08.30.62

20
An AttchOf' of 'h, Soul, aw. tIM PAUL ter is dean of ·the juniorate at the convent. As provincial, Father Costa will supervise the congregation!! work at churches and schoow located in Barre (Mass.), Cleve- land, Hyde Park, Chicago, paca (Wisc.), Albuquerque and Manila as well as Ware and cester in England. Father Costa has served 00 superior of the Cleveland nary of the Blessed Fathers. He was named a pro-- vincial consultor in 1958 and was elected as a delegate to the congregation's Rome 1961 al chapter. In addition, he 10 III membeli' of the Catholic Theological So- ciety of America and a membei' of the Mariological Society of America. Father Costa plans to attend the canonization of Blessed Peter Julian Eymard, founder of the Blessed Sac ram eDt Father,- in Rome on next Dec. .. Drivers Must Use Care MANCHESTER (NC) . The automobile is "a poteft- tial killer in the of the careless, the reCkless and the inebriate," Bishop Ernest I. Primeau of Manchester declared.. As the Labor Day weekend holiday approached, the Bishop in a letter to New Hampshire .Catholics voiced his concerm over increasing fatalities. The Bishop's letter, read at Sunday masses in all Catholie ch,urches of the diocese, declared motorists have a responsibility to . "observe highway safety atiI an act of religion." "The modern,. powerful autaa mobile, capable of excessive speeds, must be 'considered l! lethal weapon," Bishop Primeau warned. "It is primarily a means of transportation and recreation, but it can and must be recog- nized as a potential killer in tho hands of the carelefls, the reck- less and the inebriate. "Every driver must be scious of his responsibilities to others from the moment he' terll ,his car. He must observe' Christian charity and courtesy,- the Bishop' said. Dedicate'New Cape School The Most Reverend James L.' Connolly, D.D.· will bless and dedicate the new Holy Trinity School, West Har- wich, tonight at 6 o'clock. The ground was broken July 28, 1961 for· this new L-shaped edifice which contains eight classrooms, a library and a prin- cipal's office. The building 'is constructed of 'California red- wood , with a stain- less steel tower and cro!,s. All floors in the building are of tile. The name of the school is emblazoned' 'on the sides' in ·stainless steel.' The main entrance is from 28 but. there is a side en- trance on, Earl ,Street leading into the .principal's office. '. . During the ·year, the schOOl. Will be :used for catechical work and then it will open the fi,rst four grades of a parochiai' school. Following the blessing and dedication, a' dinner and recep- tion to· Bishop Connolly for the benefit of the new school will be held at 8 o'clock at the Bel- mont Hotel; Rev. Finbarr McAloon, sS.ce. administrator of ':he parish, has. announced that the Sisters of Mercy have'accepted the teach- ing in the new . school and will come to the Cape Cod Parish when the first four grades. are opened for reg- ular classes. Our' Lady of Victory Mission_ ary Sisters, who at 'present carry' on the catechetical instructions for the children of the area, ar- rived on the Cape Aug. 21, 1953. In with the pastor, they established the first Con- fraternity of Christian Doctrine on the Cape. The' West Harwich Parish waD established as such in 1869, al- though. the first Mass was said in the Holy Trinity Church im' · July 1866. Head of Blessed Sacramen't Fathers Enjoys Reunion' with, Sister-Nun At Convent in Fall River · 'l,'he good .nuns at St. Theresa's Convent in Fan River experienced the unusual thrill of" meeting with the new American provincial of the Blessed Sacrament Fathers of America early this week. Very Francis D. Costa, S.S.S.. who has just assumed the duties of American 'provin- cial, visited the Fall River Diocese to meet his blood- sister, Sister Marie Emmanuel, S.S.J., who is a member of the religious house on Townsend Hill, Fall River. Father Costa, a native oi Gardner (Mass.), is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Manuel R. Costa of 29 Duxbury Road in Worcester, and formerly of Fall River. . The new provincial of the Blessed Sacrament Fathers in America has succeeded Very Rev. William LaVerdiere, S.S.S., who resigned as provincial be- cause of ill health.. Of course, it goes without saying that the happiest mem- ber of the Sisters of St. Joseph at the Fall River convent was Sister Marie Emmanuel who has not had too many occasions to see her brother since both have been ill the religiou. life;. Sbo Progress" (Mater et Magistra) is stressed in the statement issued by the Social Action Department of the National Catholic Welfare Conference here. Msgr. George G. Higginfl is director of the department. The statement, like last year's, expresses concern over the future of collective bargaining, but also says the department is confident tnat labor and management are determined to avoid the possibility that bargaining may be supplanted by some form of compulsory arbitration. It cites, as a "significant in the right direction" a report to President Kennedy from the Chief Executive's A d.-v is 0 ry Committee on Labor-Manage- ment Policy. The report, the statement· re- lates, says collective bargaining can be preserved only if it ia exercised responsibly through recognition not only of indivi- dual responsibilities, but Gt duties to society. Turn to Page Eighteell FATHER O.F.M. AT DAKLY MASS: Steve Mattes has pedaled to Mass each morning at St. Patrick's Church, Youngstown, Ohio, since 1910. Mattes began the daily trips after one of his sons, now dead, was stricken with ' paralysis. The retired city playground caretaker is 88 years old.. NC Photo. Fr. Clifford To" Preach Retreat. WASHINGTON (NC) - Pope John's soCial encyclical can· help U.S. labor ano'! management in their analysis of how economic activity should serve the common a major Catholic Labor Day statement says. The usefulness of the Pontiff's encyclical "Christianity and Social Church Stresses Management And Labor Have Common Duty to American Public Father Leo Clifford; (>.F.M.. . will be retreat master for the annual retreat for· Diocesan' priests' to be held at Diocesan Retreat House, Cathedral Camp, beginning next Monday night A native of Killarney, County Kerry, Father Clifford is a grad- uate of the University of Gal-· ,way. Before coming to the United, States he taught at St. Mary'll College; Dublin and has preached throughout Ireland and England. . Guests of the Franciscanll m Turn to Page Seventeen PRICl! lOll $4.00 per V_ Figures Give Distortion ST. LOUIS (NC)-A bish- op cautioned here against re- lying on statistics to meas- ure the success of convert WO,rk. . Auxiliary Bishop George J. Gottwald of St. Louis said sta- tistics can be "very misleading>' in dealing with souls. ' The reason is that the Mys- tical Body of Christ does not work statistically, Bishop Gott- wald .pointed out. And the ef- fect of the work one person does for a conversion is not alwaYll felt by that person, he said. "One of the most gratifying moments of a priest is to give instructions to a prospective convert," Bishop Gottwald said. "When the doorbell rings, he knows he is going to give in-' structions. But someone else has done a lot of work before the bell ever .rings. "Who did the work? It may have been somebody working Oill the Religious Information gram. It may have been some people in an office. It may have been an old lady praying some- where. You and I 'will neve!' TlU'n to Page Twelve· b ........a. for advanced degrees. In the past, the nuns have been atteI1d- . iog college'during the Summers. In Fargo, Superintendent of Schools Hamilton Vasey told the Board of EducatIon that teachers will have to be hired to ' care for almost 200 St. An.- thony's students. Parochial School .Closings Hit Purse in Fargo , FARGO (NC)-Two Catholic elemen.tary s.chools in the Fargo diocese have announced they are dropping some, grfldes this Fall because of a lack of qualified teachers. St. Anthony of Padua grade school in Fargo is dropping grades One, two and three. St. James Academy of New' Rockford is : dropping Grades three, four, five and six. These schools, like several others in the diocese, are staffed by nuns of the Presentation of' the Blessed Virgin Mary order, whose motherhouse is 'in Fargo. Mother Mary Catherine, com- munity superior, told pastor!! at the end of the past school year, that she was pulling out about 30 Sisters to attend colleges and anlversities for the full school year. These Sisters will either' !Rudy for Bachelor's degrees or Vot 6, No. 36 (C) 1962 The AnchOf' Pope John Lauds Cardinal Bea's Zeal for Unity VATICAN CITY (NC)- Pope John in a personal ietter to Augustin Cardinal 'JBea, S.J., on his 50th anni- versary as a priest praised especially his zeal and diligence as president of the Secretariat for Promoting 'Christian Unity. The letter, revealed here, was sent to Cardinal Bea at his native town of Riedboehringen, Germany, where he is celebra- ting his priestly jubilee. The 81-year-old Scriptural personal confessor of )?ope Pius XII, went to Germany Glfter attending a conference on <Christian unity in England. Pope John told him in his Retter: "We are aware of the Breat alacrity with which you illave performed the holy priest- lW ministry during the long lileriod of your life. We praioo Turn to Page Twelve ........ _ . b The ANCHOR . . . fedl River, Mass., Thursday, August 30, 1962 O'Neill Announces , . School', T ofal Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, Diocesan Superintendent o( School, announced today a new high in the enrollment in the schools of the Diocese. There 'will be approximately 19,- 400 enrolled in the elementary schools' in the Diocese when classes begin for t.he new . Y ear while the Immaculate ye 'ar next Wed nes day, , Conception School, New. Bed- Father O'Neill reported. The ford, is adding a seventh' grade. increase in the various .high Across the 'entire NatiOn more schools in the Diocese will bring than 13,000 Catholic .schools . and the secondary enrollment up to colleges .to 'enroll 4500 for a grand total of 23,900ahOut' 5,917,000 'students' this pupils receiving training in the year, setting another,record high lIChools of the Diocese..·. ' total . ... Next Wednesday, the first in past. years, the biggest Senior class at Stang' High .. increase is expected in the grade School in No., DartQlouth will 'schools, about 115,000 ata'rt their stUdies, while the High school enrollment should . !l!irst Sophomore class at Feehan go .up by about 64,000 youngsters High, Attleboro, will begin their and colleges by nearly 29,000 G2cond year's curriculum. students. The Holy Name School, Fall These estiJl1ates were· pre- lliver, will ha,ve six grades thilJ. Turn to Page Seventeen

description

Chief Executive&#39;s A d.-v is 0 ry 400 enrolledintheelementaryschools&#39;intheDiocesewhen classes begin for t.he new . Y ear while the Immaculate ye&#39;ar next Wednesday, , Conception School, New.Bed- FatherO&#39;Neillreported.The ford, is adding a seventh&#39;grade. increase inthevarious.high Acrossthe&#39;entireNatiOnmore schoolsintheDiocesewillbring than13,000Catholic.schools.and Guests of the Franciscanll m 88 years old..NCPhoto. theschoolsoftheDiocese.There&#39;willbeapproximately 19,- ~ ........ _ . b . , ~

Transcript of 08.30.62

Page 1: 08.30.62

~

An AttchOf' of 'h, Soul, aw. tIM"~T. PAUL

ter is dean of ·the juniorate atthe convent.

As provincial, Father Costawill supervise the congregation!!work at churches and schoowlocated in Barre (Mass.), Cleve­land, Hyde Park, Chicago, Wau~paca (Wisc.), Albuquerque andManila as well as Ware and Lei~

cester in England.Father Costa has served 00

superior of the Cleveland semi~

nary of the Blessed Sacramen~

Fathers. He was named a pro-­vincial consultor in 1958 andwas elected as a delegate to thecongregation's Rome 1961 gener~

al chapter.In addition, he 10 III membeli'

of the Catholic Theological So­ciety of America and a membei'of the Mariological Society ofAmerica.

Father Costa plans to attendthe canonization of BlessedPeter Julian Eymard, founderof the Blessed Sac ram eDtFather,- in Rome on next Dec. ..

Drivers MustUse Care

MANCHESTER (NC). The automobile is "a poteft­tial killer in the'han~8 of thecareless, the reCkless and theinebriate," Bishop Ernest I.Primeau of Manchester declared..

As the Labor Day weekendholiday approached, the Bishopin a letter to New Hampshire

. Catholics voiced his concermover increasing fatalities.

The Bishop's letter, read atSunday masses in all Catholiech,urches of the diocese, declaredmotorists have a responsibilityto . "observe highway safety atiI

an act of religion.""The modern,. powerful autaa

mobile, capable of excessivespeeds, must be 'considered l!lethal weapon," Bishop Primeauwarned. "It is primarily a meansof transportation and recreation,but it can and must be recog­nized as a potential killer in thohands of the carelefls, the reck­less and the inebriate.

"Every driver must be con~

scious of his responsibilities toothers from the moment he' en~terll ,his car. He must observe'Christian charity and courtesy,­the Bishop' said.

Dedicate'NewCape School

The Most Reverend JamesL.' Connolly, D.D.· will blessand dedicate the new HolyTrinity School, West Har­wich, tonight at 6 o'clock.

The ground was broken July28, 1961 for· this new L-shapededifice which contains eightclassrooms, a library and a prin­cipal's office. The building 'isconstructed of 'California red­wood ,surmou~ted with a stain­less steel tower and cro!,s. Allfloors in the building are oftile. The name of the school isemblazoned' 'on the sides' in·stainless steel.'

The main entrance is from~oute 28 but. there is a side en­trance on, Earl ,Street leadinginto the .principal's office. '.

. During the co~ing ·year, thene~ schOOl. Will be :used forcatechical work and then it willopen the fi,rst four grades ofa parochiai' school.

Following the blessing anddedication, a' dinner and recep­tion to· Bishop Connolly for thebenefit of the new school willbe held at 8 o'clock at the Bel­mont Hotel;

Rev. Finbarr McAloon, sS.ce.administrator of ':he parish, has.announced that the Sisters ofMercy have'accepted the teach­ing ~ssignment in the new

. school and will come to theCape Cod Parish when the firstfour grades. are opened for reg­ular classes.

Our' Lady of Victory Mission_ary Sisters, who at 'present carry'on the catechetical instructionsfor the children of the area, ar­rived on the Cape Aug. 21, 1953.In coop~ation with the pastor,they established the first Con­fraternity of Christian Doctrineon the Cape.

The' West Harwich Parish waDestablished as such in 1869, al­though. the first Mass was saidin the Holy Trinity Church im'

· July 1866.

Head of Blessed Sacramen't FathersEnjoys Reunion' with, Sister-NunAt Convent in Fall River

· 'l,'he good .nuns at St. Theresa's Convent in Fan Riverexperienced the unusual thrill of" meeting with the newAmerican provincial of the Blessed Sacrament Fathers ofAmerica early this week. Very Rev~ Francis D. Costa, S.S.S..who has just assumed the

~. duties of American 'provin­cial, visited the Fall RiverDiocese to meet his blood­sister, Sister Marie Emmanuel,S.S.J., who is a member of thereligious house on TownsendHill, Fall River.

Father Costa, a native oiGardner (Mass.), is the son ofMr. and Mrs. Manuel R. Costa of29 Duxbury Road in Worcester,and formerly of Fall River.

. The new provincial of theBlessed Sacrament Fathers inAmerica has succeeded VeryRev. William LaVerdiere, S.S.S.,who resigned as provincial be­cause of ill health..

Of course, it goes withoutsaying that the happiest mem­ber of the Sisters of St. Josephat the Fall River convent wasSister Marie Emmanuel who hasnot had too many occasions tosee her brother since both havebeen ill the religiou. life;. Sbo

Progress" (Mater et Magistra) is stressed in the statementissued by the Social Action Department of the NationalCatholic Welfare Conference here. Msgr. George G. Higginflis director of the department. The statement, like last year's,expresses concern over the future of collective bargaining,

but also says the departmentis confident tnat labor andmanagement are determinedto avoid the possibility thatbargaining may be supplantedby some form of compulsoryarbitration.

It cites, as a "significant ste~

in the right direction" a reportto President Kennedy from theChief Executive's A d.-v i s 0 r yCommittee on Labor-Manage­ment Policy.

The report, the statement· re­lates, says collective bargainingcan be preserved only if it iaexercised responsibly throughrecognition not only of indivi­dual responsibilities, but Gtduties to society.

Turn to Page Eighteell

FATHER C~FORD; O.F.M.

AT DAKLY MASS: SteveMattes has pedaled to Masseach morning at St. Patrick'sChurch, Youngstown, Ohio,since 1910. Mattes began thedaily trips after one of hissons, now dead, was strickenwith ' paralysis. The retiredcity playground caretaker is88 years old.. NC Photo.

Fr. CliffordTo" PreachRetreat.

WASHINGTON (NC) - Pope John's soCial encyclical can· help U.S. labor ano'!management in their analysis of how economic activity should serve the common goo~

a major Catholic Labor Day statement says. The usefulness of the Pontiff's encyclical"Christianity and Social

Church Stresses ManagementAnd Labor Have CommonDuty to American Public

Father Leo Clifford; (>.F.M... will be retreat master for theannual retreat for· Diocesan'priests' to be held at DiocesanRetreat House, Cathedral Camp,beginning next Monday night

A native of Killarney, CountyKerry, Father Clifford is a grad­uate of the University of Gal-·

,way. Before coming to the United,States he taught at St. Mary'llCollege; Dublin and haspreached throughout Ireland andEngland. .

Guests of the Franciscanll mTurn to Page Seventeen

PRICl! lOll$4.00 per V_

Figures GiveDistortion

ST. LOUIS (NC)-A bish­op cautioned here against re­lying on statistics to meas­ure the success of convertWO,rk. .

Auxiliary Bishop George J.Gottwald of St. Louis said sta­tistics can be "very misleading>'in dealing with souls. '

The reason is that the Mys­tical Body of Christ does notwork statistically, Bishop Gott­wald .pointed out. And the ef­fect of the work one person doesfor a conversion is not alwaYllfelt by that person, he said.

"One of the most gratifyingmoments of a priest is to giveinstructions to a prospectiveconvert," Bishop Gottwald said."When the doorbell rings, heknows he is going to give in-'structions. But someone else hasdone a lot of work before thebell ever .rings.

"Who did the work? It mayhave been somebody workingOill the Religious Informationgram. It may have been somepeople in an office. It may havebeen an old lady praying some­where. You and I 'will neve!'

TlU'n to Page Twelve·b ........a.

for advanced degrees. In thepast, the nuns have been atteI1d­

. iog college'during the Summers.

In Fargo, Superintendent ofSchools Hamilton Vasey told theBoard of EducatIon that fiv~

teachers will have to be hiredto ' care for almost 200 St. An.­thony's students.

Parochial School .ClosingsHit ~ublic Purse in Fargo

, FARGO (NC)-Two Catholic elemen.tary s.chools inthe Fargo diocese have announced they are dropping some,grfldes this Fall because of a lack of qualified teachers. St.Anthony of Padua grade school in Fargo is dropping gradesOne, two and three. St. JamesAcademy of New' Rockfordis : dropping Grades three,four, five and six.

These schools, like severalothers in the diocese, are staffedby nuns of the Presentation of'the Blessed Virgin Mary order,whose motherhouse is 'in Fargo.

Mother Mary Catherine, com­munity superior, told pastor!! atthe end of the past school year,that she was pulling out about30 Sisters to attend colleges andanlversities for the full schoolyear. These Sisters will either'!Rudy for Bachelor's degrees or

Vot 6, No. 36 (C) 1962 The AnchOf'

Pope John LaudsCardinal Bea'sZeal for Unity

VATICAN CITY (NC)­Pope John in a personalietter to Augustin Cardinal'JBea, S.J., on his 50th anni­versary as a priest praisedespecially his zeal and diligenceas president of the Secretariatfor Promoting 'Christian Unity.

The letter, revealed here, wassent to Cardinal Bea at hisnative town of Riedboehringen,Germany, where he is celebra­ting his priestly jubilee.

The 81-year-old Scriptural~holar, personal confessor of)?ope Pius XII, went to GermanyGlfter attending a conference on<Christian unity in England.

Pope John told him in hisRetter: "We are aware of theBreat alacrity with which youillave performed the holy priest­lW ministry during the longlileriod of your life. We praioo

Turn to Page Twelve~ ........ _ . b

TheANCHOR. . .

fedl River, Mass., Thursday, August 30, 1962

Fr~ O'Neill Announces, .

~3,900 School', TofalRev. Patrick J. O'Neill, Diocesan Superintendent o(

School, announced today a new high in the enrollment inthe schools of the Diocese. There 'will be approximately 19,­400 enrolled in the elementary schools' in the Diocese whenclasses begin for t.he new .

Year while the Immaculateye'ar next Wed n e s day, ,Conception School, New. Bed-Father O'Neill reported. The ford, is adding a seventh' grade.increase in the various .high Across the 'entire NatiOn moreschools in the Diocese will bring than 13,000 Catholic .schools .andthe secondary enrollment up to colleges ~areexpected .to 'enroll4500 for a grand total of 23,900ahOut' 5,917,000 'students' thispupils receiving training in the year, setting another,record highlIChools of the Diocese..·. ' total. ...

Next Wednesday, the first ~s in past. years, the biggestSenior class at Stang' High .. increase is expected in the gradeSchool in No., DartQlouth will 'schools, about 115,000 childr~n.ata'rt their stUdies, while the High school enrollment should .!l!irst Sophomore class at Feehan go .up by about 64,000 youngstersHigh, Attleboro, will begin their and colleges by nearly 29,000G2cond year's curriculum. students.

The Holy Name School, Fall These estiJl1ates were· pre-lliver, will ha,ve six grades thilJ. Turn to Page Seventeen

Page 2: 08.30.62

"

POIRIERBUICK

1M PLEASANT STUEf, , FAU, IIVat "

M-K Re$taurantfeaturing

"The G~slBght, Room"[de&! for Communion Break-,faste. Organization Banquets,. ,386 Acus,hnet Ave.

'New Bedford, Call WYman 2-1703

COME INAND SEE I

THE

'New Buick,t ",~,'.~~..

", BUICK 'ELfCTRA!'1' ST .".' ' - 'FOR QUAI.ITY~'

, " STYLE AND,", , COMFORT

'Mee~ 1l'uesday, SS. Peter and Paul, Fall Rive!'t

wpmen's club will open theirFall season with a regulai'monthly meeting -at 8 P.M. OilTuesday, Sept. 4 in the churchha¥.

'~t. Dorothy Nuns,.an New Bedford',list, Tra~sfers~e foIIowing transferm

have been announced by theSisters of St. Dor~thy, VillaFatima, Taunton,' and af­fecting Sisters in the Fall RiverDiocese.

Appointed to Mt. Carmel, New'Bedford, are Mother A. Avelarfrom St. Francis Xavier, Ea~

Providence, R. 1.; Mother I. Car.rellas and Mother M. Ferro fromSt. Dorothy's Academy, StateDIsland; Mother B. Gonsalves and •Mother B. Scatmacchia fromVilla Fatima. Going to VillaFatima are Mother A.· Costafrom St. Dorothy's Academ11.Staten,Island, and Mother A. Silaveira from Mt. Carmel, NewBedford. ', Leaving Mt. Carinel Convent

are Mother A. Canellas who willbe at St. Francis Xavier, Eas4:Providence, R. I.; Mother 'R,Ellul to St. PatriCk's, Richmond,Staten Is13nd;, Mother R. Patrelloto Santa Maria, Detroit, Mich.;and Motl;1er B. Rocha to Mt. SIt.Joseph, Bristol, R. L

. :.

GREEN,VIEW

• lITOlIEn'S.' •REST HOME FOR THE AGED

MEN AND WOMENBeautiful Surroundings~, Comforlab~ UMmg

, WONDERFUL FOODAfttoinette Picard, P<OIIo

ME 6-4921

I_lis' Mills Rd. & 51'" c.r....DARTMOUTH'

Convalescent Home, Inc.109 GREEN STREET FAIRHAVEN

WY 4·7643'announces additional' accommo­

dations for men and wamen .24. Hour Care Special Diets

Open for inspection alWaY''Prop. Lena M.PiUiilg

and Joan Larriv~

Plan" Supper,St. ' John's, 'Central Village,

will hold a corned beef supperfrom 5:30 to 7:00 P.M. on Satur_day, Sept. 1, A penny sale willfollow. '

Sturtevant &H"'k• 00

" Elt. ,1897

lui'lders Supplies'23-43 Purchal. Street

New B.dford,WY 6~5661,

N~CVGlogy .SEPT; 3

Rev. Thomas J. McGee, D.D.,1912, Pastor, 'Sacred Heart, Taun­ton., SEPT. 5',Rev. Napoleon A. Messier,1948, Pastor, St, Mathieu,' FallRiver. '.. , ,', F~culty ~o~Se.'

, GREENSBURG (NC) ...-Con­struction has begup' 'here' on anew faculty house f~r ,". Sistersteaching at Greensbur-g; Pa.,Central Catholic High 'School.Designed to house' 30 nuns of

· six communities staffing theschool,the faculty house willinclude individual eommon

· rooms for each religious com-· munity, in additioll to '. 1'OORl

:', foe each Bus.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foell· ~iver;-Thurs., Aug. 30; 19(12". .' .. '

FORTY HOURSDEVOTION

Sept. 2-Our Lady of the As­sumption, New ,Bed­ford.

OUI Lady of Mount Car..mel, See~9nk. . '

, Sept. 9-St. Anne, Fall River.St. ,Dominic, Swansea "

sept. 16-Holy CrOSSt F a II'River. '

S~. Joseph, Attleboro

Sept. 23--St. Roch, Fall River,. 'Sacred Heart, Taunton.

·-2

'1'11& ~.NCBO&

8eootl4 OJ- Poesap '1'a1d .. reU .1............ Pullllabed ....ftJ 1'11""- at ·'1eBlablaDCl AY_ll.,· J'alI ,at... .... ,tir,tIM o.SboIM ..... 01 ~DIoe_, ''''raD RlYe, ,lllllleerlllltaa ..... .. .......... :.....'...-

ITte~@M~~~&~ crmnmr~~ H©)~©l

r M@re Top~lev~~ ,M®@tfo[fl)~~i NEW YORK (NC) :- The 'American. In!'!titute of( Management has recommended that the Church hold more

iop-Ievel meetings ~f its principal' executives as a meansIDf dealing with, changing conditions and, problems. TheAIM, also suggested ~ that .

. ecumenical e 0 u n e i I stake DE;W rating was prepared for -theplace at least twice a cen- present study, and, the, 1960'tury.' The institute, recom- rating is considered "still valid."

The 'spokesman said the Study.mended the establishment of a was prepared 'lY institute per­body of specialized consultants, sonnel who went to Roine andIncluding "experts on every re- did research' there on the ad­gio" ana' every kind of human ministrative operations of theactivity," whom the pope and Church. " .bis top advisors, could consult The institute's~w study re­quickly should the need' arise'conimends that e cum e n i cal

The nonprofit organization councils be, held more often.said the "uncertainty" of the sit- "So" great is the 'purposeuation in Cuba should be a "red and so useful are the results of:flag warning" to the Church and such a gathering that holdinga spur to its adaptation to meet ecumenical meetings at shortermodern needs. intervals has, become' highly de-

E!ficiency Rating sirable for the Church," It says." These eonclusions, are con- Is recommending frequenttained in a "management audit" meetings of top-level Church of­of the Catholic Church prepared iicials, the study comments thatby the AIM in connection with "in most corporations it is cus- OPUS DEI PRIEST: Rev. William Stetson, of Green­~ coming ecumenical eo~ci1. tomary to call together at ,fre- . field, Mass., director of foreign students at University of

The study was made public quentintervals the heads of the Navarre, is ordained in Madrid as a priest of Opus Dei by p,."est's, Requ.-emhere, by Jackson ~artindell" ma)9r departments and the geo~ , ' • L h' . . . h {M drid 'Chairman of the board of ,the graphical or specialized divisions _ Most Rev., GarCIa a Iguera, AUXIhary BIS op 0 a - La" M d' ,American Institute of Manage- 'to exchange information' about', A~cala. NC, Photo., , . ' ' -: st on ayment. It outlines the historical the state of the enterprise as' a '

d · ' , , ' M$)st' Rev. James Genar:d;background of past ecumenical whole and in some cases to IS- Thr<l!le' A'mer.·c"ans 'Am'on"g' ~,(),pus De'i Auxiliary Bishop of the Dio--eouncils, the ,lessons to be cuss problems which affect it, \1i# ce~, was present at the Solenmlearned from the way they were as a whole.'" Member's Orden·ned .-n' 'S'p'c, in'. " '- High. Mass of' Requiem cele-managed, and their effects on 0 , View Limited .'brat~d Monday morning in st.the long-range management of The purpose of such meetings, MADRID (NC)-Three Amer- at Harvard and received a do~- Miu'y's Church, Taunton, for tlulthe Church. the report' states, is "the, im- leans' were among 28 members torate in ~heology from Rome s Very Reverend James F. GJJ..

The report is the third on the provement of communicatio:lls, of Opus Dei from eight countries Lateran University. . christ, C.P.M. vicar general aiCatholic Church prepared by. the the exchange of information, the ordained, priests' in the Basilica While the majority of --Opus .. the Congregation of the FatheR!AIM in recent years. An analy- recognition of problems that af-' of San Miguel by Auxiliary Dei members continue as ordi- of Mercy.ais released in 1956 gave the feet the enterprise as l!-, whole, Bishop Jose Garcia Lahiguera nary laymen, some members are Father Gilchrist, a native ofChurch an efficiency rating of and the coordination of points of Madrid. 9rdained as priests of the asso- ',Taunton, graduated' from ~8,800, points out of a possible of view and attitudes which will' '. The American members of the ciation in order, to serve .the, Mary's High School, Taunton,10,000.. In 1960, a revised rating enable all .tpe participants to secular institute ordained are a spiritual needs of the membero Holy Cross College, Worceste~gave the Church 9,010 points. carry out their particular activi- lawyer, a chemist, and a Slavic and the apostolates of Opus Dei. and received his theologiC'lllllA rating Qf 7,500 points is re- ties with a better sense of their -languages scholar~Father Wil- Thus Father Stetson will eon- training at St. Bernard's Semi­quired to be certified as "ex- relation to the welfare of the Ham Stetson of Greenfield, tiilue as professor of law and nary, Rochester. He was ap;.cellent" by AIM 'standards. entire enterprise." Mass., a graduate of Harvard director of foreign students' at pointed the first vicar generSt1l

Results Are Useful Provision for such meetings 'College and Hal' val' d" Law the University of Navane, Opus of ',the order in 1954. 'An AIM spokesman said no in the Catholic Church, is School, also holds a doctorate Dei ,_ conducted .ins~itution 10- He leaves his mot'her" MrS.

\ , "largely absent," the AIM,study in carton law from the Angeti-, cate~ at Pamplona, m 'northern Alice Maguire Gilchrist; anellMall Or«lo says. It concludes that the belie- cum University in Rome. . Spam.' . ' .three brothers, Leo and Loulfl,

fit' of the "broad view" to be Father Bradley Arturi, of Opus Dei, which has, sections bOth of Taunton, and 'Dr. Joho 0

FRIDAY - St. Raymond Non- gained by an ov~ralliookatthe Chicago: is a graduate in chern':' for both men and women, has J: of "Dorchester.natus, Confessor. III Class. affairs of the Church is limited istry of the Illinois Institute of become widely kpown in' the 'Chapiains to Bishop Gerr:ucllWhite. Mass, PrClper; Gloria; to the Pope and' a few of his , Technology 'and also received Urtited States through the stu-· at the Solemn Mass of Requiem

'no Creed; Common Preface. close aides. his canon law doctorate from the dents' residences it directs in a were Rt: Rev. James Dolan and','J,'omorrow is the .First Satur- , • Angel1cum." , number of eastern and mid- Rt. ,'Rev. Francis McKeon.. ', d f S t b Father Paul Donlan, B,osto~,ay.o ep em er., fl "0 IC 11"\1 western college cities. .. BudaI took place at 'the

SATURDAY - Mass 'of the ~eSlnCllIl1l «)\f l!,#'ec~rrocy '- specialized in Slavic languages Fathers of Mercy' Cemete~Blessed Virgin for Saturday. " ' b' A' .... 'IS Tr""'nsfe'"'5 'N b h NY T' , The following films are to e ~. IL. ''VV!. IL& T ~ , 1'll1i1"",~'!UU:: ... , """ . ' ew urg, .., on uesday.IV Class. White. Mass Proper; added to the lists in their res,. ~OSlT)j«!>~ VV B'OgllVli «» ,;;I@Y " . ,

I Gloria; Second Collect St. 'pective classifications: ReltllWluem for Fll:IIth~r At NOirth AttleboroGiles, Abbot; Third Collect' Unobjectionable fOr general "iJ Sacred' ;He~' Convent, . No.Twelve Holy Brothers, Mar- patronage: No Man Is'an Island; John -Wright, 81,' father of Attleboro,' has ,three facultytyrs; no Creed; Preface of Wonderful World of the Broth- Bishop John J. Wright of Pitts- changes for the, conling 'year.Blessed'Virgin. , ers Grimm (superior entettain- burgh,', died yesterday at Sister Margarita from St. Cecile

SUNDAY - XII' Sunday After ment for the whole 'family).' Lemuel' Shattuck Hospital, School, Pawtucket, will teachPentecost. II ClasS. Green. Unobjectionable for adults:, Jamaica Plain. the eighth grade in place of Sis-Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; Tower of London. :Mr. Wright lived at 698 River .tel' Paul Rita, who goes to thePreface of Trinity. , Ob' t· bl' rt f t 11' Street, Mattapan. " Sacred- Heart School, Lawrence.

, MONDAY--:-St. Pius X, Pope and Jec lana e In pao a. 'A t· f Medfi ld h'The Firebrand (low moral tone; na Ive 0 e ,,' e Sister Lorraine Edmond comes

,Confessor. III Class. White. excessl've brutality)', A' Very Pri- was graduated from BurdettM P Gl ' CdC11 from Groton' to teach the secondass roper; ona; no ree; vate AffaI'r (amoral and sugges- 0 ege. He was the supervisorC P f f B t ' 'k' grade and will, replace Sisterommon re ace. tive)-. ' ' ,0 a os on paperma mg con-

TUES' DAY M 'of 'vi ' f 30 ti . 1- Marie Antoine" who has been- ass pre ous Condemned: B ace ace I 0 70 .'cern or years, re rmg ...Sunday. IV Class: Green. 1951 ' t l' a nsf e I' re d to Assumption

(suggestive; ,a "dirty joke" at . ", School, Chelsea." Mass Proper; No Gloria ~r expense of sex and religion). ,Besides his wife, Harriet L.. .

Creed; Common Preface. ' (Cokely) and Bishop Wright, he Sister Mape Emma is trana-WEDNESDAY - ,St. ' Lawrence Separate Classification: Too 1 d h M Ma ferred from St. Jacques Con-

Young , to T Ave '(I'f exhibl'ted eaves two aug ters, ra. r- 11J 't" B' h d C f' .uu et H rt B sto' d M' vent, Taunton; and wi serve' us Iman, IS op ,an on es- with discretion, this' stQry of an gar ave y, 0 n, an rs. .

'sor. III "Class. White. Mass "Harriet L. Gibbons, Milton; .and as the cook for the commumty.,', Proper; No Gloria' or Creed; inadequately supervised .teen~ three' sons, 'Dr. Richard H., Common Prefa'ce.· , ager can have sociological W· h f M' Alfr

t · is rIg to Ilton; ed F. ofTHURSDAY .,.... Mass of,'prevI'o'us value). Separate classifica Ion D db d R b rt G of CI

given films not in, themselves e, am, an 0 e . eve-Sunday. IV Class. Green. MaSl[l morally offensive which may land Heights, Ohio.'Proper; No Gloria or Creed; nevertheless require some an.- Bish9P Wright will sing aCommon Preface. ' pontifical requiem Mass tomor-f' alysis and explanation. . to' 1 k .

, The following fiims are to be, row mornmg a 1 0 c oc madded to the lists in their re- 'St. Angela's Church, Mattapan.spective classifications: Cardinal Cushing will preside., Unobjectionable for GeneralPatronage - Coming Out Party;Reluctant Saint. '

Unobjectionable.for .Multsand Adolescents -.A ,Matter ofWho; ,Two Tickets to Paris.

, Unobjectionable for Ad\Jlts­Married Tooyoung.'

Page 3: 08.30.62

3

Vincentians MeetTuesday Night·

Members of Fall River Partio­ular Council, Society of St. Vin.­cent de Paul, will be guests cd.St. Stanislaus Conference fortheir monthly meeting at 8 nedTuesday night.

The meeting will be held ia.the school hall following Bene­diction at 7:45 in the church.

The annual retreat for allmembers of the society in theDiocese will be held at CathedralCamp the wl:.ekend of Sept. aand 9.

The annual national meetingof the society will be held begin­ning Friday, Sept. 14, a.t AtlanticCity. Fall River ParticularCouncil will be represented. ,

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Hart, speaking at the conveo­tion banquet, said the principlesof the K of C "have worn weDthrough ,the 80 years of ourhistory."

"May we continue to exemplt­fy them through all the decadesto come by increased good worqfor our Church and our couo­tries", he said.

Earlier the convention re­ceived messages of greetingfrom President Kennedy andfrom Amleto Cardinal Cicog­nani, Papal Secretary of State.

K 4)f C LeaderCites ChangingRole of La ity

B 0 S TON (NC) - Thechanging role of the laymanin the Church means moreclergy - laity collaboration,not less, the head of the Knightsof Columbus said here.. Supreme Knight Luke E. Hart

told the 80tti international coo­vention:

"There is no implication. thatthe layman's response to newopportunities and obligationsentails some sort of separationfrom the guidance of our priestsand bishops, or from their coun­sel in temporal affairs.

"What the layman is beingasked to do is to take his partin the work of the Churchwhich extends beyond the sanc­tuary and into the marketplace.

Through 80 Years"The shepherd, in short, fa

saying to the sheep: Gentlemen,there is much to be done-morethan I can handle by myself.Go out and do some of it fOl'me."

Tt:tE ANCHOR-Thurs., Aug. 30, 1962'

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shakable soundness of principleswhich are the assurance of thesalvation of humanity.

. Unity\ of Principles"These are known to you:

God, the Creator and Father;Jesus Christ, the Son of Godwho became man and died forour salvation; the Church, ani­mated by the, Holy Spirit, thefortress of real peace and theteacher of salvation for all men.

"There is also the moral lawand the 10 Commandments andthe ecclesiastical precepts forthe interior order of conscience

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RESTAURAHT

Pope Says Coun'cil's EffectsWill Begin in Parishes

·HAPPY REUNION: Very Rev. Francis D. Costa,S.S.S., new American Provincial of the Blessed SacramentFathers, enjoys an infrequent reunion with his sister inreligion, Sister Marie Emmanuel, S.S.J., of St. Theresa'sConvent, Fan River.

CASTELGANDOLFO (Ne) -;- Pope John called fora renewal of parish life in his sermon at a Mass he offeredin the parish of this village where his Summer residenceis located. The Holy Father spoke of the concept of theparish and its relation to·the coming e cum e n i c a I

'council, saying that the par~ish is "the noble and effica­cious form of religious and ec­clesiastical organization" andadding that the council is "di­rected particularly toward theparish and will throw its lighton it."

The Holy Father stated thatin the "pages of the preparatorywork -and of the now abundantliterature on the council, thereis reserved for the parish.a postof honor, in the same way asthere is for the diocese and forthe problems of the social lifeof the Church."

The effects of the council willbegin in the parish, the Popesaid, a.nd so the council seeksto offer three major helps toparish life in order that theymay pass thep1 on from genera­tion to generation for the salva­tion of souls.

These three helps, he said, aresound principles, opportune ad­monishments and the' diffusionof grace.

Pope John said that thecoming council "will seek to bea· shining reminder of the un..

Father Peyton StoryOn Radio Su~day

HOLLYWOOD (NC) - Th~

story of the priest who made theworld conscious of' the slogan,"The family that prays to'gether,stays together," will be recountedon a nationwide radio broadcastSunday night.

"The Story of Father, PatrickPeyton" will be related on theMarian Theater program broad­cast from. 10 to 10:30 P.M. overthe Mutual Broadcasting System.Marvin Miller and Dan O'Her­lihy will be the narrators, whileFather Peyton, C.S.C., will fillin some chapters of his life inhis own words.

The Holy Cross priest current_ly . iii celebrating the 20th anni­versary of his worldwide cru­sade for family prayer. 'BesidesfOUnding and directing' theFamily Rosary Crusade, FatherPeyton also founded and' directsthe Marian Theater and theFamily Theater weekly. radioprograms. His organization alsoproduces special occasional tele­vision programs.

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Baptism - Prepara.tion I was simple, then, when theSign.was visible, for the Bishop toinsist that the community carry .and show the community. signin public. But besides this, everysign means something. In "thiscase it shows the person's' at­tachm:ent to Christ and incor­porates the candidate to thoseHebrews saved by the sign ofthe blood of the Lamb. Yet thereis always that real risk that thissupernatural effect will some­how be lost and seem truly un­real if the Cross no longer isvisible and a community bond.

We mentioned, some time ago,that at this giving of the Sign,there is also an exorcism thattakes place. Yes, all this only tomake the act more meaningful,real, and show the candidate theimportance of the change thatmust take place if one is' trulyto be a Christian.

Sit Down, Have A BiteA hearty welcome is so often

followed by such a bidding. Itseems just natural. This does theChurch also do in the adminis­tration of the Sacrament as Shegoes on to present the candidatewith salt.

The presentation of salt isalready rich with symbolism.We have the salt of· preservation;the salt of wisdom. But. inthe beginning, it was bread andsalt-or salted bread-that wasgiven' the new candidate. Thiswas simply one of the normalcustoms of the day. No familywould think of receiving somevoyager or guest without pre­paring something to eat for him.

So here the Church presentsher candidate with something'of an appetizer-to prepare theway 'for that Eucharistic mealwhich is the banquet and thelife-conserving fOod of allChristians.

It was only when this mostnatural act of wel<;ome of a trueand living community was lost,that some new significance ­such as preservation or wisdom-had to be read into ihe rite.

Next. week: Preparation II

Protest Selling LandTo Nuns for Hospital

FAIRBANKS (NC)-Respond­ing to criticism of its decision tosell 20 acres of land to the Sis­ters of Providence for a hospitalsite, the Fairbapks City' Councilhas agreed to' seel a similaramount of land to a communitygroup for the same purpose.

The Fairbanks CommunityHospital Association, Inc., pro­tested the decision to sell landto the Catholic nuns on theground that a community-ownedhospital would benef~t residentsmore than a privately ownedone.

The City Council directedRobert Crow, acting city man­ager, to meet with representa­tives of the community associa­tion and discuss negotiation forbuying city land for a, hospital

'/tite.

"Hi! Come on in." Whata relief. We're welcome! Wecan all realise and appreciatesuch a thing. The Sacrament

, of Baptism is meant to be suchan introduction and inaugura­tion. The Chris-tian communityis to be livelyand interestedenough to ex­tend the wel­come to thecandidate that iscontained in themeaning of theSacrament ofInitiation. Nowif you were oneof the generousparishioners brave enough to.volunteer as a parish visitor orcollector of some drive, youknow what a smile means assome strange door is opened toyou. This is how the Churchwishes to meet any real candi-date. .

"What can the Church of Goddo for you?" asks her represen­tative. "Please grant me thegreatest gift possible-Faith."

Now, perhaps we have toooften idealised out of proportio'nwhat is meant by this "Churchof God." Perhaps, like many in­terested but perplexed Protes­tant, we too are deceived by thefirst meaning of "the Church."

The Church is not some loose­ly defined spirit that sort ofbinds men who often have thesame- feelings, likes or dislikes.Nor is the Chu!"ch simply anearly perfect institution withan orderly organization, correctdiscipline, and fine spirit., It isnot some world-wide society to

·which we give our name andreceive an appropriate numberand credit card. Too often, wehave interpreted our fa£th inthis Church as something alto­gether independent of our be­longing to it. Too often we havemissed the fact t:lat it is a realand visible community of whichwe form a true part.

The gentle advice that followspoints to this true communityof which the' candidate is to bea part, please God. How does onelive in such a community? Why,it's simple: one has "faith", .aridhope ("eternal life"), and char­ity ("you shall love ...").

The 'Sign"Did she or didn't she?" "Of

course, she did. Look at the signin the window. She already hasbought Girl Scout 'cookies thisyear." Oh, how important signsare! Each little organization hasits own sign. Why? Because it isproof of the real belonging ofan individual to the particular'group. Now the signing of thecandidate with the Sign of theCross is only symbolical but atone time it was most important.There were centuries when thecandidate was actually markedwas simple, then, when the Sign

Page 4: 08.30.62

, AT LITURGICAL WEEK: Liturgical Movement leaders gathered informally duringsessions of the 23rd North American Liturgical'Week held ,in Seattle, included, left toright, Bishop Charles A. Buswell of Pueblo, a member of the board' of directors; JohnB. Mannion, ex-ecutivesecretary; Mary Perkins Ryan, member of the board of directorsand national vice-chairman of the spii-itual development committee of the National Coun­cil of Catholic Women; and Father Frederick -McManus of the Catholic University, presi-,dent of. the conference..NC Photo.' '.'

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Protest Haiti's BanOn Catholnc Pope'r

NEW YORK (N€)-The ex­ecutive committee of the Inter­American Press Association here

nas condemneq Haiti's continuedrefusal to permit publication ofLa Phalange, Catholic newspa­per of Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

The association adopted a res­olution urging reopening of the

'newspaper and abolishment of"methods of terror" in HaitiThe group made a similar ple~'last January.

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Afr@U1H~li"lfTI®[Ji)tt ~Bt®sHANOVER (N C ) - A

bishop who was once an in­mate of the concentrationcamp at Dachau led 'hun­dreds of his fellow Catholics tothe site of the old nazi Bergen­Belsen camp for a service ofatonement for the crimes com­mitted during the HiUerite era.

The ceremony was part of thefive-day national Catholic con-

-vention here. Bergen - Belsen,about 3.0 miles from here was aplace of Hving hell for some.110,000 men of many nationali­ties. About 51,000 did not leavethe concentration camp alive.Many died of epidemics andstarvation. Many others weremurdered in cold blood.

The camp barracks wereburned to the ground afterWorld War II.' But GermanCatholics built there a memorialchapel, 'the Church of the Pre­cious Blood, and Bishop Hein­rich Maria Janssen of Hilde­sheim dedicated it last Novem­ber

Mass in ChapelMain featur~ of the atonement

-ceremonies was the Mass offered''in the memorial chapel by Au;x­iliary Bishop Joseph Buchkre­mer of Aachen. The Bishop wasan inmate at Dachau when he

'was a priest.The rites on the site of the

Bergen _ Belsen camp werebroadcast to the convention sitehere, where thousands more ofthe convention participants hadparticipated in a Mass offeredby Archbishop Hermann Schaeu­fele of Freiburg. The Hanover'ceremonies closed with' a briefaddress by West German Presi­dent Heinrich Luebke.

Then Catholic men attendedall-night atonement services inseveral Hanover churches wherethe Blessed Sacrament was ex­posed for nocturnal adoration.

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Some 4,400 priests, Religiousand laymen attended the meet­ing, held in the civic 'arena onthe grounds of the SeattleWorld's Fair.

.Causes for Joy-- Father McManus said develop­ments in the liturgy so far thisyear are "causes for Christianjoy and Christian hope."

He said these developmentsunderline the importance at­tached by the Church to pastoralpreparation of the ,people, con­gregational responses, ,invoca­tions and sacred song duringMass and the sacraments; andparticularly the .increase in "useof the mother tongues in theliturgy itself."

Place of LatinReferring. to last February's

papal constitution o,n the studyof Latill" ','Veterum 'Sapientia,"Father McManus said there was

'~'not the least hint or suggestionth!1t the Holy See intended towithdraw the concessions ofbilingual rituals, to revoke theexpress encouragement givenby both Pope ,Pius XII and PopeJr;>hn XXIII to the use of sacredsong in the mother tongue atlow. Mass, Or halt- the gradualdevelopment in this matter al­ready undertaken by the sameapostolic See."

Subsequent actions by theSacred' Congregation of Ritesacting under the authority ofPope John, indicate that thereare two distinct questions in­volved regarding 'the place ofLatin' in the Church, he'said.

These are ,"first, the study ofLatin by the clergy of the west­ern Church for various import-'ant purposes, and second, theintroduction of the variouslanguages into the liturgy as theneeds of the people may requireand as authority may deter-,mine," he said.

Aid School BuildingYOUNGSTOWN (NC)­

Youngstown diocesan fund cam­paigns netted $3,700,000 andcleared the way for constructionof two new high, schools, en­largement ,of another, and v debtreductiollB at two other highschools. ' '

St. LOUDS U. HighestIn Alumni Support

ST. LOUIS (NC) - The St.Louis (Mo.) University sehool ofmedicine r.anked first among thecountry's 86 medical schools, incontributions from alumni dur­ing 1961, according to the Jour-'nal of the American MedicalAssociation.

Graduates of the schooi gavea total of $199,409.07,to medicaleducation during the year. Thefigure included $187,397.02 con- .tribu'ted directly to the univer­sity and $12,051.05 to the AMAEducation and Research Foun­dation.

A spokesman for the unive~­sity said 54 per cent of the schoolof medicine alumni contributedto the university during 1961.

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state Requirements. "No serious student of Amer­ican religious bodies has pre­dicted that, even though govern­ment aid should make itpossi­ble, there, would exist any wide':'

Bit.ter,nep.s.Ball said that much of the bit­

terness in the controversy overFederal aid has been caused byfea'r of the demise ,of publicschools. '

"It cannot be denied that therehas been a, notable trend in thepast 20 years toward private ed­ucation," he said in a lecture.

But, he added, "fears concern­ing a threatened demise of pub­lic schools should be shown asbaseless. The average child in a 'public, school 'today representsat least the third ,generation ofa family attending ,public schools:A tradition such as this tends tocontinue. .

Fath'er McManus UU'ges RenewalSEATTLE (NC) - The - liturgical apostolate : .. (and)

president of the national continu~ a?d acceler~te .t~eLitu'rgical Conference has ~ ~eat ,lIturgICal ~estoratto~ u~:-

d th S d V t· ,- hated by the Roman pontiffs.

urge ' e econ a lcan .Council to "undertake a liturgi- Father McManus, ~ profess~rcal renewal which will make the of canon, law at the CatholIcChurch and her life more intel-' University of America, Wash­ligible and attractive." ington, .D.C., spoke at the open-

Father Frederick 'R. McManus ing general' sesion of the' 1962also asked the ,council, Fathers North Arne ric a n Liturgicalto "confirm and stimulate the Week. '

Legion Asks Pra,yer

l~PublicSchools'NEW YORK. (NC)..,.-'The New

-York state department 'of the­American Legion recorded itself,in favor of prayer 'in the state'spublic 'schools. '

The 3;000 delegates at the de­partment's 44th annual conven­tion here adopted it resolutionurging that school children andtheir parents agree on a prayerand ask local school boards tohave it said voluntarily in publicschool classrooms.

The resolution urged ac'tion betaken without delay so, begin­ning with the new school term,next month, pupils might be ableto recite "a, prayer acknowledg­ing our dependence upon God,and acknowledging His bless~

1ngs."

,Fear of Public School SY$t1'emDemaseC(jJUedBCl1~<eles$by Cai'h@H(; Lawyetr

DULUTH, (NC) - A Catholic spread interest in non-Catholiclawyer said here opponents 'of 'religious bodies for the creatingFederal aid to private schools of their own separate schools,"have'deliberately created a base- Ball also said that even if

: less fear in the public mind' that , more separate schools werepublic schools will go out of formed, this would not mean theexistence if 'private 'schools are end of good education. "Suchhelped. schools would still have to meet

William B. Ball, executive' di- r~asonable state req'uirements ofrector of the Pennsylvania Cath- law," he said.olic Welfare Coml'l.ittee, Harris- He said that "we cannot doubtburg, and a widely known ,con- that cultural freedom would bestitutional lawyer, spoke at the benefitted precisely to the de­University of Minnesota campus gree that we would move awayhere. from a'governmental educational

monolith.'"

THE ANCHO~-

Th'urs., Aug. 30, 1962'

Abso~:uJ",gcn Deri'Dg«ll~

Up~e~& :byCCllJlD'tROME (NC)- The Italian Su­

preme Constitutional Court hasruled' that a priest who deniesabsolution to a Catholic who hasvoted for leftis. political partiesdoes not infringe on electoralfreedom

The ,ase goes back to ,1956when, in ,the small town of Amo- 'rosi, Passionist Father Francisof Naples refused absolution totwo women, Drusa Malgieri andVilma D'Angelo who told himthey' had voted for a leftist party.

The priest refused to give ab­solution on the ground that the.women had deliberately ignoredthe Church's warnings ,aboutvoting for 'parties collaboratingwi.th c()mmunists.

Pll'el4Jlte ProtestsSALISBURY (NC) -'- Arch­

bishop F,rancis Markall, S.J., C1fSalisbury has joined four Pro­testant churchmen here in, ajoint protest against a 'propos~d

law to curb ]Sl}litical activitiesof African nationalists in thissouthern African country..

[L@W[J'[(i)®l1iJ [RS.®~IR1@[)i)@]

U@ ~[[@~@U'~/~ C©J~~

n:@[i" _~~~ovoty, DUBUQUE (NC) - TheCatholic men's organizationof the Dubuque archdiocesehas launched an intensiveleadership program following anappeal to priests from the localArchbishop' for more missionsfor laymen.

The Archdiocesan Council ofCatholic Men's cqmpaign waspreceded by a letter of Arch­bishop James' J. Byrne of Du­buque to his priests saying thatlay persons must be given jobs'worthy of their talents andtraining. '

The Archbishop wrote that'priests must give increasing at­tention to the challenge of howto utpize the large group of in­formed and alert lay men andwomen eager to be of service tothe Church.

"To answer this question," heWrote,"we must address our­eelves to. serious thought in themonths,ahead.

Leadership Courses"I am convinced, Fathers,

that we must give 'our zealouslaity, as a group and as .indivi­duals, specific missions worthyaI. their talents ,and training.These missions must more andDlOre bring our people to liveout in the world and in the in­lltitutions _oj. society the princi­pIes of the Gospel of Christ."

Since p~lblication of the bulle­tin, men of the, archdiocese;guided by the ArchdiocesanMen's C 0 u n c iI, have' beenbrought into "1 e a d e r s hipeourses" conducted on' a parishlevel. .

The course, consisting of'seven' two-hour sessions, brings'before the men issues facing theChurch today; such as social andeconomic justic'e.. Federal aid toI!lChools, ,communism and spiri­tual formation of the laity. Italso ,aims to teach them -to plan ,various parish programs.,

Participation in MassAt the sa'me time, a Christo­

pher leadership course of theGabriel Richard Institute inDetroit has been brought to thecity of Dubuque. A regular nine-

,week session will start here inSeptember. It will be offered inCedar Rapids and Waterloo in1963 and in Mason City andMarshalltown in 1964.

In addition, the diocese is pre,..paring further directives on par­ticipation of the laity in the'Mass. They are to be publishedthis Fall.

Other organizations of laity,such as the Council of CatholicWomen and the doctors' andlawyers' guilds, are expected tocooperate in the effort for in­creased 'lay activity here.

Page 5: 08.30.62

mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Aug. 30, 1962 5

f ,, ,....hit '"~...' ~~~f', 1 ~ 1',"'"1 ~ 'l;),

, ~, "~'~'~~'h:;J~~:~~}~~:~~~~L,BOWS TO TUNNEL BUT REMAINS OPEN: A 1,000-year-old rescue travelers today require the services of the famous dogs who have saved

mission will be brought to a veritable close this Fall when a three-and- more than 2,000 human lives over the years. At left, a group of religioll3one-half-mile-tunnel is opened through Grand St. Bernard Pass in the takes a prayerful walk outside the hospice. The famous St. Bernard dogsSwiss Alps. Although the Grand St. Bernard hospice, center, conducted are still bred at the hospice and the largest, right, is named after "Barry,"by the Canons Regular of St. Augustine, will not be abandoned, few if any most famous of the canine rescue workers. NC Photos.

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NEW YORK (NC) -:... A.U.S. Catholic emergency ~lief unit has arrived inAlgiers to aid in an ~panded Catholic relief progl'amamong refugees and other need7persons in war-torn Algeria.

The emergency aid unit willassi'st regular staff members inAlgeria of CRS-NCWC, the U.S.Catholic overseas relief agency.

The resident CRS-NCWC de­legate in Algeria, Johri T. Crow_ley of San Francisco, recentlysigned an agreement with theAlgerian provisional govern­ment calling for "the importa­tion and distribution of food.clothing, medicine and other re­lief supplies for the benefit ofsick and needy persons amongthe population of Algeria."

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hundred beds remain availablein the hospice for travelers andvisitors. Some 20]000 people stayat the hospice every year, quitea few Americans among them,but mostly Italian workmen insearch of work in Switzerland.

Admire AntiquitiesThe Divine Office and con­

ventual Mass are sung in the17th century. chapel where a,monument erected by Napoleoncan still be seen. Visitors ad-

. mire the Roman antiquities inthe treasury and precious medie­val books in the library.

Rescue work 'in these dayswhen skiers can usually takecare of themselves is a' rare oc­currence in the life of theFathers who brave Winter tem­peratures of 22 below zero andsnows on an average of 36 feetin depth some 10 months of theyear. However, the advantagesof - electric current, centralheating and the telephone· nowmake these rigors more bear­able.

What things were like in thepast may be gathered by takinga' look at the bronze finger­warmer in the chapel sacristrywhich once was used by thepriests to thaw their freezingfingers during Mass.

Southeastern Massachusetts·I.argest Indep~ndent Chain

10 BIG STORESWe Give Gold Bond Stamps'

lJurfaca road is impassable."

As a matter of fact, a chair­lift now operates from thehospice to the very top of Chen­alette Mountain, at an altitudeof 9,100 feet, affording a breath­taking view to tourists on clear

,days of towering Mont Blanc,other Alpine peaks and 27glaciers. But the dogs in theirkennels attract an even greaterinterest among the numerousvisitors.. "We keep them only for

breeding purposes," said FatherGiroud. "Fourteen of them here,seven at our Simplon Pass hos­pice."

The hospice now serves prin­cipally for the Summer vaca­tions of the monks, whose~otherhouse is in Martigny.and whose seminary is in nearbyEcone. The novices also come upfor part of their training, butonly four priests remain duringthe winter.

Activities ContinueThe order's mission estab­

lished in 1933 on the Latza Passin Tibet had to be abandonedwhen the Chinese communistsoccupied that country. Onecanon assigned there,. FatherMaurice Tornay, died a martyrwhen he was slain by a groupof fanatical Tibetan Buddish'priests. His cause for beatifica­tion and canonization now ispending in Rome.

The order's present superiorgeneral,. Abbot Angelin Lovey,was elected to his post while stilla member of the Tibetan group.The Tibetan mission has nowbeen'moved to Formosa.

Activities here on the pass.continue uninterrupted. Four

Decline to ExhibitTeaching Machines

ST. PAUL (NC) - A StateEducation Department officialhas refused to demonstrateteaching machines to Catholiceducators on the grounds thatit would be unconstitutional aidto a sectarian group.

A letter· to the MinnesotaCatholic Education Association'from a department spokesmansaid the demonstration mighttake place if the state' employeewere willing to take a day ofI e a v e. A arrangement wassuggested.

The superintendent of Catho­lic schools of the Sf. Paul arch­diocese has charged that the de­partment's rejection is "an' in­dication of a trend" toward astrict form of Church-Stateseparation which he said woulddeny all state services to chil­dren whose parents choose tosend them to church-relatedschools.

Msgr. Roger J. Connole alsoemphasized the department's in­terpretation of the state con­stitutio'n puts the state agencyin the position of not .being in-.terested in the education of allfuture citizenS.

St. Bernard Monks to I(eep .FamedDespite New Tunnel 3,000 FeetGREAT ST. BERNARD PASS (NC)-"We will not abandon the c'radle of our order,"

Father Charles Giroud, Canon Regular of the Order of St. Al.!gustine, said here. He spOke'at his order's famed 8,114-foot hospice on this mountain pass between Switzerland andItaly, under which a 3-t-mile tunnel is being completed to link the two nations~ The tun­nel, some 3,000 feet belowthe hospice, was started fouryears ago to take care of thelarge amount of motor traf-.fie beteen the two countr'-- Itwill be opened this Fall and beused by an estimated 300,000motorists during its first year ofoperation.

When the project was firstannounced, it was feared thatth order's members, commonlyknown as the ''Monks of St. Ber­nard," would have to end their1,000-year-old mission becausetravelers would no longer crossthe pass. Also few,' if any,travelers now need the help ofthe famous St. Bernard dogswhose skill saved more than2,000 lives over the years.

"Nevertheless," Father Giroudsaid, "our mission will not beabandoned. We now know thatheavy traffic will continue tocross our pass except during thehigh Winter season when the

Vocation~st F.athersOpen U. S. House

NEWARK (NC) - At.the in­vitation of Archbishop ThomasA. Boland of Newark, the Voca­tionist Fathers have their firstbouse in the U.S.

A headquarters for their mis­sion efforts among the Spanish­speaking people 'of Newark wasblessed by the Archbishop. Thebuilding will serve as a homeand office for Vocationist priestsassigned to Our Lady of Per­petual Help Center for the·Spanish-speaking.

The formal tiUe of the com­munity is the Society of DivineVocations. It was founded inNaples, Italy, shortly afterWorld War I by Father Justinof the Holy Trinity. Its mainconcern is the promotion of vo­cations and most of its memberswork in Italy and Brazil.

Asserts AmericanCatholics IgnoreSocial. Teachings

DAVENPORT (NC) - Apriest has told participantsat the Study Week of theApostolate here that U. S.Catholics are conforming to theexternals of American life andIgnoring the social teaching of>the Church.

Father Louis M. Colonnese,general,chairm'm, said "there isoften not even a single voice ofdissent on issues that are warmlyand continuously debated in theother democracies of the worldGnd in nations where the Churchis well-established." ,

"There is only a strange si­lence," Father Colonnese pointedout, "that mocks our claimlo bethe most open society on earthand the country which proudlypossesses such a vast Ca·tholiceducational system."

He charged that "Members oft'he Mystical Body of Christ," arenot recognizing their role,' "be­cause we are fearful, frustratedand overcOme by our failures asChristian leaders."

"If in our thinking, our con­versation and especially ourCatholic scnool classrooms, weIgnore the social teaching of theChurch," the priest concluded,"then we are guilty of high trea­son not only because of Catholicsocial doctrine's place in Chris­tian living, but doubly so be­cause of the critical situanonfacin'! all of humanity in thisour day."

Page 6: 08.30.62

Turn to Page Seven

I;.

Coming.Vatican

CouncilBy Rev.Wm. F. Hogan,C.S.C.

~ StonehiP. Professor

Secrecy, Scholarship andTllIle Ecumeflical Council .

One very important ch~aeteristie of man is his iD­satiable desire to know and~ overwhelming intellectualeuriosity. Rare is the individ.al who does not have an interestin learni.qg the .news (even be­fore it hap­pens), especial­ly when some­thing extraor­dinary is aboutto occur. Thefort h c 0 m­ing council isno exception tothis driving in­tellectual curi-osity of man; V'{e ,would all like to know just whatis going to happen and just whatwill be discussed. Holy MotherChurch would like nothing 'bet­ter than to be able to let eachand everyone of us know whatprecisely we may expect, butof necessity much secrecy hadto surround the preparations forthis great council, with onlylimited ·reports of the activitiesbeing made available to thepeople. .

ReaSons for SecrecyThe' principal reason for this

secrecy can be gathered from asimple review of history. Count­less times the Church has suf­fered undue influence fromtemporal rulers who have hin:­dered the very life of theChurch.

In previous articles we havepointed out how the emperors

·usurped the right of the Churchto appoint bishops, ho'Y politi­cal pressures kept the papacy avirtual prisoner at Avignon, howemperors claimed the right teelect the pope, how conciliarismwith its tenet that the councilis above the pope was fosteredby kings against the papacy.

And at the la'st ecumenicsleounciI many difficulties Weft

caused by leakages during thetimeS of preparation.

The sensationalism which fre­quently .characterizes today'"press might easily misinterpretsome of the discussions of thecommissions in preparation farthe Second Vatican Council.

Temporal powers might oneeagain try to exert pressure emthe Church and prevent it fromfreely exercising its spiritualmission iri the world accordingto the designs of the Holy Spirit.

Scholarly ArticlesOne tremendous benefit hm;

eome forth from the secrecy pre­vailing around the preparatiol11lfor the Council, and that is theabundance of scholarly articleswhich have come forth from thepens of scholars and have beenpublished in Catholic maga­zines.

The minds of the Church'sscholars have been forp~" ''1

study the problems. of theChurch today from eVelj' lNS­

sible angle in order to obtain IIglimpse of what the Council iflfacing. Much positive construe­tive criticism of Catholicism hat!resulted, and this kind of 'criti­cism has been of the highesttype, bringing rna'ny advantagesto the life of the .Church.

Learn Inner MeaningEven if their criticisms are n9t

those to be treated by .the'Fathers of the Council, some ofthese reflections will help 1;(,)stir the minds of the clergy and.laity with _the result of a pos­sible reappreciation and revita­lization of Catholic life in arellQwhich may not be .officiallwtreated.

Catholics can learn from these'articl~s the. inner meaning of

MONDAY - St. Pius X, Pope,Confessor. At times in the his­tory of the Church we havetried to exalt the sacraments byforgetting that they exist forpersons, fo~ us all. We thoughtfor a time, for example, that the ;Eucharist was so holy that itcouldn't possibly be the regularfood of sinners like ourselves.St. Piu.s recalled us to a moreChristian view of the, Eucharist,not as, an end in itself, but 'assacra'mental tool by which Christfeeds and forms His disciples.

TUESDAY - Mass as on SUIIG­day. The idea of the 'person'simportance is in the very sto~yof creation, "in the image ofGod." But is was Jesus who in­sisted on it, impressed it, drilledit into the mind of mankind, asHe . does in the Gospel of thisMass. It isn't just the idea ofman that we have to put first-­ahead of our money and our'things-but this perSQn or thatperson, .parti~ular man..

WEDNESDAY-8t.. Lawrenee.Justinian, Bishop, ConfessGa'.The Gospel parable of the tal­ents tells U1il that the sacra­ment of Holy Orders, .too, .existsfor the Church; for the Peopleof .God, not vice. versa. Epis­copacy, presbytership, deacon­ship-all services, functions oflove and .unity, for the properordering of the life of theConvenant here on earth. Wehonor today. one who broughtto his service as. bishop a greatlove of God and a will eOll­formed to God's Will.

WltlI$!hJoll1l\9j{hOlft SchcoOsTo .1lt<eth~JofJ1 Prayers, WASHINGTON (NC) - Pub­lic schools in the nation's capitalwill continue the practice ofopening the school 'day withBible reading and the Lord'sPrayer when the new term be­gins Tuesdar,., Sept. 4.

Wesley. S. Williams, presidentof the District of ColumbiaBoard of Education, announced

. continuance of the practice,. al­though the city's legal depart­ment has not yet· given an.opinion on. its legality.

Williams said the school board."is deeply concerned about theinterpretation" of the U.S. Su­preme court's ruling, in the NewYork state public school prayerease. The ruling generally hasbeen interpreted as applying toa prayer composed by the NewYork state Board of .Regents and'recommended by it for volun­tary use in' the Schools. Thecourt decision held .governmentagencies ~hould stay out of thebusiness,of composing and pro-

. mulgating pray~rs.

Directions

Cfh,nO'u.'1h thE CWu:k With. th£ ChW\chBy REV. ROBERT W. lHIOVDA, Catholic' University

ST. MARY ON SATURDAY.She who brought forth "the kindwho' .rules heaven and' earth"(entrance hymn) is our interces­sor as we pray for grace to ex-.tend the realization of His king­ship here' and now. For in Hisplan it is our witness' whichbuilds up' the kingdom in this

'"space-between." To root ourlives in the. "assembly of saints"(first reading) and 'to "hear theword of God and keep it" (Gos­pel) is to cooperate in the con­struction of the heavenly Jeru-salem. .

TWELFTH SUNDAY AFTERPENTECOST. Today's commu-

. nion hymn expresses the rela­tionship the Christian sees be­tween man and lesser things:... . • food from the earth andwine to cheer the heart of;man,oil to .make his face gleam, andbread to sustain hfs srength..'

The liturgy. itself is a .N­minder, and is full of reminders,that the person is· the greatestearthly value - the individualhuman being. And we tend tosay, "Of course;" and proceed

. on our way as usual. But if onereally accepts the' Christian

. answer, really believes that theperson is the greatest value inthis world, he must believe alsothat every other thing~Church,state, law, freedom, democracy,,edl,l.cation, social customs- isgood only as it serves and pro­·motes the good of the person,this person, every person..

'ANCHOR'

ConclusioD.§

THE AW'I-l()D-;Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Aug. 30, 1962

Conformity

..6

Audit

The national Commander of AMVETS recommendeda worthy approach to the organization's aniJ.Ual convention.

He pointed out that increasing pressures. for conformi-.ty, are hindering the development of leadership in the,United States..' . .

"More and more, day by day, we are all being pres­sured to conform; gently but firmly, it is brought ,home to'us from childhood 'that pleasant, reliable people do nothold opinions which differ from their neighbors'."

And again: " 'Buy it-everyone else is buyi'ng it' criesthe advertisement; 'think it-everyone else is. thinking,it'shout the editorials, and' consultants in depth psychologynod: in approval at this happy display of wh~t they Call.togetherness."

"There is sufficient evidence that a high proportion'ofpeople, and specffically people in our own age group, wouldrather say that black is white than find themselves outof step' with their friends. H

This is all too true.Leadership demands that a' person get out in front,.

stand-at times-alone, in making recommendations or inadvancing programs. It deltlands that a person get frombehind the breastworks and stand out in the open, the'blrget of criticism and carping from' those huddled to­gether in the safe anonymity of the crowd.'

This is true in the religious sphere as well.How many persons, knowing what is right, keep re­

ligion on an intellectual level only, because' they will notmove away from the crowd to do what is right. They don'treally want to sin, but they are afraid to walk alone. Thethought of God is not strong enough nor vivid enough intheir lives to make Him their .sole companion.

Religion remains in their minds but does not movefile will. Religious' truths. remain. truths but not convic­tions that affect their actions.

To these, conformity-with mediocrity and even evil--ois preferable to being alone. in doing, good.

More people should be inspired to do what il3 right re­gardless of the crowd, to break away from conformity withpeople and to ,make conformity' to God their rule of life.

. )'

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL IMRPublished weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland AvenueFall River, Mass. OSliorne 5-7151

PUBLISHER .'Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD.

GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGERRav. Daniel F. Shalloo~ M.A.· . Rev. John P. Driscoll

MANAGING EDITORHugh J. Golden

TODAY -' S~ Rose of lLima,Virgin. Christian virginity is oneway of bearing witness to Christ.Chrill,tian 'marriage is another.Virginity witnesses to the Chris­tian belief that eternity opensup beyond time, that· all thegood things of this world mustbe seen in relation to that ulti­mate reality whiCh transcendsthem. Marriage witnesses to theChristian belief that God lovesthe world and all that is human'and ,that the persons' and thingswe see are icons of the invisibleGod. We need both witnesses,both messages. .

It is interesting to note that the American Institute TOMORROW - St. Raymundof Management has come up once again with some favo-I'- Nonnatus,' Confessor. St. Ray-

b mund's work, the ransoming ofa Ie conclusions on the Catholic Church simply as am 0lP- captives, is a work never done.ganization. . 'Man has not yet evolved to the

Considering the Church in the same light as it would point, of prizing his neighbor's. freedom as he prizes his own.

approach any organization the Institute placed it second Most of us do not yet love ouronly to the American Telephone and Telegraph Company _ neighbors as ourselves. Butill efficiency. ' 1here is still opportunity for

, following :Raymund's example.The exceptions taken :to ~he· Church were in the Every Christian working to make

Ilpheres. of financial investments and in drawing top level . housing and schooling and jobspersonnel from the "prince and pauper". classes only and available to Negroes and otherDot the middle class. _ '. minority groups in our commu-

nities, every Christian trying' to. But it is' pleasing to realize that the Church-()fteil make JUStice accessible to the

pictured by friends as well as enemies as a ponderoU's and· . poor, is Raymund's model'll.slow-moving behemoth-"':is considered on the basis of counterpart.facts a remarkable well-ordered and efficient organization.

And a significant conclusion by the I:ristitue is that"no organization in the world is beJter equipped to fighteommunism than the Catholic Church. Either communismwill rule the world or the Church will prevent it."

. The Institute has nothing to gain by a misinterpre­tation of facts. Its conclusions have an unbiased validity.The leaders of anti-red nations would do well to listen tothe Church's advice and follow its moral and social pro­grams which. aim at preserving and building up familylife 'and dignity and rooting out the internal weaknessesthat communism feeds upon. .

Arid Catholics must be aware that much of the world,knowi'ngly or otherwise, is depending upon Catholicism todeliver it from evil and to help it weather the cruel stormsOf communisIll-

@rhe

Page 7: 08.30.62

7

1.95 Prelates SpokeAt!' Vatican Counca I

BONN (NC) - Of the morethan 700 Prelates who took pariin the First Vatican EcumenicalCouncil in 1869 and 1870, 195spoke at its general meetings.

Father Burkhart Schneider,S.J., has reported in an articlein the German review, Stimmender Zeit, that 99 of the prelatE;s

,spoke more than once - 47twice, 17 three· times, 15 fourtimes, 7 five times, 4 six timesand 2 eleven times. The longestspeech was delivered by Bishop

.Paya y Rico Cuenca, Spain.

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Aug. 30, 1962

Stre$ses UrgentN~ed of Worker~

In 50" Am®r?~~@NOTRE DAME (NC)

Religious communities oughtto send "tithes" of 10 percent of their membership toLatin America, ArchBishop KarlJ. Alter of Cincinnati has said.

He told the 20th national con~

vention of the Catholic StudentsMission Crusade that at least200,000 lay teachers of reiigiousdoctrine are needed immediately.

Archbishop Alter suggestedthe following measures in addi­tion to the "tithing" of religioulJpriests:

Establishment of new regional, seminaries in Latin America at

a rate of two every five years.Creation of scholarships for

seminarians, both at home andabroad.

Enlistment of lay teachers ofChristian Doctrine and estab:­lishment of local, national andinternational training centers forthem.

CUOOIll lFi.&sc~

Archbishop Alter called on"rank and file students in highschools and colleges" to studythe problems and opportunitiesof the Church in Latin America.citing especially the study pro­gram drawn up for that purposeby the CSMC.

He warned that "unless extra..ordinary efforts are made to sal­vage the situation, the LatiaAmerican countries, which areuniformly Catholic in tradition,will succumb to further rapiddeterioration of their historicreligion and culture."

"The danger of subversionby sectarian and Communistpropaganda becomes more acuteeach day," he emphasized. "Itwould be a serious blow to thefuture of the Catholic Faith ifthese countries, with their rap­idly increasing population andtheir growing influence in worldaffairs, were to follow the pll't­tern established by Castro inCuba."

Father' Waldron, proud of thework which his parish has done,praised especially the church or­ganizations which he describedas "e x c e p t ion a I.l y active"throughout the year.

These include the Our Lady ofVictory Guild of which Mrs.Bradley Parker is president; theSt. Vincent de Paul Society withStephen B. O'Brien, Sr., as pres­ident; and the Parish Men's Clubof which Harold L. Bragle ispresident. All hold their meet­ings an4 activities in the down­stairs part of the church.

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ReceptionCeremony

Three novices from the Dio- ceremonies was Rev. Antoine­cese received the habit of the M. Lanoue, O.P. The preacherDominican Sisters, three took for the 0 c cas ion was Rev.temporary: vows and one made Charles L. Hewitt of St. Ber­her perpetual profession at cere- nadette's Parish, New Haven.monies in the Convent Chapel Profess Vows

Receiving the habit was Sister Making temporary vows wereMary Kevin, Cynthia Merna,. Sister Mary Christopher, Clairedaughter of Mr; and Mrs. John' Siriott-,e, daughter' 'of Mr. andMerna, Summer Street, Dennis- Mrs. Germain Sinotte, 151 De­port; Sister James Michael, troit Street, Fall River; SisterDiane Prezalar, daughter of Mr.' . Francoise Therese,. Therese Bis­and" Mrs. Lawrence Prezalar,. 86· son; daughter Of Mr~ and Mrs.Freedom Street, . Fall River;, Theodule Bisson, 28 BayViewSister Marie Louise; Louise I:.e;. ,Avenue,: ,Swansea; .Sister Annevesque, daughter of· Mr. and de Jesus, Claudette Pelletier,Mrs... ,Napoleoa Levesque, 94 . daughter of Mr. and Mrs. AquilaKellogg Street, Fall River. Pelletier of 280 Whipple '~treet,

R.ev•. Jean-P. Cossette, O.P. Fall River.presided at the ceremony and Sister Mary Martin, MarciaRev. Robert Kaszynski of St. Delahanty, daughter of Mr. andStanislaw Church, Fall River, Mrs.. Martin Delahanty of 1106preached, , &>. Main Street, Fall River,,Presiding 'at tho profession made her perpetual profession.

Father Waldron explained, "butwhile we have two Massesduring the Winter, they are in­creased to five in the Summer."Two Jesuit priests from BostonCollege assist Father Waldronduring the Summer.

The Centerville parish has amission, Our Lady of Hope inWest Barnstable, which until1960 was part· of Our Lady ofthe Assumption in Osterville.During the Spring and Summermonths, two Masses are' cele­brated eal:h Sunday in an oldbrick church. '

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Free, BB'(QJd'ilu iJ'~Dr; Philip Cogley, whose out­

door Marian shrine project wasdescribed in The Anchor forAug. 2, offers a free brophureon shrine construction to any­one sending a postcard requestto him at Cogleywood, CouncilBlUffs, Ia.

Our Lady of VictQry. Paruh in Centerville··...Boasis One of Loveliest Cape Churches

. By Marion UnsworthSituated at the top of a hill borderinir the road leading from Osterville to Hyan­

nisis one of Cape Cod's loveiiest churches which serves res.identsof one of the prettiestcommunities in the entire resort area. This is Our Lady of Victory Parish in Center­ville.For many years, Catholics in the Centerville section attended Mass and other serviceseither at Our Lady of theAssumption in Osterville orat St. Francis Xavier in Hy­annis. Five years ago, underthe auspices of, Bishop JamesConnolly, plans were initiatedfor the erection of a church onland which had been donated '"by Dr. Herbert Kalmas, thenpresident of Technicolor. The re­mainer of the Kaimas estate Isnow owned by the Archdioceseof New York.

Rev. Howard Waldron, sta­tioned at st. Mary's Parish,North Attleboro, was namedfi.rst pastor of Our Lady of Vic­tory Parish and was placed incharge of the plans for the newchurch. '

John B. Lebel and Sons; Con~tractors, of Osterville beganconstruction in February of 1957,and on June 23 of that year,Father Waldron came to Center­vlile to take up his residence.

lFirst MassPlanned to harmonize with. its

surroundings, the church is ap­proached by a long curveddriveway and I and s cap e dgrounds. Traditional' colonialcolumns line the front while theremainder is of. the familiarCape shingle. Simplicity domi- .nates the interior which is ofgreen and white and has single­

,figured casement' stained glasswindows. .

Downstairs there is a largehall with a modern kitchen andseveral storage rooms. In frontof the church, overlooking thehighway, is a shrine of theBlessed Mother. .

The first Mass at Our Lady ofVictory Church was celebratedin the partially completed up­stairs on July 7,1957 and 'duringthat first Summer Masses werecelebrated there. In October theparishioners moved downstairsfor Mass during the winter.months until in May of 1958, theentire church was complete.

In addition to Centerville, theparish includes' West Hyannis­por~ ~nd the Craigville Beacharea, in all approximately 125f ami lie s duriQg the Wintermonths.

"There are so many· tran­scieQts it is difficult to. say howmany. Catholics are in the areaduring the' vacation period;"

Pope Blesses, AidsEarthquake Victims

CASTELGANDOLFO (NC)­Pope John has sent a specialme$sage of condolences and en­couragement to the people ofNaples and other southernItalian cities which suffered·from r.ecent earthquakeS.

'J,'he Pope told Alfonso Cardi­nal Castaldo, Archbishop ofNaples, to give his special apo&­tolic .blessing to the people. Healso instructed. all offices oftbePontifical Relief Organization mthe area to make immediate aidavailable to au who neect J&.

Vatic'an CouncilContinued from Page .siX .

Catholicism, facets of whi~h!bey may never have graspedbefore. . ,

In one particular area severalpieces of writing have appearedwhich have done much for Cath­olics and the Church. When inview of recent liturgical reformsscholars suspected that one o~the questions to be studied bythe Central Preparatory Com­mission was the Mass, someworthwhile articles appeared inmagazines concerning a true ap­preciation of the liturgy in gen­eral and the Mass in particular.

Role off LaityThese articles have brought

before the mind again the rolewhich belongs to the laity inthe Eucharistic Sacrifice, a rolewhich can never be stressedenough. .

For instance, H. A. Reinholdwrote an excellent article inCommonweal for Jan. 15 of thisyear (reprinted in the AprilCatholic Digest) stressing theneed we Catholics have toap­preciate our own religion and itsliturgy before we can expectnon-Catholics to appreciate it.

The latter often object toCatholic worship as relativelymeaningless and not appreciatedeven by Catholics; Reinhold ob-.serves that when they can seeCatholics partaking wholeheart­edly in the Mass following therole that is theirs; ecumenismwill be greatly furthered.

After all the Holy Eucharistis the sacrament of unity, anda true appreciation of this sacra­ment will help to foster unity.

Question of ReunionArticles have appeared on the

nature of the Church, Stressingits nature as the Mystical Bodyo'f Christ and the responsibilitythat belongs to each layman tofurther and spread the kingdomof God on earth.

Catholic Action and lay apos­tolate movements have been dis­cussed in writings which stressthe role of the laity i~ theChurch.

Countless publications haveappeared on the question of thereunion of the churches. Catho­lics have been informed of thedifferences which separate manynon-Catholics from the trueChurch; many misconceptions ofthe ordinary Catholic have beencleared up and It has been in­dicated that the 4ifferences are'more deeply rooted than meetsthe· ordinary eye.

As· a result of the activity' of'the· Commission on Religious afew articles have appearedtreating the place and functionof religious orders and the' new.... ·ly established secular institutes·in the Church. Such writingshave helped Catholics under­stand the different orders andsocieties in the Church and howthey contribute to the commongood and life of the Church..

There is no .need to go onciting types of articles whichhave appeared in view of thecoming Council. We need onlymention that they have contri­buted much to educate Catho­lics and help them to appreciate'Catholicism.

Undoubtedly this effect wasintended for the life of theChurch by the Holy Spirit whenHe prompted Our Holy Fatherto summon the Second VaticanCouncil. These writings andtheir beneficial effects may wellbe numbered among the fruitsof the ecumenical council alongwith the decrees and decisionsthe world now anxiously awaits.

(This is the final article ina series of 24 written by Fatha'Hogan for The Anchor.)

Page 8: 08.30.62

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to formulate plans for, develop­ment ,o~ a Sister Formation COl')oo

ference ,edu<;ation program.Leaders of 70 Peruvian religious

, communities have pledged theiI'coop~ation with tpe plan.

, The Sisters' investigation tookthem from coasta~ Peru into theAndean high sierra and east toPeru's jungle lands. '

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sters will get a break this yearin the evening division of LOyo­la University here. Persons 65or ,over .will be ,charged no tui- ,tii>il and will pay only fees and

, tex~book costs.

TH£A.NCHOR-Df.Oc:ete,OfFaft R"1YtIt;-1'h~, Aug. 30, '962' '"/ 1-.;'.·.. , '-.. ' '- - ~ -. ,-' ... -,.... "",0

,Most Girls Consider Schools, '

'Hunting Grounds for Mates',By Father John L. Thomas, S.J.

Asst.' Sociology prof.~t. Londs University ,. ,\. . ~ Ii

~ you accept' suggestions for topics to ,discuss in:four column? Although I'm past 80, I'm an avi<J reader ofyour' column and' would like to have YQU write on the sub-

o ject: education fol" the girl. Educating a girl is a real'needof today'a ,family ,life -..;.. if 'the girl or wife is educated, have little 'serious need for edu.;the whole family (hers) cation; .

o t, , Necesary Meansreaps the benefit; if no In other words, with the ex;-what have 'we got - dumb ceptioil of the members of theducks. The world today needs upper social ,classes who havekains." a relatively' long tradition ,of

S u g g e s - education as 'a general prepara-tions for topics tion for life, there are sound~ be discussed reasons for doubting that theare always wel- bulk of American women pre-come since the sently regard their ample educa-KJurpose 'of this tional opportunities as anythingeolum is to deal , more than necessary means for , •with problems getting a job-or a husband.@f immediate From the viewpOint. of youngm.terest a'n d__ women, our collegeS, and moreeoncem to my recently our high schools, havf:!aoeaders. Such become socially ,0 r g ani z edl!IlUggestions are hunting, grounds for a mate. Al-most helpful if they are accom-, though they take the requiredpanied by-your own vie:w~ 'and courses and frequently secure SISTERS OF HOLY UNION' CEIlEMQNY: Most";Rev. James J. Gerrard, Auxiliaryare related to,' some particular 'relatively good grades, they are' " ' , . f S" f h H I

_problem or situation of your not really interested mtheir in- Bishop of, the Diocese, presided at investiture and profeSSIon 0 .the Istera 0 teo l'immediate experience. It might tellectual development and feel Union' of the' Sacred Hearts: Seated left to right: Very Reverend Mother Philomen~

, be well, to add that only issues slight commitment to the pUIl'- ' S.U.S.C., ,Superior General, 'visitirig from Rome; Bishop Gerrard; Reyerend Mothermore Or less closely, connected suit of knowledge." Dorothy Marie, S.U.S.C., Assistant: General from ,England. Sta~ding, left to right, are

~ with marriage and family life Bi:iefly, they want to get mall'- Sisters from the Diocese:- Sister-Mary Augustine, Mary Lou Simcoe, Swansea; Sr. FredeJlooean be discussed, in my column.' ried, "-and 'in ~'.0 ei e t y ,,Requests for. information ,OIl IlChools provide' themoBt con- ick. Therese" Mary Badwey; Somerset; Sr. Eleanor Francis, Carol Regan, Fall River; Sr., ether tOpics should be submitted venient eoncentration of avail-Mal"Y -Frances, Patricia' Heath" N,orth', Easton;' Sr. Bartholo'mew, Eleanor McNally, Fall

to other columnists. Ilbleprospective mates~ River; Sr. John Evelina, Barbara. N9brega, Somerset; Sr. Josep~- Catherine, Sandra MaPa' New Attitucle , , C~mpetenee iD Struggle, ooux;Fall'River; Sr. Isabel14ary; Barbara Kirkman, Fall Rive~~, ' _"Your views on education folC' 'If this observation' appears '

tirls are quite similar to mine., llInduly cynical, one might con­, Perhaps to a superficial observer sider how'manY"youngwomen

flIf modern trends m educatioll '~hesitatingly terminate their,there would seem to ~ little 'educational program as soon aa ,LIMA' (NC)~"OUr,w~tchdogS,' ,Su~ was one experien~ 'of

, Deed to discuss this point fur- they' have 8G' opportunity to do a good jqb, Sister. But if you'd, ~ese Sisters, who hold doctor-tiler. We have come a long .way marry. ' '" ' 'like a--little m~re ,prot.ect~oJ;l dur:' . ,a~ _q.egrees, as they,' traveled

, trom the post-reformation VIews 'How manY motherii with' ii' iDg the night, I can let you have , P~ruvian roads in their, exhaus­'of colonial times when it was daughter in high 'school are a 045 if you want." ,,' "',tive study of educational facili­believed th~t· formal education seriously concerned abOut her " The 'prop;rie'tor of,an, inn in the : ties .for communities of teaching

'ilor women was somehow con- progress in intellectual develop_ little community of Tingo Maria, .' Sist,ers.,. trary to their nature 'and made ment' as long as !lb.e Hi' POpuJ.air '345 iniies northeast of Lima' W!lS : : The three nuns are each' in-them unwomanly.' , and reveals adequate ,co~pe- ,181king to' one of,thJ.-ee ,nuns at, mumental in, developing' 'the

In spite of its obvious ab~rra- tence in the highly, competitive the counter;', ' }:.', " :, Sis~r Formation Conference~'tions, the century-long lltruggle ,struggle 10' secure the' ''right'' "DOes he mean aA5 pistol'!"", which h,as headquarters in

, ef the feminist move~ent, aided dates? ' ,, Sister Mar,. Gerard of Mihvau- ,Washington, D. C. The confer-

by the expanding opportunities 'What blUshing bride, flushed kee, Wis., asked her',two com- ,erice's,purpose is to advance thetor employment created by our with her succ~ iit securing II ' panions, Sist~r, Mary Theaphane "lIPiritual and intellectual train-,technically advanced, sOciety, well-educ,ated youngman for, of Seattle Wash. and Sister ing of nuns.iierved gradually to modify tra- her Iife-:partner, ever asks' her- Mary" Rom,'~naof W,inona, Minn."ditional attitudes concerning the self, what serious preparatiOileducational capacitiel:! of women, she has made to become the com- When the tWo' other SistersI!IO that sexual differences in this panion and help-mate ci such nodded, the thr~nuns held aregard are no longer considered a spouse? ' conference and decided to castsignificant. The factors underlying this their lot with the watehdogs,

, Whether boys and girls should paradoxical, short-'sighted view- since, they know' little about ..receive the same type of formal 'point are not difficult to dis- pistols.'education ,remains an open ques_ cover. They took- their key, went totiOJ,l, but, the belief that they Our society places great em- their. room, 'brushed their teethMould receive roughly equiva- phasis on m~rriage rather thall' ,(with soft drink in the'absence!ent amounts is rightly no longer on the' family. Particularly ,of water) and turned in for the'open to"discussion. among mothers and daughters, night.

Two Premises preparation for marriage is con- ' , , . .-, An analysis of the thinking , sequently throught of primarily Awnings ~er V~ticaf1l'relating to this changed popular as the acquisition of the social If""ourty'ard Co,~,e Down,view reveals that it stems from skills required to secure a' suit- I\",

two major premises. You have able partner, while the quali- VAT~CAN CITY (NC) -.Theindicated one in your statement ties needed to fulfill their roles awnings that went 'UP over thetbatthe girl's education will , as wives and mothers receive Vatican's busy courtyard of Sa~benefit her family when she minor consideration or are sUn- ,Damaso in July have come down,becomes a wife and mother. ply taken for granted. ' at the' peak ef, ,Rome's, hottest

The other, and perhaps the Hen~e mothers are ,little eon- ~~son, ' ~ om e bod y , threw:, ,_more operative one, is that girls eei-neq about their 'daughter&' "llghted cigarette :,outof ,lIlD up..Deed an education in order to intellectual development or per-story window;, ".ecure employment, for tliey are training in domestic arts. Since "During, their', brief '"lifetime,expected not only 'to be self':'sup- their majOr ,focus' is marriage .the"six: broad strips 'of cloth:e~~.porting before, marriage but they early orient their daugh- ten~ed from one windowed wall,must be prepared to seek outside ters'· interest and. attentiOn to 'the 'other, archi~gslightly a,t::~AOyyrr;~n:n:e~ri~:o:;;rr:::~i:: eliiefly in ,this, direction. ' • the mid,dle. The great bars, Q.f

Yes, I fully agree with you. ,shade 'they cast o~fered re~uge

.. that education for girls is II fr~m the. Roman sun to VatIcanMajor Goal prime requisite 'for stable fami- CIty pollce' and ~e people ~t..

These two motives for pro- Ii, life today, but society can, ,t,endinl{ papal audlenc~s, whl(~hmotingthe education, of girls provide only the opportunity., were.helq in the courty~ b~correspond to a fundamental Mere exposure.to education'wi'II ,'cau~of ..w.o.rk g,oing ~n m S~,ambivalence or confusing dual ' p t ' b lifocus in their preparation for prove of little avail as long as 'e e~ s:', aSl ca:, ' ',"

interest and' at ten t io n are But after that careless ciga~' '.lif~onsidering current marriage focused primarily on getting ,rette butt set .fire to, o.n~ of th!!

married rather than on' self-de- a'YVning~, VatIcan offICIals or-trends, there cail be' no doubt, , dthat American young women re- velopment, and preparatioR for ,dered, them 'all ~taken , own. ,"ard marriage as their major family life. ' The cobblest!lnes :of the ~an.. Damaso' courtyard' are, bemg,oal i~tlhife't'hlndeed, in, comfPatrhi- I " scorched ,once again by theson WI 0 er women 0 e Cape Parish Saie ' Summer sun, as they had beenWestern world, more of them for, centuries. '

I eventually marry, they marry St. Joan of Arc GUild, Orleans"you n g e r, and they marry will sponsor a food sale after all'oftener. ' the Masses on Sunday at 'the

On the other hand, the ma- 'Road and Route 6A.jority together with \ their par- Parish House, ,corner of Bridge~nts, appear to regard formal The Thrift Shop in the Parish,61ducation primarily as a pre- House is opened Monday, Wed­l'aration for employment rather nesday and Friday mornings.than marriage, so that if they from io o'clock until noon andmarry young" or "wen;," they every Friday night :£rom 7 to 9.

..

Page 9: 08.30.62

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St. Louis Parishes PlanSchools of Religion'

. ST. LOUIS (NC) - Five newparishes in the St. Louis archadiocese will have no schools be-.cause they cannot obtain a ratioof three Sister-teachers to onelay teacher on the faculty.

This was made known in 1mannouncement thQt the archdiOocese it! about to launch a com~

prehensive "School of Religion'"program in all parishes for Cathaollcchildren unable to attendCatholic cehools.

The cOUrcea in religion witt betaught by trained lay men andwOmen as part of the Confra~

ternity of Christian Doctrine. Thefive new parishes have post..poned school construction underan. .order ext Joseph CardinalRitter, Archbishop of St. Louiro.who set a three-to-one ratio ,.nUDS and lay teachern.

U.s. Nuns FoundBolivia Mission

BORDENTOWN (NC) - TheSisters of St. Clare monasteryhere in New Jersey will.establlslila new Poor Clare monastery UnCoroico, Bolivia.

Mother Mary Paschal, abbeSB"said the new commu.tiity will befounded by six Sisters in comapl1ance with the wishes of PopeJohn that all religious commUanities join in the missionary efaforts in Latin America. 'XVI@years ago the local communityestablished a monastery in Floraida with five members.

Mother Mary Paschal saidthree years ago the community

. wao 'invited to establish themonastery in Bolivia by Bisho~

Thomas Manning, O.F.M., Pre­late Nullius of Coroico. Mathe?Mary Paschal and. Sister MaryConsolata ~ecently visited thoprimitive area and inspected thesite of the monastery.

Plans for the new buildinghave been completed and thoconstruction will be directed bya Franciscan Brother. Until themonastery i:J completed, the 51&0tera will live in an adobe builcll~

ing now on the property. Theywill operateD printing plant.

For more than 50 years thePoor Clares at St. Clare's monaastery here 'have supportedfuemsclves mainly by ~kmg

altar breads for many parishesin the Dloc'ese of Trenton aMICamden.

..,THE .'AN~HOR-' :.\ 9Th",rli., Aug. 30, 196~

at

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NEW BEDFORD. MASS.W'I 1-661.

Pa"e·nts Favor SchoolPrayer ObservancepaI~CETON (NC) - Eighty

per .cent of a group of parentsquestioned ~'aGallup poll saidthey approve of religious obser­vances in public school!!.

Questioned were parents whowill be sending their children topublic e I em e n tar 'Y tbr highschools this Fall. Fourteen percent said· they disapproved of

Open House the religious observancell, andsix per cent' expressed no

St. Jean Baptist Council of opinion.Catholic Women, Fall River, Asked if the practice of sayingwill hold an open.hou·seand cof- graCe before mealo io observedfee hour at 1:30 Sunday; Sept.·· in their homes,' 69 ,per ;;ent of9.' Rev. Maurice R.Je:f£rey will the paren'tssaid it w, and 31

. speak and all parish' women aTe per cent said it 1D not.invited. Other counciloactivitieo ..will includea'hat show Monday, -_....-~~.-""!'"--~""""-- ..~Sept. 17 and s·turkeY'whiGt Whit.e~s. ~arm D~lifJ

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BROUGHT UP.TO-D;ATE: Science professors at col­leges and universities are attending the Georgetown Uni­versity Summer School Conferenoo on Recent Advances inAstro-Geophysics. Two of them are' shown replicas of sat­ellites at the Goddard Space Flight Center of the National,Aeronautics and Space Administration NC Photo.' .

Nun ·OvercomesPrimitiv~·. Medical:Notipn·roH~~p :Save Girl's Life

MINNEAPOUS. (NC) :..... A Sister Michael Ann commented.Catholic m'edlcal 'missionary in . . ':'I've heard it often from theIndia related in a message home simple. village' people to whom'how .she· o~erCaD,le primitive the wondero of·' medicine are 11confusion about modern medi- deep mystery. I'd answered thecine to help save a girl's life. argument before, with more Oi"

Sister Michael Ann, medical less success. This morning 1 wontechnologist .at Holy' 'Family again."Hospital in New Delhi, told of All the while she took bloodher experience with the ParentQ from the falher, the motherof 13-year-old Shafikan, a.Mos-. walled at .the thought ox losing

'lem girl scheduled for surgery. her husband, the nun reported."Her blood tests showed she But all went well both for him

would need transfusions," Sister IWldfor Shafikan, who ill nowMichael Anne said.' "Lilckily, on her way to recovery.two relatives donated two' bota , ..And,"added Sister MichaeitIes; ~ut .as. ·surgery.progres:::eci, Ann, "Shafikan~B parents 'havethere came calls for . three' tnOf'.e become leading workers'for mybottles.". . '. ... _ . clay-in- day-out struggle for

The' nun hurried to the par- . blood 'donors." .ents, huddled' weeping 'm •waiting room. 'She . asked thefather. if she' could test his' blood­·to see if he would be able togive some 10 is daughter.

Honest QuestioD'The father shook his head. "I

cannot give," he said. "I haveother ,sniall children at home.I have .m" land to plow.' Whatwill happen to them if I diegiving my blood .for Shafikan?H

"It was an honest question.,"

North AttJeboroGirlr0 Enter Novitiate '

Miss· Joan Saulnier,' Sacred'PariSh, North Attleboro, "'411 en­ter1:he .Jesus and Mary Novitiatein ·B'yattsville, Md., Monday.

She was' graduated fromSacred Heart parocbial schooland from' St. Charles High.Schow. Providence. Her sister,''Mother'Mary of Joy, is stationedat. the Hyattsville novitiate.

Norto,,·Series''!'be Norton ,CatholleWomen'.

eJ.ub w111 ~nsor~ld.,. whistPOSTuLANT,. Miss M&Ul'& ·par:tielliD St. l\Ia.ri's Parish. .• . Center on 'Route 123 in Norton

lI'alvey, daughter .of Mr. and carting Friday evening, Sept. 1.Mrs. JohB W. Falvey, '79' at a o'clock.Manton StNet, Fall Riv.er, . Mrs. Ruth Yelle and Mrs. Marywill enter the Carmelite Or. Murphy, co-chairmen, have an-

S S · She .no.uncetl that· the ,public is in-eIer aturday. ept. 8: ... vited to this series 'being eon-fa a gradu.te of DominieaJl 1tueted for 1he benefit CIIf thekadelD1'.C1au .of 196.L .eem..,

·Descr·ibe~·':1:·Solemn·:C-erem·on·yAs' Twin Boys Are Baptized

By Mary Tinley Daly

It was Christening Day for the twins at Johnny andLu's house. True to his jokingly made' promise, Johnnyfound that they had selected the hottest day of the entireyear, temperature a sizzling 92, humidity smothering. Heat~nd humidity notwithsta?-d- tlul Goon-to-bec~me Christial18.mg, a hum of happy exCIte- "Brendan's. the one with thement bubbled at the twins' soft cord tied around his ankle,house. Being _of the "let's- Grandma," Lu called from thebalte _ 0 - cake" generatdon ~oz bathroom as she waD gettingevery celebTation, 1 won the no- Katie ready~ "He gets the tradi-DignmeJ1t 0 f tiona! Corbett dress; Matthewm a kin B the gets the Daly dress." ,e a k e ;" two These dresses, worn by Cor-cokes, matter betts and Dalys for DO manyof fact. Bakery yem-s . • . Here was the oneeakes are all tlult &1l of our children" hadwell and eood, been christened in, ~io other,~ut the r e ' s Lu. had worn.oomething per- 'Godmother Markie picked upDOnal a I) 0 u t Matthew, god mot her Joaniliose done by Kohler picked up Brendan, and~ving hands. they started for the cars. Pani-

L-oving handa, eking 9lightly, ~ called to Lu,I learned are "Which baby did you say hasoot nece~sarilY skilled one3. the cord around his ankle?"With the zeal of a typical "Brendan," she al18wered witharandmother 1 "did my hom~ the patience that comes fromwork" stud;ing cookbooko fol' dealing with little children andthe ~oot tantalizingly delicious an nging mother-in-law.f'acipe;otudying liturgical booka Whew! Right for once.gor n perfect symbol in the dee- RIch SymooM!:;;morating. Found! The paraclete, No matter how many timessymbol Of the Holy Spirit de1l- one witnesses the ceremony of'cending. After tracing..frQmthe Baptism, 'it never loses ito awe­book, ! eut out a, cardboard' someness. Young Father Williamfigure, Wd it carefully. on top Kane of St. Bartholomew's madeof the .. newly £rosted cake.. it solemnly impressive by ex-

. h'acing it· with a knife' poin~ .plainingall tlierich, centuries-'A' For .Effori old Symbolism as he went along.

. ' ..' . , '.. Fascinated and' in wide-eyed, WIth th~ c~ncenttabon.of one wonder, many attending chil­uoyingugainst odds, 1 maneu- ,dren watched as -three .babies

, veI:E!d· that pas~ tube With its became membe~s of the Churchebocolate . icing slowly Mound MilitaIit:' a .d~rk' haired boythe edge Of the cardboard PW:ll.C- numed Donald Joseph and thealete, lltopping every few.squeezes . twins.to pop the whole thing into the Outside the church, the babiesx<efrlgeratOf'. . through their sponsors answered

Between the heat· an6the the questions as did the catechu­paraclete, life was difficult. mens of old, applicants f<lr Bap­Lastotraw came when the Head tism.. Prayers were said over.of the House sauntered into 1he each child a b I uti 0 n s and

. kitchen.and asked, "Wouldn"t anointingn' were. administered.,it be enmer to 'put a flagon eacn the" ''Salt of' Wisdom" put· onlimlte?" eacb little tongue~"May it be

''Easier than what?" the :£rwJ- lllntothee -an earnest of God's. tra.ted artist asked. favor Ut1Ul life' .everlasting."

"Than that American .oo,gle - For Life'Of Gracewith the broken wing?",.. . .Came progress to'the font the

•So m,ueh for .the. liturgical. .priest's ·stole·· on the shot:lder~pl~.. Ii .the ,Paraclete loolta of the first iB prOcessron. 'Thenlike the America~,~l~ :.and the promises ·to renounce. satan.with 11 .broken wmg, this 'was his works and POlnPs, anointingit! A wlPe-?ff of the ehoco1n~ of the breast and back,changing'are-do WJ.th ·white, ,and. the of the priest's stole from violet"1homework" was for 'naught. of sorrow to white of joy for

The lovln,g but clumsy hands the life of grace about ·to begin.ttettled 'for s imp 1.,. writing Climax, the formal request"Brendan" .on one cak~ ".Mat- for Baptism made 'by each littleibew"on the ,other,added "!he boy as pronounced by his spon­date and a .couple of~ink sors, and the "Ego te Baptizo in .frosting roses which promptly nomine Patrie, et-Fillil, et .Spiri­melted into .tlat blobs. tus Sancti"as the wa~er was

A for effort., D .for ,perfor- poured on each, small head.mance. The newly .baptized could now~ime to feed. the babies, Lu be treated as kings, Father ex­

aiving a 'oottle 10 one, I to the plained, anointing their heads~her. .with Holy Chrism in a wide,

II'mditional 'Dressea generous crosS, giving each theAs LUGUW to getting the other "white garment,"the "burning

clI.ildrenready, 1 waa :allowed light.. and the blessings.ate fun 'ofbathing and dressing Donald Joseph and his troop

. . _. ~ .. ,' of relatives, friends and photo-·,. : graphera w.ent their way; Mat-·

. thew and Br.endan, aCdompanied. ,by .their admiring fan club mem- ;. bers' went .theirs.

Onward' Chrlstian SQldiers!

...'

Page 10: 08.30.62

. $2.00•

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~~~ri!!IWi!lJi!!Ji!~~i!re!ffi!~i!!Ji!!ffi!Ji!!li!!rc!Ii!!li!Ji!!ffi!ffi!ffi!Jri!!IWi!lJi!!Ji!!Ii1!ffi!Ii!!li!mi!re!ffi!~r.~

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,- GON.DOLA ,RESTAURANT and LOUNGE',

. on' Lake 'Sabbatia .10948ayS~eet I

,TAUNTON VA ·t!7~ ,.

THE ANCHOR-·Thurs., Aug. 30, 1962'

10

BEDSIDE BLESSING: Mr;land Mrs. Pedro Traverio,firsteouple to be mal'ried after instructions at ReginaPacis, New'Bedford center for Spanish-speaking people, visit FatherRegis, SS.CC., confined to St. Luke's Hospital. The couplereceived the blessing of the'priest, whoinstructed·therii forthe Sacrament of Matrimonyo .

Inter ~ American,Bank Loans Aid

Revival of Shinto Peru WorkersSlows Progress LIMA (NC)-Smallloan;Of' Church for ,housing, crops and sani..

tation proJects authorizedSAPPORO (NC) Mis- for Peruvian workers in the

sionaries here are viewing lower income brackets are im:'with misgiving recent at- proving the social justice out-tempts tq revive the nation- , look in this nation.alistic cult of Shinto by some, Money for the loans comesJapane'se political and financial from a million-dollar contractleaders. , with the Inter.-American De-

Father Bertrand A. Gramel- velopment Bank in Washington.SlPacher, M,M., of Jasper, Ind.; The loans extend over 2'0 years.noted that an increasing number Fishermen along the. coastof stories on the development of. near Lambayeque, coffee plan-this movement appear in the ters in the' far northeast jungle-daily press here. .land near Jaen, and day laborers

In March, the re-established in Lima are getting more out ofKogakkan University opened for life as the result of loans ob-'the first time since being closed tained.by Gen. Douglas MacArthurafter the war in 1945. The Shinto, Restrict Useuniversity is a revival of the "To date," says Father Josephprewar Jingu Kogakkan which J. Sarjeant of the Central Creditwas founded 80 years ago as II Union of Peru, "we have madeI3tate university. \ 165 sub-loans amounting to al..;

Course for ,Kamikaze most $135,000. We make loansJingu Kogakkan became most exclusively to associate credit

famous during the war when it lIn'ions who in' turn loan moneyser'ved as the center of "Misogi' to their members.training" (training' through a "This IDB money is restrictedpurification ceremony by bath- to credit unions whose membersing in the cold water of the make only $120 or less. a month.

, Isuzu River near Ise Shrine; the It can be used only for housing,center of Japanese Shinto). agriculture or the pressing sani-

Governmental and nongovern_ tation needs of potable drinkingmenta! leaders, advocating "serv- water and sewage projects." 'ice to the state thro'ugh indus- The Central Cr~dit Union' hastry," went through such training. been operating' just less than aIt was also the basic, training year. It opened Sept. 21, 1961,eourse for the Japanese Kami- . as .another service of the Peru-kaze (suicide) pilot, of Worl4' vian .Credit Union League. TheWra II. " RECEIVE. HABI.T:' Four,Coyle:High School"graduates -were·a~ong 21 candidates Central .CredifUnion has.91 af-. Before the ·war; governine.·rtt-· . .. .' , f"l' t d d·t . . . M.... ppor·.ted Shinto nearly stifled fo.r theB,r"others, o,f. H"olv:,Oross.:.. ,Wh9.,f,eee!yed the :religlous,habit .. ~nd: start~·their, c~n~. 118 e .cre 1u.~110ns.. orc; are.DU • ~. • h I f ·teaming' up ¥onthly fJ..'o~ am~ng.missionary' activity"because' the.', onical year at .St;. Joseph Novitiate, Valatie, N.Y. All..Taunt~n ·~~t~yesA .ey. are,; e t·to the 300-plus individual credit.~hur~h ~a8 foreip1:.T~Er.Jap!1n;'", .. 'r~g~t,. Brother Edw:ard·. p'Co.~n~~I, O.S:C., Br ~ther Da,vid An~rews,. C.S:c.., :aro.th~r ·Mjchael. " unions Of ,the 'league; founded·~. pea.pIe are ver.y n.ab~mali~tie~,: DO.eFl'ore C S C and Brother Harold Hathaw IlY, C.S.C. by the Maryknoll Fathers'co-Shmto' ·feeds· thUlnabonaliSm,'" ..,.. •

._.nd to that extent· a reviv'al "of": . ~1~:n.Pert, Father DanieLI~. ~c-.

~~~~~hi~nb~~::.theWOrkofthe U.S~ Playw'righ.ts Ignore. Religi~n, In 1959, former Prime Minis- . . Pon'e To Speak'lerShigeru Yoshida and Hayato . 'FORT, LAUDE.RDALE .(NCl-:- .. for· -eption' . on .the 'script', of tic criticism ftom Yale Univer- .' r-". .'ikeda, 'prese~t ~rime' Mi~ist~r,. American playwrights "miss,.the "Seven Nuns at Las Vegas" but sity and did-postgraduate ,work. D' ·n .'. Ret' e' t.t the request of Toyoo Hase,' boat" when they leave religion, has declin'ed them because she at the .University ,of Birming-. " Jar. 9 - . r a .ehief priest at 'the Ise Shrine, .out of their .work.. ' . . would not haye the right to· ham, .England. At Stratfor.d-on- VATICAN CITY (NC) _ His

. became the' leaders' of the' new' That's' the opinion of Natalie. okay the, final' production. .' Avon, she :was, ~. student on an. Holiness Pope John XXIII will'imiversitY. Yoshida is both its Wliite, .whose latest work" .MAfter ,all," . she.explain.ed" Institute,·of International Educa- speak to the' world's Catholics inpresident and"chairman of the' h::;even' Nuns' South Of· the ,'"these are religious plays of a :tion :scholarship.·", . , ",' a'radio message to be broadcastboard.of directors., Border" has just been published' . sOrt, ": have. been ,_carefully, . She' became a convert.to ,the exactly;;· a month before the

While funds were being raised" . by Dra'matists Play.Servic~, Ine.,. checked. by priests and .,nuHns,Gatholic ~ .Faith in ,1952;. at .the, opeiung :.f the Second' Vaticallto reopen theuniversity, Yoshida of New York. ... " .:: ... and approved as they stand,. .: Universjty.;· of . Notre . Dame, ,Ecu'menical Council, it was ao-·.tressed that ttW!' school would .', . She ""'id her new play centers .,where sheserv,ed as dr,llm.ain-· ,nounce.d. here~". A. convert .. to Catholicism", ."': t' . f· O· 'L ··d . ~ \;ifight against.any "id~!>logy Miss'White'is a m.ember·ol.St.· .Oll B.' piC ure 0... ur,. a Y; . .v... ,Iltructor during S,umm~r sessi,ons. Vatican. Radio will carry thewhich wiiI poison the nation CI 't '. h he e' She"lii; the Guadalupe. and the "MeXIcan.. and wher€! al(of her other plays Pope's broadcast on Septemberwhile protecting ·aOd. developing . ethmen fPam , al

r'1'" . 'h'ch' legend· :concerning the·· appar.i- ' were produced., . 11 at 3 p.m.' (EDT) and is ar-

d ; ". au or "0 • sever . pays' WI. . . . . . '.. • .emocracy. . have been produced in schools" tion of. the BI:ssed :~TlrglO·:c . .;. . . -.... ":-' . ranging for a relay.of the. papalEven 'though the new school is ' Color m Religion E" G ...... 'd' message by other networks.

backed by top 'g'ove'rnmenta'l' a'nd' universiti~ and by little .theater. '.;; ''Th' .... • .. h ·1" . "d' xpress ratltu e' . , .groups. both i1),. the· U.S. and ere-,'Ul .90 m~c. coo~ an,. _'. . ' " . Pope:. JC;>,hn will deliver hi. -

financial leaders some observers' Euro~ .' . atmosph~re In relIgIOn that ~e To Brazil Prelate' . " .' speech d~ring, a personal re-'feel iit is doomed tolilllure. Some . .' Of'.. f .. seem. to be. ~gnoring,".. the· play- ._,'.. . ..... ' ,.'. , '., ;treat,he WIll make from Septem_'Japanese see' the' fivival~~Ol _ . Deelines ~rs,....; .c', wright said: " ..' "RIg, Pi;, ~f\N.EI:Ro...():'lG), ..~. ber 1.0 to 17 ~n ·pr.eparation for

.Sliirito' as a revival of the things ,- Miss White Said "Seven. Nuns '. ,'Miss 'White 'was awarded a. ,The, CQnf~derab?n. of Is!.~~llte the c~)Uncil., During that timewhich led to the last war; and South of the ,Border" isa'sequel dOctorate iii iheaterand diaina- '.Groups of BraZil ha~, t~all;ked . all audiences will be suspended,'most Japanese do not want an- to another of' her plays, entitled '.' - .,.. " . Jaime .Cardinal de Barros Cani~ , , '. " "other war to .destroy their "Seven Nuns 'at {..as .vegas,~ She ara, Archbishop. of. R~o' de"cOuntrY again. . said she has had many offen Asks Catholics Work Janeiro, for his recent protests.

.. ~ . . against anti-Semitism.For 'EuropC'.an Unity .The' confederation also ex-

MILAN (NC)-'-The Patriarch pressed 'thanks to the Cardinalof Venice has urged Catholics'to for his cordiality in'receiving awork lor European unity. '. 'Brazilian· Jew ish delegation. Catholics are called' "to' be- which presented him a memor-' .

.come the conscious and active randum listing world Jewish or­citizens of this Europe,"'. 'Gio- ganizatl.ons"vanni CardinalUrbani'said. The memorandum asked that

CitizensHip. in a new Europe the Second Vatican Council ad­would not imply denial. of one's' monish the -world 'about thenational heritage, the Cardinal dangers of racism and otherasserted. Rather it would con- doctrines tliat inCite hatred intribute to the ;growth of that society.heritage '!within a wider andfairer distribution of economicgoods."

.1

Page 11: 08.30.62

I KNOW THA1 MUMS

TOUHEY'SPHARMACY

8'M A FAN Of' THEIR~TOO - ESP£CIA~~Y

THEIR PRESC.~IPTIOH

DEPARTMENT .'1KEY;IlETHOROUGM\;Y 1l£l\A8~£!

~,....

I'M ON MY WAY TO THEDRuG STOllE TO PIC.K. UP

A PRESCRIPTION-'

MJheFamily That. Prays Together,Stays Together"

THEFIRST NATIONAL

BANK"'boro-Sou&b AUlebon

Seekonk

THE ANCHOR- 1,Thurs., Aug. 30, 1962'

Forces at WorkFor Red VrnctoryIn Amero~a

LATROBE'(NC) -APennsylvania bishop saidhere that "the pagan is verymuch with us in America"and "many forces are at workto assure the eventual victory ofcommunism over us."

Bishop William G. Connare ofGreenburg enumerated "some ofthese harmful forces" in hiskeynote address at a Chris'tianFamily Movement regional con­vention at St. Vincent Collegehere.

He cited "the unrestrainedpursuit of pleasure for plea­sure's sake" as one example. Hesaid '''the spate of erotic moviesflooding our cities, designed 'formature adults,' •.. is but l:lsymptom of this pursuit."

"Most unfortunately the boxoffice is not too concerned aboutthe maturity of their patrons,but rather with the color Bnddenomination of their money,"he declared:

The Bishop said the "emo­tional hysteria, which sur­rounded the abortion recentlyper for m e d on an Arizonamother," 'is symptomat"ic offorces at work in this countrythat could enslave it.

Selfish ConcernBis~op Connare maintained

that "it is becoming increasinglymore, difficult to hold and cer­tainly more ,difficult to expressa, positioJ!" of cQmplete and un­sw(':'~ing .' allegiance ,to' Our'Blessed Lord and His moral law

'in the climate'which is, modernAmerica." .

He condemned that selfishneBalwhieb "merely abandons to awanton pursuit of pleasure thatsense of ,sacrifice . . . which isthe foundation of all that islasting, and good in the Ameri­can tradition.", "Communism can never take

over here," the ,Bishop said, "un­less and until this selfish con­cern for only that which pleasCIIconditions us for the take-over."

CITIES SERVICEDISTRIBUTORS

'For pro",!pt delivery

,&D~y & Night Sel'Vlce

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5-End of third quarter. Examinationsgiven during .. this week: Report cardsissued within' one week. .

1lI.-Holy Thursday~ Classes ,as.. ).lsual thisday. Easter vacation begins at ~lose

of the school day. '22-Easter vacation Cl\ds; classes resume

~y ", I-Palmer .Examinations

9-10-Catholic Teachers Asso~iationConven­tion

23-:Feast ,of, tlle Ascension; no school30-Memorial Day; no school'

April

laDelo-l4-Dioeesan Examinations - Elementary

Schools '18-19-20--Dioeesan School Picnic

21-Close of school yearSchools Reopen Septembe!' 4u 1963

'e5;..,

F~mMY ,'I5-Mid-winter vacation begins at clolltl ~

school' day ,2lr--Mfd-winter vacation ends; classes re­

sume

Diocesan1962-63

of

forFirst Semester

Superintendent,Calendar

JanUary28-Begioning 01 &loond semester

-"

January2-Christmas vacation ~ndB; classes li'tP

, sumed25-End of First Semester. ExamlnatiolUl

given during this week. Report cardfiissued within one week.

September5-Opening of schools '

October12-Columbus, Day-no school

November ,I-Feast of All Saints; no school9-End pf First Quarter. Examinations

given during this week. Report cardll ­issued within one week following.

12-Veterans' Day; no school2~-23-Thanksgiving receSB

December.21-Christmas vacation begins at close ~

school day

Deplore Bar to' Attenda,nce, at' Meeting ~aunch ProgramHANOVER (NC)-The first many could not participate iD : pie of Protestant-eatholie rela- For, DeHnquents

full day of Germany's great, the great biennial gather,ing, tions. The Catholics of the SAN ANTONIO (NC) -"-- TheCatholic convention got under even though Hanover lies only Hildesheim diocese have had the launching of a full-time pro­way with all the bishops of West 80 miles from the zonal'border. use ,of more,than.. l,OOO,Protes- gram ,for ihe rehabilitation ofGermany and thousands of ,The last national 'Catholic tant churches and parish halls as juvenile delinquents has beenpries"ts and lay people assisting convention, in Berlin in' 1958 sites of parish 'Masses. The Prot- announced for the San Antonioat pontifical Mass offered by, drew Catholics froni. both East estants offered their churchesarchdioc$lse by, Father JamesDenmark's ,only. Catholic bishop. and West Germany. (The 1980 ,when the inflow of 450,000 Brandes, director of the Catho-

The votive Mass of the Holy Katholikehtag was cancelled so _ Catholk' refugees trebled, the ' lie Welfare Bureau. "Spirit was sung by Bishop Jo-' , as not to impede' the Intenia-· Catholic population of this area., ' - The pr~gram haS'been formal-himnes, Theodor Suhr, 'O.S.B., of 'ti,onal Eucharistic Congresss, : Bishop Janssen, has termed 1)- inaugurated by Auxiliary'Copenhagen. The massive con- : 'held that year in Munich,) " choice of Hanover as this year's ;B.ishop'Stephen A. Leven acting 0

gregation in the banner-decked,' Hanover offers a good. exam:-- eonvention site a special gesture ,t, ,:' ,,',

pavilion at the, Hanover fair-, of gratitude for all the' help the in the name of Archbishop Rob-grounds joined in singing the, region's Protestants 'have given ert E;' ~~cey of ,San Antonio.,Mass with orchestral accompa- ,To Schools Contract' the Catholic Church. Volunteer sponsors were foundniment. For Educational TV, Hanover's' ProteSants 'also" in 16 parishes to act as counse-

The convention was opened helpea Catholics to: find b?using lors for young "boys' and girlsthe night before by Prince Karl SAG I N A W (NC) -, Forty for the thousan<ls, of ~a;ticIp'ants." who are under the jurisdictiOnzu Lowenstein, president of the'" Catholk schools in the Diocese Many Protestant famIlIes opened' " " "" , , " .Central Committee of German of Saginaw have' eontract~,with their doors to them.' The Cister- of th~, Bexar Count)' Juvenile,Catholics.: A representative of the Central Michigan'Educa- clan 'Abbot of'Seligporten arid Department.' ..the nation's Lutherans delivered tional Television Council for Auxiliary B ish 0 p' Walther, The &ponsor's job ill to seekfraternal greelings. the use of instructional televi- Kampe, of Limb are guests of '

, sion in the classroom during Protestant ni.inisters~ out these teenagers and help~ recurring note in all the th

talks was regret that Catholics 1962-'63. The Protestant head of the em to become useful citizensliving in East Germany were Involved win be more than royal house of Hanover, Prince and active members of their'barred by their communist gov- 10,000 elementary 'and second-, Ernst August, provided rooms parish'es.ernment from attending the COn- ary pupils in a system which for ,Bishop Josef Stan~l. olf They are given the opportu-ven·tion. This was the first time covers 16 counties and enrolls Wuerzburg and his, i\uxilIary,. . . .that Catholics in eastern Ger- 23,000 students. Bishop Alfons Kempf. nIty to find work, fIn Ish

, schooling and, in general, de-

School Announces velop many of their abilities, that they would otherwise lose

Academic Year without a helping hand.

PROFESSED: These Coyle High School graduates took perpetual .. profession. Standing, Brother Rob~rt Rodier,110WS of religion at reception and profession ceremonies at Taunton; Brother Joseph Quill, East Taunton; Brother Pi-,"'he Brothers of Holy Cross, St. Joseph's Novitiate, Valatie, erre Paquin, New Bedford; Brother James Nichols, Taunton;N.Y. ~ft to right, seated, Bro~her Charles Cote, Taunton'; ',Brother Peter McGarry, Raynham ; Brother Francis Mello,Brother 'John Donahue, Taunton; Brother' Frederick 'Mc- ,Taunton; Brother Stephen Nunes, Taunton all of'whom tookAul~;Y,AttIeboro; Broth~r' 'Jp,hn, Collins, No; Attlebor~; : iii'st vow$.' '" '. "Brother Terrence Kendall, 'Hemsted, N.Yof all of whomma<le '. < ".' '" , ,", , , • ,i ~;'

.. ; ~ .'" '. \ , ; .. ':' '. .; , :'...;

,

Page 12: 08.30.62

I

o

Ii

~ ".'~'" -:'.'"--,'

BARGAIN DAYS

"

·LINCOLN PARK II~, ., } . . .

By Most Rev. Fulton. J. Sh~ D.D.

Om Bllessed 'Lora ffurst fea! the multitBliewl!l.o lronMVe(j 10mmoo tb.e ll1esen and then tall3:oo bt!l.ems1OO1id t!lehellmrim. Be

. used externals ta» ,atnadmeml to IDmse]f, ~e EtertJall.Some SGlallb.procedure often has ·tIl be lloUl!owedm ~@n 1l:mdl:l, :fICIn otiv.eo.are at first hesitant anlill call1ltill)W!.

, 'V'oery .~ten, .~in ,the ,uili3!OD ;land: ·,the feeding 1)f :the bUnIP'V;;md .the' 11ulaling"Of Ithe ;sick ';iili (the ,cOll1ditloD :rm'])eOple' ':rcecelvtJmgthe Faith.. 'With us who have ,the Rllith, ,the .tes& ,of ,our "graiit[!dk;)

.1or .it, a oar ,willingness to. ,give breadandllledicines eto &hooQ·whoare" 'in ';Deed.Prove·that 'your Faith pasSes this test 'by:senillng :an· ,offermg ,to 'The' Sooietyfw 'the ;~OpagatiOill ·of Iii:lIlQFaith! .

JF/R,f!$iH:' ~, ~NAT!lViE.',. ."

·5'.'Y.·~rO\'··Jft.." .il'SIH" .':~W':.: ,. 'II ,i, l .'

69~I'b .....Maclean's 'Sea 'foods

. ." UNION' ·:W.HARF, .FAlRHAVEN '.' ~ c.=:['occ=o o,oco 0 oee·!=.==o 0 0.0 coc 0 CCXll ~ e:t>..

TO':UlS -JOLOn ,AND to 'GIVEIIk. :lih> ,ot ,a.D;\UGHTER ,OF ;51. (PAUL .Lo". 'God.IIION. 'and 'sm '0 ,Hili. 'lUtowtedgo 'and 10"..of,God .by ·lI01'Ying Him 'in ,. !MinIOlt ,WhiCh uAa Ithe·'lOrea, !Radio. IMofioe 'Plctvrel ,CI1UI iTY. to bring.!JIb IWord '(to .llOuls ,..,.".,who... %ecilou. lyang'girls. 1~23 ·yea.. IIl'ore.tHl :b!l ;flii. Wlique'."010", ,may \wriR .10'

,R,IEVEREND ,MOTH£llSUflERIORIDAUGHJERS ,OF ~ST. ,l>AUl

.90 ,ST. ,.PAUl$ 'AV.E~ ,1Il0S10N :30.MAS$.

, One Itiissionary informed Wlthat it took 1rlmo full year tofilidIa.nd on ,whiCh to 'Btart a mission: "I could .·caeo lot 01' uaeleSllouncUltivated land, but ,the ownerS wouldnot :sell it at any price. Thlswaa their wayof ;sa,ying, 'Who are ·tou? What do you want?We. don't trust you and we :don't want you.'

"When I 'was at ,the em.i G»f my ll'oJj)e,·God .opened aCllo:oll'; Someoneillltll!e village,bowing :I he-de cii.sP0ilSll.rY, !eli Gne ·61the older men thatJIwas:1:. first-elasadooWll'

. who could .perform .min.e~efl ,wltlli mymeclicines ·fromabroed. Th~oUall man~s

sonwasdyilllg ofdysent0!711nc!flever, allladministratiolllSof t~1Il ,oorcerernhavUJing

·flWed. :Smcethe lOOy ':woo~e .~lll1y ~son'and :heh:, -tb.efather "WlW 'willfumg .~ pay:Z9Y :price ;to have the ''bOY ,cmed. ·]E1llI.t b.e'l'Ual!l :indesperateconditJiOl!l ;and .lI .lmewJIwowd .neetrllmuclil alGoa's1li~ to 'save 'his ·life. ·Thepl.lll'en1l!l ,agIl'eed <thae ]I mllll.Sttu. :1 stayed-wntb. ,him ,for ,three days, ;and ,the ,nIi1tibiOtiiCll ;pell'l1'll)rmeall 11 reaR·mkacle. .Mterthful, 'man,ysicit 'w,ee;bro11llght :to my,t2n'LTheo0D1i .lnimit ·to lilY ;aalt!vi~~ ;.the ;SmaJj '!lUlmtity ,~ :melliicmea.

. Cut out ~is column,pin .yoursacrlfice 'ItO !U :and·maiI- it ~lio :~Most'Rev~ .F,ulton J. Sp,een,NationalDirector of the 'Society ~~. Pxopagat!mi·~ \fheF.liith, ~66 FifthA:venue, .New ¥ork' :1,; 'Ji. ':Y...or :Y'our Diocesan'Directoz:, RT.· ;,REV. 'RAYMOND .T. ·CONSWDm.36~ .'N.orth 'Mab,1 :Street, FJill lR"iver, ,Mass, , ..

G0D L0VE¥OU 'to ·iB.H. :for $10 "'Enclosed fInd 'n <few of ths2'1 cen~ that I have missed over the last ten or .fifteen years.'''· .••to G:E!G:'for '$3 ,"r"llrish '11 could ,do this everyday:" ... :'to A.W. fer:$3":1 h@pe this "vii1'l make ~ 'for 'the many times I ,could havesentcmoney, ··but was :too ·,gelf:iSh. '1 'wassavln:g -this :money -for J::i'QSenior"PJ;mn 'thUlf81l;" .

Ii res! of Gra!itu~e,God 'Love'You'

CardinaI Bea

,,:;4:, -:',. :,".. ' .'. '.'~ :::,:' "--:.••- ",-"'0 ~

THE ANCHOR-.D.iocese ·ofFaN River-Thurs., Aug. 3tt 1'96212

Prote~d"'ant ,Revival' EffectsGreat~'r:Concern fo:r Unii'ty

By Mos1Rev. RobertJ. Dwyer, D.n.Biahop of Reno '

In the halcyond~y,sofour youth .(ah; bright Medusa'!). we were trqubled not at all by the problems 'of ecumenicity <

and reunion all around. We had .a simple formula for thesolution of s.uch 'vexing matters:.Protestantisin manifestlywas in its seer and yellow tual1 b d 'ed d .-1 f 1 t t

'+'~ 1· . ae 'ya an on . ogma. 'Toea .' amos. a l~ astgasp. the contrary :there has come

Walt a few years more and about a t1lemendousresurgenceall good Protestants would of interest in the fundamentalsbegin to see the light .and .come of .faith, . . .trooping back to Mother ChurCh; . Karl ,Barth as ,the il"arikingwhereas all bad Protestant theologian may havePro t e S _ been wryly amused (we hope 'hetants would was) by the .:antic publicity at-thereupon be- tending his visit .to these shores, :'~®ill~li'@ ft®~U.(ffi1ftl$come, presum- but the commotion was :anaive .t;2Jably,. agnostics, recognition of the importance J:..' 'ml t D . 'iL.'atheists a: n d of what he stands for 'andwhat ~$ 'rr-@, ![f'iIJO!!i'~:11!llanarchi~s. The he .!hasdone. 'VATICAN 'CITY (NC)---Gre-last was thrown 'Catholics may jusMy criticize gorioPietro XV Cardinal Aga-in for good much ·ofcontemporatYiProtes- gianianhasresignedasPatriarchmeasure. tanttheologizingasnothing of Cilicia of the .Armenians tbe-

We were sus- more than modernism .in ,thin cause of .thepressures ,.-of ihis&Uined' in our . disguise or as sheer evolutionism work as overseer ·of Latin 'roteillusion not parading in Christian .aress ,but mission activities throughout 'theonly by youths as callow 'as 'our- we cannot ignore:the 'fact'that world :Cardimil Agagianianhadselves .but by elders 'who uught' the ~hole movement ;betokens been PatriarCh, :andthusspiI'it­to have known better. In the a. vast reversal ~f pattern.ual "leader ,of ,200,000 Armenianpopular Catholic literature tJf . Not ,that this applies to :all Rite ,catholics ,throughout ,the :"witho:ut ~yiD,g :~y:tb1ng, ..the people :understood ihat if Ithe '20s, say, it was blithely ,an-. Protestant groups, :nor m ithe world, :s"inceil.'93:7.. :But as ,effec- ,coUld get ;apiece ,of "land 1 \Would' open 'a dlispensarY 'and :give 'themt:ici,pated that Protestantism was same measure, 'but ,dearly at tive .head of the :Sacred :Congre_me~c1nes-theY :had ,never had ·.before.The next evening, :some ofindeed' nearing its 'historic' .dis- does· toa ":sufficiently iinBuential gationfor the Pr.opagation ,of.the . ·,the :,elders :came 'and ;gav.eme :some :fine land cat :areasonableprice.

.solution, and Hilaire !Sellae, ad- minority:' ':Faith since 1958, .hehashad !little :!Before :a :fun month had ;passed, :I 'had :a ·small.houseand dispenSary.mii'able in. so ~y way.s,e1se, Diffell'ent Approacll. time.to give to the work of the After ;two years, :1.built 'a 'church. 'Now, 'after eight years,lt is aeonst~tuted himself :something of In a word, ,the Isimplisticfor.-patriarchate, whiCh ilias its lhead-' . promising pariSh;- .a prophet of thiS demise. mUla. of -the "20s, w.hich lacked quaitersin B~irut, Lebanon.

Had it .not ,abandoned. ,dogma validity as· well as ,Charity, Isa :His :resignation has been ;ac-.for the. 'gospel ',of social ;serYice?' little Ilainful. to. remember.. Pro- . 'cepted bypo,Pe "John. TheVati- .Wel'e nof its "pews empty ':and testantismis ,certaiIily under no ~~n :nfahnounch'lg .the actionlts:.p~pIts ..piled ,with, ,airY,'.. t.em.p~tit:'nto..fpId its 1tent;and . also' revealed thaVthePope 'hasmouthmgs? Professor' ~y,rrel1';s steal aw~y. . : ...' authorized the ~convokingof'a

eelebratedqili.p, '1: .am ,sufferin,g, . Wha~ IS .called .for .now, from synod· o~ ···the . Armenian Ri~elately, .fro!hinsOni·niauf~chureh".. Cathohcs, IS a totally different Hierarchy in' order .t~\. elect' awas'" the proper" epftaPh".~. aPJ?roach to the problem.ofre,,:,."". successor. Pope .J.ohlf praisedthought, for the RefOrmation. \lIllo.n.It :mostem.phatical1,,. is . Cardinal ..Aga,gianian .;for ihis

Rumol'll of Rebellion' not a matter of holding out- work :during !his '25 :years ,00

Now it is true, .of ,cour.se,ithat spread the generous apron ,of P~triarch,clur'ingthe yearsfollow1:ng ilbe. Mother IOh~ch,-sha1Png1Jhe .first World ·warp.rotestantiSm. tree,. and lettmg the .ri;pe!£nuit 'D'isto.rt'ion'~ecia1ly 'in England and Amer:- fall.ln. . ' ,,";' , . . - . -

'lea, fell upon evil 'Wnes. iIt .had, ~ven mOlle· em.p~a1l,ic~y" :it 1is ., ,Continued fr,omP.ageG>nelargely jettisoned its ,theological n.0t.a matter ,of ;Slt!lilJ,g' ;~ound. knowuntilgudgement ·who igetsconstrUCtiOIlll in :fa:v.or ,Of iIDoT.e like .so mllDY mutes wait~ :!for the credit for ,conversion. .practical .aspects· of ,group life' ~e Old Laqy fr.om iGene;v;a itol~ut if we know: ,any,thing r MISSION-combines.the ,be;d feat~eD ,of ,liD .:other :ma,glWneD: -.....d ''-0 t·· die. about ,the MysticaI:Sody oat ,ati, stories, ~.;n·;cture" ,statistics ,-and _de+o~l~ l"uman inter,ont. '':''-'-e .....,__ o' upac 10D"w'hich .iis ·,to ,.,.,....... . . ., . -' :r-... ~ ... ..... ........ .......,/JIly~that it was otrly too wi'll.in;g It I:ll difficUlt for many :Of 'us .' we know that wllat :weao .here interest.in ,the suffering ihumanity ,of -the .mission world' ,and t1~to throwaway ,theker:nel,and " ~ accept the .fa~.that ,thIS '~e- .may"aff-ect :someonefu ,the iCon- -y'our .sacrifices .along with ,a ,request Ito .be put ,on ,the 'miUling .~usuage its spiritualhul1ger with' vlve~ ·Protestantasm"witih its go. I. may .be .working on :some- 01. ,tbh .bi~montliW J)ubllcation... ' .. '. ' ..the husks. . '~ paSSiOnate concern .for .faith :and one in iqy. o.wn,parishwho

There W!l1'e'~ors of mass ' disciplin~, off~rs farmoPt! 1h9pe, ne¥er 'becomes .a 'Clith6lic - :but .i'ebell.io.n .against the ,old :stand- . ~orr~unl()n. thana P,rotestantism because iof, .my work ,somebo~y .

In disso"'''''on in Lithuania .does.But I ·t"'·-'-.ds.a~dt~e ,00dmo~~,.reports : .. " . 'l.w.. .,'. .' .1UUAq4, a gr.owingdisguSt 'With the, .P~pe.sp'lea I" -Ws,'heartening .:to ·'know ·,thatanci~nt'PuTi ta n inheritance. The erro~~ofthe:pa.st~""illl even though 't ;get fhe doorMimsters, queried on the fUilda- the ·SUPPOSlt.U)D. ·that, ,the : pas- slammed 'in :my 'ia"C~, ,'someone .ismentals of the ,Oliristian' ,faith, :: Senger.. s w~uld. ,s,.c'U.t:t1:e, .•the "getting ,grace:" J :

s~g ship Actuall fhJProgra,m ,of :SoalS.seemed ,Cheerfully prepared. "ito : •. ' . Y" er~ . 'The .!Bishop ;spo'ke :aFan_or-

. foreswear Trinity. lncarI.lation, .was far more' !evidence,to indi- .gatiizational . :mee.ting tor ,theand Redemption, .along with the cate that .they ..would prefer :toVirgin Bir,thandthc .Johann'ine sink with it; "Annual "Program .for 'Souls"Comma. , But :as t'hmgs are, ,there 'is 'DO now 'underway 'in ·St. Louis 'for

It was the 'era of the .notorious que~tion ibut 1that ,the' PrOtestant the :eighth 'consecutive ·year.Bisho.p Barnes 'and 'of that ,gad- - revl\,:al 'has .ibr~ol1ght :about,:in The "Annual PrQgram :for'fly of or,thodoxy,Dean W'illiam all Tan~,.aheI.~htened ,concern Solils,"ajoint project :of -theInge. .' ..' ~or 'Chrxstlan umtY,not .-somuch Archdiocesan 'Councils 'Of :Cath~

'Remar"kableRevival I? te.rms of .los!p.g the fa'ith ,to .cilicMen :and 'Women, 1s beingOddl .... .' ,find)1t ,as ,of .fmdmg jit 'in itsflill.- ca!ried 'out ina 'new 'way ..this

y, ,,:,owev~, ;as time went ness. y,ear, 'according to ··Father :JohnOB" ., mO~ib.~iP.r:otestant;ism, :It may well. be that the· Il~S-' P. Cradick, :spiritualm(,derator~~::blY J;D. a·fit of :absent-:mndl- peets .for uni'ty" today .or ,t:'rriar-' '. of, the two organizations.'

ess, . neglected ,to.' . die.. It row, 'are in .almost exact r, :. The prQgram is ;being .dividedsoou[d .have ,cea~d,and :desisted pot,tion to the 'relative 'revi~~t iIito ··two parts.' Before' Christ­~~h\N'ber~ arop.nd, mid-century. " of contemporarY-:Protestantis mas,. everyonelivin,g in, the .St.

e. .calcuJ,abpos were .<&t ..all" ~ and catholicism '. . m . LOUIS area w:i11 be invited .:to.accurate .... '. to'·· , f wnf. . . . P.er.haps .as Woe meditate u'. '0', .come ,a serIes 0 ' ..1, orma-

Behold., here in !L962, iLls an these' ......·.n·""~ .. w'e ,. '.' !P nd tional" meetings in Ii Catholic .exit 1:U 1 • II.W. ..." '. may re~on '. . '.~eme.y . v: y. .'ghost.. Both I!1 the more intelligently -to the. c~urcb. ; '.'

ElU'ope ·an~ .the ~ew Wurld It Holy Father's !plea for l' l After ChrIstmas" those pro­him..expenenced a 'remarkable and penance ';fasting d'P :aN:~fess"ing':a further 'interest ~in 'the,rWIval" and the most 'recent .'fice, thatth~ work of~e ~aom- C!Iurch will be contacted and in-

Lvolume .'~ Dr. K-enneth :Sco:tt ci1, which 'is the wonk ,of uri~- vlted .10 a series of instructions,

atour.e:ttes monumental ;stud'" maoy crown' ·t·..;:...· ';'e''" al 'tYh' he :SIlld. . .of Christia·t i ..iT ' ,.<t;.. V.~V: WI . . , •..m y . n .the mode.rm divine success

wor,IfI ICOnfirmS.. the wlew :tba't it . .has managed to ::r.eCllq). ;its l1mmes A • t P • 34of .!the 19th· iC.en1:uIt:Y 'alnios.t :as _ R,PPo,n ;. ,r.les,Ii.,. ',Continued :n-omP.age (<llnesuccessfully as :the. c4thtiliie ector of Semina ~or.e rYiour ,diligence' ,andChtu'cll. . . '. "'. .. ,~ ,your zeal -in. :tp.e.tasks. :as~gned

'Il'lher.e .~ ,Of course,,~ ~W YORK .(NC;) -:- 'Father .,to :you in: :the preparation lor ,thewhere lP-rOt s.tan1;'- P~tr~ck J; Gaf£n~y', :S:M.M. :34'" ·'5econdV.a.tican Ecumenical

. just :as 'Ilh~ are~e:= "has been'named 'rector ,of ,,Si;-CounClLas'president Ofl1lhe;S~CatholiCismhu~." .. ." '~uis .:de .tMontfor.t :s.eminaio/, ·retariat·for :P.rom~\Cluistianfromltihe :mmiiS' ~. ;hWVF#J:iBiI· -Llteh'field,Conn. . , . . Unity:"men: . '., . '.,~ .'fil ~paipte.d lhe1le.11:J)' Fmber . The, .Po~ exp~".thehQpe

Nor, <in ~t,haS Piote~tiHsm. R,?ger ,Charest, 5..MiM.,a:Fall 'that Christ will'''asS!St:y:oulGOll­mver ~:v~ ·U;S;P;rov.inmlilal.·· .stantJy;" adiiing, "'lind \W:e ,lpray

Back :SChooliPiI'Gv.:eJ' the Misslonarles of.the Company Him to . grant ,yOa·ane:v.er:i1'Of -MIllY, {the Mo~tfcmFathers)'" greater ,abundance rot His ,graces

M~GllIS (.NC.~- "11be F.atherGafineY.'!S~t;POr.ted 'ito so that-with :unsba'ken .faith,Veterans o(,)f ~oremn 'WV:ars lbav.e be. :the y~ungest 'rector of a with youthful hope, and with agone on record 'iiJ. .favor <Oif a maJOr -semmlll1" m Ifhe 1tlI;S. ch,arUY greater than :all diffici:ul_congresSional !11escilution :antI . The rec:tor:s paIlentl!. ,Mr. and ··ties, you may continue :to make

. proposed ,constitutional.:amend- 1lIIrs. Jame. Gaffney, arce .deaf : your priesthood .fr.w.tful ,andmen:t Ito ililellllU,t ~y.er,$ jin }pub- mutes. "His :!fatlwr '8q, 3W1 JhOlds - tenderly acceptable ito :God :and~ '&cl1ool&.a::fulltime jOb. . His .ho4' \Cbw:cA."

.... :

Page 13: 08.30.62

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Oklahoma will be working.Papal Volunteers in the Guate­mala 'mission ,within 10. yeam. 'He said that· he and the two 'other priests will be living in' Q • ,

20-by-30-foot ;r:oom. 'He, quipped~ ."And I snore..There may be lil!fl

iJnsurreetion.to, • '. '

,UTges Emphas~s,

,On .ResurrectionSEATTLE (Nt) - 'A leader :

iJn the liturgical movement de­clared her, that a true view of "Christ's r~deinptive mission de.. ­Jl)ands that the Resurrection 'begiven equal emphasis with ~Crucifixion.

,Father Go~frey Diekmariill,,O.S.B., of Collegeville, Minn..charged that until recent yearswestern theologians and spiri~

tual writers have neglected theredemptive aspect of the Re­surrection.

Father Diekmann, editor GfWorship magazine, called this a"truncated'! and "largely nega­tive" view of the redemption.

The Benedictine priest alsotold nearly 5,000 persons at­tending the annual North Amer­ican Liturgical Week here that

. there is "probably no' greaterheretical thre,at conlronting the

. Christian western world, today"than the denial of the historicalreality of tlie Resurrection. .0:

Father Diekmann attributedthis view to the German Pro­testant theologian Rudolf Bult-­mann, emeritus professor at theUi!iversity of Marbtirg" ~romany. .

Providential Countei1'orceHe said Bultmann'sview of

the lt€surrection' would make it"a mere symbol of early Chris..tian .faith in the Saviour" andadded that it has been estimated..that as many a's 70 per cent ofProtestant theological studentsat German· universities are £01­lc>wers of Bultmann in his viewof the Resurrection." '

"Please' God, the percentageis as yet substantially smallerin the U.S.; but whatever it maybe, if Ch:ri~t be not risen, vainis our faith,"·' he said.

He speculated that the "strongand long-overdue emphasis onChrist's Resurrection in all itsdimensions, historical- and re-'demptive, may possibly be aprovidential counterforce thatwill also serve to support thoseof our .non-Catholic 'brethren

<Jwho are facing up to the threat."

Urge Priests HelpBuild Free Uganda

ENTEBBE .(NC)-The priestsof Uganda,' which will becomeAfrica's newest free nation inOctober, were urged here to"contribute to the progress andgreater prosperity of an inde­pendent Uganda." .

Archbishop Joseph Kiwanuka,W.F., of Rubaga told over 100priests gathered here at a semi­nar on "The Catholic Church inIndependent Uganda," that theconclusions of their discussionsmust be "practical ones whichcan be put practice in present­day Uganda," with 'the personneland funds the Church now has.

,Deposing Witch Doctors First Ai~Of 'Planned Guatemala' Mission'

, . OKLAHOMA CITY (NC) ­The Oklahoma City and Tulsadiocese plans to open a' mis­sion in Santiago' Atitlan,. Guate­mala,' next Summer, anti ae­cording to Father Ramon Car­lin, there will be need to com-

, . bat the work of witch doctors.Father Carlin, superintendent

of McGuinness High school herefor the last' five years, will beone of three diocesan' priest4lgoing to the quatemala mission.

He returned recently from atour of the town, which has apopulation of 11,000. While hewas offering a Mass there, herelated, he turned to say II·'D 0 min u s v 0 b i s cum" andcounted five witch doctors inthe sanctuary.

·'All natives are baptized,some are practicing Catholics,but the Christianity is riddledwith paganism," he said. "Paganrites and dances go on in thechurches during Mass.

"Neither priests nor Indianscan define !!harply where Chris­tianity ends and paganism be­gins," he continued. "You see,since 1566 there have been manytimes' when there was no priestat all. So the people went backto pagan ways."

Native CatechistsThe witch doctors claim to

be Christians, but they will notUlke ,instructions or mafry inthe Church, and on certain,

. Church feast days it is custom­, ary for them' to swap wives,

Father Carlin said. He added:"We 'must teach them about theFaIth but we must' be carefulnot to insult thern. One way todo this is to train' native cate-chists." '

Father Carlin" said he hopessome 40 lay missioners from '

,

Page 14: 08.30.62

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The governing body of St.John's Medical College and Hos_pital, which includes the Cathq­lie Bishop's 'Conference of In­~ia, decided at meetings heldhere to locate the school in St.

Needs 'Reemphasis Mary's Ind.ustrial OrphanageEven at this late date ~ al-" until the buildings on the col-

most '30 years after the passage· lege's 40-acre site are ready for'ot the .Wagner Act - this. prin- use.ciple still needs to be reem-'phasized froni time to time; To, . 'Valerian Cardinal Gracias,be sure, many if not most' of the ' FROM FOREIGN LEGION: Bill St. Laurent of Bay Archbishop of Bombay, is 'chair-more influential American em- ' man of the governing body.ployers are today willing to ad-:- City" M.ich., fifth:'graderat' St. Joseph's ScJlOol, thinks he Archbishop ThoIJlas Pothaca-

, mit that unions are legitimate must be the only kid in the United States with a bugle from mury of Bangalore is vice-chair- .arid that they are probably here the French Foreign Legion. One of eight children, he found man.

: to stay. . ' at an early age that it never hurts to ask. That's how he St. John's will be staffed by, But too few Americans in all . the Sons of Mary, Health of the

...walks 'of life are wl1ling to go got the bugle. NC Photo. Sick, a'10-year-old U.S. medicalthe whole way' and' to 'take the mission community with head-unconditional and unqualified &." 0 11... 0 FD:> I1-J] 1'5)@ 11~18l a.JI ['(i) 'f1 J6l quarters in Framingham.

. positio~ that secure and ,stable N'V\10~InlD~@[j'j} W@V tr1l@~ I:9J a uU\EiU'ISi~ [9}tU!@ UI9 O, The first dean of the collegeunions are an essential' and in- F'er;;:rI8lr;:;)!?11.. re"'B'r;;:rIi3l~I51r;:;), rJ ta\1Ql~rr;\r;:;) ~~ngW1ti!l1f';;l~F>l is Dr. L. Monteiro, formerlydispensable prerequisite of a lrl!J\9UU\l::<[[tl I.r'~U\9Ut2}UU lb\9~uIWUU ~~~VI9UU\lU dean of the Topiwala Nationalsound social order. BAY CITY (NC)-'-A battered heard the French Foreign Legion Medical College and Nair Hos-

, :Until'this principle is more or old bugle is the pride and joy ,was to disband. He wrote a letter pital, Bombay. W.-Saldanha, un­less u n i v e r saIl y taken' for of Bill St. Laurent, fifth grader to the legion. headquarters in, til recently secretary of India'sgranted as- a 'se1f;,evident truth, . at St. Joseph's school h~re. Paris, _asking for a bugle as a Central Board of Revenue andlabOr " and management will This is no ordinary horn-it's memento.. A month later he got a Collector of Customs and Cen­spend. too much time and energy something special. It may have letter from 'a . legion colonel tral Excise, was named the col- ,sparring with one' another - sounded the charge in ,the which said the legion is not dis- lege's administration director.time and energy which they 'Sahara, taps at Dienbienphu, ' banding, but if it does the colo- University Affiliateought to devote to carrying out call to the colors at Sidi bel nel will ~nd . Billy not only a The college, which will startthe demands which social justice Abbes. But there's rio doubt bugle "but the entire band." with 50 admissions' a year, willmakes on both of them. about it-this is an authentic Hands-off Orders be affiliated with the University

Social justice demands, among souvenir. of the storied French of Mysore, a state universityother things, that the two groups Foreign Legion. S.ome qays .later a, package with' centers bi Mysore andforget petty differences and Some time ago the son of Mr. arnved at the St. Laurent house. Bangalore, and with St. Mar-jointly. try to figure out how nd Mrs. Joseph St. Laurent It .was ,postmarked, fr~m .the tha~s hospital which will bethey can best serve the welfare a 'officeofLe Colon~I,Regimentes built up to a 4OQ-bed capacity.not only of their own members, Etrangers" Paris. And there was The' college hospital, with 250and their own stockholders but 300· Sociologists the bugle, wraJ.?ped in a French be,ds and a'n out-patient depart-of all their fellow citizens. newspaper WhIch had .a story , ment in its first' phase, will

Because ·of their tremendoUs At Convention about the te~tar ~atel1ite...The eventually have a 750-bed capa-strength, they have it withia dented. hor,n 18 eqUIpped WIth a citytheir power to make or break WASHINGTON (NC)-About: red felt ·emblem bearing the.' . ,the American economy. History 300 sociologists are expected at 'words "Legio' Patria ,Nostra." The. standards . for faculty,wiU judge them very harshly the 24th anriual convention of ; Bill surmises.dark spots on the . student-~eacher ratio, and salaryif the" selfishl" -their separ- the American Catholic Sociolo- bugle are blood.' ' , , scales wIll be those of the All-

" , ..~ .' ". India Institute of Medical Sci-ate ways and refuse to subordi- gical Association here next BIll- ca~ t play. the bugle yet. ence. The school will adopt, thenate their oWn separate interest Saturday and Sunday. He call makea:gogh~awfulnorse university's minimum' standardsto the requirements of the ge~ The assembly, to be held' at ~n.d his, practI~ tl1l~e is _c~~- ,for admisSion, with preferenceeral welfare.., the Catholic Uri i v e r sit y of taIled ,when ~-month~old E~d~e . shown, s.tudents with a good

Asks Encouragement, Prayen America, will 'open with a .ses- St., L.aurent 18 ~leepm? BIlls science background. ., In the final analysis, then, the sion on "Alienation and 'Social other brothers and sisters-

ri L b D ,- . . t Evolution" and. later meetings Rickie; .14; Patsy, 13; Mike, 9;spi t of a or ay ... unmmen - h A K'. .. , t· If" win take up subjects' sue . as Joan,~; .nn" 6, ,and evin, 1-1y pOSItive and construe lVe. "The Sociology of Occupa:tion~" , haye strict hands-off orders.criticism of eitner labor or man- and "The SocioJOgyof Religion." '. , 'The" orders ~.en't observedagement seems to be called for " " ., , .on this occasion' well and good. . Bishop JOho.: J: Wright· of .housewide. The oUi r day aph~But Jl little criticism goes a long Pittsburgh wm: preach at a Masil ' ,tog.rapher "£tom; the. Catholicway; celebrated' by Msgr:" WilliamJ. ~ Weekly, Saginaw diocesan' news- .­

McDonald, rector of the unive.- paper,:' visited the S,t. Laurent'What labor and manageIJlent sity'o home w'get'a shot of Bill and his

need more .thananything else A preliminarv program 1'9- bugle. The horn' was nowhere toand what they have a right to -"

leased here shoW'S that the con- be . found. It seems dad hadexpect from aU of us on Labor &h thDay is encouragement and, vention will also have meetings taken it to the office to ow eabove an, -the support of 0Ui" on "Marriage and the Family," gang..continued prayers. "Population," and "The Socio- tf""'~-----------""'"!

They know th;lt their .past logy ,of Education." A:tf'\11 IA ~~performance leaves something L1fVtbnAI~

to be desired and, by and large, !¥Ii'O~${/' t\J~caJ<dl$ Aflj'a~@ se',' IIlBfl1l\IS:II'Illtl'nil H~mll!Athey are honestly lookhlg for " I('~ III II"" ~ llItd Il I!ItII 'lWnew ways and means of serving JOMfi'B'ii~~i$m GuiMthe public interest more effec- MOSHI (NC) -: A Tanganyi- 123 a,oadwGYtively. , kan priest-editor has been· I

More power to them as they elected the first president orf ' TAU~TON 'prepare to observe, on Monday the newly established East andof next· week, a national holiday Central-Africa J 0 u r Ii a Ii s t Ef­which belongs to both of them Guild.- the one holiday of the year He is Father John Kabeya,which is dedicated to the causs editor of Kiongozi - a Swahili­of social justice. language _ Catholic newspaper

published in Tabora, whi$ baa'the largest circulation (26,000)of any periodical in this countryof close to 10 million people.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Aug-.30, 1962. " " • .:' • • ..... ,~'.',', • _._f·_ • '_". ·-~f ~ •. ,:.J4

CathoUc Chcw-itie$ in Hong KongHelp Refugees From Red China. HONG KONG (NC)-Caritas-, day. 'Hong Kong is expanding an am- 'Depth of Defeae"bitious welfare program to make Many of the' refugees, most of.sure. that refugees pouring into whom come from the farmingthe British colony from Red districts of Kwantung, have'China' don't meet misery worse neither education nor skills. Thethan that they fled from. change from rural to urban life

Bishop Lawrence Bianchi, brings a shift in. work and inP.I.M.E., of Hong Kong has i'e- way of life. Their substandard,Ported that this year Caritas, wages do not meet the city'sthe diocesan Catholic charities rising costs.organization, opened four soCial Consequently they have to de-centers, a medical center, a pri- pend on welfare.mary school for refugee children "The depth, of human defeat,"and three educational centers observed Bishop Bianchi, "comesfor teenagers and young work- when a perSon re'ally cannot doers: Only a small fraction of the anything to help himself . • •number served are Catholic. Crime and delinquency are' rec-

':., . Close to 70,000 escapees from ognized' byproducts of any com­'Red China are unofficially re- pulsive, one might say animalis­ported to have secured govern- tic, drive for surviaI."ment identity .cards in May· and The social work cited in theJune. Even now, 500 are said Bishop's report focuses on sea.-to apply for the' cards every help .programlll .... •

."Says Spirit, ofLC!bor· Day''Is' .Positivetr Cons.truct.ive

, . By MsgJr. George G. Higgillls-Dlrecio~, NCWC' Socdal Act!on Department ..

Between- now .a~d next Monday all sorts of people,starting with the President of the. United States, will beissuing public statements on th~ meaning ,of Labor pay.,And over the weekend special Labor Da~ ·sermons WIll bedelivered' in churches ~ndsynagogues all ov~r the l~nd.It is safe to predIct, I thmk:,that most of these LabprDay statements and' sermo~s

will be' mO're: critic!!l of or-;-.ganized 1abo rthan were those_of, say, thethirties andforties. Duringthe thirties andforties the' typi­eal Labor Day'statement orsermon putmuch more em­phasis on labo~'Sllights and prI-vileges than on ' . ., .

.... Its duties and responSIbilities,'more praise of labor~s acco~­

plishments than criticism of Itamistakes, and of its faults.

, Still on Defensiye ~., In my judgment, there wasn'tanything reprehensible aboutthis tendepcy to accentuate thepositive and to concentrate forthe most part on .labor's rightsand privileges and on labor's.accomplishments. '

It was fully warranted by thefact that organized labor at t.hattime was still on the defenSIve"struggling - in many casesagainst very uneven odds - ~win acceptance in the commu~u­

ty and to achieve a decent m~n­imum of stability and,. UnIOB

security.Even today, of course, there

are some industries in someeommunities in which labor. is

.Still on the defensive and inwhich it has to fight a rear,guard action to protect its basicrights and to achieve its minu­mum goals.'

Union NecessaryNevertheless, taking the coun- .

try as a whole, we can say that." r g ani zed ,labor has nowachieved its majority and con-

. sequently must expect to betreated accordingly.'Having long since _passed

through its adolescence, it nowenjoys the status of full fledgedcitizenship, and must expect to ,be judged according to adultStandards even, or especially, byits friends. '

, .; 'Of course, c~iticism of today'siabor movement ought to be asconstructive as possible andShould be aimed at streng-

",thening rather than weakening:' the cause of organized labor.

': One would hope, therdore, I

ftlat this year's Labor Day state­ments and sermons, while re­minding organized iabor of its'duties and responsibilities, willalso remind employers, editors,and whomever else it may con­cern that unions are not ~nly-legitimate but necessary in ourtype of industrial society. .

Page 15: 08.30.62

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foti River":"Thurs.,·Aug. 30, 1962 1!5

·r

'f1he strength of A~eriea is directly related 00 its produe­

tWity. And basieto Ameriea's productivity allld strength is

the skm of the American worker.

Labcw eweates om' necessities as wen afl cur luxuries ~d .

the materials we must have to defend them.

R Is Labor's earnings and savings that make wp the eapital

tG cveate our good way of !ife that symbolizes our dem()C!'~

We salute the vital contribution OUI' membershFp flr<i:\3 made

to America's progress and the steadfast dev~ ro the

~ which bave made America great.

" .'-

UNITED LABOR· COUNCIL OF GREATER FALL REVER

AMERICAN FEDERATION Of LABOR Cllnd CONGRESS Of INDUSTRIAL ORGANDZAliONS

• Amalgamatecfl Clothing Workers of Americtll . • Plumbers Union, l.ocaU Nlc>. 1'35

• Fire Fighters Association of FaD River.. J.oeqzH No. '!tS'~4 • Retail Cerks, loca! Nlc. ]325

• Insurcmce WOlriceFs Gf America • State, COUflty, Muni~ifPCI8 lEm~oYG63

• International l:adies Garment Workevs lW111licml , Titxtile Workers Union of Amer~

• Journeymen Berbers •. Unit0d Furniture WcrrkeG'S of Ameri«D, I!.~ N@. 154

• National Association of Letter Carriers-Branch No. Sil It United Rubbet- Worketl'S, ~al No. ~6 'U

• Irotherieoodl of IIcriIway & Steamship Chnb/l~ Lodge No. 2097 .

IN MEMORIAM

To Dedicated Leader, 01 tlte Fall River Labor Movement

JOHN G()l{)Etq

JOHN IL MACHADO

JOHN ReAGAN

JAMES TANSe-V

MARtAt40 S. ~fiOP

WilliAM R. MEDEIROS

JOSEPH R. MEDEIROS

J9SEPH P. DWYER

MANUEL J. lOPES

JOHN L CAMPOS '. A

Page 16: 08.30.62

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16 THE AI'lCHOR-Diocese'of Fall River-Thurs .. Aug. 30, 1962

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8 to 14 LB'

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NEW CROP-U.S. Grade A - Plum,.Meaty,-Broad·Breaded

lame 'Low Self-ServIce Prf._1a All $tor.. ia ThiJ Vicinity;;; (We R_ the Right to Limit Quantities)

Superb Quality, Lean, Tender, Tasty

Deliciously Refreshing - Luscious Bunches of Juicy Flavor

GRAPES Reel Malaga L8 19crrAllAN PURPLE - Sun-ripened, Juicv

2 29cPrunePlulIIs L8i

flfm, Crisp - Rich in Vitamin A

·2 29cFresh-Carrols 1L1CEUOS

BEllVIEW _

Paper Napkins.Solid White in 0" .

BUlllble Be. Tuna4

Faie HaH

20cro Richer ·than U.$. Gov', Standards.

I .C - BRooKSID.ee rea... AU PopUlar Flavors

Sweet, Spicy - Old Fashion QualitY -

Ritter's Relish

.

Bless Hospita' Built.With Amerit;an Help

SEOUL (NC) - A three-storyCatholic hospital, built withAmerican help, was' dedicatedhere by Archbishop Paul K. Roof Seoul.

Holy Family Charity Hospi­tal will replace the. clinic ·thatwas used for the past four years.Only the ground floor of thehospital, run by tile Holy Fami­ly Sisters, is completed. Btit itis already treating 1,700 patientsa month, about half of· themfree of cbarge.Ameri~ Forces Aid to Korea

(AFAKO) gave $75,000 worthof materials to help build. the.hospital. Catholic Relief" Ser_vices-National Catholic WelfareConference donated equipment'and medical supplies. U.S. ArmyCatholic c hap 1 a ins collectedover $1,000 from units all overKorea. The Holy Family Sistersthemselves collected more than

, $20,000.'

. Urges All CatholicsTake Part in Council

FARGO (l'iC) - All Catholicsshould take 'an act~ve part inthe coming ecumenical council,Bishop Leo F. Dworschak ofFargo said here.

Bishop Dworschak said "notonly the bishops and theologiansbut every Catholic throughoutthe world can' and should havea part through prayer, study andpenance." .

He urged Catholics of hisNorth Dakota diocese to partici­pate ~n a novena to be conducted

.in every parish of the dioc·ese onthe:nine days before' the councilopens in Rome.

\.

~,

j Aro~rn-d' G~obe iQll 1@ Y<e«IJtr$O

.lDce;ight~uny E~i®kf&@5lftlBiil~By Rt. Rev. Msgr. JO-hlll S. KeI!0edy

Delightfully entertaining is Irena Wiley's Around theGlobe in 20 Years (McKay. $4.95), the reminiscences ofthe wife of an American diplomatic official. Of Polish birthand a Catholic, she married Jo!m Wiley, an Americanforeig·n service officer, in . .have. become extremely 'con-i934, and since then-- has troversial.lived in Moscow, many parts She admired him profoundlyof Europe, Latin America, as a person, and it was to herand the Orient. During the last that he' en\rused .the keepingpart of the two decades covered, of the manuscript of what wasMr.. Wiley rose to be an unusually well 'knownto ambassado- book, The Phenomenon of Man.rial rank. Mr. Wiley attained the status

His' wi f e of ambassador in 1944, and hisdraws, paints, first assignment in this capacityand does sculp- was to Colombia. Having seenture. There are the spectacular landscape of that16 pages of re- country, Mrs. Wiley could' wellproductions of understand why Colombians al-her work. A' we-Ys make a will before startingglance at these· on a journey.' ,shows that she There followed appointmentshas far more to Portugal, Iran, and Panama.t han courtesy In the fir_st of these she had an'right· to the title '''artist''; she opportunity to see Salazar at

-0. is a professional. Lately one of close quarters. Remarkable toher productions has attained' a her were his self-discipline andspecial sort of celebrity. The the asceticism of his life~pres: . has carried photographs Iran she found quite the re-of an altar panel, carv~d 20 verse of the romantic connota- .years ago for which the then tions of Persia. There was drab­young John F. Kennedy was the ness and .blackness, yet, as wen,model for an angel.' a beauty which did 90t ·over·

CommentoD' Moscow whelmingly lteclare itself.·Mrs. Wiley's artistry is still She 'became attached to the

operative when she puts aside people, was struck by the--Mos­brush or chisel and takes up .alems' devotion to Mary, and re­

marks, "One can never under­pen.Her marriage took place in stand the biblical' patience, the

'foulon, France. At the civil heroic acceptance of a life de­ceremony there required, the prived of even bare nececessitiesmayor officiated. of the people of the East without, After a short honeymoon, the the. 'This is -the will.. of God,'Wileys.were off to 'Moscow. Her which is not just an empty

- phrase but .• deep creed."comments on the Red. capital Indignation flares in the pages

::~ ~~e~~uri~' t~:te~~~in~~ ~~: concerned with Panama. Mrs.great purge' of the 1930's. . Wiley.had seen plenty of pover':'

She was impressed by the ty elsewhere, bllt nowhere hadshe encountered the callous sal­

drabness of the Soviet paradise, fishness of the well-to-do illthe grim poverty, and the fact Panama.that in the supposedly classless She describes these.people asBOciety distinctions were strong- icily indifferent to the wretch­1y marked and the bureaucratse n joyed luxury while - the edness_ of their fellows and com-massses were in misery. pletely unconscious of. anybody

but ·themselves.Soviet Occupation . Worthwhile Opinions

Then came stays in Belgium Scattered through the bookand Austria. She was in Vienna are opinons as' to our· foreign·

. when, in 1938, the Nazis took service which deserve more,ovJeOr'

hnthan passing notice. Mrs. Wiley

Wiley.. became . U.S. inveighs against the practice of.minister to Latvia and Estonia making pol i tic a 1 appointeeashortly before the Soviets seized heads or .missions. / ,-

. the Baltic countries. The seizure She gives telling examples ofwas hypocritically' represented the way in which an .envoy isas bringing the benefits of Com- hampered by the insufficiencymunist society to the downtrod- of the funds granted by Con­den. gress. She depicts the demanding

But Mrs. Wiley testifies that routine which aD ambassadorthe freedom, prosperity, clean- follows; his is not an eaqliness, and content which she partying life. ' •observed in those lands were in Hers is a bOQk kaleidoscopic:.marked contrast to conditions in in its sc;enicvariety, studded

·the U.S.S.R. and she remained with amusing anecdotes and in­long enough after the Soviet oc_ cisive thumbnail sketches wiseeupation to see the terror and in its appreciation of, humanexploitation which were the differences and un d e r I yin gblessings the invaders bestowed. unity. One hopetJ that in our

Leaving' the Baltic countries, foreign service there are many,the Wileys proceeded home by many people of the calibre ofway of China and Japan, and the Wileys. '-this required a journey of 12days· on the Trans-Siberian rail­way.

During the trip, the couplespent two months in Peking, andthere met the French paleonto­logist, Father Teilhard de Char­din, whose name has since be­come famous and whose theories

Q

Page 17: 08.30.62

(HI!: ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Aug. 30,1962 17

...

rEXTRA UBERAl, CREDIT TIl:RMi

OPEN DAILY 9 A. M. to 10 P. M.

SATURDAY UNTIL 6 P. M.

We had to move this tremendous inventory toour Warehouse Showroom in Fall River whereit is clogging the aisles, cramming the rafters andinterrupting our normal flow of business.We must move this merchandise immediately re­gardless of cost, loss or replacement value. Mostitems are one-of-a-kind - many sold "as is"­hurry for choice selections. If you love a bargain,now is the time. to buy! '

son,'s

CATHOLIC STUD~NTS MISSION CRUSADE: Leading figures at the 20th nationalc~nvention of - the Catholic Students Mission Crusade at Notre Dame, are: left to right;BIShop Alfred, F. MendeZ, G.S.C., of Arecibo, Puerto Rico; Bishop Raymond A. Lane,M.M., !oriner. superior general of the Maryknoll Missioners; Msgr. Edward A. Freking,executIve chaIrman of the CSMC National Board; Bishop Richard H. Ackerman of Cov­ington; Msgr. John E. Kuhn, director Of the Cincinnati Junior CSMC Conference; andFather Frederick A. McGuire, C. M., executive secretary of the Mission Secretariat,Washington,. keynote speaker at the conventjon. More than 4,100 delegates from 30states attended. NC Photo. .

"New EnglaVid's "'QlB'~est FuuD'litlJre ShowrcemN

,The building housing our New Bedford Store hasbeen sold to the New Bedford 5c Savings Bank,the premises vacated, and we're stuc1$: with aquarter million dollar inventory of nationallyfamous Bedroom, Living Room and Dining RoomFurniture . . . Chairs, Tables, Desks, Lamps,Rugs, Carpeting, Gas and Electric Ranges, Elec­tric Refrigerators, T-V's, Hi-Fi's, Beds, Beddingand Juvenile Furniture.

:.' 'P'l 1(' -M>~Q"~~r:;i' H~,t.;~"'V;E'\~"';(j'~'~'kAR' 0"0 'Iti AN'S T F"';' '1.- l '~"'I V' E'R~.,,~~ ,'t ."~"-;'t$~'\;.O.~;.•·: ~ "" ~~',,_~,' • .l."":"~'"'' ':",. ,,""~'f • .... .' • t, ~~~""'.,}o(",: '.

. - -

"'The FUmiture Wonderland

Of The East'" Mason'sOnce •in •a•Lifetime Savings on Nationally Famous

FURNITURE · CARPETING · TV and APPLIANCES

$250',000.00 HIGH GRADE INVENTOR~

GOING FOR A FRACTION OF ITS WORTH

Gauthter, Rev. Maurice E. Par­ent, Rev. Manuel Andrade, Rev.William E. Farland, Rev. JosephOliveira, Rev. John H, Hackett.

Rev. George J. Souza, Rev.Andre P. Jussaume, Rev. NormanJ. Ferris, Rev. Henry T. Munroe,Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, Rev.Edward J. Burns, Rev. LucianoPereira, Rev. Roger L. Gagne.

Rev. Edmond J. Levesque,, Rev. James A. Clark, Rev. Joao

C. Martins, Rev. James W. Clark,Rev. Bento R. Fraga, Rev. Ar­mando A. Annunziato, Rev. J.Adrien Bernier, .£lev. Arthur K. ,Wingate..

Rev. Vincent F. Diaferio, Rev.James F. Buckley, Rev. RobertF. Kirby, Rev. Anthony Rocha,Rev. Roger J. Levesque, Rev.Hugh Keenan, Rev. John V.Magnani.

Rev. Thomas C. Mayhew,' Rev.Daniel F. Moriarty, Rev. MartinL. Buote, Rev. Agostinho S.Pacheco, Rev. John J.'Steakem,Rev. Kenneth J. Delano, Rev.Maurice R. Jeffrey.

Rev. Francis L. Mahoney, Rev.John W. Pegnam, Rev. Joseph P.Delaney, Rev. James F. Greene,Rev. James F., Kelley, Rev.Gilbert J. Simoes.

School Tot~1Continue" from Page One

pared by the Department otEducation, National CatholicWelfare Conference, which hasplaced actual enrollment lastyear on the three levels at 5,­709,119.

Elementary schools: 4,560,000;Secondary schools: 1,002,000;Colleges and universities: 355,­000.

Catholic high schools thisschool year will pass the onemillion mark in enrollment fo!'the first time.

Grade and high schools haveincreased the i r enrollmentsmore than 100 per cent since1945, the year marked, unof­ficially by most educators as thebeginning of the curl'ent pupilboom.

How many students have beenturned away from Cat hoi i cschools because of a lack of desk'space is unknown. But it is esti­mated by officials that Catholicgrade schools care for about 55per cent of the Catholic childrenof elementary school age. Catho­lic high schools are said to en­roll about 45 per cent of thoseCatholics of high school years.

In 1961, the American Catho­lic educational program - thelargest private school system inthe world - had 238 collegesand universities, 92 for men and146 for women. They el1l'olled326,160 students taught by nfaculty of 25,533.

There were 2,376 secondaI'J'IlChools, enrolling 937,671 stu­dents. The faculty totaled 46,623.. Catholic grade schools - 10,­

631 of them - enrolled 4,445,288children. They were staffed by110,911 teachers.

Most of the teachers in Catho­lic educational institutions in1961 were from religious life,120,634. But lay instructorsformed a substantial part of theteaching corps, totaling 62,443.

There were more lay teachers,17,240, in Catholic colleges anduniversities than Religious in­structors who totaled 8,293. Insecondary schools, there were34,153 religious teachers to 12,­470. lay instructors. In elemen­tary schools, there were 78,188religious teachers and 32,723 layteacher&.

Continued from Page OneNew York, he has been givingretreats to priests and Sisters inthis country for the past sixyears.

The Chancery Office Has an­noun~ that the followingpriests will attend retreat thefirst week.

Most Rev. Bishop James L.Connolly will preside too firstweek. The following priests willattend.

Rev. Joseph K. Welsh, Rev.Walter J. Buckley; Rev. JamesE. Lynch, Rev. Arthur C. dosReis, Rev. John M e d e i r 0 s,Rev. Asdrubal A. C. Branco,Rev. J. Orner Lussier, Rev.. JOl;eM. B. Avila. .

Rev. James E. McMahon, Rev.Henri Charest, Rev. Cornelius J.Keliher, Rev. Maurice H. LaMon­tagne, Rev. William D. Thomson,Rev. William E. Collard, Rev.George Saad, Rev. William R.Jordan. ,

Rev. Howard A. Waldron, Rev.Leo M. Curry, Rev. George S.Daigle, Rt. Rev. Msgr. BernardJ. Fenton, Rev. Alfred J. Gen­dreau, Rev. Alfred R. Forni,Rev. Henri R. Canuel, Rev.William H. O'Reilly.

Rev. Anthony M. Gomes, Rev.Ernest R. Bessette, Rev. John G.Carroll, Rev. Edmond Tremblay,Rev. John J. Galvin, Rev. LucienMadore, Rev. John J. Murphy,Rev. Gerard Boisvert.

Rev. Stephen J. Downey, Rev.William J. McMahon, Rev. Jo­seph F. O'Donnell, Rev. DonaldA. Couza, Rev. Edmond L. Dick_inson, Rev. Robert L. Stanton,Rev. William F. Morris, Rev.Ernest E. Blais.'

Rev. James A. McCarthy, Rev.Adalbert Szklanny, Rev. JamesF. McCarthy; Rev. Jo~ph L.Powers, Rev. William J. Shovel­ton, Rev. George E. Amaral, Rev.John P. Driscoll; Rev. Roger P.Poirier.

Rev. Albert F. Shovelton, Rev.Louis R. Boivin, Rev. Rene

Page 18: 08.30.62

, MAKING A 'WILL? REMEMBER Tilt: MISSIONS. Oar Iei'll. He: TIlE CATHOLIC N'EAlt EAST WELFARE ASSOCIA­

TION.

.~'neartastOlissions~

~' MANe,S CARDINAL SPIUMAN. ' ....fd...,

. . .. T. I;" Sec'y , ,

,SeIId ell a : .CATHOLIC NEAR lAst WELFARE ASSoaATtOM

480 Lexington Ave. ~ 46th St. New York 11;.... , ..-..ca' _~........ .

state..••••••••

,Sisters of CharityMark Anniversary

BARDSTOWN (NC) - A car­dinal, an archbishop and fivebishops were among the hun­dreds who attended ceremonienmarking the 150th anniversaryof the founding of the Sisters ofCharity of Nazareth at the com­munity motherhouse here i1l1Kentucky.

Joseph Cardinal Ritter, Arch­bishop of St. Louis, whose sister,Sister Marie Catherine, is mmember of the sisterhood, of­fered Pontifical Mass commem­orating the annivers~ry.

,toWG1'd the $300 It takes t8 tralll$ .••••••• 0 weekJ,y, 0 mODthq,

• ••••••••• ~ -oo •••••••••• ' ...

•••••••••••••••••••.••••••'"..0 ...

City •••••• ;;~ •••••••••••••.. Zone. : ...

,Name

'Street

FATHER TIMLIN .

St. Jude ..Novena Starts Sept., ,6,This novena will begin next

Thl;lrsday, Sept. 6, with devo-,tiona being conducted by Fatt)erTimlin every Thursday at 10,12:~O noon, 5:10 7 and 8 P.M. in'the chapel. '

For the benefit, of ,shut-i.rla.the novena devotions will bebroadcast each week over radiostation WSAR, Fall River, andfor the first time this year overstation WPLM, Plymouth.

OUR SISTI;R~ ARE BIG SISTERS .THE WORK 'THEY DO IS INDESCRIBABLE. lIn INDIA the;'

care for lepers, the aged, orphans, the blind. ID ETHIOPIAthey give medicine and food to the tired, the pOOI'. In LElBl­ANON, SYRIA, JORDAN, IRAQ, and IRAN, they teach tiMcatech,ism as well as the ABC's ... They are God's chosen; theJ'themselves chose God ... Would,you like to help a young gfiI!'llbecome a Sister? Here in the New York Office we have tIwnames of 502 girls who want 110 become Sisters. These glrl!::l,however, .haven't the money 110 pa,. for the novitiate training.The 'training lasts two years, costs $300 altogether ($150 a year,$12,50 a month, only $2.88 a week). Can you spare $2.88 a weekto tcain a mission Sister? ... The Sister you 'adopt' will writeto you, and you may write 110, her. For as long as she lives,YOU'll have a share in the work she does. Please help us tl'aJa'your' Sister., '

, Dear MonsignOfl:Enclosed is $

• Sister. I'U BeDelP annually.

Eritrea:,Drums !nstead Of An Orga~OUR CATHOLICS IN MASSAWA, ERI'l'REA, DO NOT PLAUt

THE ORGAN AT SUNDAY MASS. INSTEAD, &hey ring belw.t I"h and Pia)' cymbals and arums. 'l'!r:o

L...1>S.,- "~J~. laDguage of ~he Masa (called "T~Gl'V d' Sacred Liturgy") is ,nM Latin; it to

I,. ~. Ge'ez,'. long-dead Semitic wng1llIt.,:' 0 The pries~'s ves~ments do' no~ reselllll-~ ~ ble ours a~ all '. • . Are these peopAcaG- (A really Ca~holics? The answer fD"+ + empha~ically, 1:es! ••. lB the U.S..&.

mos~ Catholics belo,ng w the so-calle\1llLatin or Romo Rik. Our Catholiiroin MASSAWA belong te one of &!2:3Eas~ern Rites-speclficaIly, the Catm-

Tht Holy FaM Mission Ait/ olie E~hiopic Rik ••• As all' CaUaolwlor tht Orimtal Churrb do, our MASSAWA Ca~holics aece~

~he Pope as &he Supreme Pontiff. Moreover, &heir li~urgy, 1a'W(iand customs are fully approved by Rome • • • To show that n:[lRites are equal, Pope John,las& year pu& on Easkrn RUe v~men&s and consecrated a Bishop according to an Eastern RUe.'He encourages Eastern Rite Catholics-like ~hose In MASSAWC.-to preserve their ancient customs . • . In,MASSAWA &herois good reason to hope that our Catholics' of Ute Elhlopic RiQ0will, be a means of convening olhers to the Faith. To do ~however, we must help provide ~he means ••• The 'church' bMASSAWA m looks like a long rec&angular, wood-shed) is, for fl

house of worship, an embarrassing disgrace. During the rainy seG­son (from mid-June to earb' October) the roof leaks heely; aDtJlhe unpainkd, warped boards-ol which the 'church' is made­nap noisily in &he wind. -Wha~ can the parishioners do abouwit? No&hing! Our Catholics in MASSAWA are very pooo.The &ypical parishioner earns seven cen&s a day-less than 50e 0

week! ••• Our priest in MASSAWA writes to us for help. WiMour readers, he asks, 'give something_loen pennies-to he!lll>him build a church? • • • The coins in YOUII' pocket are wealtllDin MASSAWA; &hey total more' &han ~he average Sunday eo{\.Iec&ion. Imagine what your $1 gift win do! . . • AUogeUler t!lnalehureh will cost $9.500. PerhapS you'd like to build it aD nrvyourself in' memory of your family or loved ones. H so, writlaus now ... Or perhapS you'd like to give the roof ($1,200), thealtar ($500), baptistry ($450), ves&men&s J$50), a holy icon ($25each) • . • Without a church to aceommodate new Ca~holies, ~is almost impOSSi1,lle in MASSAWA to make converts. Will yeahelp by doing something? Each stoDe in the church will c056$S. Why ncK give a stone? ••• Please help. Our Ca~olies l!mlIASSAWA need you!

The Franciscan Fatbersof Our',Lady's Chapel of New Bedford

announce the beginning of theirSolemn Novena of Nine Thurs­days to St. Jude, in preparation

'for his Feast Day on Sunday,Oct. 28.

Duty

Q. ,

NIW ••DPOID

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OILS

TtMKIN­

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501 COUNTY ·ST•

NEW BEDFORD/

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Industry Common

Dacha,u Priests MeetTo ,Honor' Leader

MUENSTER (NC) - Close to80 priests who were prisoners at'the nazi concentration camp atDachau came here to celebrate'the 50th anniversary ()f the or­dination of their "block father"at Dachau.

Father Reinhold Friedrichs,'vicar capitular of the Muenster'diocese, was leader of nachau'sBlock 26, where priests were in..-carcerated. .

No. Attleboro ParishSets Apostolate' Day

Sacred Hean Church, NorthAttleboro,' will' hold Lay Aposto­late Sunday, Oct. 7. Parish or­ganizations will meet to coor­dinate programs and plan an in:­tegra ted spiritual theme for allunits, '

Officers and leaders ()f or­ganizations are planning the

'day, and invite all parishionersto attend. Next organizationalmeeting is set for 8 Tuesdaynight, Aug. 28.

On the committee are EdwardSurprenant and Mrs.' RichardDeschenes, co - chairmen; Leo'Meunier, secretary; Norman La­casse, treasurer; Mrs. GerardDesilets, publicity.

'In summary, it says that free -Care lest privileged classescollective bargaining,can be pre- arise, even among the workersserved only if it is exercised ""--'Maintenance 'of equilibriumresponsibly. In the words of the between wages and prices 'report, this means that labor -The need- to make goodsand management must "recog- and services accessible to thenize not only their own indivi- greatest number,dual responsibilities but their -Elimination, or at least thejoint re'sponslbility to the so- restriction, of inequalities in theciety of which they constitute various branches of the economy'an important and integral part" -that is between agriculture,and thllt they must jointly de- industry and servicesvelop "improved methods for -Creation of a prqper bal-,reconciling their' separate and ance between economic expan­mutual interests with' those of sion and the development ofthe larger community, and for . social services, e s p e cia 11 yreducing still further the extent' 'through the activity' of publiclof avoidable' interruptions' of authoritiesoperations." -The best possible adjust-

Evidence of Unity mtmt of the means of produc-The President has character- 'tion to the progress of science

and technologylzed this report of his Advisory '~Seeing to it that the bene-Committee on, Labor-Manage- fits which make possible a morement Policy as "a higqly human way of life will be avail_meaningful and significant doc:. able not merely to the presentument" and one which can standas "a symbol of the maturity of generation but to the ,coming

genenitions as well.rthe parties to .the collective Unemployment Highbargaining relationship." He sees We sincerely hope that laborin the ,report "heartening' evi- and .'management will lOse nodence of the increased unity of time in addressing themselves topurpose in all, parts of the a serious analysis of these basicAmerican economy."

guidelines of a sound, wage­, The 'President's congratula- price-profit policy in terms ()f

tions to the members of the com- present _ day American condi­mittee willo prepared this unani- . tions.mous report will'undoubtedly be 'We further hope that, in doing

;-echoed by all those who are so, they will give special atten-,persuaded, in the words, of Pope tion to the problem of providingJohn XXIII's' recent encylical, employment to the greatestChristianity and Social Progress" number of workers' and elimi­that man's aim must be to nating some of the grosser ine:..achieve in social justice l;l society quities ,in the distribution ()f"in 'which -all economic activity national income.'can b~ conducted not merely for It is little short of a nationalprivate gain but also in the in- scandal that, in this, the most.'terests of the common good.", productive. and most affluent

The specific de'mands or re": society in the history of .thequirements',of the common good world, the rate of unemploymentin the field of wages, pric'es and is 'stilI dangerously high andprofits cannot be easily defined that extreme poverty is still theor determined. Weare confi- lot of such a large percentage ofdent, however, that labor and OUr' citizens.management in the United States Need Vigilanceare sufficiently mature and re- We have made substantialsponsible to be able to spell' economic progress in the Unitedthem out with adequate preci- States over the course of thesion if, in cooperation with rep- years and, give a minimum ofresentatives of the public and good sense and public spirit onof the government, they will the part of labor a'nd manage­continue to work at the task ment as well as on the part of'~ith sincerity and perservance. government officials, we can

Useful Guidelines expect to make even 'greaterPope John's 'encyclical should progress in the years' that lie

prove to be helpful in this' re- ahead.gard. 'The encyclical does not But the spirit of Labor Day,pretend' to say what the precise with its traditional emphasis ondemands of the common good the dignity and worth of themight be at any given time or individual human being, shouldin any given country, but it does serve !o remind Us that economicprovide us with some useful progress is not lin end in itself;

, guidelines' of a general nature. that, in the words of Pope John'sIt says that the demands of the encyclical, it "must be accom­common good on the national panied by a correspond'ing sociallevel include the following con- progress so that all classes ofsideration~: ' citizens can participate in the

increased productivity."-Employment of the greatest The encyclical adds that "the

possible number of workers utmost vigilance and effort areneeded, to insure that social in­equalities, so far from ii'l­creasing, are reducea to a mini­mum."

Now is the time for'labor andmanagement in the UnitedStates to face up to this chal­lenge with renewed vigor anddetermination. We are confidentthat they will do so out of thehighest motives of justice andcharity.

Labor;

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Th"':S., ,Aug. 30, ,1962~;

Stresses

18

Continued from Page One -The statement says that labor

and management are "sufficient­ly mature and responsible" to,spell out the requirements of

,the common gooa in wages,prices and prOfits, adding thatthe Pope's encyclical will behelpful in this task. '

This encyclical, the statement, says, 'does not give precise, de.:.mands of the common good ineach country, but it does offer

'''useful guidelines of a general'nature." The complete statementfollo~s~ ,

The President of the United,States in January of this year,called' upon labor and manage­ment to use their concentrated.economic power with a high de..:gree of social responsibility andwith a se'nsitive concern for thepublic interest,

In those sectors of the econ­omy where both companies and

,unions possess substantial mar­ket power, the President P?intedout in his annual' Economic Re­port, the interplay of price andwage decisions could trigger off

-Et 'another round of inflation. "Ifthis were to occur," he con­tinued "the whole Nation couldbe th~ victim."

Nation Would Pa,.The President hastened to add,

'however that he himself did notbelieve that American businessor labor will allow this to hap­pen. We can rely, he said, on"the good sense anq the publicspirit of our business and laborleaders" to hold the line againstinflation.

Time alone will tell whetherthis expression of confidence byour Chief Executive in "the goodsense and the public spirit" oflabor and management was fully~aIT~~~ ,

We hope it was; for if laborand management were to dem­onstrate that they did not merit,such confidence-if they were toprove themselves either unableor unwilling to reconcile theirown interests with the over­riding demands of the' commongood-not only they themselvesbut ultimately the Nation as awhole would have to pay aheavy price for their lack ofstatesmanship.

Collective BargainingWhat is really at stake here,

among other things, is the veryinstitution of free collective bar­gai'ning as we have come toknow it in the United States. Wehave reached the point, in the

, words 'of one economist, "when'collective bar g a i nj n g 'mustevolve or perish."

Another way of saying thesame thing is, that if collectivebargaining fails to ser.ve thepublic interest, it may well be

'~ supplanted, under any politicaladministration, by sorrie form ofcompulsory arbitration, call itwhatever you will.

The times are so serious and:our Nation is faced unexpected­'ly with so many difficulties. a:nd-uncertainties in the competItlVeworld 'market that collectivebargainirig could become an out­moded luxury in which laborand man age men t could no,longer indulge themselves ex­cept at the risk of caIling dowa'a plague on both their houses.

Significant stepFo'rtu~ateiy there is reason

to believe that' labor and man­agement are determined to avoidsuch a catastrophe, therebyjustifying the President's confi­

,dence in their 'good sense andpublic spirit.

During recent months out­standing representatives of, bothgroups have been meeting regu­larly under Presidential auspicesto refine their understanding ofthe public ~ interest and, morespecifically, to take a new look'at collective -bargaining in thelight of the common good., The unanimous report of this~ational labor - managementcommittee on the subject 'of col_

• , lective bargaining was trans­mitted to the President just afew months ago. This report, al­though couched in rather vaguegeneralities, marks a I significant~~ep in the right direction.

Page 19: 08.30.62

19

Franciscan Fathers600 Pleasant StreetNew Bedford, Mass.

Open Evenings

Where A

GOOD NAME

Means A'GREAT DfAL

565 MILL STREET

NEW BEDFORD

GEO. O'HARAI

CHEVROLET

THE ANCHOR­Thurs., Aug. 30, 1962'

Pll'e~ate !m.~tife~

As Air forceCh'a~lai~ Chi'ef

WASHINGTON (NC) ­'Msgr. (Maj. Gen.) TerrenooP. Finnegan,' 58, has retiJl'oo

,as Chief of U.S. Air F01l'CGChaplains after nearly a quartercentury of military, service.

, The Monsignor, a priest' of the':j...', Norwich, Conn., cUocese, is suc-, eeeded by Chaplain (Brig. ~n.)" Robert P. Taylor, 51, a Baptist

j minister, who has been nomi­nated for the rank of major gen.­eral, the Department of Defense,announced. Chaplain Taylor haDbeen Deputy Chief of Air ForceChaplains since July I, 1958when Msgr. Finnegan took overthe post as chief.

Father (Col.) Edwin R. Chess,49, of the Chicago archdiocese,assigned, as command chaplainfor the U.S. Air Force SecurityService at San Antonio, ,Tex.,becomes Deputy Chief of Chap­lains.. He has been nominated "­fOi" tile rank of brigadier gener-al.

A native of Norwich, Conn.,Msgr. Finnegan began his mili­tary service in April, 1938. Hemade his studies for the priest­hood' at St. Thomas Seminary,Hartford, and sf? Mary's Semi­nary, Baltimore. He was or­dained in 1930 and elevated 00Monsignor in 1956.

During World War II, in 1942.­43;' Msgr. Finnegan served onGuadalcanal and was a wardedthe Brone Star Medal. He servedseveral tours of duty in thePacific area.

Our Lady's Chapel

" '

t~j ST. ',J UDE; SOLEMN NOVENA! OF NINE THURSDAYS l~~ IN PREPARATION FOR FEAST ~• OCTOBER 28th. 1;1IBegins Thursday, Se~tember6th 11

II" pre~~~;'E~os;~~~;~'~~~'~l, ~ 10:00 A.M.-12:10 Noo~':10, 7 and 8 P.Mfl

:<:;

\ RADIO NOVENA" WSAR - Fall River-1480 on Dial- 6:45 P.M.

WPLM ..:- Plymouth', 1390· on Dial- 6 :45' P.M.WJDA- Boston . ·1300 oil Dial-ll :05 a.m.WARE-Springfield 1250 on Dial- 9 :45 a.m.·

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HEATING OIL

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CHARlES F. VARGAS254 ROCKDALE AVENUINEW BEDFORD, MASS.

Pro Football Declines Suggestion'To Aid Declining Co~lege Game

NEW YORK (NC) - Profes- working out a method 'of' sup­sional football spokesmen gave porting college football. AmongehoJrt ,shrift to a suggestion by a other things, he suggested: "IfWliversity president· that "001- the ,American ,Cyanamid ~orp.

kilges neek direct support from can sponsor a chemistry studentthose that benefit the most loy at Xavier University, I do notcOntinuing football-namely, the see why the Cleveland Browns,

. professional teams." 'for example, could not sponsorThe bleak picture of Catholic 11 student quarterback without

',collegiate football was painted ,calling the plays."by Father Paul L. O'Connor, ,S.J., Financial Squeezep~esident of Xavier University" To the suggestions Com:mis-Cincinnati, in an article, "Foot- sioner Joe Foss of the American,ball Flunks Out" in the Septem- "Football League' responded: "Ibel' issue of Information maga- do think professional teams andzine published here. leagues owe m,uch to the col-

The article said only five leges and should contribute inCathOlic universities - Notre every way acceptable to their .Dame, Bostor College, Holy football programs. But this mustCrOBs, Villanova and Detroit - 'be done within the financialare in big-time football today, means of the donor." And Q

while three-Xavier of Cincln- spokesman for the Nationalnati, John Carroll of Cleveland Football League was quoted asand Santa Clara-are playing saying: "A pro team' would not''minO? football." finance the education of an ath-

Debt to Colleges lete to whom 'it has no claim."Father O'Connor said:"Pro- The financial squeeze Wl:\S

fessional teams and leagues owe listed as the prime cause for themuch to the collep,es and should decline in Catholic college foot­contribute ih every way to their ball. Other causes were listed as

' football programs." He, said poor attendanCe at games, year­without outside support the around competition from otherfuture of Catholic college inter_ sport9 and televising of majorcollegiate football looks drab. college and pro football games.He added:. "If the colleges drop The article said: "Television'stheir programs,' the professional 'living room stadium' has proventeamn would have to establish much more comfortable andcostly minor league systems in there is no admission charge."Qrder to keep up their presenthigh quality of performance." .

The Jesuit educator said itshould not be too difficult 'lD

LARIVIERE'S,.Pharmacy·

Prescriptions called forand delivered

HEADQUARTERS, FORDIETETIC'SUPPLIES

600 Cofta§6 St. WV ~.,439New a.dfotcl

world championship hisk9aI. fiewas amateur flyweight cham­pion of the Republic of Panamafor three years'. He turned semi­professional 'and was on a'threshold of a pro career whenhe found there "was somethingmissing in the right game" andhung up his gloves.

uDishonest managers andcrooked referees had wormedtheir way into the sport," Law­rence said. He first considered acareer in the priesthood after'reading the Shepherd, a maga­zine for young men publishedhere by the Future Priest Club.

In 'the seminary, he said, hefound realization of ilis boyhoodideals-"models who were not,boxers, but real champions likeSt. Francis Xavier and FatherDamian of Mo~okai.H

postcards than it does. in realtty.It can't be compared to RenwayPark for aesthetic appeal. forexample. The exterior drabnessreminds one of the old BabcockStreet approa:h to Braves Field.

Just inside the grandstand en­trance is a plethora of vendors'booths which are lighted in such11 manner as to lend a garrishatmosphere to the compactedarea. The grandstand itself is atriple tiered affair and the num­ber of obstructed view seats are 'many. Yes, you guessed it; weGrew a plate blocking stanchion.

They even identify the Um­piKes' lrOQm. which we thoughtunusual. but this made BillStewart's contacting Jocko Con.-- VISITS NEWLY ORDAINED:, At the CastlegandolfoIoIll that much easier after the- ' Dr ".c th S dgame. ConlODWas a. long time Summer house of Rome's . ban UmversIty Oll eacreparlner- of Bin's father who for Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith, which trainsy~s was one of the NUs most students. from mission. territories for the pri~~thood, a newr:cspected .!ll'biters. Bill Jr. now' subdeacon kisses the ring of Pope .f~hn XXIII. Other newlycoaches. tmeemajol' sports at ·:ordained. subdeacons look on smiling their approval. ,NCBosfon English :Bigb and in his, .' , .own right Is' II: noted footbSU,.hoclrey and baseball official.

Football '€linieThe occasion for our presence

in Pittsburgh concerned 'theromua! clinic of the Ii:asternIntercoll~giateFootball Officials'Association which was hostedby the University of P\ttsburgh.and the PittsburghChaptei,Ii:.A.1.F.0. In attil!lldance, fromthis area were Don Dwyei' 'ofDartmoutll1 and Nick CarigIia,Warren, R. I.

An inspiring incident and, rbelieve, Q keen insight into thecharacter of these men whohandle college games in the East,was the lar~ turnout for Massand Communion on Saturdayprio? to the lUlnuai written ex­amination on rules and proce-'dUKe. A feature of the banquetclosing the clinic was the awardof a lifetime gold .pass to JoeMcKenney of Boston, ex B.C.grid immortal and present Direc­tor of Physical Education for theBoston School System.

And -so, we are about to tUrnthe pages of the sports Calendarand welcome football on 'thescene, though the pennant racesin both major leagues havetightened considerably in thelast couple 'Of weeks. Next timearound we'll· endeavor to reviewfor you the major grid rulechanges - there aren't many­and then it'll be about that timefor the Falmouth Jamboree andthe school season to follow.

Former Amateur Boxing ChampionNow Student .for Priesthood

TECHNY (NC) - A onetimetop-ranked flyweight boxer' inhis ,native Pans. ta ,is now' astudent fOT the Society of theDivine ,Word mIssionary ptiest­hood here in Illinois

Seminarian Albert Lawrence,S.V.D., 28-year-old' Negro, hasfour more years of study beforeordination. He said: "I still wantto fight-not other men, but' sin.I still want to win a crown-nota perishable one for myself, butan eternal one for others. I stillwant to be a champlon--a miD­aionary champion for Christ."

"Something Mlsstng'Lawrence said when he wl,ls 15

boxing was his only interest, a

70,000 Particip~te,

In Mission ClosingBRASILIA (NC)-More than

70,000 ,persons gathered In thecentral square of Brazil's neweapital to participate in cere­monies closing the first Ho~

Mission of the People.During the mission, which was

v directed by Capuchin Fathers2,000 marriages took place, over100,000 faithful received Ho~

Communion anel there were 400conversions. ..f'

...d.~;..

Alan O'Neil NE eyO Tit~ist;

Cards 71 Fo'r New RecordBy J2clt Kmeavy

.Ahm O'Nefl crf Fall River fired Do tourney record 71 towin senior division laurels in the annual New England,CYOgolf toumament at the ThIanchester, C,Oml. Country Clublast Monday. A SGb par back nine 33, highlighted bybirdies cn, the' 17th and 18thholea, enabled the slenderP.C. graduate to outdistaneethe select field. O'Neil wasnamed recipient of tOO TedCooney 'fiophy awarded annu­ally to th€ tour­ney's oustand­perfonner.

On the- base­ball front, St.Patricks of Fall:>River annexedan mnprec­edented th ~ r dsucCessive Dioo­, esan champion-ship by defeat­ing ImmaculateComeption 1£New Bedford two straight 'mtheir best of three weekendseries. The def~ tiWsto gotoff to a winging start em Satur­day when Bill Walkden fired 11>'three hitter at the Immacs en­roum to a 6-4 victory. He andJ"o~,.Kardosz&wapped positionsfor the Sunday encounter andJohn went the distance' in St.Patricks' 8-4 'win;The~big man at the plate in

the series, h9wever, was IC's Ray ,Costa who collected III total ofsix hits in seVe>! trips. AI Cwikla,St. Patricks' veteran third base­man' and field captain, closedcmt a brilUant ~areer going 3ftJr4 in Sunday's encounter. Two

, of AI's safeties were triples' goodfor S RBIs.

A check of St. Patricks' recordreveals the compiete dominanceexerted by shiPPe? Gus Kim-

o yon's charges over CYO inter­mediate competition in the pastthree yearll. During that spanthey went undefeated in series 'play and during the course ofX'egular season com'petition theywere defeated but onee-, a trulyremarkable performance.

Forhes FieldWe had our first opportunity,

in many years to sees NationalLeague game last' Thursday'nigp.t, a 4-0 victory for thePirates and Vern Law over theHouston Colts at Forbes Field,Pittsburgh. It was a fast, well­played contellt, taking only onehour and fifty-two minutes tocomplete. For this several travelweary football officials'from thisarea' were particularly gratefuL

This Was our first visit to thehome of the 1960 World Cham­pion Pirates and we must, con­fess that Forbes Field comesthroueh much better on picture

Page 20: 08.30.62

20 THE ANCHOR-DiOcese of Fall River-Thurs" Aug. 30,1962

Truly -Christian Education Forms' Souls for Heaven

MOO'HER MARY CLAUDINK

~d ";ith some pious corri~anioit8,forc-ed a charitable society tocarryon, the, work. Among' hell''early assoCiates was' Pauline

'"Jaricot, the 'future foundress o~the Association 'for, the Propa:'gation oft~e Faith. On Feb.. 25,1823, Claudine, was clothed Witlillthe religioUs habit and took thoname ,of' Mother 'MlU7 St,Ignatius.

Christlike Love, , The call to' :religious life came'in the form of a gentle tap atthe door 'vhen the Abbe Coindrefound two little 'orphan girls illl

,rags' arid confided them bl»'Claudine's care. For 14 yearsMother St. Ignatius ~as to ruleas Mother General of the Con­gregation. Self effacing and gen:..erous, she was always ready toattribute the foundation of thoInstitute to Rev. Andre Coindre.

The moving power in ,MotheX'St. Ignatius' life was her Christ­like love. She gave it to God and!then to others, especially God'olittle ones. I~ 'Was ,a love wit~~ut

stint aild without limit. She gaveand asked for nothing ,in return.That was her spirit and It waothe spirit whIch 'she gave to-he.?community.• t ,

, Mother St. Ignatius laboreduntil her death in 1837. The Cureof Ars said, "That is a 'commun­'ity that was started the' rightway." In humility, and poverty,the devoted foundress sowed

'the 'seed that has grown into 0-large and ,flourishing tree, 'who~braJ,lches _sprelld out oV,er siItcOntinents.

,: Barely -four years after thedeath of the foundress,' the Con­gregation became a missionarysociety, sending out missionariesto India,~where for' over, a cen­tury, they' have labored to

'spread the Faith among infidelsand to preserve it amongCatholics.

Jesus ~nd Mary."Claudine' T~evene,t Fo.undre~ i

The Congregation of Jesusand',Mary was founded In ~yons;

France towards the beginning ofthe nineteenth century. ClaudineThevenet, ,the foundress, b~~ ,longed ,to a much respectedfamily of silk merchants of ,that

, cIty. Sge ,was only 19 years ofage when the French Revolutiondevastated the country.

During the reign of terror, her,two brothers were taken prj's..­'o'ners with the noblest youth of'Lyons. At, the risk, of her ownlife, Claudine visited them' sev­eral times -in disguise in order

, to bring them food and clothingand encourage them.

One day when she was has-,ening on this errand of mercy,she met a long line of prisonersbeing led to execution; amongthem were her brothers. Theymanaged to ~hisper to her as shepressed close to them in thecrowd: "Forgive, Clady, as wedo." With a broken heart but,heroic constancy, she stood bywhile they were shot, murmur­ing over and over, "Father, for­give the murderers."

From that day forth, Claudinecared only for her family 'andthe poor"":""the sick, the aban­doned a,nd the little childrengrowing 'up' without the knowl­edge _'of God. She succored them

JESUS MARY ACADEMY~ FALL RIVER

FATHER ADRIEN', BERNIER,

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"Praised Forever Be Jesusand Mary!" Christ hearsan'd responds to 'this perfectact of love millions of timesdaily, as the Religious of Jesus

,and Mary reiterate ~he holiestaspiration of, Mother Mary St.Ignatius, (Marie Claudine Thev­enet), beloved foundress of theCongregation of Jesus and Mary.

In a similar manner and fromthe moment a child is, enrolledas a student of Jesus and Mary,he or I she is tau'ght the all-im-

'portant meaning and value of, this beautiful and unifying mot­to, and; through reverent prac­tice,repeats tl1is significant in­vocation before every class.

In this way, pupils become co­operative agents in the great andnoble task performed in theirbe :lalf and, many' years ago,commissioned by Christ throughRev. Mother Mary St. IgnatiusR.J.M. to form souls for Heavenby a truly Christian education!

First in U. S.The first Jesus Mary founda­

tion in the United States was inFall River; ,and it is a1s<> theoldest bi-lingual school in this

-city. In 1874, a zealous and P\OUSpriest, Father Pierre Jean Bap­tiste Bedard, laid the foundation,of a new pariiiP in Flint Village ­-Notre Dame Parish.

Numerous and noble were the pare t,he fa~ulties ,of the child Mary direct two ~chools in Fan minds is the same that unitesdreams of the ,you'ng pastor 'as ',to accept the,light of Faith and River. Fifteen nuns staff Notre ,alumnae,students and teachersb.e ,faced, the future. He ,wanted to collaborate with the action of ' ,Dame and teach', apriroxi~ately, 'in all-t,he ',Jesus..,Mary establish-schools, a cpnvent, .an orphanage 'Grace., 600 ' students. ' The 'principal is' ments the ,world over, whether, itand, a church dedIcated to, ~ur. ' ' ' Happiness of ,Others Mother St. Roland. Two hundred ,be in' a' convent in Rome, Eng-,~adY.. A~ early as 1876,. ,he 111-' Thoroughly, c(;nlviriced of, th,e 'students attend' the senior high land, 'Ireland, Spain, France,vlte~' m?-Ispen~able collabOrators statement made by st; Thomas school. Beginning in ~eptembei', Germ,ariy; Switzerland, India,~ ~IS pioneermg work--the~~.., 'Aquinas that "The miild is' nOt 'the' students' will 'don a new' Afr~ca" Canada, -South' America,llglOUS of' Jesus and, Mary from, 'a vesselt(» be 'filled but it is 'a 'sChool uniform ;consisting ot a ,Mexico, Cuba.'o~ .~ustralia; Th-e

,Quebec. .. ".. .' , " fire to be 'enkindled;', the school' ' plaid pleated skirt and a mivy". aim remai~"tQ: FQrm ,souls fQrT~lese relIgIOUS, arr!ved ~n the tries to impress upon Its students blue blazer. Because of, limited ',He,aven: ,by a truly Christian ,edu­

Spring of 1877 .to ~pen th~Ir firs~ ,that they must los,:, themselves ,space, only day pupils will at": 'cationjlild the'same motto ralliescon~ent ~n ~~~rIc~nsod. The, in 'something greater'than them- ,tend the Academy; 'itS memb'l:!rs: "Praised forever bepans? ~tIll I.n Its mfancy was selves-and that they will neverflo~nshmg; It took care of a be' happy unless they strive forparIsh school,. an orp?anage, a the happiness of others; .'convent, school, boardmg quar- ".', -;.... 'ters for working girls night Co-currIcular actIVItIes, suchschool and, Sunday schooi. ,as the Sodalit.y of Our Lad~,

M Pr st C.C.D., the NatlOnal Honor l;)OCl-sgr. . evo _ . ety, the Stud,ent Council, Libra:'

In 1~84, death mterrupte~ the ry, Clubs, Journalism Club, Year-,pastor s plans and'seemed lIkely book Staff Dramatics Orchestrato..compro~ise his life work.' Glee Club' and Atlilehcs help t~DIVIn~ ProvIde?ce, however, was develop well integrated person-watchmg apd m 1888, Fat~er J. alities. 'A. Prevost, later MonSIg,no~, From the children who learnedcame to Notre Dame where hiS within the walls of our Jesus

, name will ~ive forever in the an- Mary classroom's the all im'poi.. 'n~ls of,. parIsh an~ sch.ool. :Under, tant lessons of knowing and,hiS enlIght;ned ~IrectIon, an era, serving God has c~me a contin­Qf expanSIOn began for Jesus .gent of priests, brothers 'and Sis­Ma~~ A?a~emy. In 1887, ..the ,'ters. who in, turn are preachingmam' bUIldmg of the academy 'to' others 'the' words ',of. thewasbuilt-in 1900; Notre Da~e Gospel.' ,School. In '~928, th: south wmg . Among them we mention withwas, added, and, III 1939, the f r . f 1 g·t· t 'd

. auditorium. a e: mg ,0 e lIma e prI eThough methods and school MonSIgnor Alfred E. Bon~leau,

pastor at Notre Dame; MonSIgnorprograms have changed through.. Alb t B b to f St MOTHER ST REGINALD' R J Mout the years' the education aims ,er eru e, pas r.o . ., •• •

.' -, A th " Ch r it New Bedford'of the pIOneer nuns have re.. n ony s _ u c , , . ' , ,A flexI'ble curriculum, Ul' 0'£-inained the same to this day lor Fat,he~ Anat!>le DesmaraIs" pas-it is the aim set for the' Religious tor of St. James' Church,. Taun- fered the pupil who_ ~ishes toby their Mot~er Foundress--to ton; Father A:rthur DupuUl, pas- choose a college" a,'nursing or a

,form solus for Heaven; This is a tor at St. LoUIS ~f Franc~,. Swan_ business cateer.. Mother" Maryprecious heritage which remains ~ea; Father Lorenzo ,MoralS, pas~ Cl~udin~ is prinCipal of theas challenging today as it waS tor atSt.GC<?,r~e Church, ,West-:- Academy. Rev. Mother St. Jean

.. ioo 'years' ago. p?rt;, Rev. Wl1lIa~ Crane, supe-',?"Baptisteis 'Superior' at JesWiIn' pursuit of' this ideal the , rior of the Marlst Fathers in Mary :Convent, " ,

schOOl takes into account not . Boston. '. Three qu~rter~ 'of a ,centurYonly the' spiritual and moral de.. Alumnae Promln~nt ,has formed here.'in ,Fall River avelopment of each individual ,Among the 'scores of nuns, we large Jesus aild.Mary family,but the physical, the social and shall mention but a few: Mot~er cherishing its, oWn, ideaIs andthe intellectual as well. It is the St. Therese of the Infant Jesus, cultural backgrou,nd. Yet thework of true educators to pre- now a member of the General spirit that binds hearts and

,Council at the Motherhouse inRome; Mother Mary of theSaviour, Assistant Provincial atHyattsville, Md.; Mother MaryGertrude, superior in Pakistan,India; Rev. Mother Bernard,Superior at St. Michael's, OceanGrove; Mother St. Aloysius,bursar at Hyattsville; Mother St.Barbara in India. ., Scores of nurses, business,

women, hard ~ working par­ents, staunch parishioners, allpraise ,through their Christianliving the unsung 'deeds of thelaborious and fruit:l'ul years spentat the Jesus Mary schooIs inNotre Dame Parish. '

Flexible Curriculum, The alumnae association, or­ganized in 1917, now under theaj:>le leadershIp of its president,Mrs. Paul Dumais" still provesits love and loyalty to AlmaMater. _

MOTHER ,JOHN BAnlS1:" Toda7 the Religious of !esWl~ n '1 " , .---l1l/I' A.'"

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