontaneous in our friendli shy given first prize ness other peoples The forshy A teen-agel who has not yetas eign students who come to stuay outgrown the honest ideals of at our universities often get youth will give his time and enshylonely and discouraged because ergy unstintingly and with little they have seemingly no friends thought of consequences This

author has instanceThe Negro in his fight for for seen equality (a fight which should kids doing heroic work with the never have been necessary in the very poor and the orphans-notfirst place) very often feels just throwing money into a colshyalone (though decreasingly so) lection box for them but givingwhen even those who know he is them their time and their love getting a raw deal do nothing working with them face to face at least publicly to help him even as Christ did set things right America has a great heart

Which may be one reason the and many Americans are just as Negro American often makes a spontaneous and natural at better ambassador abroad than showing it as any people anyshyother Americans where As a country however

Friendliness Here we still have some distance to But the trouble with extolling go before this sort of generosity

the hospitality and friendlin~ becomes our national image

CHECK COMPARE SAVE

Turkeys 10to11 LIS

Ready-to-Cook 39~ FIR S T Nancy Vogel

daughter of Mr and Mrs SAVE CASH bullbullbull SHOP AampPLeonard J Vogel of Sacred Heart Parish Fall River and a senior at Starg High last night became the first recishypient of the Bishop Connolly award for the outstanding

girl athlete n a Catholic High School The Clover Club of Fall River sponsored the award

Thomas ~Vhalen

In Noviticlte Brother Thomas Whalen son

of Mr and Mrs Thomas Whalen -8 General Cobb St Taunton and a member of the Sacred Heart Parish has received the religshyious habit of the Erothers of the

SMOKED P()RK SHOUlDERS

SUPER-RIGHT SHORT SHANK 6 TO 8 lBS

PICNICS 1829c

CHICKEN LEe or BREAST 33c

QUARTERS l8

SAVE CASH ON THESEHoly Cross at ceremonies conshyducted at St Joseph Novitiate

Valatie NY 6 POUNDS ofi BREAD ONLY 99c Brother John Donoghue CSC

Provincial Superior of the Broshy Whitl Breadp~~~E~ 4 ~6~~~z99c thers of the Holy Cross of the SAVI 20e - REGULAR 59c - 8 INCHEastern Province announced I p 118 8 OZ 39CJANEthat Brother Thomas was one of App I II PARKER IACHthe 14 candidates who is now starting a canonical year of proshy JANI PARKER - SAVlOe REGULAR 9c

bation for the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross bull hB Ck 1 lB 3 OZ 3ftCSpaRIS ar a e EACH i

Following the reception the parents and friends of Brother Thomas were guests at a lunchshyeon at the novitiate

Total Now 430 NEW YORK (NC)-With the

opening of two more parish schools the number of Catholic elementary schools in the New York archdiocese now totals 430

ATWC)OD OIL CO~~PANY

SHEILL HEATIN4 OILS South SeC] Streets Hyannis Tel HY 81

COMPLleTE

Mortgage Service anywhere on Cape Cod

bull RESIDENTIAL bull COMMEI~CIAL

bull CONSTRUCTION bull SEASONAL

Call EX 8-2266

Bass ~iver Savings Bank

SOUTH YARMOUTH Hyannis - Dennis Port

Yarmouth Plaza

Special Donut and Coffee SoleI All THIS weEKI

PLAIN SUGARED CJlNNAMON OR COMBINATION

2 PKGS 4ftltJane Parker Donuts 29cR~~ Of 12

I E 5 ON ON SAVE 4c B~~S SAV 1 c B3~S MILO AND MRLOW COFfil

Eight OClock ~A~ 69c-3 IJ~G 198 RICH FULLmiddotBOOleo

Red Circle CoHee ~A~ 71 c-3 B~G204 VIGOROUS ANO WINEY

lokar Coffe ~A~ 73c-3 B~G210 rice shown In thl ud guiltnteed tlltu Sat Feb

Tobacco products and Items prohibIted by Iaw eKempt from Plaid Stamp Offbullbull amp effective at ALL Aamp Sup Matlcotn thl communll1 and lclnll1

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 14: 02.04.65

14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Stresses ilroad beep Gulf Between Two Generafions

By John J Kane Ph D What is your opinion of secretive sons and daughters

()f today Our married son and daughter never tell us anyshything Friends and strangers knew they bought a new home before we did My daughters husband knows all the ansshywers and wants no advice from anyone My son is afraid of his wife and she makes all decisions They ask us to visit but hurt our feelshyings when we do by what they say We were raised to reshyspect our elders and ask their advice

You r letter Jean does pose some justifiable complaints But it also seems to make some unshyreasonable deshy

mands Furthershymore amusingshy1y enough you conclude that you were reared to respect your elders and intimate your chil shydren werent If so whom can you blame

I dont know the reason why your children failed to inform you of their intentions to purshyehase a home But I do have some suspicions Do you have a tendency to be critical about what they buy Sometimes parshyents do

Tremendous Inflation Y-oungsters and parents both

make a certain type of mistake when it comes to purchasing of such things as homes cars or expensive appliances So m e young marrieds try to begin at a level their parents only achieved after 10 or 15 years of married life

But some parents do not seem to realize that inflation has been tremendous in the last 20 years When they hear a son or daughshyter is about to buy it home for 20 or 25 thousand dollars they are horrified They remember they paid perhaps 6 8 or 10

thousand dollars when they bought

They also forget credit is a bit easier than in the past that F BA and even the GI Bill help young people today and they may not even have existed when they were shopping for a house Longer te~ mortgages are possible today and lower down payments These of course do mean more interest

Coinmon CourteSY In other words parents should

Dot use the yardstick of economshyic conditions when they were young for the youth of today When they state perhaps with heated emphasis Why your father and I paid 10 thousand for a home the children are understandably irritated

But once having made their decisions com m 0 n courtesy would seem to demand tpat parshyents be told before strangers or at least as soon as friends Your sense -of hurt feelings here is quite understandable

Your complaint that your sons wife makes all the decisions may be true If so I agree that you have reared a Milquetoast But

is it true Are you actually cershytain or are you imagining someshything Are you really sayingshyand I frankly fear youare-that your son listens to his wife more than he listens to you

Mother-in-Law Role Being a mother-in-law is not

an easy role in Anierican soClshyety and many of the stupid

at least not if you wish to be a successful parent

Because most parents do love their children they are eager to help them They feel that their years of experience give them an advantage and this advantage they would extend to their chil shydren

At times this is true At times it is not The gulf between genshyerations is broad and deep Life has changed greatly in the space of one generation and the bench marks of the past may be unshysuitable today There are certain areas of living in which children may have better ideas than their parents Be prepared to admit as much

But within those areas where the maturity and experience of parents can be helpful advice can be given when not reshyquested only indirectly and cautiously Young marrieds misshyconstrue it as an effort to domshyinate which they reject Pershyhaps you can recall when you too felt this way

But it is indeed sad if they hurt your feelings when you do visit them You have not enshylarged on this so it is impossible to determine just what is said or done that annoys you Assuming you are making a correct judgshyment it is at the very least a breach of hospitality

Many of the inter-generational and in-laws problems of today are the result of social changes As one grows older it is less and less easy to change to adopt ways of doing and thinkshying After all if one succeeded under one system there is little motivation to alter it

Life Easier But conditions have changed

and to paraphrase a commercial this is the Pepsi generationbull Today boys and girls get married even wher the boy is unemshyployed This is scarcely advisable but somemake it Boys marry while still in college and their wives work to help put them through This would have been unthinkable 40 years ago

One of the really amazing changes is the use of long term credit The proud boast of years ago was that one didnt owe any money If you said this today youngsters would view you with open amazement and quietly conclude your credit was no good

No doubt some of this is overshydone and can bring about tragic results But if used intelligently it can make life somewhat easier perhaps more pleasant than in the past

These are only a few of the changes that could be listed a complete litany of them would be impossible Now this doesnt mean that parents are old fogeys that their counsel is useshyless It does mean that they must try tomiddot understand their married children better than some do

And incidentally because of these sweeping changes it is more difficult than it was But it isnt impossible an4 when donepays off in much better relationships

Anti-Smut Effort NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Loushy

isiana Knights of Columbus have jokes ]lake it even more diffi- launched a public information cult But parents after having campaign to combat what one reared their children to the best official t e r m e d indifference of their ability must let them go stemming from lack of knowlshyon their own You cannot keep edge about the growing traffic them tied to your apron strings in obscene literature

PRINCE OF THE CHURCH Americas new cardin~l recelyes congratulations from an old friend as Archbishop Patrlck A OBoyle of Washington felicitatesmiddot Lawrence Cardmal Shehan Archbishop of Baltimore on his elevation to the College of Cardinals by Pope Paul vi NC Photo

~Glassand Wire Tiny Foulr-Bell Chime in Bay State Church

Producing Soundof Big Heavy Metal WALTHAM (N C) - The string-shaped length of glass

church-bell of the future may which may be up to a foot i~ bE a ht~le thing of glass and length and a tiny hammer to Wire weighm~ about two grams produce the proper vibrations but reproducmg the sound of These vibrations are converted cast-metal constructions weigh- into an electronic signal which ing more than a ton ~asses through an amplifier is

j Pope Emphasizes Import of Hymns

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul in an audience for more han 1000 priests participating in a convention on pastoral lit shyurgy emphasized the key role of hymn-singing in the liturgy

We are not in a hurry he said

We must raise up a new peoshyple who learn to pray as the Church now prescribes

One of the prescriptions which I believe to be most influshyential and most necessary is singing

The Pope said that hymns inshycluding popular ones lift the soul and nourish it with religious sentiments

Illinois School Joins Expanding ETV Plan

MORTON (NC)-A parochial school here in Dlinois has served as pilot school in a historic edushyeational television experiment

Blessed Sacrament School reshyceived the first experimental transmission of v ide 0 tap e d courses in color from a high freshyquency monidirectional terminal

A 120-foot tower atop the school received signals from a tower on the Bradley University campus 10 miles away Bradley Coordinator Philip Weinburg said he expects an ETV program to be operational in the 1965-66 school year

The Catholic school tower will remain as a permanent inshystallation to serve both as an ETV booster station with a 15shymile radius and a receiver for educational programs in the school next Fall

Changes in Mass EDINBURGH (NC) - Scots

Catholics are busily preparing for the introduction of English and Gaelic into the Mass on March 1 the first Sunday in Lent

bull HYANNIS bull HARWICH PORT bull ~olri YAAMOUTH

--- shy

funeral Service

DoANmiddotSpoundALmiddotAMtS INCOIlPOItATtiD

Glassblower Gerhard B Finkshybeiner of Brandeis University here in Mass lpoundlas installed for the first time in the United States a set of the tiny bells in St Susanna church in Dedham named for the t~tula church in ~ome of ~ostOIl s Richardmiddot Carshydinal Cushmg

Finkbeiner whose small glass bells already al~e making kingshysiZed sounds in 10 churches in Germany and ]~rance has proshyduced a four-bell chime for the Dedham church encased in a metal cabinet only two feet long and weighing a mere 40 pounds In cast metal equivalent sotmdshyproducers would occupy a goodshysized belfry and weigh aboUt 10000 pounds Finbeiner envishysions his discovery as destined for churches which cannot afford regular bells

The new-style bells look like nothing so much as the fa~iliar vacuum tubes found in any nonshytransistor radio but they proshyduce a never-changing high quality sound which is fully comparable to the metallic clang

of the old-fashioned bell shy

Inside each vacuum tube in Finkbeiners system there is a

MON~~GHAN

ACCEF-TANCE CQIRP

JHOMAS F MONAGHAN JR

Trecisurer

142 SECOND STREET

OSborne 5-7856

FALL RIVER

Increased 100000 times and comes out through a ~pecial speaker whose sound most exshyperts cannot tell from a metallic ben

The sound of a heavy metallic bell is one of the most complex of all musical sounds according to Finbeiner but he has been able to dUJlicat~ it through parshyallel ~Udi~ in glassblowing electronics and ~acuum techshyniques

BARDAHL MAKES YOUR

CAR RUN BEnER tAt New Car Dealers and Service Stations

Everywhere -I

With Safety at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK

115 WILLIAM sr NEW BEDFORD MASS

WEBB OIL (OMPANY TEXACO FUEL ()IL$

DOMESTIC amp HFAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS

Sales~SetYce-lnstaDtjon MAINO~FICE~JO ~RFEEmiddot sTREETmiddotfAll ~IVER

Phone OS 5-7484

11

1S --

Views of New Ho~Y TrinitYmiddotmiddot-C-h-~-rc-h-I-W-e-s-t-~-I-a-li-i-ac-h-middotmiddotmiddotI

-

I I

16 THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

Says Pope John Left Cha lIenge To Catholicsmiddot

NORTH PALM BEACH (NC) - Pope John XXIII left Catholics with a chalshylenge to meet the world Bishop Coleman F Carroll of Miami said here

Bishop Carroll said Pope John dared Catholics to meet other Christians and non-Christians and to discuss our common problems and seek by discussion a solution to these problems

This challenge cannot be met by the pope alone or by the bishops and priests alone he said It must be met by all inshycluding-indeed especially-the laymen

-He said laymen must be propshy

erly prepared for this task through study training and spirshyitual preparation In this conshynection he called a closed spirshyitual retreat an absolute must for the lay person

Bishop Carroll spoke to memshybers of the Our Lady of Florida Retreat League at a dinner in his honor at the Passionist Retreat House here

PrelWtes Sc~~dlJ(e

US~ ~f VeCrulall ROME (NC)-The Italian lanshy

guage will be used in Mass throughout I t a I y beginning March 7 the first Sunday of Lent

The Italian Bishops Commitshytee on the Liturgy in announcshying the change specified that the Italian language would be used in Masses on Sundays and holy days and at all Masses attended by a substantial number of the faithful

The parts of the Mass to be said in Italian are the following the Epistle Gospel acclamations salutations and dialogues (inshycluding the prayers at the foot of the altar and the dialogue preshyceding the Preface) the Kyrie Gloria Creed Sanctus-Benedicshytus and Agnus Dei themiddot Patermiddot Noster with its introduction and the formula for the Communion

Peloquin Chorale Televises Hymns

NEW YORK (NC)-Hymns -Yesterday and Today featurshyipg C Alexander Peloquin and members of his popular Peloquin Chorale will be telecast Feb 14 from 1 to 130 PM EST over the ABC-TV network

The latest program in the seshyries Directions 65 - a Catholic Perspective produced by the National Council of Catholic Men and the ABC public affairs department was written by Peloquin and traces the develshyopment of hymnody from the Te Deum of the 4th century to the works of contemporary composers

Stresses Doctrines Substance Remains

DAVENPORT (NC) -Bishop Ralph L Hayes of Davenport adshymonished an interfaith meeting here in Iowa against expecting changes in Catholic doctrine

The (Second Vatican) Counshycil may change the manner of presentation of doctrines but not their substance he said pointing to the liturgy as an exshyample of such a change

We must admit bigotry and misunderstanding on both sides But followers of Christ have Scripture devotion to the Holy Spirit and devotion to Christ in common Why not talk about the things on which we agree he asked

Sisters of Mercy General Asks Personal ST LOUIS (NC)-Weve got

to develop the Sister in depth Thats what the times call for said the mother general of the 7300 American nuns of the Sisshyters of Mercy of the Union

Mother Mary Regina Cunningshyham ending her first six-year term as the head of the widely known teaching social work and hospital nuns was talking about what the Sisters of Mercy are doing to bring themselves fully up to the times

In St Louis Mo to meet with the superiors of the nine Mercy provinces Mother Regina talked about the main vehicle she and her colleagues hope will achieve the transformation

This is the year in the commu- nity for chapter meetings and general meetings of the nuns in

each of the provinces climaxed by a meeting of the general chapter at the orders mothershyhoupse in Bethesda Md she said

Changing Church Results will be ~olnown in Aushy

gust and Mother Regina hopes that they will show her commushynity to be in line with the mind of a rapidly changing Church in the midst of an even faster movshying world

She predicted tlat the chapshyters would have some surprises not only in the deisions but in the way they are organized to give a more representative view of all the Sisters in the order

If one overall phrase had to sum up what Mother Regina and the other planners are looking for in the Mere chapters it

would be personal responsibil shyity she said

A Sister has to have the reshysponsibility to make judgments for herself said the mother general Her superiors have to give her the responsibility to achieve her own role She has to make the decision to take the risks

~And then of course be ready to pay the price for her decishysion said Mother Regina

In Updated Sense Weve gone beyond the day

Papal Count BALTIMORE (NC) - Thomas

W Pangborn a Hagerstown (Md) industrialist and philanshythropist has been named a papal count by Pope Paul

Responsibility of always being safe Some peoshyple want to be sure to have the answer before they move But sometimes that meant they never moved at all she observed

Developing a Sister in depth will mean a lot of things espeshycially an updated sense of her apostolate and the way she works at it For the Mercy nuns in the U S Central and Latin America and in the West Indies it will mean a lot of littie things Mother Regina hinted

Changes might relax regulashytions about home visits dining with others attending night meetings and cultural affairs or traveling with companions

Mother Regina said that we have to plan for more contact with the laity and for more edushycation to understand each other shy

a

lYonderful Meatsbullbullbull Anoth~r Big Reasll Why zltI ~III I bull STAYING ~c~ Z ~

with FIRST NATIONAL it

l~middotmiddotsowll ItmiddotI

IIIIr-All vlu

FACE RUMIP Fine Grained Texture shy

Heavy Steer Beef for Hearty Eating LB

The Perfect Roast for large Families

ROASTL854CAITCHBONE Same [ow Self-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vidnily rNe Reserve Iie Right to Limit Quantitietl

-

I The Parish Parade I SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO bull

Holy Name Society members will receive corporate Communshyion at 7 oclock Mass Sunday morning Feb 14 The unit plans a Valentine dance and supper from 7 to 12 Saturday night Feb 13 in the Elks auditorium on Church Street SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs John DeBettenshycourt president Mrs Arnold Muckerheid vice-president Mrs Nelson J DeBettencourt Jr treasurer Mrs Charles Davis secretary

For the Holy Name SOGiety James Ferreira is president supshyported by Freeman Willoughby vice-president Alfred Metell treasurer Anthony Rebello secshyretary The units next meeting will be Sunday Feb 14 at the parish hall OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a Masquerade Ball Friday night Feb 26 at Wimpys resshytaurantr Osterville Mrs James E Murphy is chairman ST JOSEPH ATTLEBORO

The CYO will sponsor a dance Saturday night Feb 20 with enshytertainment by Mickey Chagnon and the Rivieras Chairmen for the unit include Carolee Desshyrochers membership Judy Roy spiritual Claudette Ouimet culshytural Sue Reynolds publicity Claire Piette social Don Fisher recreational BLESSED SACRAMENT FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will present a fashion fair at an open meeting to be held Wedshynesday Feb 17 in the church basement Planned for April are a rummage sale and a whist party ST JEAN BAPTISTE FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women announces a ham and basket whist party for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 in the lower church hall In charge will be Mrs Napoleon Picard and Mrs Eugene Gagnon aided by a large committee ST STANISLAUS FALL RIVER

Civics Club members of the parochial school will deliver pastry to nursing home patients for Valentines Day Other projshyects include collecting Christmas cards for missionaries and shovshyelling snow to augment the club treasury OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION OSTERVILLE

Mr and Mrs William Dacey will be co-chairmen of a preshyLenten dance to be held Friday night Feb 19 at Wimpys restaushyrant in Osterville under sponsorshyship of the Womens Guild The program will include a buffef and dancing from 9 to to ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

Mrs Lionel J Dulude presishydent of the Sacred Hearts Assoshyciation requests all ladies of the unit who have First Friday Adoration to check their asshysigned times in order that the full quota will be present at all hours

Corporate Communion for members will be held on Sunday at the 815 Mass and the regushylar meeting will be held the same evening at 730 in the Church Hall

The Penny Sale scheduled for Feb 20 will be discussed atthis meeting ST JOSEPH FALLRIVER

The annual mid-Winter Gala is set for Saturday night at Venus de Milo restaurant A buffet supper from 630 to 830 will be followed by dancing a parish reunion and awarding of prizes

ST JOAN OF ARC ORLEANS

Forthcoming events for the Womens Guild include penny sales this month April and next November socials in March and June and Summer fairs in July and August A ham and bean supper is ~cheduled for May ST JAMES NEW BEDFORD

middotMsgr Noon Circle plans a potluck supper for members and their guests Saturday night Feb 20 OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION NEW BEDFORD

Holy Name Society officers inshyclude Severo G Alfama presishydent James P Gonsalves and John Monteiro vice-president Antonio Rocha treasurer John Soares secretary ST GEORGE WESTPORT

Womens Guild members will form the congregation at the TV Mass to be broadcast on channel 6 at 10 Sunday morning Feb 7 Participants will meet at the parish school hall at 9 to travel to New Bedford ST JOHN BAPTIST NEW BEDFORD

Parishioners will hold their annual filhoz supper and penny sale at 530 Sunday evening Feb 21 in the cllurch hall Tickshyets are available from officers of church organizations or at the rectory In charge are Gilbert Brazil and George Ladino ST PIUS X SOUTH YARMOUTH

The WQmens Guild will hold a past presidents dinner Monshyday night March 1 at Armands restaurant_ Hyannis NOTRE DAME FALL RIVER

Cubs and Boy Scouts will at shytend a Communion breakfast Sunday Feb 7 following 815 Mass A blue and gold banquet for the Cubs is set for Sunday Feb 28 in the parish hall with Roger Labonte in charge of arshyrangements

The Council of Catholic Women will hold its installation banquet Monday Feb 22 at Whites resshytaurant under the chairmanship of Mrs Paul Ilmais To be seated are Miss Helena Dumont president Mrs Cecile Barnabe frst vice-president Mrs Gershyard DextTaze second vice-presishydent Mrs Richard Perry treasshyurer Mrs Romeo Parent reshycording secretary Mrs Roger Langlois corresponding secreshytary

The third in a series of cake sales will follow all Masses this Sunday in the lower church Mrs Ferdnand Letendre chairman will be aided by Mrs Robert Phenixco-chairman Cakes can be brought to the lower church from 4 to 5 and 630 to s Saturshyday afternoon and evening SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a potluck supper for members at 630 Tuesday night Feb 16 in the parish hall A silent auction will follow the slipper In charge of arrangeshyments is Mrs Mary Pereira chairman aided by Mrs Mary Gagne The council announces a malassada supper and penny sale open to the public from 530 to 7 Sunday night Feb 21 also in the hall Tickets will be available at the door and chairshymen are Mrs Mary Cabeceiras and Mrs Albina Quintill

A regular meeting is set for 730 Friday night Feb 12 in the hall Installation of officers is planned for later in the month ST MATIDEU FALL RIVER 4

A Valentine whist is planned by the Council of Catholic Womshyen for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 at the parish hall Mrs Raymond Antaya is chairman

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan RIver-Thurs Feb 1l96I rr

GIVE VIEWS ON AID Presenting views on federal aid to education to the House Education sub-committee was this panel representing the Catholic school system left to right Msgr William E McManus Chicago superintendent of the largest Ctholic school system in the country Mr Edward McArdle Washington DC who focussed on the parents view of the childs needs as the father of seven children Msgr Freclerck G Hochwalt Director Education Department NCWC and Msgr John B McDowell sushyperintendent of the Pittsburgh diocesan school system NC Photo

bullSays Church Must Live In Wide World~ Cardinal Hits Ignorance of Our Neighbor

CHICAGO (NC)-An Amerishycan prelate prominent in the Churchs work for Latin Amershyica has told US Catholics there is no excuse for our ignorance of our neighbors the nations of Central and South America

Archbishop Paul L Hallinan of Atlanta chairman of the subshycommittee for inter-American cooperation of the US Bishops Committee for Latin America in a message to the second annual conference of the Catholic IntershyAmerican Cooperation Program SClid the Church today lives in a new world but it must preshypare to live in a wide world

Miles Are Nothing Catholics in tpe United States

with a strong cultural and comshymercial bridge to Europe find Africa a puzzle and Asia an Orshyiental mystery Strangest of all is our ignorance of our own neighbors the nations of Central

E~ual Treatment JERSEY CITY (NC)-Hudson

County parishes here in New Jersey are joining in a countyshywide interfaith appeal seeking pledges of fair housing practices

~T FRANCIS XAVIER IIYANNIS

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a penny sale at 8 Tuesday right Feb 9 in the parish hall A Communion breakfast and fashion show are on the units Spring schedule

ST JOHN BAPTIST CENTRAL VILLAGE

A housewares demonstraticm will follow an open meeting scheduled by the Womens Guild for 8 Thursday night Feb 11 in the church hall In charge of refreshments will be Mrs Matil shyda Shelter Miss Margaret Shay and Miss May Taggart The unit plans a Valentine whist for 3 Saturday night Feb 13 also in the church hall on Main Road Miss Edith Kirby and Mrs Louise Vieira are chairmen ST JOHN POCASSET

The Womens Guild announces a penny sale for Friday Feb 12 Mrs Sprague Spooner will be chairman The units next meetshying will feature slides and a talk by Col Eugene S Clark on the early history of Marthas Vineshyyard It will be held Tuesd~

Feb 16

and South America he deshyclared

The ~rchbishop said 60 years ago there was an excuse-travel communications and cultural knowledge were in their inshylancy But now miles are nothshying since Pope John XXIII brought his message of unity to the world he averred adding

Real Import The CICOP meeting brings

bishops priests and laymen of both hemispheres together for a remarkable in-service training period a healthy learn while you work program We know much of Latin American needs both religious economic and culshytural We are helping in our way to repair these shortcomings But we need even more to share

in this Christian fraternity fIIf background common resources and future hopes Only by free easy association with the repshyresentatives of Latin America can we get the real import

ELECTRICAL Contractors~

~ ~ ~ ~

944 County St ~ New Bedford

ecec~c~ccccee~o

C) LOUlUl~S iiffii~ ~ i middotbull EWrIMA ~- shyg l~

ROMEamp I~-

I SHmNES imiddot ~ OF EUROPE iiI bull ampHOLY LAND ~) C~ 1 bull CATBOLIC PROGRAJ 1965 ~)

ALI~~16 ~I CachoIlcTeI Orrlce ~) c~ WASHINGTON CHICAGOIOMI LONDONI CATHOLtC TRAVEL OFFICE FRM ~------------II -~ Dupont Circle Building WashIngton D C 20036 fali ~ ~ j1ii Please send me your free Illustrated booklet describing in ~ iJl detail the wOrldmiddotcovering pilgrimages

C~ Name iI ~IJ Address ~ C_~ CityIloneState 11 =~~~~~_~_~~_~_ft~ftVw ijrv _ii~middotV

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Teen-agers Outstanding For Prodigal Generosity

By Rev Joseph T McGloin S J Several times in this column Ive had some glowing

words to say about our Mexican neighbors to the south about their friendliness and hospitality- and general likeshyableness And certainly its all true These people busy as they are will go out of their of other peoples is that you canway give you their precious easily give the idea you are sell shytime and attention to see ing all your own countrymen that you enjoy your visit to short And this would be the their country When a Mexican furthest thing from my own says Mi casa es su casa My thoughts house is your Because there is great friendli shyhouse - which ness in our country too - in he invariably varying degrees and manifested

middot does-he means in various ways The Mexican is it F r i end s in general more spontaneous strangers even than we and most of us have to shopkeepshy be approached before we give ers youve never our friendship since an initial II e e n before shyness seems to hold us back will introduce Often enough however this

middotyou to the whole shyness is caused by a national family and inshy superiority complex by a fear vite you to hav~ of not being accepted and by

middotdinner wit h the fear of making fools of ourshymiddot them To put it mildly hospital shy selves in a language we dont ity like this would be impossible know In other words humility to forget or to overlook is an esseatial to friendliness and _ Sometimes you wonder as you hospitality Sometimes we have walk the downtown- streets of it Often we dont CHle of our own cities and as you Hospitable People see pe~ple going their own inshy We Americans are sometimessulated ways if it isnt true that afraid to show our real feelingsas a country we have only a -afraid to show for inst~nce

-head while Mexico has a head our sympathy forthe underdogand a heart We usually make up for t~is

Superiority Complex psychologically by cheering on - This feeling grows on - you the hiss favored side at spe~tator when you visit Mexico and have sports when we should be doingthe misfortunE to encounter the it in the causes of racial justiceAmerican tourist who is bent on and equality of opportunity inshyacting like one It is a crying stead shame that so many Americans We are afraid others usuallyhave to show a superiority com- those very loud others will look

middotplex to those they encounter in down on us if we give public middot other countries seeming to feel support to those who need our that no matter where they go it support the little -people the is not they who are the foreignshy least of Christs and our brethshyers but those they encounter ren

All too often these types seem The fact is though that we to despise the customs and lanshy Americans do have a- heart and guage and even the currency of that once we put aside our sillythe countries they visit apparshy ideas that we are too busy to be ently thinking that anyone can hospitable or that others will understand English if you only look on us as soft and foolish if speak louder and that real we are or that we must not goAmerican money will buy anyshy out of way forour foreign~rs thing even respect because we might make a misshy

Worst of all are those wbo take in speaking their languagebring their aura of racial supeshy -then we can be and are just as riority along with them and hospitable and friendly as anymake little effort to hide it It is peoplein the world undoubtedly true that some of Ideals of Youththis patronizing attitude is partly There are many Americansresponsible (along with Castro~ and fortunately there are gettingeternal vigilance for American to be more who are willing tomistakes and seeming mistakes) stand up publicly and be countedfor the affection with which on the side of right instead ofAmericans are held in some parts - merely clucking in quiet privateof Latin America such as in sympathy There are lots ofPanama Americans who are not jqst

Race Prejudice friendly and hospitable to forshyAnd its tragic that have eigners but who do heroic workwe

to expoFt the most shameful of with the poor and downtrodden our national sins the stupidity and handicapped of their own which is race prejudice We country and their own city as might as well forget in fact well about any good neighbor polshy - Now there are lots of adult icy until we ourselves become Americans of this type But good neighbors when it comes to out-and-out

But even when we are not prodigal generosity it is the snobbish at home we are seldom teens as a rule whohave to be as spontaneous in our friendli shy given first prize ness other peoples The forshy A teen-agel who has not yetas eign students who come to stuay outgrown the honest ideals of at our universities often get youth will give his time and enshylonely and discouraged because ergy unstintingly and with little they have seemingly no friends thought of consequences This

author has instanceThe Negro in his fight for for seen equality (a fight which should kids doing heroic work with the never have been necessary in the very poor and the orphans-notfirst place) very often feels just throwing money into a colshyalone (though decreasingly so) lection box for them but givingwhen even those who know he is them their time and their love getting a raw deal do nothing working with them face to face at least publicly to help him even as Christ did set things right America has a great heart

Which may be one reason the and many Americans are just as Negro American often makes a spontaneous and natural at better ambassador abroad than showing it as any people anyshyother Americans where As a country however

Friendliness Here we still have some distance to But the trouble with extolling go before this sort of generosity

the hospitality and friendlin~ becomes our national image

CHECK COMPARE SAVE

Turkeys 10to11 LIS

Ready-to-Cook 39~ FIR S T Nancy Vogel

daughter of Mr and Mrs SAVE CASH bullbullbull SHOP AampPLeonard J Vogel of Sacred Heart Parish Fall River and a senior at Starg High last night became the first recishypient of the Bishop Connolly award for the outstanding

girl athlete n a Catholic High School The Clover Club of Fall River sponsored the award

Thomas ~Vhalen

In Noviticlte Brother Thomas Whalen son

of Mr and Mrs Thomas Whalen -8 General Cobb St Taunton and a member of the Sacred Heart Parish has received the religshyious habit of the Erothers of the

SMOKED P()RK SHOUlDERS

SUPER-RIGHT SHORT SHANK 6 TO 8 lBS

PICNICS 1829c

CHICKEN LEe or BREAST 33c

QUARTERS l8

SAVE CASH ON THESEHoly Cross at ceremonies conshyducted at St Joseph Novitiate

Valatie NY 6 POUNDS ofi BREAD ONLY 99c Brother John Donoghue CSC

Provincial Superior of the Broshy Whitl Breadp~~~E~ 4 ~6~~~z99c thers of the Holy Cross of the SAVI 20e - REGULAR 59c - 8 INCHEastern Province announced I p 118 8 OZ 39CJANEthat Brother Thomas was one of App I II PARKER IACHthe 14 candidates who is now starting a canonical year of proshy JANI PARKER - SAVlOe REGULAR 9c

bation for the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross bull hB Ck 1 lB 3 OZ 3ftCSpaRIS ar a e EACH i

Following the reception the parents and friends of Brother Thomas were guests at a lunchshyeon at the novitiate

Total Now 430 NEW YORK (NC)-With the

opening of two more parish schools the number of Catholic elementary schools in the New York archdiocese now totals 430

ATWC)OD OIL CO~~PANY

SHEILL HEATIN4 OILS South SeC] Streets Hyannis Tel HY 81

COMPLleTE

Mortgage Service anywhere on Cape Cod

bull RESIDENTIAL bull COMMEI~CIAL

bull CONSTRUCTION bull SEASONAL

Call EX 8-2266

Bass ~iver Savings Bank

SOUTH YARMOUTH Hyannis - Dennis Port

Yarmouth Plaza

Special Donut and Coffee SoleI All THIS weEKI

PLAIN SUGARED CJlNNAMON OR COMBINATION

2 PKGS 4ftltJane Parker Donuts 29cR~~ Of 12

I E 5 ON ON SAVE 4c B~~S SAV 1 c B3~S MILO AND MRLOW COFfil

Eight OClock ~A~ 69c-3 IJ~G 198 RICH FULLmiddotBOOleo

Red Circle CoHee ~A~ 71 c-3 B~G204 VIGOROUS ANO WINEY

lokar Coffe ~A~ 73c-3 B~G210 rice shown In thl ud guiltnteed tlltu Sat Feb

Tobacco products and Items prohibIted by Iaw eKempt from Plaid Stamp Offbullbull amp effective at ALL Aamp Sup Matlcotn thl communll1 and lclnll1

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 15: 02.04.65

1S --

Views of New Ho~Y TrinitYmiddotmiddot-C-h-~-rc-h-I-W-e-s-t-~-I-a-li-i-ac-h-middotmiddotmiddotI

-

I I

16 THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

Says Pope John Left Cha lIenge To Catholicsmiddot

NORTH PALM BEACH (NC) - Pope John XXIII left Catholics with a chalshylenge to meet the world Bishop Coleman F Carroll of Miami said here

Bishop Carroll said Pope John dared Catholics to meet other Christians and non-Christians and to discuss our common problems and seek by discussion a solution to these problems

This challenge cannot be met by the pope alone or by the bishops and priests alone he said It must be met by all inshycluding-indeed especially-the laymen

-He said laymen must be propshy

erly prepared for this task through study training and spirshyitual preparation In this conshynection he called a closed spirshyitual retreat an absolute must for the lay person

Bishop Carroll spoke to memshybers of the Our Lady of Florida Retreat League at a dinner in his honor at the Passionist Retreat House here

PrelWtes Sc~~dlJ(e

US~ ~f VeCrulall ROME (NC)-The Italian lanshy

guage will be used in Mass throughout I t a I y beginning March 7 the first Sunday of Lent

The Italian Bishops Commitshytee on the Liturgy in announcshying the change specified that the Italian language would be used in Masses on Sundays and holy days and at all Masses attended by a substantial number of the faithful

The parts of the Mass to be said in Italian are the following the Epistle Gospel acclamations salutations and dialogues (inshycluding the prayers at the foot of the altar and the dialogue preshyceding the Preface) the Kyrie Gloria Creed Sanctus-Benedicshytus and Agnus Dei themiddot Patermiddot Noster with its introduction and the formula for the Communion

Peloquin Chorale Televises Hymns

NEW YORK (NC)-Hymns -Yesterday and Today featurshyipg C Alexander Peloquin and members of his popular Peloquin Chorale will be telecast Feb 14 from 1 to 130 PM EST over the ABC-TV network

The latest program in the seshyries Directions 65 - a Catholic Perspective produced by the National Council of Catholic Men and the ABC public affairs department was written by Peloquin and traces the develshyopment of hymnody from the Te Deum of the 4th century to the works of contemporary composers

Stresses Doctrines Substance Remains

DAVENPORT (NC) -Bishop Ralph L Hayes of Davenport adshymonished an interfaith meeting here in Iowa against expecting changes in Catholic doctrine

The (Second Vatican) Counshycil may change the manner of presentation of doctrines but not their substance he said pointing to the liturgy as an exshyample of such a change

We must admit bigotry and misunderstanding on both sides But followers of Christ have Scripture devotion to the Holy Spirit and devotion to Christ in common Why not talk about the things on which we agree he asked

Sisters of Mercy General Asks Personal ST LOUIS (NC)-Weve got

to develop the Sister in depth Thats what the times call for said the mother general of the 7300 American nuns of the Sisshyters of Mercy of the Union

Mother Mary Regina Cunningshyham ending her first six-year term as the head of the widely known teaching social work and hospital nuns was talking about what the Sisters of Mercy are doing to bring themselves fully up to the times

In St Louis Mo to meet with the superiors of the nine Mercy provinces Mother Regina talked about the main vehicle she and her colleagues hope will achieve the transformation

This is the year in the commu- nity for chapter meetings and general meetings of the nuns in

each of the provinces climaxed by a meeting of the general chapter at the orders mothershyhoupse in Bethesda Md she said

Changing Church Results will be ~olnown in Aushy

gust and Mother Regina hopes that they will show her commushynity to be in line with the mind of a rapidly changing Church in the midst of an even faster movshying world

She predicted tlat the chapshyters would have some surprises not only in the deisions but in the way they are organized to give a more representative view of all the Sisters in the order

If one overall phrase had to sum up what Mother Regina and the other planners are looking for in the Mere chapters it

would be personal responsibil shyity she said

A Sister has to have the reshysponsibility to make judgments for herself said the mother general Her superiors have to give her the responsibility to achieve her own role She has to make the decision to take the risks

~And then of course be ready to pay the price for her decishysion said Mother Regina

In Updated Sense Weve gone beyond the day

Papal Count BALTIMORE (NC) - Thomas

W Pangborn a Hagerstown (Md) industrialist and philanshythropist has been named a papal count by Pope Paul

Responsibility of always being safe Some peoshyple want to be sure to have the answer before they move But sometimes that meant they never moved at all she observed

Developing a Sister in depth will mean a lot of things espeshycially an updated sense of her apostolate and the way she works at it For the Mercy nuns in the U S Central and Latin America and in the West Indies it will mean a lot of littie things Mother Regina hinted

Changes might relax regulashytions about home visits dining with others attending night meetings and cultural affairs or traveling with companions

Mother Regina said that we have to plan for more contact with the laity and for more edushycation to understand each other shy

a

lYonderful Meatsbullbullbull Anoth~r Big Reasll Why zltI ~III I bull STAYING ~c~ Z ~

with FIRST NATIONAL it

l~middotmiddotsowll ItmiddotI

IIIIr-All vlu

FACE RUMIP Fine Grained Texture shy

Heavy Steer Beef for Hearty Eating LB

The Perfect Roast for large Families

ROASTL854CAITCHBONE Same [ow Self-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vidnily rNe Reserve Iie Right to Limit Quantitietl

-

I The Parish Parade I SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO bull

Holy Name Society members will receive corporate Communshyion at 7 oclock Mass Sunday morning Feb 14 The unit plans a Valentine dance and supper from 7 to 12 Saturday night Feb 13 in the Elks auditorium on Church Street SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs John DeBettenshycourt president Mrs Arnold Muckerheid vice-president Mrs Nelson J DeBettencourt Jr treasurer Mrs Charles Davis secretary

For the Holy Name SOGiety James Ferreira is president supshyported by Freeman Willoughby vice-president Alfred Metell treasurer Anthony Rebello secshyretary The units next meeting will be Sunday Feb 14 at the parish hall OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a Masquerade Ball Friday night Feb 26 at Wimpys resshytaurantr Osterville Mrs James E Murphy is chairman ST JOSEPH ATTLEBORO

The CYO will sponsor a dance Saturday night Feb 20 with enshytertainment by Mickey Chagnon and the Rivieras Chairmen for the unit include Carolee Desshyrochers membership Judy Roy spiritual Claudette Ouimet culshytural Sue Reynolds publicity Claire Piette social Don Fisher recreational BLESSED SACRAMENT FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will present a fashion fair at an open meeting to be held Wedshynesday Feb 17 in the church basement Planned for April are a rummage sale and a whist party ST JEAN BAPTISTE FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women announces a ham and basket whist party for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 in the lower church hall In charge will be Mrs Napoleon Picard and Mrs Eugene Gagnon aided by a large committee ST STANISLAUS FALL RIVER

Civics Club members of the parochial school will deliver pastry to nursing home patients for Valentines Day Other projshyects include collecting Christmas cards for missionaries and shovshyelling snow to augment the club treasury OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION OSTERVILLE

Mr and Mrs William Dacey will be co-chairmen of a preshyLenten dance to be held Friday night Feb 19 at Wimpys restaushyrant in Osterville under sponsorshyship of the Womens Guild The program will include a buffef and dancing from 9 to to ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

Mrs Lionel J Dulude presishydent of the Sacred Hearts Assoshyciation requests all ladies of the unit who have First Friday Adoration to check their asshysigned times in order that the full quota will be present at all hours

Corporate Communion for members will be held on Sunday at the 815 Mass and the regushylar meeting will be held the same evening at 730 in the Church Hall

The Penny Sale scheduled for Feb 20 will be discussed atthis meeting ST JOSEPH FALLRIVER

The annual mid-Winter Gala is set for Saturday night at Venus de Milo restaurant A buffet supper from 630 to 830 will be followed by dancing a parish reunion and awarding of prizes

ST JOAN OF ARC ORLEANS

Forthcoming events for the Womens Guild include penny sales this month April and next November socials in March and June and Summer fairs in July and August A ham and bean supper is ~cheduled for May ST JAMES NEW BEDFORD

middotMsgr Noon Circle plans a potluck supper for members and their guests Saturday night Feb 20 OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION NEW BEDFORD

Holy Name Society officers inshyclude Severo G Alfama presishydent James P Gonsalves and John Monteiro vice-president Antonio Rocha treasurer John Soares secretary ST GEORGE WESTPORT

Womens Guild members will form the congregation at the TV Mass to be broadcast on channel 6 at 10 Sunday morning Feb 7 Participants will meet at the parish school hall at 9 to travel to New Bedford ST JOHN BAPTIST NEW BEDFORD

Parishioners will hold their annual filhoz supper and penny sale at 530 Sunday evening Feb 21 in the cllurch hall Tickshyets are available from officers of church organizations or at the rectory In charge are Gilbert Brazil and George Ladino ST PIUS X SOUTH YARMOUTH

The WQmens Guild will hold a past presidents dinner Monshyday night March 1 at Armands restaurant_ Hyannis NOTRE DAME FALL RIVER

Cubs and Boy Scouts will at shytend a Communion breakfast Sunday Feb 7 following 815 Mass A blue and gold banquet for the Cubs is set for Sunday Feb 28 in the parish hall with Roger Labonte in charge of arshyrangements

The Council of Catholic Women will hold its installation banquet Monday Feb 22 at Whites resshytaurant under the chairmanship of Mrs Paul Ilmais To be seated are Miss Helena Dumont president Mrs Cecile Barnabe frst vice-president Mrs Gershyard DextTaze second vice-presishydent Mrs Richard Perry treasshyurer Mrs Romeo Parent reshycording secretary Mrs Roger Langlois corresponding secreshytary

The third in a series of cake sales will follow all Masses this Sunday in the lower church Mrs Ferdnand Letendre chairman will be aided by Mrs Robert Phenixco-chairman Cakes can be brought to the lower church from 4 to 5 and 630 to s Saturshyday afternoon and evening SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a potluck supper for members at 630 Tuesday night Feb 16 in the parish hall A silent auction will follow the slipper In charge of arrangeshyments is Mrs Mary Pereira chairman aided by Mrs Mary Gagne The council announces a malassada supper and penny sale open to the public from 530 to 7 Sunday night Feb 21 also in the hall Tickets will be available at the door and chairshymen are Mrs Mary Cabeceiras and Mrs Albina Quintill

A regular meeting is set for 730 Friday night Feb 12 in the hall Installation of officers is planned for later in the month ST MATIDEU FALL RIVER 4

A Valentine whist is planned by the Council of Catholic Womshyen for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 at the parish hall Mrs Raymond Antaya is chairman

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan RIver-Thurs Feb 1l96I rr

GIVE VIEWS ON AID Presenting views on federal aid to education to the House Education sub-committee was this panel representing the Catholic school system left to right Msgr William E McManus Chicago superintendent of the largest Ctholic school system in the country Mr Edward McArdle Washington DC who focussed on the parents view of the childs needs as the father of seven children Msgr Freclerck G Hochwalt Director Education Department NCWC and Msgr John B McDowell sushyperintendent of the Pittsburgh diocesan school system NC Photo

bullSays Church Must Live In Wide World~ Cardinal Hits Ignorance of Our Neighbor

CHICAGO (NC)-An Amerishycan prelate prominent in the Churchs work for Latin Amershyica has told US Catholics there is no excuse for our ignorance of our neighbors the nations of Central and South America

Archbishop Paul L Hallinan of Atlanta chairman of the subshycommittee for inter-American cooperation of the US Bishops Committee for Latin America in a message to the second annual conference of the Catholic IntershyAmerican Cooperation Program SClid the Church today lives in a new world but it must preshypare to live in a wide world

Miles Are Nothing Catholics in tpe United States

with a strong cultural and comshymercial bridge to Europe find Africa a puzzle and Asia an Orshyiental mystery Strangest of all is our ignorance of our own neighbors the nations of Central

E~ual Treatment JERSEY CITY (NC)-Hudson

County parishes here in New Jersey are joining in a countyshywide interfaith appeal seeking pledges of fair housing practices

~T FRANCIS XAVIER IIYANNIS

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a penny sale at 8 Tuesday right Feb 9 in the parish hall A Communion breakfast and fashion show are on the units Spring schedule

ST JOHN BAPTIST CENTRAL VILLAGE

A housewares demonstraticm will follow an open meeting scheduled by the Womens Guild for 8 Thursday night Feb 11 in the church hall In charge of refreshments will be Mrs Matil shyda Shelter Miss Margaret Shay and Miss May Taggart The unit plans a Valentine whist for 3 Saturday night Feb 13 also in the church hall on Main Road Miss Edith Kirby and Mrs Louise Vieira are chairmen ST JOHN POCASSET

The Womens Guild announces a penny sale for Friday Feb 12 Mrs Sprague Spooner will be chairman The units next meetshying will feature slides and a talk by Col Eugene S Clark on the early history of Marthas Vineshyyard It will be held Tuesd~

Feb 16

and South America he deshyclared

The ~rchbishop said 60 years ago there was an excuse-travel communications and cultural knowledge were in their inshylancy But now miles are nothshying since Pope John XXIII brought his message of unity to the world he averred adding

Real Import The CICOP meeting brings

bishops priests and laymen of both hemispheres together for a remarkable in-service training period a healthy learn while you work program We know much of Latin American needs both religious economic and culshytural We are helping in our way to repair these shortcomings But we need even more to share

in this Christian fraternity fIIf background common resources and future hopes Only by free easy association with the repshyresentatives of Latin America can we get the real import

ELECTRICAL Contractors~

~ ~ ~ ~

944 County St ~ New Bedford

ecec~c~ccccee~o

C) LOUlUl~S iiffii~ ~ i middotbull EWrIMA ~- shyg l~

ROMEamp I~-

I SHmNES imiddot ~ OF EUROPE iiI bull ampHOLY LAND ~) C~ 1 bull CATBOLIC PROGRAJ 1965 ~)

ALI~~16 ~I CachoIlcTeI Orrlce ~) c~ WASHINGTON CHICAGOIOMI LONDONI CATHOLtC TRAVEL OFFICE FRM ~------------II -~ Dupont Circle Building WashIngton D C 20036 fali ~ ~ j1ii Please send me your free Illustrated booklet describing in ~ iJl detail the wOrldmiddotcovering pilgrimages

C~ Name iI ~IJ Address ~ C_~ CityIloneState 11 =~~~~~_~_~~_~_ft~ftVw ijrv _ii~middotV

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Teen-agers Outstanding For Prodigal Generosity

By Rev Joseph T McGloin S J Several times in this column Ive had some glowing

words to say about our Mexican neighbors to the south about their friendliness and hospitality- and general likeshyableness And certainly its all true These people busy as they are will go out of their of other peoples is that you canway give you their precious easily give the idea you are sell shytime and attention to see ing all your own countrymen that you enjoy your visit to short And this would be the their country When a Mexican furthest thing from my own says Mi casa es su casa My thoughts house is your Because there is great friendli shyhouse - which ness in our country too - in he invariably varying degrees and manifested

middot does-he means in various ways The Mexican is it F r i end s in general more spontaneous strangers even than we and most of us have to shopkeepshy be approached before we give ers youve never our friendship since an initial II e e n before shyness seems to hold us back will introduce Often enough however this

middotyou to the whole shyness is caused by a national family and inshy superiority complex by a fear vite you to hav~ of not being accepted and by

middotdinner wit h the fear of making fools of ourshymiddot them To put it mildly hospital shy selves in a language we dont ity like this would be impossible know In other words humility to forget or to overlook is an esseatial to friendliness and _ Sometimes you wonder as you hospitality Sometimes we have walk the downtown- streets of it Often we dont CHle of our own cities and as you Hospitable People see pe~ple going their own inshy We Americans are sometimessulated ways if it isnt true that afraid to show our real feelingsas a country we have only a -afraid to show for inst~nce

-head while Mexico has a head our sympathy forthe underdogand a heart We usually make up for t~is

Superiority Complex psychologically by cheering on - This feeling grows on - you the hiss favored side at spe~tator when you visit Mexico and have sports when we should be doingthe misfortunE to encounter the it in the causes of racial justiceAmerican tourist who is bent on and equality of opportunity inshyacting like one It is a crying stead shame that so many Americans We are afraid others usuallyhave to show a superiority com- those very loud others will look

middotplex to those they encounter in down on us if we give public middot other countries seeming to feel support to those who need our that no matter where they go it support the little -people the is not they who are the foreignshy least of Christs and our brethshyers but those they encounter ren

All too often these types seem The fact is though that we to despise the customs and lanshy Americans do have a- heart and guage and even the currency of that once we put aside our sillythe countries they visit apparshy ideas that we are too busy to be ently thinking that anyone can hospitable or that others will understand English if you only look on us as soft and foolish if speak louder and that real we are or that we must not goAmerican money will buy anyshy out of way forour foreign~rs thing even respect because we might make a misshy

Worst of all are those wbo take in speaking their languagebring their aura of racial supeshy -then we can be and are just as riority along with them and hospitable and friendly as anymake little effort to hide it It is peoplein the world undoubtedly true that some of Ideals of Youththis patronizing attitude is partly There are many Americansresponsible (along with Castro~ and fortunately there are gettingeternal vigilance for American to be more who are willing tomistakes and seeming mistakes) stand up publicly and be countedfor the affection with which on the side of right instead ofAmericans are held in some parts - merely clucking in quiet privateof Latin America such as in sympathy There are lots ofPanama Americans who are not jqst

Race Prejudice friendly and hospitable to forshyAnd its tragic that have eigners but who do heroic workwe

to expoFt the most shameful of with the poor and downtrodden our national sins the stupidity and handicapped of their own which is race prejudice We country and their own city as might as well forget in fact well about any good neighbor polshy - Now there are lots of adult icy until we ourselves become Americans of this type But good neighbors when it comes to out-and-out

But even when we are not prodigal generosity it is the snobbish at home we are seldom teens as a rule whohave to be as spontaneous in our friendli shy given first prize ness other peoples The forshy A teen-agel who has not yetas eign students who come to stuay outgrown the honest ideals of at our universities often get youth will give his time and enshylonely and discouraged because ergy unstintingly and with little they have seemingly no friends thought of consequences This

author has instanceThe Negro in his fight for for seen equality (a fight which should kids doing heroic work with the never have been necessary in the very poor and the orphans-notfirst place) very often feels just throwing money into a colshyalone (though decreasingly so) lection box for them but givingwhen even those who know he is them their time and their love getting a raw deal do nothing working with them face to face at least publicly to help him even as Christ did set things right America has a great heart

Which may be one reason the and many Americans are just as Negro American often makes a spontaneous and natural at better ambassador abroad than showing it as any people anyshyother Americans where As a country however

Friendliness Here we still have some distance to But the trouble with extolling go before this sort of generosity

the hospitality and friendlin~ becomes our national image

CHECK COMPARE SAVE

Turkeys 10to11 LIS

Ready-to-Cook 39~ FIR S T Nancy Vogel

daughter of Mr and Mrs SAVE CASH bullbullbull SHOP AampPLeonard J Vogel of Sacred Heart Parish Fall River and a senior at Starg High last night became the first recishypient of the Bishop Connolly award for the outstanding

girl athlete n a Catholic High School The Clover Club of Fall River sponsored the award

Thomas ~Vhalen

In Noviticlte Brother Thomas Whalen son

of Mr and Mrs Thomas Whalen -8 General Cobb St Taunton and a member of the Sacred Heart Parish has received the religshyious habit of the Erothers of the

SMOKED P()RK SHOUlDERS

SUPER-RIGHT SHORT SHANK 6 TO 8 lBS

PICNICS 1829c

CHICKEN LEe or BREAST 33c

QUARTERS l8

SAVE CASH ON THESEHoly Cross at ceremonies conshyducted at St Joseph Novitiate

Valatie NY 6 POUNDS ofi BREAD ONLY 99c Brother John Donoghue CSC

Provincial Superior of the Broshy Whitl Breadp~~~E~ 4 ~6~~~z99c thers of the Holy Cross of the SAVI 20e - REGULAR 59c - 8 INCHEastern Province announced I p 118 8 OZ 39CJANEthat Brother Thomas was one of App I II PARKER IACHthe 14 candidates who is now starting a canonical year of proshy JANI PARKER - SAVlOe REGULAR 9c

bation for the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross bull hB Ck 1 lB 3 OZ 3ftCSpaRIS ar a e EACH i

Following the reception the parents and friends of Brother Thomas were guests at a lunchshyeon at the novitiate

Total Now 430 NEW YORK (NC)-With the

opening of two more parish schools the number of Catholic elementary schools in the New York archdiocese now totals 430

ATWC)OD OIL CO~~PANY

SHEILL HEATIN4 OILS South SeC] Streets Hyannis Tel HY 81

COMPLleTE

Mortgage Service anywhere on Cape Cod

bull RESIDENTIAL bull COMMEI~CIAL

bull CONSTRUCTION bull SEASONAL

Call EX 8-2266

Bass ~iver Savings Bank

SOUTH YARMOUTH Hyannis - Dennis Port

Yarmouth Plaza

Special Donut and Coffee SoleI All THIS weEKI

PLAIN SUGARED CJlNNAMON OR COMBINATION

2 PKGS 4ftltJane Parker Donuts 29cR~~ Of 12

I E 5 ON ON SAVE 4c B~~S SAV 1 c B3~S MILO AND MRLOW COFfil

Eight OClock ~A~ 69c-3 IJ~G 198 RICH FULLmiddotBOOleo

Red Circle CoHee ~A~ 71 c-3 B~G204 VIGOROUS ANO WINEY

lokar Coffe ~A~ 73c-3 B~G210 rice shown In thl ud guiltnteed tlltu Sat Feb

Tobacco products and Items prohibIted by Iaw eKempt from Plaid Stamp Offbullbull amp effective at ALL Aamp Sup Matlcotn thl communll1 and lclnll1

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 16: 02.04.65

16 THE ANCHORshyThurs Feb 4 1965

Says Pope John Left Cha lIenge To Catholicsmiddot

NORTH PALM BEACH (NC) - Pope John XXIII left Catholics with a chalshylenge to meet the world Bishop Coleman F Carroll of Miami said here

Bishop Carroll said Pope John dared Catholics to meet other Christians and non-Christians and to discuss our common problems and seek by discussion a solution to these problems

This challenge cannot be met by the pope alone or by the bishops and priests alone he said It must be met by all inshycluding-indeed especially-the laymen

-He said laymen must be propshy

erly prepared for this task through study training and spirshyitual preparation In this conshynection he called a closed spirshyitual retreat an absolute must for the lay person

Bishop Carroll spoke to memshybers of the Our Lady of Florida Retreat League at a dinner in his honor at the Passionist Retreat House here

PrelWtes Sc~~dlJ(e

US~ ~f VeCrulall ROME (NC)-The Italian lanshy

guage will be used in Mass throughout I t a I y beginning March 7 the first Sunday of Lent

The Italian Bishops Commitshytee on the Liturgy in announcshying the change specified that the Italian language would be used in Masses on Sundays and holy days and at all Masses attended by a substantial number of the faithful

The parts of the Mass to be said in Italian are the following the Epistle Gospel acclamations salutations and dialogues (inshycluding the prayers at the foot of the altar and the dialogue preshyceding the Preface) the Kyrie Gloria Creed Sanctus-Benedicshytus and Agnus Dei themiddot Patermiddot Noster with its introduction and the formula for the Communion

Peloquin Chorale Televises Hymns

NEW YORK (NC)-Hymns -Yesterday and Today featurshyipg C Alexander Peloquin and members of his popular Peloquin Chorale will be telecast Feb 14 from 1 to 130 PM EST over the ABC-TV network

The latest program in the seshyries Directions 65 - a Catholic Perspective produced by the National Council of Catholic Men and the ABC public affairs department was written by Peloquin and traces the develshyopment of hymnody from the Te Deum of the 4th century to the works of contemporary composers

Stresses Doctrines Substance Remains

DAVENPORT (NC) -Bishop Ralph L Hayes of Davenport adshymonished an interfaith meeting here in Iowa against expecting changes in Catholic doctrine

The (Second Vatican) Counshycil may change the manner of presentation of doctrines but not their substance he said pointing to the liturgy as an exshyample of such a change

We must admit bigotry and misunderstanding on both sides But followers of Christ have Scripture devotion to the Holy Spirit and devotion to Christ in common Why not talk about the things on which we agree he asked

Sisters of Mercy General Asks Personal ST LOUIS (NC)-Weve got

to develop the Sister in depth Thats what the times call for said the mother general of the 7300 American nuns of the Sisshyters of Mercy of the Union

Mother Mary Regina Cunningshyham ending her first six-year term as the head of the widely known teaching social work and hospital nuns was talking about what the Sisters of Mercy are doing to bring themselves fully up to the times

In St Louis Mo to meet with the superiors of the nine Mercy provinces Mother Regina talked about the main vehicle she and her colleagues hope will achieve the transformation

This is the year in the commu- nity for chapter meetings and general meetings of the nuns in

each of the provinces climaxed by a meeting of the general chapter at the orders mothershyhoupse in Bethesda Md she said

Changing Church Results will be ~olnown in Aushy

gust and Mother Regina hopes that they will show her commushynity to be in line with the mind of a rapidly changing Church in the midst of an even faster movshying world

She predicted tlat the chapshyters would have some surprises not only in the deisions but in the way they are organized to give a more representative view of all the Sisters in the order

If one overall phrase had to sum up what Mother Regina and the other planners are looking for in the Mere chapters it

would be personal responsibil shyity she said

A Sister has to have the reshysponsibility to make judgments for herself said the mother general Her superiors have to give her the responsibility to achieve her own role She has to make the decision to take the risks

~And then of course be ready to pay the price for her decishysion said Mother Regina

In Updated Sense Weve gone beyond the day

Papal Count BALTIMORE (NC) - Thomas

W Pangborn a Hagerstown (Md) industrialist and philanshythropist has been named a papal count by Pope Paul

Responsibility of always being safe Some peoshyple want to be sure to have the answer before they move But sometimes that meant they never moved at all she observed

Developing a Sister in depth will mean a lot of things espeshycially an updated sense of her apostolate and the way she works at it For the Mercy nuns in the U S Central and Latin America and in the West Indies it will mean a lot of littie things Mother Regina hinted

Changes might relax regulashytions about home visits dining with others attending night meetings and cultural affairs or traveling with companions

Mother Regina said that we have to plan for more contact with the laity and for more edushycation to understand each other shy

a

lYonderful Meatsbullbullbull Anoth~r Big Reasll Why zltI ~III I bull STAYING ~c~ Z ~

with FIRST NATIONAL it

l~middotmiddotsowll ItmiddotI

IIIIr-All vlu

FACE RUMIP Fine Grained Texture shy

Heavy Steer Beef for Hearty Eating LB

The Perfect Roast for large Families

ROASTL854CAITCHBONE Same [ow Self-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vidnily rNe Reserve Iie Right to Limit Quantitietl

-

I The Parish Parade I SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO bull

Holy Name Society members will receive corporate Communshyion at 7 oclock Mass Sunday morning Feb 14 The unit plans a Valentine dance and supper from 7 to 12 Saturday night Feb 13 in the Elks auditorium on Church Street SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs John DeBettenshycourt president Mrs Arnold Muckerheid vice-president Mrs Nelson J DeBettencourt Jr treasurer Mrs Charles Davis secretary

For the Holy Name SOGiety James Ferreira is president supshyported by Freeman Willoughby vice-president Alfred Metell treasurer Anthony Rebello secshyretary The units next meeting will be Sunday Feb 14 at the parish hall OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a Masquerade Ball Friday night Feb 26 at Wimpys resshytaurantr Osterville Mrs James E Murphy is chairman ST JOSEPH ATTLEBORO

The CYO will sponsor a dance Saturday night Feb 20 with enshytertainment by Mickey Chagnon and the Rivieras Chairmen for the unit include Carolee Desshyrochers membership Judy Roy spiritual Claudette Ouimet culshytural Sue Reynolds publicity Claire Piette social Don Fisher recreational BLESSED SACRAMENT FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will present a fashion fair at an open meeting to be held Wedshynesday Feb 17 in the church basement Planned for April are a rummage sale and a whist party ST JEAN BAPTISTE FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women announces a ham and basket whist party for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 in the lower church hall In charge will be Mrs Napoleon Picard and Mrs Eugene Gagnon aided by a large committee ST STANISLAUS FALL RIVER

Civics Club members of the parochial school will deliver pastry to nursing home patients for Valentines Day Other projshyects include collecting Christmas cards for missionaries and shovshyelling snow to augment the club treasury OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION OSTERVILLE

Mr and Mrs William Dacey will be co-chairmen of a preshyLenten dance to be held Friday night Feb 19 at Wimpys restaushyrant in Osterville under sponsorshyship of the Womens Guild The program will include a buffef and dancing from 9 to to ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

Mrs Lionel J Dulude presishydent of the Sacred Hearts Assoshyciation requests all ladies of the unit who have First Friday Adoration to check their asshysigned times in order that the full quota will be present at all hours

Corporate Communion for members will be held on Sunday at the 815 Mass and the regushylar meeting will be held the same evening at 730 in the Church Hall

The Penny Sale scheduled for Feb 20 will be discussed atthis meeting ST JOSEPH FALLRIVER

The annual mid-Winter Gala is set for Saturday night at Venus de Milo restaurant A buffet supper from 630 to 830 will be followed by dancing a parish reunion and awarding of prizes

ST JOAN OF ARC ORLEANS

Forthcoming events for the Womens Guild include penny sales this month April and next November socials in March and June and Summer fairs in July and August A ham and bean supper is ~cheduled for May ST JAMES NEW BEDFORD

middotMsgr Noon Circle plans a potluck supper for members and their guests Saturday night Feb 20 OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION NEW BEDFORD

Holy Name Society officers inshyclude Severo G Alfama presishydent James P Gonsalves and John Monteiro vice-president Antonio Rocha treasurer John Soares secretary ST GEORGE WESTPORT

Womens Guild members will form the congregation at the TV Mass to be broadcast on channel 6 at 10 Sunday morning Feb 7 Participants will meet at the parish school hall at 9 to travel to New Bedford ST JOHN BAPTIST NEW BEDFORD

Parishioners will hold their annual filhoz supper and penny sale at 530 Sunday evening Feb 21 in the cllurch hall Tickshyets are available from officers of church organizations or at the rectory In charge are Gilbert Brazil and George Ladino ST PIUS X SOUTH YARMOUTH

The WQmens Guild will hold a past presidents dinner Monshyday night March 1 at Armands restaurant_ Hyannis NOTRE DAME FALL RIVER

Cubs and Boy Scouts will at shytend a Communion breakfast Sunday Feb 7 following 815 Mass A blue and gold banquet for the Cubs is set for Sunday Feb 28 in the parish hall with Roger Labonte in charge of arshyrangements

The Council of Catholic Women will hold its installation banquet Monday Feb 22 at Whites resshytaurant under the chairmanship of Mrs Paul Ilmais To be seated are Miss Helena Dumont president Mrs Cecile Barnabe frst vice-president Mrs Gershyard DextTaze second vice-presishydent Mrs Richard Perry treasshyurer Mrs Romeo Parent reshycording secretary Mrs Roger Langlois corresponding secreshytary

The third in a series of cake sales will follow all Masses this Sunday in the lower church Mrs Ferdnand Letendre chairman will be aided by Mrs Robert Phenixco-chairman Cakes can be brought to the lower church from 4 to 5 and 630 to s Saturshyday afternoon and evening SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a potluck supper for members at 630 Tuesday night Feb 16 in the parish hall A silent auction will follow the slipper In charge of arrangeshyments is Mrs Mary Pereira chairman aided by Mrs Mary Gagne The council announces a malassada supper and penny sale open to the public from 530 to 7 Sunday night Feb 21 also in the hall Tickets will be available at the door and chairshymen are Mrs Mary Cabeceiras and Mrs Albina Quintill

A regular meeting is set for 730 Friday night Feb 12 in the hall Installation of officers is planned for later in the month ST MATIDEU FALL RIVER 4

A Valentine whist is planned by the Council of Catholic Womshyen for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 at the parish hall Mrs Raymond Antaya is chairman

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan RIver-Thurs Feb 1l96I rr

GIVE VIEWS ON AID Presenting views on federal aid to education to the House Education sub-committee was this panel representing the Catholic school system left to right Msgr William E McManus Chicago superintendent of the largest Ctholic school system in the country Mr Edward McArdle Washington DC who focussed on the parents view of the childs needs as the father of seven children Msgr Freclerck G Hochwalt Director Education Department NCWC and Msgr John B McDowell sushyperintendent of the Pittsburgh diocesan school system NC Photo

bullSays Church Must Live In Wide World~ Cardinal Hits Ignorance of Our Neighbor

CHICAGO (NC)-An Amerishycan prelate prominent in the Churchs work for Latin Amershyica has told US Catholics there is no excuse for our ignorance of our neighbors the nations of Central and South America

Archbishop Paul L Hallinan of Atlanta chairman of the subshycommittee for inter-American cooperation of the US Bishops Committee for Latin America in a message to the second annual conference of the Catholic IntershyAmerican Cooperation Program SClid the Church today lives in a new world but it must preshypare to live in a wide world

Miles Are Nothing Catholics in tpe United States

with a strong cultural and comshymercial bridge to Europe find Africa a puzzle and Asia an Orshyiental mystery Strangest of all is our ignorance of our own neighbors the nations of Central

E~ual Treatment JERSEY CITY (NC)-Hudson

County parishes here in New Jersey are joining in a countyshywide interfaith appeal seeking pledges of fair housing practices

~T FRANCIS XAVIER IIYANNIS

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a penny sale at 8 Tuesday right Feb 9 in the parish hall A Communion breakfast and fashion show are on the units Spring schedule

ST JOHN BAPTIST CENTRAL VILLAGE

A housewares demonstraticm will follow an open meeting scheduled by the Womens Guild for 8 Thursday night Feb 11 in the church hall In charge of refreshments will be Mrs Matil shyda Shelter Miss Margaret Shay and Miss May Taggart The unit plans a Valentine whist for 3 Saturday night Feb 13 also in the church hall on Main Road Miss Edith Kirby and Mrs Louise Vieira are chairmen ST JOHN POCASSET

The Womens Guild announces a penny sale for Friday Feb 12 Mrs Sprague Spooner will be chairman The units next meetshying will feature slides and a talk by Col Eugene S Clark on the early history of Marthas Vineshyyard It will be held Tuesd~

Feb 16

and South America he deshyclared

The ~rchbishop said 60 years ago there was an excuse-travel communications and cultural knowledge were in their inshylancy But now miles are nothshying since Pope John XXIII brought his message of unity to the world he averred adding

Real Import The CICOP meeting brings

bishops priests and laymen of both hemispheres together for a remarkable in-service training period a healthy learn while you work program We know much of Latin American needs both religious economic and culshytural We are helping in our way to repair these shortcomings But we need even more to share

in this Christian fraternity fIIf background common resources and future hopes Only by free easy association with the repshyresentatives of Latin America can we get the real import

ELECTRICAL Contractors~

~ ~ ~ ~

944 County St ~ New Bedford

ecec~c~ccccee~o

C) LOUlUl~S iiffii~ ~ i middotbull EWrIMA ~- shyg l~

ROMEamp I~-

I SHmNES imiddot ~ OF EUROPE iiI bull ampHOLY LAND ~) C~ 1 bull CATBOLIC PROGRAJ 1965 ~)

ALI~~16 ~I CachoIlcTeI Orrlce ~) c~ WASHINGTON CHICAGOIOMI LONDONI CATHOLtC TRAVEL OFFICE FRM ~------------II -~ Dupont Circle Building WashIngton D C 20036 fali ~ ~ j1ii Please send me your free Illustrated booklet describing in ~ iJl detail the wOrldmiddotcovering pilgrimages

C~ Name iI ~IJ Address ~ C_~ CityIloneState 11 =~~~~~_~_~~_~_ft~ftVw ijrv _ii~middotV

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Teen-agers Outstanding For Prodigal Generosity

By Rev Joseph T McGloin S J Several times in this column Ive had some glowing

words to say about our Mexican neighbors to the south about their friendliness and hospitality- and general likeshyableness And certainly its all true These people busy as they are will go out of their of other peoples is that you canway give you their precious easily give the idea you are sell shytime and attention to see ing all your own countrymen that you enjoy your visit to short And this would be the their country When a Mexican furthest thing from my own says Mi casa es su casa My thoughts house is your Because there is great friendli shyhouse - which ness in our country too - in he invariably varying degrees and manifested

middot does-he means in various ways The Mexican is it F r i end s in general more spontaneous strangers even than we and most of us have to shopkeepshy be approached before we give ers youve never our friendship since an initial II e e n before shyness seems to hold us back will introduce Often enough however this

middotyou to the whole shyness is caused by a national family and inshy superiority complex by a fear vite you to hav~ of not being accepted and by

middotdinner wit h the fear of making fools of ourshymiddot them To put it mildly hospital shy selves in a language we dont ity like this would be impossible know In other words humility to forget or to overlook is an esseatial to friendliness and _ Sometimes you wonder as you hospitality Sometimes we have walk the downtown- streets of it Often we dont CHle of our own cities and as you Hospitable People see pe~ple going their own inshy We Americans are sometimessulated ways if it isnt true that afraid to show our real feelingsas a country we have only a -afraid to show for inst~nce

-head while Mexico has a head our sympathy forthe underdogand a heart We usually make up for t~is

Superiority Complex psychologically by cheering on - This feeling grows on - you the hiss favored side at spe~tator when you visit Mexico and have sports when we should be doingthe misfortunE to encounter the it in the causes of racial justiceAmerican tourist who is bent on and equality of opportunity inshyacting like one It is a crying stead shame that so many Americans We are afraid others usuallyhave to show a superiority com- those very loud others will look

middotplex to those they encounter in down on us if we give public middot other countries seeming to feel support to those who need our that no matter where they go it support the little -people the is not they who are the foreignshy least of Christs and our brethshyers but those they encounter ren

All too often these types seem The fact is though that we to despise the customs and lanshy Americans do have a- heart and guage and even the currency of that once we put aside our sillythe countries they visit apparshy ideas that we are too busy to be ently thinking that anyone can hospitable or that others will understand English if you only look on us as soft and foolish if speak louder and that real we are or that we must not goAmerican money will buy anyshy out of way forour foreign~rs thing even respect because we might make a misshy

Worst of all are those wbo take in speaking their languagebring their aura of racial supeshy -then we can be and are just as riority along with them and hospitable and friendly as anymake little effort to hide it It is peoplein the world undoubtedly true that some of Ideals of Youththis patronizing attitude is partly There are many Americansresponsible (along with Castro~ and fortunately there are gettingeternal vigilance for American to be more who are willing tomistakes and seeming mistakes) stand up publicly and be countedfor the affection with which on the side of right instead ofAmericans are held in some parts - merely clucking in quiet privateof Latin America such as in sympathy There are lots ofPanama Americans who are not jqst

Race Prejudice friendly and hospitable to forshyAnd its tragic that have eigners but who do heroic workwe

to expoFt the most shameful of with the poor and downtrodden our national sins the stupidity and handicapped of their own which is race prejudice We country and their own city as might as well forget in fact well about any good neighbor polshy - Now there are lots of adult icy until we ourselves become Americans of this type But good neighbors when it comes to out-and-out

But even when we are not prodigal generosity it is the snobbish at home we are seldom teens as a rule whohave to be as spontaneous in our friendli shy given first prize ness other peoples The forshy A teen-agel who has not yetas eign students who come to stuay outgrown the honest ideals of at our universities often get youth will give his time and enshylonely and discouraged because ergy unstintingly and with little they have seemingly no friends thought of consequences This

author has instanceThe Negro in his fight for for seen equality (a fight which should kids doing heroic work with the never have been necessary in the very poor and the orphans-notfirst place) very often feels just throwing money into a colshyalone (though decreasingly so) lection box for them but givingwhen even those who know he is them their time and their love getting a raw deal do nothing working with them face to face at least publicly to help him even as Christ did set things right America has a great heart

Which may be one reason the and many Americans are just as Negro American often makes a spontaneous and natural at better ambassador abroad than showing it as any people anyshyother Americans where As a country however

Friendliness Here we still have some distance to But the trouble with extolling go before this sort of generosity

the hospitality and friendlin~ becomes our national image

CHECK COMPARE SAVE

Turkeys 10to11 LIS

Ready-to-Cook 39~ FIR S T Nancy Vogel

daughter of Mr and Mrs SAVE CASH bullbullbull SHOP AampPLeonard J Vogel of Sacred Heart Parish Fall River and a senior at Starg High last night became the first recishypient of the Bishop Connolly award for the outstanding

girl athlete n a Catholic High School The Clover Club of Fall River sponsored the award

Thomas ~Vhalen

In Noviticlte Brother Thomas Whalen son

of Mr and Mrs Thomas Whalen -8 General Cobb St Taunton and a member of the Sacred Heart Parish has received the religshyious habit of the Erothers of the

SMOKED P()RK SHOUlDERS

SUPER-RIGHT SHORT SHANK 6 TO 8 lBS

PICNICS 1829c

CHICKEN LEe or BREAST 33c

QUARTERS l8

SAVE CASH ON THESEHoly Cross at ceremonies conshyducted at St Joseph Novitiate

Valatie NY 6 POUNDS ofi BREAD ONLY 99c Brother John Donoghue CSC

Provincial Superior of the Broshy Whitl Breadp~~~E~ 4 ~6~~~z99c thers of the Holy Cross of the SAVI 20e - REGULAR 59c - 8 INCHEastern Province announced I p 118 8 OZ 39CJANEthat Brother Thomas was one of App I II PARKER IACHthe 14 candidates who is now starting a canonical year of proshy JANI PARKER - SAVlOe REGULAR 9c

bation for the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross bull hB Ck 1 lB 3 OZ 3ftCSpaRIS ar a e EACH i

Following the reception the parents and friends of Brother Thomas were guests at a lunchshyeon at the novitiate

Total Now 430 NEW YORK (NC)-With the

opening of two more parish schools the number of Catholic elementary schools in the New York archdiocese now totals 430

ATWC)OD OIL CO~~PANY

SHEILL HEATIN4 OILS South SeC] Streets Hyannis Tel HY 81

COMPLleTE

Mortgage Service anywhere on Cape Cod

bull RESIDENTIAL bull COMMEI~CIAL

bull CONSTRUCTION bull SEASONAL

Call EX 8-2266

Bass ~iver Savings Bank

SOUTH YARMOUTH Hyannis - Dennis Port

Yarmouth Plaza

Special Donut and Coffee SoleI All THIS weEKI

PLAIN SUGARED CJlNNAMON OR COMBINATION

2 PKGS 4ftltJane Parker Donuts 29cR~~ Of 12

I E 5 ON ON SAVE 4c B~~S SAV 1 c B3~S MILO AND MRLOW COFfil

Eight OClock ~A~ 69c-3 IJ~G 198 RICH FULLmiddotBOOleo

Red Circle CoHee ~A~ 71 c-3 B~G204 VIGOROUS ANO WINEY

lokar Coffe ~A~ 73c-3 B~G210 rice shown In thl ud guiltnteed tlltu Sat Feb

Tobacco products and Items prohibIted by Iaw eKempt from Plaid Stamp Offbullbull amp effective at ALL Aamp Sup Matlcotn thl communll1 and lclnll1

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 17: 02.04.65

-

I The Parish Parade I SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO bull

Holy Name Society members will receive corporate Communshyion at 7 oclock Mass Sunday morning Feb 14 The unit plans a Valentine dance and supper from 7 to 12 Saturday night Feb 13 in the Elks auditorium on Church Street SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs John DeBettenshycourt president Mrs Arnold Muckerheid vice-president Mrs Nelson J DeBettencourt Jr treasurer Mrs Charles Davis secretary

For the Holy Name SOGiety James Ferreira is president supshyported by Freeman Willoughby vice-president Alfred Metell treasurer Anthony Rebello secshyretary The units next meeting will be Sunday Feb 14 at the parish hall OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a Masquerade Ball Friday night Feb 26 at Wimpys resshytaurantr Osterville Mrs James E Murphy is chairman ST JOSEPH ATTLEBORO

The CYO will sponsor a dance Saturday night Feb 20 with enshytertainment by Mickey Chagnon and the Rivieras Chairmen for the unit include Carolee Desshyrochers membership Judy Roy spiritual Claudette Ouimet culshytural Sue Reynolds publicity Claire Piette social Don Fisher recreational BLESSED SACRAMENT FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will present a fashion fair at an open meeting to be held Wedshynesday Feb 17 in the church basement Planned for April are a rummage sale and a whist party ST JEAN BAPTISTE FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women announces a ham and basket whist party for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 in the lower church hall In charge will be Mrs Napoleon Picard and Mrs Eugene Gagnon aided by a large committee ST STANISLAUS FALL RIVER

Civics Club members of the parochial school will deliver pastry to nursing home patients for Valentines Day Other projshyects include collecting Christmas cards for missionaries and shovshyelling snow to augment the club treasury OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION OSTERVILLE

Mr and Mrs William Dacey will be co-chairmen of a preshyLenten dance to be held Friday night Feb 19 at Wimpys restaushyrant in Osterville under sponsorshyship of the Womens Guild The program will include a buffef and dancing from 9 to to ST JOSEPH FAIRHAVEN

Mrs Lionel J Dulude presishydent of the Sacred Hearts Assoshyciation requests all ladies of the unit who have First Friday Adoration to check their asshysigned times in order that the full quota will be present at all hours

Corporate Communion for members will be held on Sunday at the 815 Mass and the regushylar meeting will be held the same evening at 730 in the Church Hall

The Penny Sale scheduled for Feb 20 will be discussed atthis meeting ST JOSEPH FALLRIVER

The annual mid-Winter Gala is set for Saturday night at Venus de Milo restaurant A buffet supper from 630 to 830 will be followed by dancing a parish reunion and awarding of prizes

ST JOAN OF ARC ORLEANS

Forthcoming events for the Womens Guild include penny sales this month April and next November socials in March and June and Summer fairs in July and August A ham and bean supper is ~cheduled for May ST JAMES NEW BEDFORD

middotMsgr Noon Circle plans a potluck supper for members and their guests Saturday night Feb 20 OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION NEW BEDFORD

Holy Name Society officers inshyclude Severo G Alfama presishydent James P Gonsalves and John Monteiro vice-president Antonio Rocha treasurer John Soares secretary ST GEORGE WESTPORT

Womens Guild members will form the congregation at the TV Mass to be broadcast on channel 6 at 10 Sunday morning Feb 7 Participants will meet at the parish school hall at 9 to travel to New Bedford ST JOHN BAPTIST NEW BEDFORD

Parishioners will hold their annual filhoz supper and penny sale at 530 Sunday evening Feb 21 in the cllurch hall Tickshyets are available from officers of church organizations or at the rectory In charge are Gilbert Brazil and George Ladino ST PIUS X SOUTH YARMOUTH

The WQmens Guild will hold a past presidents dinner Monshyday night March 1 at Armands restaurant_ Hyannis NOTRE DAME FALL RIVER

Cubs and Boy Scouts will at shytend a Communion breakfast Sunday Feb 7 following 815 Mass A blue and gold banquet for the Cubs is set for Sunday Feb 28 in the parish hall with Roger Labonte in charge of arshyrangements

The Council of Catholic Women will hold its installation banquet Monday Feb 22 at Whites resshytaurant under the chairmanship of Mrs Paul Ilmais To be seated are Miss Helena Dumont president Mrs Cecile Barnabe frst vice-president Mrs Gershyard DextTaze second vice-presishydent Mrs Richard Perry treasshyurer Mrs Romeo Parent reshycording secretary Mrs Roger Langlois corresponding secreshytary

The third in a series of cake sales will follow all Masses this Sunday in the lower church Mrs Ferdnand Letendre chairman will be aided by Mrs Robert Phenixco-chairman Cakes can be brought to the lower church from 4 to 5 and 630 to s Saturshyday afternoon and evening SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a potluck supper for members at 630 Tuesday night Feb 16 in the parish hall A silent auction will follow the slipper In charge of arrangeshyments is Mrs Mary Pereira chairman aided by Mrs Mary Gagne The council announces a malassada supper and penny sale open to the public from 530 to 7 Sunday night Feb 21 also in the hall Tickets will be available at the door and chairshymen are Mrs Mary Cabeceiras and Mrs Albina Quintill

A regular meeting is set for 730 Friday night Feb 12 in the hall Installation of officers is planned for later in the month ST MATIDEU FALL RIVER 4

A Valentine whist is planned by the Council of Catholic Womshyen for 8 Saturday night Feb 13 at the parish hall Mrs Raymond Antaya is chairman

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan RIver-Thurs Feb 1l96I rr

GIVE VIEWS ON AID Presenting views on federal aid to education to the House Education sub-committee was this panel representing the Catholic school system left to right Msgr William E McManus Chicago superintendent of the largest Ctholic school system in the country Mr Edward McArdle Washington DC who focussed on the parents view of the childs needs as the father of seven children Msgr Freclerck G Hochwalt Director Education Department NCWC and Msgr John B McDowell sushyperintendent of the Pittsburgh diocesan school system NC Photo

bullSays Church Must Live In Wide World~ Cardinal Hits Ignorance of Our Neighbor

CHICAGO (NC)-An Amerishycan prelate prominent in the Churchs work for Latin Amershyica has told US Catholics there is no excuse for our ignorance of our neighbors the nations of Central and South America

Archbishop Paul L Hallinan of Atlanta chairman of the subshycommittee for inter-American cooperation of the US Bishops Committee for Latin America in a message to the second annual conference of the Catholic IntershyAmerican Cooperation Program SClid the Church today lives in a new world but it must preshypare to live in a wide world

Miles Are Nothing Catholics in tpe United States

with a strong cultural and comshymercial bridge to Europe find Africa a puzzle and Asia an Orshyiental mystery Strangest of all is our ignorance of our own neighbors the nations of Central

E~ual Treatment JERSEY CITY (NC)-Hudson

County parishes here in New Jersey are joining in a countyshywide interfaith appeal seeking pledges of fair housing practices

~T FRANCIS XAVIER IIYANNIS

The Womens Guild will sponshysor a penny sale at 8 Tuesday right Feb 9 in the parish hall A Communion breakfast and fashion show are on the units Spring schedule

ST JOHN BAPTIST CENTRAL VILLAGE

A housewares demonstraticm will follow an open meeting scheduled by the Womens Guild for 8 Thursday night Feb 11 in the church hall In charge of refreshments will be Mrs Matil shyda Shelter Miss Margaret Shay and Miss May Taggart The unit plans a Valentine whist for 3 Saturday night Feb 13 also in the church hall on Main Road Miss Edith Kirby and Mrs Louise Vieira are chairmen ST JOHN POCASSET

The Womens Guild announces a penny sale for Friday Feb 12 Mrs Sprague Spooner will be chairman The units next meetshying will feature slides and a talk by Col Eugene S Clark on the early history of Marthas Vineshyyard It will be held Tuesd~

Feb 16

and South America he deshyclared

The ~rchbishop said 60 years ago there was an excuse-travel communications and cultural knowledge were in their inshylancy But now miles are nothshying since Pope John XXIII brought his message of unity to the world he averred adding

Real Import The CICOP meeting brings

bishops priests and laymen of both hemispheres together for a remarkable in-service training period a healthy learn while you work program We know much of Latin American needs both religious economic and culshytural We are helping in our way to repair these shortcomings But we need even more to share

in this Christian fraternity fIIf background common resources and future hopes Only by free easy association with the repshyresentatives of Latin America can we get the real import

ELECTRICAL Contractors~

~ ~ ~ ~

944 County St ~ New Bedford

ecec~c~ccccee~o

C) LOUlUl~S iiffii~ ~ i middotbull EWrIMA ~- shyg l~

ROMEamp I~-

I SHmNES imiddot ~ OF EUROPE iiI bull ampHOLY LAND ~) C~ 1 bull CATBOLIC PROGRAJ 1965 ~)

ALI~~16 ~I CachoIlcTeI Orrlce ~) c~ WASHINGTON CHICAGOIOMI LONDONI CATHOLtC TRAVEL OFFICE FRM ~------------II -~ Dupont Circle Building WashIngton D C 20036 fali ~ ~ j1ii Please send me your free Illustrated booklet describing in ~ iJl detail the wOrldmiddotcovering pilgrimages

C~ Name iI ~IJ Address ~ C_~ CityIloneState 11 =~~~~~_~_~~_~_ft~ftVw ijrv _ii~middotV

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Teen-agers Outstanding For Prodigal Generosity

By Rev Joseph T McGloin S J Several times in this column Ive had some glowing

words to say about our Mexican neighbors to the south about their friendliness and hospitality- and general likeshyableness And certainly its all true These people busy as they are will go out of their of other peoples is that you canway give you their precious easily give the idea you are sell shytime and attention to see ing all your own countrymen that you enjoy your visit to short And this would be the their country When a Mexican furthest thing from my own says Mi casa es su casa My thoughts house is your Because there is great friendli shyhouse - which ness in our country too - in he invariably varying degrees and manifested

middot does-he means in various ways The Mexican is it F r i end s in general more spontaneous strangers even than we and most of us have to shopkeepshy be approached before we give ers youve never our friendship since an initial II e e n before shyness seems to hold us back will introduce Often enough however this

middotyou to the whole shyness is caused by a national family and inshy superiority complex by a fear vite you to hav~ of not being accepted and by

middotdinner wit h the fear of making fools of ourshymiddot them To put it mildly hospital shy selves in a language we dont ity like this would be impossible know In other words humility to forget or to overlook is an esseatial to friendliness and _ Sometimes you wonder as you hospitality Sometimes we have walk the downtown- streets of it Often we dont CHle of our own cities and as you Hospitable People see pe~ple going their own inshy We Americans are sometimessulated ways if it isnt true that afraid to show our real feelingsas a country we have only a -afraid to show for inst~nce

-head while Mexico has a head our sympathy forthe underdogand a heart We usually make up for t~is

Superiority Complex psychologically by cheering on - This feeling grows on - you the hiss favored side at spe~tator when you visit Mexico and have sports when we should be doingthe misfortunE to encounter the it in the causes of racial justiceAmerican tourist who is bent on and equality of opportunity inshyacting like one It is a crying stead shame that so many Americans We are afraid others usuallyhave to show a superiority com- those very loud others will look

middotplex to those they encounter in down on us if we give public middot other countries seeming to feel support to those who need our that no matter where they go it support the little -people the is not they who are the foreignshy least of Christs and our brethshyers but those they encounter ren

All too often these types seem The fact is though that we to despise the customs and lanshy Americans do have a- heart and guage and even the currency of that once we put aside our sillythe countries they visit apparshy ideas that we are too busy to be ently thinking that anyone can hospitable or that others will understand English if you only look on us as soft and foolish if speak louder and that real we are or that we must not goAmerican money will buy anyshy out of way forour foreign~rs thing even respect because we might make a misshy

Worst of all are those wbo take in speaking their languagebring their aura of racial supeshy -then we can be and are just as riority along with them and hospitable and friendly as anymake little effort to hide it It is peoplein the world undoubtedly true that some of Ideals of Youththis patronizing attitude is partly There are many Americansresponsible (along with Castro~ and fortunately there are gettingeternal vigilance for American to be more who are willing tomistakes and seeming mistakes) stand up publicly and be countedfor the affection with which on the side of right instead ofAmericans are held in some parts - merely clucking in quiet privateof Latin America such as in sympathy There are lots ofPanama Americans who are not jqst

Race Prejudice friendly and hospitable to forshyAnd its tragic that have eigners but who do heroic workwe

to expoFt the most shameful of with the poor and downtrodden our national sins the stupidity and handicapped of their own which is race prejudice We country and their own city as might as well forget in fact well about any good neighbor polshy - Now there are lots of adult icy until we ourselves become Americans of this type But good neighbors when it comes to out-and-out

But even when we are not prodigal generosity it is the snobbish at home we are seldom teens as a rule whohave to be as spontaneous in our friendli shy given first prize ness other peoples The forshy A teen-agel who has not yetas eign students who come to stuay outgrown the honest ideals of at our universities often get youth will give his time and enshylonely and discouraged because ergy unstintingly and with little they have seemingly no friends thought of consequences This

author has instanceThe Negro in his fight for for seen equality (a fight which should kids doing heroic work with the never have been necessary in the very poor and the orphans-notfirst place) very often feels just throwing money into a colshyalone (though decreasingly so) lection box for them but givingwhen even those who know he is them their time and their love getting a raw deal do nothing working with them face to face at least publicly to help him even as Christ did set things right America has a great heart

Which may be one reason the and many Americans are just as Negro American often makes a spontaneous and natural at better ambassador abroad than showing it as any people anyshyother Americans where As a country however

Friendliness Here we still have some distance to But the trouble with extolling go before this sort of generosity

the hospitality and friendlin~ becomes our national image

CHECK COMPARE SAVE

Turkeys 10to11 LIS

Ready-to-Cook 39~ FIR S T Nancy Vogel

daughter of Mr and Mrs SAVE CASH bullbullbull SHOP AampPLeonard J Vogel of Sacred Heart Parish Fall River and a senior at Starg High last night became the first recishypient of the Bishop Connolly award for the outstanding

girl athlete n a Catholic High School The Clover Club of Fall River sponsored the award

Thomas ~Vhalen

In Noviticlte Brother Thomas Whalen son

of Mr and Mrs Thomas Whalen -8 General Cobb St Taunton and a member of the Sacred Heart Parish has received the religshyious habit of the Erothers of the

SMOKED P()RK SHOUlDERS

SUPER-RIGHT SHORT SHANK 6 TO 8 lBS

PICNICS 1829c

CHICKEN LEe or BREAST 33c

QUARTERS l8

SAVE CASH ON THESEHoly Cross at ceremonies conshyducted at St Joseph Novitiate

Valatie NY 6 POUNDS ofi BREAD ONLY 99c Brother John Donoghue CSC

Provincial Superior of the Broshy Whitl Breadp~~~E~ 4 ~6~~~z99c thers of the Holy Cross of the SAVI 20e - REGULAR 59c - 8 INCHEastern Province announced I p 118 8 OZ 39CJANEthat Brother Thomas was one of App I II PARKER IACHthe 14 candidates who is now starting a canonical year of proshy JANI PARKER - SAVlOe REGULAR 9c

bation for the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross bull hB Ck 1 lB 3 OZ 3ftCSpaRIS ar a e EACH i

Following the reception the parents and friends of Brother Thomas were guests at a lunchshyeon at the novitiate

Total Now 430 NEW YORK (NC)-With the

opening of two more parish schools the number of Catholic elementary schools in the New York archdiocese now totals 430

ATWC)OD OIL CO~~PANY

SHEILL HEATIN4 OILS South SeC] Streets Hyannis Tel HY 81

COMPLleTE

Mortgage Service anywhere on Cape Cod

bull RESIDENTIAL bull COMMEI~CIAL

bull CONSTRUCTION bull SEASONAL

Call EX 8-2266

Bass ~iver Savings Bank

SOUTH YARMOUTH Hyannis - Dennis Port

Yarmouth Plaza

Special Donut and Coffee SoleI All THIS weEKI

PLAIN SUGARED CJlNNAMON OR COMBINATION

2 PKGS 4ftltJane Parker Donuts 29cR~~ Of 12

I E 5 ON ON SAVE 4c B~~S SAV 1 c B3~S MILO AND MRLOW COFfil

Eight OClock ~A~ 69c-3 IJ~G 198 RICH FULLmiddotBOOleo

Red Circle CoHee ~A~ 71 c-3 B~G204 VIGOROUS ANO WINEY

lokar Coffe ~A~ 73c-3 B~G210 rice shown In thl ud guiltnteed tlltu Sat Feb

Tobacco products and Items prohibIted by Iaw eKempt from Plaid Stamp Offbullbull amp effective at ALL Aamp Sup Matlcotn thl communll1 and lclnll1

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 18: 02.04.65

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs feb 4 1965

Teen-agers Outstanding For Prodigal Generosity

By Rev Joseph T McGloin S J Several times in this column Ive had some glowing

words to say about our Mexican neighbors to the south about their friendliness and hospitality- and general likeshyableness And certainly its all true These people busy as they are will go out of their of other peoples is that you canway give you their precious easily give the idea you are sell shytime and attention to see ing all your own countrymen that you enjoy your visit to short And this would be the their country When a Mexican furthest thing from my own says Mi casa es su casa My thoughts house is your Because there is great friendli shyhouse - which ness in our country too - in he invariably varying degrees and manifested

middot does-he means in various ways The Mexican is it F r i end s in general more spontaneous strangers even than we and most of us have to shopkeepshy be approached before we give ers youve never our friendship since an initial II e e n before shyness seems to hold us back will introduce Often enough however this

middotyou to the whole shyness is caused by a national family and inshy superiority complex by a fear vite you to hav~ of not being accepted and by

middotdinner wit h the fear of making fools of ourshymiddot them To put it mildly hospital shy selves in a language we dont ity like this would be impossible know In other words humility to forget or to overlook is an esseatial to friendliness and _ Sometimes you wonder as you hospitality Sometimes we have walk the downtown- streets of it Often we dont CHle of our own cities and as you Hospitable People see pe~ple going their own inshy We Americans are sometimessulated ways if it isnt true that afraid to show our real feelingsas a country we have only a -afraid to show for inst~nce

-head while Mexico has a head our sympathy forthe underdogand a heart We usually make up for t~is

Superiority Complex psychologically by cheering on - This feeling grows on - you the hiss favored side at spe~tator when you visit Mexico and have sports when we should be doingthe misfortunE to encounter the it in the causes of racial justiceAmerican tourist who is bent on and equality of opportunity inshyacting like one It is a crying stead shame that so many Americans We are afraid others usuallyhave to show a superiority com- those very loud others will look

middotplex to those they encounter in down on us if we give public middot other countries seeming to feel support to those who need our that no matter where they go it support the little -people the is not they who are the foreignshy least of Christs and our brethshyers but those they encounter ren

All too often these types seem The fact is though that we to despise the customs and lanshy Americans do have a- heart and guage and even the currency of that once we put aside our sillythe countries they visit apparshy ideas that we are too busy to be ently thinking that anyone can hospitable or that others will understand English if you only look on us as soft and foolish if speak louder and that real we are or that we must not goAmerican money will buy anyshy out of way forour foreign~rs thing even respect because we might make a misshy

Worst of all are those wbo take in speaking their languagebring their aura of racial supeshy -then we can be and are just as riority along with them and hospitable and friendly as anymake little effort to hide it It is peoplein the world undoubtedly true that some of Ideals of Youththis patronizing attitude is partly There are many Americansresponsible (along with Castro~ and fortunately there are gettingeternal vigilance for American to be more who are willing tomistakes and seeming mistakes) stand up publicly and be countedfor the affection with which on the side of right instead ofAmericans are held in some parts - merely clucking in quiet privateof Latin America such as in sympathy There are lots ofPanama Americans who are not jqst

Race Prejudice friendly and hospitable to forshyAnd its tragic that have eigners but who do heroic workwe

to expoFt the most shameful of with the poor and downtrodden our national sins the stupidity and handicapped of their own which is race prejudice We country and their own city as might as well forget in fact well about any good neighbor polshy - Now there are lots of adult icy until we ourselves become Americans of this type But good neighbors when it comes to out-and-out

But even when we are not prodigal generosity it is the snobbish at home we are seldom teens as a rule whohave to be as spontaneous in our friendli shy given first prize ness other peoples The forshy A teen-agel who has not yetas eign students who come to stuay outgrown the honest ideals of at our universities often get youth will give his time and enshylonely and discouraged because ergy unstintingly and with little they have seemingly no friends thought of consequences This

author has instanceThe Negro in his fight for for seen equality (a fight which should kids doing heroic work with the never have been necessary in the very poor and the orphans-notfirst place) very often feels just throwing money into a colshyalone (though decreasingly so) lection box for them but givingwhen even those who know he is them their time and their love getting a raw deal do nothing working with them face to face at least publicly to help him even as Christ did set things right America has a great heart

Which may be one reason the and many Americans are just as Negro American often makes a spontaneous and natural at better ambassador abroad than showing it as any people anyshyother Americans where As a country however

Friendliness Here we still have some distance to But the trouble with extolling go before this sort of generosity

the hospitality and friendlin~ becomes our national image

CHECK COMPARE SAVE

Turkeys 10to11 LIS

Ready-to-Cook 39~ FIR S T Nancy Vogel

daughter of Mr and Mrs SAVE CASH bullbullbull SHOP AampPLeonard J Vogel of Sacred Heart Parish Fall River and a senior at Starg High last night became the first recishypient of the Bishop Connolly award for the outstanding

girl athlete n a Catholic High School The Clover Club of Fall River sponsored the award

Thomas ~Vhalen

In Noviticlte Brother Thomas Whalen son

of Mr and Mrs Thomas Whalen -8 General Cobb St Taunton and a member of the Sacred Heart Parish has received the religshyious habit of the Erothers of the

SMOKED P()RK SHOUlDERS

SUPER-RIGHT SHORT SHANK 6 TO 8 lBS

PICNICS 1829c

CHICKEN LEe or BREAST 33c

QUARTERS l8

SAVE CASH ON THESEHoly Cross at ceremonies conshyducted at St Joseph Novitiate

Valatie NY 6 POUNDS ofi BREAD ONLY 99c Brother John Donoghue CSC

Provincial Superior of the Broshy Whitl Breadp~~~E~ 4 ~6~~~z99c thers of the Holy Cross of the SAVI 20e - REGULAR 59c - 8 INCHEastern Province announced I p 118 8 OZ 39CJANEthat Brother Thomas was one of App I II PARKER IACHthe 14 candidates who is now starting a canonical year of proshy JANI PARKER - SAVlOe REGULAR 9c

bation for the religious life in the Congregation of Holy Cross bull hB Ck 1 lB 3 OZ 3ftCSpaRIS ar a e EACH i

Following the reception the parents and friends of Brother Thomas were guests at a lunchshyeon at the novitiate

Total Now 430 NEW YORK (NC)-With the

opening of two more parish schools the number of Catholic elementary schools in the New York archdiocese now totals 430

ATWC)OD OIL CO~~PANY

SHEILL HEATIN4 OILS South SeC] Streets Hyannis Tel HY 81

COMPLleTE

Mortgage Service anywhere on Cape Cod

bull RESIDENTIAL bull COMMEI~CIAL

bull CONSTRUCTION bull SEASONAL

Call EX 8-2266

Bass ~iver Savings Bank

SOUTH YARMOUTH Hyannis - Dennis Port

Yarmouth Plaza

Special Donut and Coffee SoleI All THIS weEKI

PLAIN SUGARED CJlNNAMON OR COMBINATION

2 PKGS 4ftltJane Parker Donuts 29cR~~ Of 12

I E 5 ON ON SAVE 4c B~~S SAV 1 c B3~S MILO AND MRLOW COFfil

Eight OClock ~A~ 69c-3 IJ~G 198 RICH FULLmiddotBOOleo

Red Circle CoHee ~A~ 71 c-3 B~G204 VIGOROUS ANO WINEY

lokar Coffe ~A~ 73c-3 B~G210 rice shown In thl ud guiltnteed tlltu Sat Feb

Tobacco products and Items prohibIted by Iaw eKempt from Plaid Stamp Offbullbull amp effective at ALL Aamp Sup Matlcotn thl communll1 and lclnll1

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 19: 02.04.65

ltrBrien StangCQurt Co~ch Molds Character in Players

By Fred Bartek To be closer to the boys and to work on a day-to-day

basis with young high school athletes Thats the reason John OBrien switched from refereeing to coaching One of the unusual points in the athletic interests of Coach John OBrien of Bishop StangHigh School is that he has cepted a teaching position at been in all phases of basket- Somerset High School in 1950

after he gained a Masters Deshyball gree in Education

He participated actively Somerset Then Coyle in basketball as a player during While at Somerset he taught his high school days In his first English and History OBrien years as a teach- also began his coaching career er he handled at this time He had refereed for the thankless six years and was a member of pOllition of a the association which serves the refeiee Then to Bristol County and Narragansett round out the Leagues He gave up the whistleshypicture and to middot toting job in order to coach see his favorite first an assistant coach in basketshysport from still ball ancl baseball at Somerset another angle High~

OBrien became In 1959 Jim BumS-of Coyle reshya coach Tak- tired from the basketball ranlal ing an points and John OBrien was selected into considera- to succeed his former coach at tionI must say that I enjoy my his alma mater OBrien guided present status in basketball the the Warriors during the 1959-60 most said OBrien season and finished his first varshy

Iii coaching yOU have ail op- sity campaign in third place in portUnity to see boys develop the BCL Jerry Cuniff was the and mature at a very crucial mainstay of the Coyle five that petjOd in their lives Except f()r season Cuniff has continued his a t)oys parents there are actu- court success in the college allonly a very few people that ranks at Stonehill College where haVe as close a contact with the he is averaging close to 17 points young athlete as the teacher- a game col1ch Boys in their high school Joins stang Staff years have many problems The following year OBrien w~iC~ to grown-ups might seem was appointed to a teaching poshyinsignificant but to them these sition at Stang High School in prOblems are Teal and important Dartmouth He became head They must learn to acceptmiddot clr- basketball mentor as the Sparshycumstances whether it be the tans were ready to enter varsity joy of winning or the frustration competition for the first time of ~osing My satisfaction comes Two of Johns former Stang in knowing that in some cases I hoopsters currently are doing might have aided a few individ- well in the collegiate brackets u~in overcoming some prob- rhey are Fred Zebrallky at leDt Westfield and Ron Roskiet9witz

World War D Vet at Stonehill In 1963 OBriens OBrien went on to say that Stang combine went to the finals

he did enjoy refereeing but in the Bay State Tournament founci that he had only a llm- It is a truism that ho one ited Contact with young athletes knows more basketball t~an the In refereeing he said you Dartmouth regional high school doiitget to know the individual mentor No one is better liked boY-from all sides You might among his fellow coaches than see aparticular boy a few times the quiet and unassumingfOnner on the basketball court but yoU Somerset High school teacher dont see him in the light as who is as competent in the classshyyOU do as a coach A coach sees room teaching Latin as he is u his boys not only on the hard- an English instructor wood but at practice every day OBrien exemplifies the pershyand sometimes in the class room fect gentleman a trait he un In other words yOU have a ceasingly tries to inlpart to an broader contact with the ath- who come under him whether in lete the classroom or on the basket-

Born and brought up in FaD ball court River OBrien graduated from Game of Life St Marys Grammar School and Itmiddot is how you play the game then went to Monsignor James that counts insists the Stang Coyle High School in Taunton coach We play to win always He participated in basketball for Yes we want every boy to give four years at Coyle and earned and do his best and as long as

he does we are satisfied We tedtwo varsity letters He gradua know that a continuation of this from the Diocesan institute in spirit and effort will attain more JU~9~~n entered Holy Cross satisfying gratiyiDg and imshyCollege in Worcester Aftercom- portant goals than a single game pleting two yeats of study at the or a seasons average We are Jesuit institution he was called building leaders for tomorrow

while we work diligently on the to setye his coun~rr in the armedbasketball floor services From 1943 to 1946 he was in the Navy as a quarler- OJ3Iien i the son of the late master He was assigned to the Dr John and Mary OBrien He Pacific for those three years married the former Jean Monshy

arch of Fall River in 1947 and worldng aboard a PT boat they are the Parents of two boys

He returned to Holy Cross after)1is discharge He gladua~

from the Cross in 1948 and then Rev Dr King Gets entered Graduate School at DpvenpQrt H~norBrown University OBrien ac-

Fathers Daughters Fatlers and daughters will be

honored at an hiformal dance to be sponsored at 8 tomorrow Dlght in the Sacred Hearts Acadshyemy auditorium Fall River by the Sucordium Club Tickets will be available at the door Parents on the planning committee inshyelude Mr and Mrs Edmund Metras and Hr and Mrs David Bilbop

DAVENPORT (NC) - The Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr civil rights leader who won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize has been named by the Davenport Interracial Council for its 1965 Pacem in Terris peace and freeshydom award

Dr King has accepted the honor and will come here in April for the formal presentashytion The award was founded in 1963 in memory of Pope John XXIIL

Attleboro Retreats Rev Giles Genest MS dishy

rector of the La Salette retreat house in Attleboro announces a weekend retreat will be held for single men from ages 18 to 25 Feb 12 through 14 A retreat for marrieti couples is scheduled the weekend of Feb 26 through 28 Reservations may be made with Father Genest at the retreat house

BANQUETS TESTIMO~nALS

fASHION SHOWS bull

WYmeR 9-6984

FOR FAMILY BANKING

FIRST NATIONAL BANK ATTLEBORO

SO ATILEBORO - SEEKONK

MEMBER FDIC

Color Process Year Books

Booklets Brochures

American Press Inc OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

1-17_COFFN AVENUE Phone WYman 7middot9421

New Bedford Mass

j

COACH JOHN fYBRIEN Prom Player to Referee to Mentor

THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs Feb 4 1965

Action Evid~2ces

Trust in UN VATICAN CITY (NC) -Thc

dedsion of Pope Paul VI tshysend his Bombay peace appeashyto the United Nations shows th Popes trust in that body Vati shycan Radio declared here the da~

after the message was given to UN Secretary General U Thant

But the handing of the ponshytifical document to U Thant iF more than a recognition thr broadcast continued It implishy

citly testifies to the difficult eomplex wearying but meritori shyOllS work which the great intershynational organization is carryint out in favor of world peace

It is a proof of confidence iT the effort of the United Nation specialized agencies to fosterthe economic development and the cultural progress of the las privileged countries _

It is a recognition of the higt and noble aims of the United Nashytions and of its providential nashyture which deserves support ane encouragement from all~ broadcast stated

ANTONE s FENOJ~~ DISPENSING

OPTICIAN Prescription

for EyeglosUt Filled

Office Ho 900-500

excepl Wed Fri Eve

630 - 830 Room 1

7 No Main St Fa~1 River OS 8-0412 ~

YOULLI 1

TICKLI1 I shy

cleUvery-Ccdl

IDEAL LAUNDRY 373 New Boston Road

Fall River OS 8-5677

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday

Page 20: 02.04.65

2n THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Feb 4 1965

Protestant Minister Lists Areas of Difference

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Protestant minister told a national meeting of Catholic priests here cold water was thrown on ecumenical progress by Pope Pauls closing stateshyment at the third session of the Vatican council th~t Mary the Mother of God was

but is to be found in great fershyQueen of the Catholic mentChurch The Rev Dr David As a result of the Vatican

G Colwell pastor of the council Dr Colwell said the Fir s t Congregational United laity of all churches have beshyChurch of Christ here told a come deeply involved in the life twO-day Seminar on Ecumenshy of the Church and they evidence ism at St Pauls College the a hunger and a thirst to come differences between Christians together as Christians He cited over the Catholic teaching on the racial revolution in the Mary are the toughest obstacle a facing those of 1lS committed to

US as key vehicle for relishygious groups of various denomishy

Christian unity nations to work together on a Dr Colwell said the marriage common social problem

laws of the Catholic Church and Overcome Fearthe Catholic position on the prishy

macy of the Holy See constitute Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A

- two other major areas of serishy Leven of San Antonio Tex ous differenc~ between Protesshy urged Catholics to overcome tants and Catholics in this ecushy their old-fashioned fear of Protshymenical era estants and to set about in search

Discoveries of the elements Catholic and Among chief discoveries Protshy Protestants have in common

estants are making today about Bishop Leven recommended Catholics Dr Colwell noted are that Catholic clergymen listen that the spirit of religious reform patiently to the beliefs and opinshyis strongest in the Roman Cathshy ions of Protestants and proceed olic Church today and that the to study together the teachings Roman Church is not a monolith of Jesus Christ

Negro Missionary Priest Says Discrimination Hurts All Society

NEWARK (NC)-It happened wants people to understand that In Indiana The priest a Negro its not sensational that God had just finished saying Mass should give vocations to Negroes when a man came up to him and Orientals or Indians because as thanked him for being there St Paul said with God there

The man confessed he had isnt any distinction been away from the Church for Real Discrimination many years He felt the need of For himself Father Potts said a sign that the Church was he has never met any problems Christian as well as Catholic or discrimination as a priest To him the presence of a Negro even in towns considered segreshypriest on the altar was such a gated But he does not softshysign pedal the reality of discriminashy

Thatsone reason Father Don- tion aId G Potts OSC says I am Some religious orders wont a Negro and wouldnt have my accept us he noted And many color any other way Father Negroes he said will not emshyPotts sees himself as a potential Drace the Church because of instrument for Gods use practices found in the South

A native of Newark and a con- making Negroes wait until last vert Father Potts is a member of to receive Communion refusal the Crosier Fathers Ordained in to accept Negroes as altar boys 1960 he teaches English and boycotts of Masses celebrated by Latin at Our Lady of the Lake Negro priests the refusal of Seminary in Syracuse Ind some to confess to a Negro priest

In an interview during a visit Otherwise he said the Negro home he admitted he gets the eould be very receptive to Cathshyuncomfortable feeling of being olicism The Church is the last a display piece when he is in- place where you would expect to

troduced as a Negro priest He find such incidents

Californias Flood-Ravaged Areas Grateful for Nationwide Support -SANTA ROSA (NC) - Call- Acknowledging the support fomias flood-ravaged Humboldt Bishop Maher said All of us and Del Norte countries are are indebted to the splendid genshystruggling to get back on their erosity of Cardinal Spellman feet through their own efforts Archbishop McGucken and Bishshyand the help of people through- op Begin In these dark days of out the country widespread suffering our lag-

Man y contributions have ging spirits have been bolstered reached the area in response to by these wonderful acts of appeals by Bishop Leo T Maher Christian charity of Santa Rosa Our people are still in des-

Francis Cardinal Spellman of perate need of almost all lifes New York sent a check for $5000 necessities but the best help to aid flood victims given us has been the knowledge

Archbishop Joseph T Mc- that our good friends have not Gucken gave $35000 represent- forgotten us Ing offerings from Catholics of the Archdiocese of San Francisshyco Governor Supports

Parishes in the Diocese of School Bus PlanOakland also took up a collection

DES MOINES (NC) - Gobullbulland Bishop Floyd Begin mailed Harold Hughes of Iowa in his$20000 inauguration address called for enactment of state legislation toFlight to Council provide tax-paid bus rides tomiddot

NEW YORK NC)-A Cathshy nonpublic school students elic press charter flight to Rome Calling education one of the for the opening of the final sesshy states main responsibilities ion of the Second Vatican Counshy Hughes also urged approval of eil is being organized by the a state-financed collele llC1gto1oe Catholic Presa Association here ship program

ANOTHER COLUMBUS FIRST ITCA-523

SHRINE TRIP Round Trip Jet Flights via Canadian Pacific Airlines or Irish Airlines

see bullbullbull CANADAmiddot PORTUGALmiddot ITALYmiddot FRANCEmiddot IRELAND Round Trip Jet BOSTON MONTREALmiddot LISBONmiddot LOURDESmiddot SHANNONmiddot BOSTON This Tour Personally Escorted

ihrin of Knock Co Mayo Ireland By a Columbus StaH Member Visit the famous Shrines of bullbullbull

St Josephs (Montreal) bull Visit The VATICAN St Anne De Beaupre (Quebec) Cape dela Madeline (Quebec) bull 5 Days in ROME lourdes (France) Our Lady of Fatima (Lisbon) bull 6 Days in IRElAND Shrine of Knock (Ireland) Departs May 23rd

Rome (1~18 DAYS-$695 Included in this one low price TRANSPORTATION HOTELS

bull SIGHTSEEING bull MOST MEALS

ANOTHER COLUMBUS PERSONNALLY ESCORTED TOURI

15 DAYS001y$495

THRII TOUR DEPARTURH TO CHOOSE FROM

LeIWe Return MAY 31st JUNE 14th JULY 19+11 AUG 2nd

Alhford Castle Cobull Mayo Irelanel SEPT 13th SEPT 27th

JET FLIIHTI DIRECT froll 80STOI Ii IIISH AIILIIII Visil bull bull bull Killaloe-Crui Ihe River Shanno Trip to ttte Cliffs of Moher-Medlaeval Dinner at Bunratty Castle--Limerlck-Ennis-Gort-Con_ Leenarne Maam Cross--Qalway-Headford--Clar morrls--Vlsit Shrine of Knock-Silgo-Bundoran-shyDonegal-Derry-Portrush -Giants CausewayshyBelfaat-Newcastle-Dundalk-Drogheda - Dublin -Glendalough-Waterford-Vee Gap - Cashel shyLakes of Killamey-Tour the Ring of Kerry-Cork -Blamey Castle--Shannon amp Return

FIRST QUALITY ACCOMMODATIONS FINEST FOODS

THIS IS THE 6th ANNUAL COLUMBUS TOUR OF IRELAND

One of New Englands Fastest Growing Travel Agencies

Columbus ~t~~7) AV2middot5191 15 STOUGHTON ST DORCHESTER MASS (Boston)

Open 9 to 9 Monday thru Saturday