06.22.61

Page 1

Bishop" Names New Administrator

Fr.. Gomes to Direct· Fall River Parish

The ANCHOR An Anchor of the 80ul, filure and Pi'Nl'1t-BT. PAUL

:j .~. " ;

lFaU River, Mass., Thursday, June 22, 1961

Vol. 5, No. 26

© 1961

The Anchor

PRICE lOe

$4,00 por Year

Socond Clau Mail PrivilegeD Authorized at Fall River, Mass,

Attleboro Families Provide' Homes for Two Cubans

REV. ANTHONY M. GOMES

Rev. Anthony M. Gomes is the new administrator at Our Lady of the Angels Church in Fall River. Appointments of the Santo Christo Church (Fall River) curate as the successor to the late Rev. James M. Mendes was announced today by the Most Reverend attended the Seminary <l\f AnJames L. Connolly, Bishop gora in the Azores for one yeai' of Fall River. Fr. Mendes where he studied theology. Foldied May 25 last. The desig- lowing this, Father Gomes renation of Father Gomes is effec- turned to St. Bernard's in Rochester for three more years gg tive on Wednesday, June 28. The new Fall River adminis- study in theology. The new administrator WOO trator is a native of Taunton. He is the son of Antonio J .. and ordained to the priesthood on Maria (Baptista) Gomes. Ha June 4, 1942 in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, by tho was 'born on pec. 16, ~914. Father Gomes attended the late Most Rev. James E. Cas-public schools of his native sidy, third Bishop of the DiOc> T'aunton and then matriculated Dese of Fall River. His first assignment was as t'l at Notre Dame UniveI'sity in curate at St. Jolm the Bapti~ South Bend, Ind. He then pursued his philoso- Church in New Bedford where phy course at St. Bernard's Sem- he served for 11 years. Fathe!' Turn to Page Seventeellll inary in Rochester.• Then, he

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Archbishop Vagnozzi Warns Intellectuals

MILWAUKEE (NC) , - The Apostolic Delegate to tlt. Because six Attleboro couples take seriously the Gospel U.S. sounded a warning here to Catholic intellectuals who a4monition to shelter the' homeless, two Cuban refugees. wurt secularism in the hope of being accepted in intellectuai are starting a new life in this Diocese. They are Armando circles. Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi said in the baccalau.Piquero and Manuel Soto and they arrived ,in Attleboro reate sermon at·· Marquette ..duce interpretations, of Cathoiie tHrough the efforts of mem:. ' University., : from which he ' teaching which often appear to ", . ' .. with Rev. John E. 'Boyd of the r~eived an honorar-y :degree; be· contradictory to what· has bers of the Christian' Family Catholic Welfare 'Bureau in Fall that he. is "concerned. with' ooen believed not only in the M.ovement, a lay, apostolic " River. He directed them to ,thetineasiness and preocciJpa- last century· but in, the precedP. organization designed to' Catholic CharitieR in l\1iami, _tions of some Cath'olic intellec- ing centur·ies as well,'; help Catholie husbands, and Florida, where most' Cubaa tuals." . . Archbishop \'agnozzi said'th. wives to put into practice i!Il refugees are concentrated. They "seem'to feel," he· stated, fiJ;st area of danger relates to the their daily lives the teachings of ' Through Sister Mary Christo"that the Catholic intellectual '''dispute amongst Catholic scholChrist. pher, O.P., director of the Centro effort of today does not seem to . ars concerning the idea of hisEach year CFM national head- Hispano Catolieo in Miami, armeasure up satisfactorily with ,tory as applied to both the OW ql1al'lers issues a handbook of rangements were made,' not for' the level of the secular effort, ' and New Testarne.nts." Buggested meetings and activities 'll family, but for two single men that an excessive attachment to Noting tha~ this dispute takes for members. This year interna- to accept the Attleboro hospitaltraditional positions appears to its foundation from Pius XII'II tiona I life is being 'studied. ity. prevent the Church from freely request that exegetes investigatlii "We thought for a long time Many Cubans are afraid of facing problems with adequate the "literary meaning" of Sacred /about what we could do in this what they've heard of our Northanswers and assuring directions." Scripture, the Archbishop addedc area," explained Mr. and Mrs. ern cold weather," said Mr. Fin"Whether some of the most reEdward Finerty, one of the At- erty, "and also many are hoping "They seem to feel," he continued, "that every effort has to cent efforts to give us this liter~ tleboro CFM couples, "and we to return to Cuba eventually and be made in order to build a ary meaning are in consonanco decided we would like to SpOil- prefer to stay in nearby Florbridge between modern secular with the teaching of the Churc~ sor a Cuban family." ida." The group began inquiries thought and Catholic thought, it is not for me to say." The group is still hoping to even to the point of digressing "But I would only remark," b4t sponsor a family, however, hearfrom positions traditionally ac- continued, "that as the protagtened by their success in finding cepted in .the intellectual circleD ,onists of toe new position should work and living accommodations of today. not summarily be accused of for Mr. Piquero and. Mr. Soto. "In an attempt to obtain thin heresy, neither should they insist "We ourselves have had inHarold F. Hanewich, 'Osacknowledgement and accept- in presenting as definitive truth quiries from other CFM groups FORCED OUT: When they ance they are inclined. to introterville, will be a teacher of who would like to take on a Turn to .Page Fourteen mathematics, head baseball similar, project," ,said Mr. Fin- refused to teach under comeoach and assistant football erty, "and Sister Christopher. munist s,upervision in' parocoach at Bishop Stang High Turn to Page Seventeen' chial schools now national~chool, North Dartmouth, effec, ized under Fidel Castro, tive in September, according to Blessing , , MIAMI (NO) Cuba's cOmmunist regime moved , tHese nuns were ordered out announcement made by the DioOoo' Bishop Connolly wilt bless closer to outrigh:t founding of a national church as superiors of Cuba. Arriving at Baltiesan Catholic School Depart&be . new st. Ann's' Church. inent.. of many religiou8 orders .were ordered to leave the"island. more, they prefer exile to lltaynham, at 4 Sanday after. Mr. Hanewich, a ,teacher at There had'been prior evidence o{the regime's intent in this - . Marxist 'communism. DOGDo Ju17 16. Barnstable High School for the '. regard. But now according past few years, previously taught to sourCes the foundLaSalle Academy, Providence. . iug. ,of a national chu·rch • and ,Barnstable Junior, High' $chool. , , He attended St. Raphael'Tt Academy, Pawtucket and Boston . " .'. ,By Patricja M c G o w a n . , ': churches 'on the island are now €ollege, participati~g in varsity . T,,,!O 'b.rothers:·froRi· st. A.,ime,'s par,ish', F'all River, haw· found 'the same vocation:- o~~upied by m'illtia, indica~i!lg they may soon be the scene of football, and baseball. At Boston' College he was a member, of the as De Montfor't Father,S. They are Very Rev. Flavius Gamache,S.M.M. and Rev. Lionel national :church services. . " Other of' PremierCastroi • College . ,World Series Baseballl. Gamache, S.M.M. They' were members of. a ,unique eighth grade,·that ,graduated from' Team. St. Anne's School'in 1929. Four boys in the cla8S entered :the'De:Montfort FatherS and militia guard the outside of other churches where Mass is cel&' He is married to the former Ann Keating Higgins, of Provihave persevered. In adbrated. dence and is the father of three dition to the Gamache broAll priests in the Camaguey boys. He is a member of Our thers, the others were Rev. diocese of Bishop Carlos Rit! Angles have been expelled. It Lady of the Assumption parish, Roger Charest, S.M.M. and was estimated that more than 50 Osterville. Rev. Reginald Gilman, S,M.M. priests. were ·affected by the 'Father Charest is editor of order that gave them 48 hours to Queen of All Hearts magazine, leave Cuba. in addition to handling a fulllecThe superiors of some orders ture schedule throughout the were given five days in which United States. Father Gilman i5 to take' refuge in the U. S. or a pastor in Noblesville, Ind. other countries. More than 450 Father Flavius' most recent nuns from various orders hav~ , visit to the Diocese came last arrived in the Miami diocese week when he escorted Bishop since early May when the Castro ~.. Augustin; S.M.M., first nonreg i m e nationalized schools. African Negro Bishop and first Others have returned to motherHaitian to be in charge of a Diohouses in Spain, Mexico and cese in that country, on a visit Canada, while many have been to Prevost High School, Fall reassigned to missions in Latim River. F ALL RIVER VISITORS: A distinguished alumnus of America. The Bishop, exiled from hiD ' , Of the estimated 2,000 nUM Diocese of Port-au-Prince for' the Brothers of Christian Instruction, Bishop Augustin, who originally staffed school~ anti-communist activity, iG an, S.M.M., exiled Apostolic Administrator of the Diocese of homes for the aged and orphanalumnus of the Brothers of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, visits Prevost High School, Fall River. ages, about 100 remain en the Christian Instruction who staff Left to right: the Bishop; Very Rev. Flavius Gamache, island. • Prevost, and never misses an op. It- has been estimated that of ~rtunity to visit schools of the S.M.M., a Fall River native accompanying the Bishop and the 45 Jesuit priests stationed OD 'll'ura eo Page Eigh&eela JBro~her ,Ignatilis Of P r e v o s t . ' . TurD M Page 'rwelv. . HAROLD F... BANEWICB

Hanewich Coach At Stang. High

Cuban National Church Nearer As Castro Forces Clergy Out

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Transfer Rev. Anthony M. Gomes, assistant at Santo, Christo Churcb, Fall Riyer, to become Administrator' ,fJf Our Lady of An~e'hl Churcb, Fall River. Effective June 28, 1961~

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, Dr David Prial, Fall River Ii New Bedford Express Co., Auel'a bach Bathrobe c.:o., And~ Market Inc.

House Votes New II~portMeasu,e

.. WA.S~NGTON (Ne) -:- " . l;I~u~ ,of Representatives ,~ pa~d and sent to the Sena~.•

bill under which the Tariff Act ,,1930 would be a~ende(,~ benefit religious groups. · .The .bill (H. R. 4449) specifieIJ that cemeteries, schools, orphanages' and similar nonprofit age.... ei~s· operated by religious groupe . may' import certain religiOUll articles duty-free. .'By spelling out the right all . these agencies to share in the '. , dufy:':£fee privileges, the bin ~ solves 'problems in interpretatkIM that bave arisen under the aeL " The' measure also would ',.. altar 'screens--known as ieo'" ostases--to the list of duty-f~ articles, which already inc!iule. such items as pulpits, sbr~ 'MODEL CEREMONY: Catholic ceremony to aceom- Baptismal fonts and mosaiell. · -'. . pany annual Boy Scout Charter ,Night is 'given premiere

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at' St. Patrick's Church" Fall River.' Robert Floyd, Eagle . Sc~~~; is invested with necl(erchiefby Rev. Robert Kl:\szyriski '3s Robert Aubin, ass,istant Scoutmaster, an4 Harvey Donnelly" Scoutmaster, look on. Ceremony,' jf) intended as model for all Catholic troops in area.

WASHINGTON (NC)-A 1ft,. page bOOk on the proceedins- .. ~. 30th national conventiOll' GIl the National Council of CatboBi' Women beld in Las Vegas, Nw.., trom Oct. 31 to Nov. 4, has heeD published bel'e by the

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Religious' Tmining' Must Exceed That of Laity

"THE -ANCliORThurs., June 22, 1961

Vatican Prelate ,Visits Mosso ens In Mackenzue

ST. LOUIS (NC) - ·Religious vocations wtrl dwindle bless those entering receive better training than has been available in the past, the executive secretary of the Ila~~~mal Sister Formation Conference said here. Sister Annette Walters, on, ,leave more than mere numbers 'of apfrom the College of St. Oath- plicants. ~rine, St. Paul, Minn.,. to "It's not just the number," head' the Washington, D.C. she said. "The Holy See insists

OTTAWA (NC) - Msgro Luigi Del Gallo Raccagiovine, one of four Italian prelates in immediate at-

tendance on Pope John at the offices of the Sister Formation that coml9lunities select very Vatican is realizing a childhood Conference, said there are evi- carcfully today, and admit no dream-a visit to the Canadian dences that young people have one who will not be a worthy Far North missions. ohosen lay, rather than religious representative of the Church." Since he was a child, the Holy 'Vocations, because they wanted Bottueneck See 'prelate said, he has been to do apostolic work. There is one big bottleneck in stirred after reading, in French, She cited the case of the late Sister Formation today, she said. the works of the Oblate Fathers Dr. Thomas Dooley, who chose "There are not en'ough Sisters . in the difficult missions of the to remain a layman while per- trained to teach in the college Canadian Arctic. forming works normally done programs," she explained. There From Ottawa, where he haa by members of religious orders are 412 Sister Formation centers been the guest of the Apostolic in the mission fields. in the United States, and· "at Delegate, Archbishop Sebastiano least four-fifths of them" have Pope Pius XII Baggio, an old friend, Msgr. Del Religious, Sister Annette said not yet been able to train an Gallo will travel to the Mackenadquate staff for their purposes, 1ft a!1 interview, should' have ziemissions to sperid two weeks' training equal to or bettter than she declared. SCHOLARSHIP PARISH: Scholarship conscious is with Bishop Paul Piche, O.M.I.. She said the Sister Formation fttat of lay people. She noted that Immaculate Conception parish, Fall River. Accepting grants Vicar Apostolic of the Mackenzie. the late Pope Pius XII so in- Conference is sponsoring a felPapal Interest from Rev. Edward F. Dowling, pastor, are Raymond Comeau, structed superiors of the world's lowship project in hopes of obThe Italian prelate said Popo taIning 2,000 Ph,D: fellowships front, David Thomas, Jessica Mattos, James Harkin and ooligious Qrders in 1952. .. John is very interested in the , "We live in a world where the worth $5,000 each, for the pur- Henry Gillet, rear, left to right. Raymond will enter eighth Far North missions of Canada !Rost good can be done by those pose of educating Sister-teach- &"rade at Prevost grammar school; David and James are and ,as an expression of that inwho are most-trained," she said. ers at thc various Sister Formastudents at Bishop Stang; Jessica will enter Mt. St. Mary terest tho Pope gave him medaIa ""!\nd unless Religious have bet- tion centers. Academy;. and Henry is a senior at Coyle High School. All and rosaries to present to EsBest Buy ter' training than lay people, the While the money has been, grants 'are Paul Nogueira Memorial Scholarships from the kimos and Indians whom he will wry significance of the state of meet ?n his visit. eonsecrated virginity as the slow coming in, SQme foundation parish CYO with the exception of James' which is from Msgr. Del Gallo speaks both highest in the Church can easily officials have been enthusiastic. the Holy Name Society. French and English fluently. He One told the conference he felt l!Mt lost sight of." . ..." sometimes acts as interpreter in i~ was the "best- philanthropic Public Rcpresent'ative audiences of English Bishops She added that the .Holy See buy" his foundation could .make, with the Pope. ' fillS pointed out that the Sister since it would edtlcat~ teachers Msgr. Del Gallo said POp0 in .. an active' community is,'~ for teachers. Sister Annette, a com'ert from GUADALAJARA ( N C) .....; Me x i co, alerted Catholics John has high esteem for Gov~ublic and official representa-:Lutheranism, grew up in a small Mexico's Bishops have sent _,Ill against communism in a pastoral ernor General Georges Vanier !We of the Church," "Since the Sister today.is en", farming town in Wisconsin be- message to the Bishops of Cuba, letter. He said the Church can~ of Canada. Their personal friendgaged in a public, apostolic work, fore joining the Sisters of St; offering prayers and support in not remain silent in the face of ship,.began when Pope John was tltld is an official represcntative Joseph of Carondelet in 1929 in the latter's struggle against the ~ed efforts to' take Latin Amer- Papal Nuncio to France and dean St.. Paul. She holds her doctQr- procommunist regime of Premier i~a. He added: "We shmild never , of the diplomatic corps and Gello fit, the Church, it is important Vanier was Canadian Ambassa,a~low' 11' foreig~ invader to conthat!lhe be trained. adequate!y l!-te from the J]niver:;;ity of Minn- Fidel Castro. dor to France. esota, and did post-doctoral work The message was signed ~1! q,:,er our country and change our fJD represent the Church as the under a Fulbright scholarship, behalf of the Mexican Bishops good Christian institutions for ehurch wishes to be represen'iat the University of Louvain. TV' Courses by Jose Cardinal Garibi y Rivera, exotic political theories in which ed," she said. She was in St. Louis to give Archbishop of Guadalajara. It· God has no place." NEW YORK (NC) -A six. It is for this reaSQn, the Sisthe commencement address at stated: week surv-ey of educational teleflllr Formation Conference secFontbonne College. Effective Lesson vision comprising two three1leMry added, that the Holy See week credit courses, will bll "God grant that the events in' has directed religious superiors laid's Spoliqht New offered this Summer at Fordham your country may serve a~ an C'1l women to establish juniorates. University in New York City. effective lesson, sO that .our These are "seminaries" for wo- Aspect of Obscenity Word has been received here NEWARK (NC)-In a series peoples may not later become the nten, frankly modelcd after the of' the death of Rev. Manuel major seminaries for men, where of raids here, the Esse,JI; County prey of similar hardships." "If there is' no gain, "The remedy for our present Francisco Cordeiro, a priest in Sisters get three years of train- Sheriff's Office has turned the the 'loIS is ·obvious." the California Diocese of Moning after leaving the novitiate. spo'uight on anot~er' aspect of evils'," it continued, "is not to be foul).d in the tyrannical direc- terey-Fresno for 50 years, and in . Often receiving a college degree the obscenity racket. tion of communism, but. rather his youth a 'curate at Santo In the last six wee~s, four upon graduatiol'l, they get tl1oSt. Michael's photo studio opel'ators have been in a vitalization of our Christian Christo an d l'l)ug~ training in philosophy, Churches, FaB River and Our ibeology and psychology, as well arrested as t~e continuin'g inves- life.'; , The Cardinal recaIled that Ll}dy of Lourdes, Taunton. • . specific training in the ap- , tigation moves toward the close during the' persecution of Cath:' .rolic work of their community. of its se,cond year. ..l3orn . i,n Fern~is da LU~, San,· Previously police in this area olics in Mexico three decades Miguel, 'Azores, Father Cordeiro Training . 'Sister Annette said ·the Sister have struck at second-hand book ago, Cuba !tad offered him gen:' was, ordained in 1905 and came . !'ormation Conference has un- dealers, newsstand dealers, and erous hospitality." He went on: to : tJIe United States in 1906~ "While the Cuban revolution 'FQllowing his service in this 60vered 'evidence to indicate that mail order mel'chants in their gave you hope that ,it would Diocese, ~e served in varrous -'e'ability of a community' to drive ,on: obScenity: More 'tlian promote social 'ju'stice, true California churches and was a attract and hold gifted young 60 arrests have been made and Sisters is related Doth to the' more' than 15 convictiOns have democracy and mutual welfare; Navy chaplain in World War I. ·you prayed for its success . . . From 1937 until his retirement 4(Uality and the, length of the been obtained thus far: "But when the revolution in 1956 he was convent chaptraining it gave 'its members. friars Add Facility delivered itself into the hands of lain. 'In retirement he made his "If a girl is in a school where communism, we saw you rise home with two nieces in Pacific' 1Ite lay people are the best teafor Homeless Men llihers, sh~ is not going to· be GARRISON (NC)-Father An_ with holy strength to point out G~ove, Calif. attracted to the religious. life," gelus 'Delahunt, S.A., Superior the danger of atheism, of tyranny, of the destruction of 'the Ihe commetited. ' General of the Franciscan Friars But she indicated that m~jor of the Atonement; dedicated a Christian civilization and of • SAVE'TIME .~inari~ are interested " ,in new annex to the Friars' St.. human'dignity';' , • SAV-= IENERGY' LiC!! Christopher's Inn for homeless ; •. SAVE RUNNI.NG AROUND . men here~··. ' . '.' Therefore, the. message said, Excavating The two':storybrick" building "the Cuban: revolution, has .~ SAVE YOURSELF . .Contractors iecalled ' Matt·· Talbot Hall in hurled lies at the Bishops anei ~ '.. , Free 'M~il Forrm Two faculty members of St. honor, of the ·Irish working man violence against the clergy' and 9 ClOSS ST., FAI.RHAVEN Mary's Higli School, Taunton, and one~timealcoholicwhodied Catholic if\stitutions,particularly ':WYman 2-4862 against the schoois." . ' in 1925, and is now being considare recipients of grants for Sum~URRE~T'. DIVIDENDS' AT Meanwhile, Archbishop Octamer study, according to word ered for canonization for his viano CC C C',C C C'C C C =. Marquez Toriz ~ l'uebla, RAT_~ OF 3% A YEAR great penance' in later life. just received at the Holy Union .The annex will be reception Provincial House, Fall Rlver. . The . They are Sister Therese' Anna . center of the 50-year-old shelter Donova'n, prinCipal of"the 'raim~' which can care for 200 men at ' Paint and Wallpaper tad high school,' and Sister John 'a time. ' . Dupont Paint Mathilda Boudreau, 's Clen c e cor. Middle St teacher. , DRY CLEANING River Savings Bank - • ,422 Acu'sh, Ave. Sister Therese Anna, a docSCHOOL and floral candidate in history at Bos.Q"~*,,, . New Bedford :141 NO~ MAIN FUR STORAGE ' lJon College, has been invited by SUMMER SESSIONS PARKING the institution's gradl.late school . FALL RIVER , . Rear of Store SHORTHAND - TYPIN~ fllt be one of 24 Social' science teachers to attend an Institute in ENGLISH - NOTE HAND CLEA~NERS Ariterican Studies sponsored by the Coe Foundation. 34-44 Cohannet Street WELCOME VACATIONERS HYANNIS Sp. 5-1372 The invitation is extended to Taunton VA 2-6161 LIVE· LARGE KINB SiZE outstanding teachers in the sochil aeience field and the Summer work is intended to broaden DAUGHTERS·OF 'ST: PAUL ttteir outlook in history, civics, .social science and related areas. Invite young Virl. (14-23) to lobo, !la Chri.t·s vail" vineya;d as an Apostle 'of 'he Catholic Universi~:v Editions, Press. Rcidio Movies and te'", Sister John Mathilda will study vision, With these modern' moans. thoce at the Catholic University of \/Iissionary Siston. bring Christ's Doctri...", America under a grant from the 10 all, ,oga ,dloss of ,ace. color or crood. National Science Foundation. For ingorm!ltjon ,write til: 9 ~ §C&W1 Her work will be in fields of Mf[ df)(Jf-lr.ifl ~ REV MOTHER SUPIERIOR science related to the courses· she SG 5V: PAUL'S AVE. BOSTON 30, MACa. Ope" 6 P.M. Sa~. Night - CLOSIEIl) AU DAY SUNDAY ,:teaches at St. Mary~ , ~~OOCl~q-~

Bh;hops of Mexico Offer Support To Hierarchy Struggling in Cuba

Father Cordeiro Dies in West

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Tli: .. : '-:'-::~--D;ocese of Fall River-Thurs. Juhe 22,1961

The editor of the Question and Answer column does not guarantee to /!InStoer anonymous queries nor, letters from unidentifiable sources. In every instance the desire for anonymity will be respected. To that end, names are never appended, to the questions, but unless the letter is signed there is na assurance that any ci!ns ideration will be given it. A friend of mine told me that he believes in the theory of' evolution. Doesn't the Catholic Church forbid such a belief? The Catholic Church neither You have perhaps already affIrms nor denies the theory of thought of most, if not all of the evolution, though individual· articles that you will see listed Catholics, even Church authorhere, but at an'y rate, here they ities, may line up on either side are. of the question. A crucifix to remind us of the It is important to note that love that prompted Christ's sa'c"theory" ,in this sense of the rifice for the redemption of manword refers to a conclusion kind; a Bible, approved by the reached by unproven assumpChurch, a statue or picture of tions. Every so-called "missing the Sacred Heart, The Blessed link" so far discovered has Virgin, or some saint to whom proven to. be either fraudulent you may have a particular devoor very questionable. The Church tion. ' does not prohibit its members to Additionally, we would list: believe in the theory of evoluholy water and blessed' candles, tion, on condition that the holder because these articles together with a crucifix are necessary if of this theory accept the fact that at the moment the first the priest ever has to come on human being began to exist, it a sick call. came about through the immeIt is certainly advisable also diate intervention of 'God infusto have prayer books and rosing a spiritual soul into the ai'ies for each, member of the material used. family and a Catholic calendar The slime of the earth referred listing feast days, days of abstinence, fast, etc: and Catholic to in the Bible narration of creliterature and periodicals for the ation of the first man could possibly refer to mud, ~ust, the body reference of all. ' of a dead animal, a live animal The most important element or what have you. It is the perof all for "a truly Catholic home" sonal opinion of the editor of is the internal'devotion of which this column that the material the above-mentioned articles are used was literally 'slime,' but the -external manifestations. This Catholic Church has never as yet element seems to be already ,present in your case, if you are imposed this idea on Catholics. • • !. already discussing this aspect 01. On May 15 is the Feast of your future married life. the Invention of the Holy Cross. What is the meaning 01 What is the' origin of tIM this feast? "!First Friday" devotion? INVENTION is a word someThe FIRST FRIDAY devotion times used in English Churcll , originated'jfi the 17th century. calendars, taken directly from the Latin 'invenire' meaning to It started as a J'esult of one of the 12 promises of Christ to St. Mar- FIND. The feast of the "invengaret Mary Alacoque when He tion of the head of St. John the appeared to her. His last promise Baptist", sounds even more ludiwas: "I will grant the grace 01. crous. The feast celebrated on May final penitence to those who re- ' ceive Communion on the first 15, to which you refer commemFriday of nine consecutive orates the discovery of the true Cross upon which Christ was months." This devotion is one to give crucified in the year 326 aftel;' it honor to the Sacred Heart of had been hidden by infidels and buried f?r 180 years. Jesus in reparation for sin.

My fiance and I were dis4lussing furniture for our home after we are married. Could yOU give us a list of furnishings for a truly Catholic home?

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FORTiETH ANNIVERSARY: Rev. Ed ward L. O'B~ien is honored by parishionellli of St. Mary's Church, Mansfield, on occasion of his 40th ordination anniversary. Rev.. James F. Kelley, g.eneral chairman of celebration, looks on as Stephen J. Conroy and Girtesio Ginesi, vice chairmen, together with Vincent Smith and Alfred" Carbonetti, liM up to greet pastor. '$'

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Urges Quick Decision on Attitude Toward, Communism in Cuba ANAHEIM (NC) - A' former Manion said, "I learned there are law school dean .advocated that only three ways to meet blackthe U. S. make a speedy decision mail: You either kill or payor on whether it will permit a tell the truth. And we had better . communist state to flourish in decide what we are going to 00 Cuba. in Cuba. We are back as far as Clarence E. Manion, former we can go. The time for resoluhead of the law school at the tion !is now. If we can't beat University of Notre Dame, stress- communism in CUba, there is no ing the nearness of the situation,' use talking about it in Laos or observed: "On a clear day you the Congo or anywhere else." can see the Iron -Curtain from The present moderator of the Miami." nationwide Manion Radio Forum In an address before 1,000 said this country's greatest need members of the First Friday is a revival of religion and patriFriars of Orange County, here otism, with the emphasis on in California, Mr. Manion said if religion. ' the U. S. had recognized in 1958 "One of our greatest mistakes ~hat "the purpose o~ goverm~ent is to try to fight communism IS to protect men, then FIdel with sophisms like atheism and Castro would never have come to pacifism," he said. "All communpower. ists are atheists and all communHe recalled that in 1904' a ists profess to be pacifists. When bandit in Morocco held 'an you stand on the platform of American citizen captive. He said anticommuniSm, then, as, a,n President Theodore Roosevelt,' atheist or pacifist, you find the sent an ultimatum to the Sultan, platform a bit crowded with then dispatched a warship to • members of the opposition." Morocco which assured the God 'T is American's deliverance.' o~ ~ran. Time' for Resoluti~n Mr. Manion said t.he' U. S. has "As a young law er" M veered far from the l1~ten.t of. the y, r. framers of the ConstItutIon and the Declaration of Independence in recognizing the place of reliPAENGYANG (NC) - Under gion in the nation. . sponsorship of the U. S. Armed He observed: "William, Penri Forces Assistance to Korea pro- told us neaI;1y 300 years ago that gram, a three-man surgical team 'those people who will not be from Catholic Medical Center in governed by GOd will be ruled Seoul performed 80 orthopedic by tyrants.' What we are wit.operations in this island,of 13,000 nessing today is an ever-expandInhabitants during a ,two-week ing domination of ,peoples by a visit to the island's tiny hospitaL, band of godless- gangsters."

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Fathe-r Delaney Fir 5 t Solemn Mass July 16 Rev. Joseph of Mr. and R. Delaney of Heart Parish,

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P. -Delaney, Mrs. Joseph the Sacred Fall River,

wm. sing a Solemn Mass of 'l'hanksgiving at 11 Sunday morning, July 16, in his home parish church. Father Delaney was ordained last Dec. 18 in the Chapel of the immaculate Conception, North American College, Rome, by the Most Rev. Martin J. O'Connor, :Rector of the North American College. Since his ordination, the Fall River native has been completing - . his theological studies at the Borne college. Assisting Father Delaney will be: Rev. Mr. Edmund T. Delaney, a brother, who will be ordained next year, deacon; Rev. Bruce lDyrolly of Delaware, subdeacon; lllev. John P. Cronin, St. Patrick's ehul·ch. Fall River, master of oeremo;lies; and Rev. John H. Rackett, J.C.D., vice-chancellor MId episcopal secretary, preacher. Diocesan seminarians will .rve as minor officers, and the eyO choir will be 'under the direction of Rev. Paul G. ConDOIly of the Immaculate Con..,.,tion Church, Fall River: 1ft addition to the above menGoned members of his family, !'ather Delaney has a sister in @Ie Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts, Sister Joseph Thomas, a brother Daniel, a Durfee High lIchool teacher, and a brother 'l'bomas, a student at Coyle High Sehool, Taunton.

,Name Mission Band Head Very Rev. George S. DePrizio, e:S.C., Eastern Provincial of the Rol:y Cross Fathers, has anBOunced the appointment of Rev. .John Foley, C.S.C. as religious lmperior of the mission band staeIoned at North Dartmouth. Father Foley succeeds Rev. bwrence Sullivan; C.S.C., new~ appointed superior of King's College, Wilkes Barre, Pa. Father Foley, a native of Central Falls, R. I., entered' Holy eross Seminary, Notre Dame, Ind. in 1928. He pronounced first ~ws in 1933 and graduated from the Univel·sity. of Notre Dame in 1937, beginning theological stud' - at Holy Cross College, WashIngton D. C., the same year. Ordained in 1941, he has been • mem bel' of the Holy Cross ll'athers' mission band since then. The new superior is known hm coast to coast as an outlItanding preacher of missions and retreats, and has been saIseted on several occasions to direct missions at military bases throughout the United States. For a number of years he dil!leCted the Holy Cross Fathers' J.,. retreats at North Easton.

Prevost Alumnus N01V, Missioner to Uganda Says Many Africans Ashamed of Congo

THE ANCHORThurs., June 22, 1961

By Patricia McGowan "Many educated Africans are ashamed of the Congo. They feel it was not ready for independence." This is the statement of a man who has spent the past 15 years at the task of preparing natives of Uganda, British East ~frica, for a mature acce~t~nce of status as a sovereign state. He is Brother Eugene LOUIS of the Brothers of ChrIstian Instruction, a native of Notre the other hand, there was a pol. Dame parish, Fall River, and icy of. mass education, wi.th a graduate of Prevost High everyone learning a little, but no one learning much. As a reSchool. Although French, the son of Mrs. Emilie Chouinard Tremblay, who still lives in Notre Dame parish, Brother Eugene's accent betrays the influence of nine years spent in England and 15 in the British territory of Africa. Entering the Brothers' of Christian Instruction at the age of 17, he went to England for training, and was delayed th~re during the years of World War II. He took advantage of the time to make a careful study of the British educational system, which is followed in Uganda, and to take a degree in biology.. Twice a Headmaster Brother Eugene arrived in Africa in 1946. Since then he has taught biology and has twice served as headmast&l' of Brothers' schools in Uganda. The community operates 11 secondary schools and St. Mary's College, a: two year institution from which graduates can go on to Makarere University, a fullfledged government \.miversity serving all British Africa. Scholastic standards are very high, said Brother Eugene. A oontinuous weeding-out process leaves none but the best students at college level. In proof of this he noted that· 100 per cent of his biology stu- . den~ qualified last year for scholarships for advanced study, . some to Makarere and some to institutions in England. In the United States on home leave since April, he is cutting his vacation short to return to Africa this month. "There is no one teaching biology in my absence and I must get my students ready f()r examinations in November." He said that he had left his boys plenty of work to do while he , was away, but that he was anxious to check on their progre(ls persona lIy. .,.. Beautiful All Yellor Commenting on New England's far from ideal Spring this year, Brother Eugene said that. in Uganda "it's' beautiful all yea-r round. There are' no seasons,

AU Clergy Get Social Security ROME (NC)-A bill providing health insurance and old age benefits for non-Catholic clergy in Italy has passed the Italian parliament. Although the Catholic religion Is the State religion of Italy; the law provides benefits for nonCatholic ministers equal to those given to Catholic priests. The bill was originally presented together with similar legislation for Catholic clergy and passed last May 5. The law relating to non-Catholic clergy was delayed briefly, however, for further amendments. The amendments referred chiefly to the manner in which the ministers' authoritative appointments would be determined. The amended law applies to all non-Catholic ministers of religion of Italiar.. citizenship who are lawfully appoi.nted by the religious bodies.

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sult, when European .control ceased, there was chaos." One problem, said the Brother, lies in the education of women, which lags behind that of men. Parents are not eager to let their daughters "waste time" in school instead of learning homemaking; therefore educated African men have trouble finding wives who are their intellectual equals. African boys trained in the Brothers' schools have made an ou tstanding record in government service, said Brother Eugene. Of 62 members of the legislative council of Uganda', 22 are "Brothers' Boys" and four of nine ministers have been trained in the Catholic schools. Church Flourishes The Church is flourishing in Ugand,a, too. There are quite a few native vocations, said the Fall River missionary, noting that his community alone has 46 professed African brothers. The American and English members of the community are following the mind of the Church in preparing for their future ·in Uganda. BROTHER EUGENE LOUIS ''The Church's policy is that native clergy and' religious only dry.and wet periods." He said that Ugandans, when should supplant missionaries as soon as possible. That is our goal they achieve independence, will in Uganda." be better prepared for its reBrother Eugene visit~ his sponsibilities than were the natives of the Congo. "Britain's alma mater, Prevost Hi g h School, during his stay in Fall policy has been to prepare many River and also addressed the for key positions, and to provide a 'pyramid' of education, giving Sisters of 8t. Joseph at their the most capable students the Fall River provincial house. His most training. In the Congo, on ' sister, Sister Louise Angela, is a member of the community, teaching at Blessed Sacrament Plfe~@te School, also Fall River. Another sister is 'in Biddeford, C~o$e$Mis§a~Gap Me. Two brothers live in Fall BOSTON (NC) They're River and another in New York closing the "missal gap" in Pak- state. The missionary was last in istan, thanks to what a missionary Bishop calls a "typical . Fall River in 1955. His next display of American generosity." scheduled home visit will come Up to now no missal had ever in five years. been printed in Urdu, one of tht: major languages of Pakistan, because its characters are so numerous and variable they have never been put in printing type. But through the efforts OIl Bishop Nicholas Hettinga of Rawalpindi,' West Pakistan and Edward Neumann of the Neumann Printing Company, t'he printing company has produced a 464-page missal and 1,250 c()pies have arrived in Pakistan. Each page of the missal was prepared by hand in Rawalpindi. The pen-and-ink pages. were sent here and photographed, and pl"inting plates were made from the photos.

/Pakistan

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By Himself SEATTLE (NC) .. - A merchant mariner h~rt: has his own supply line to the Orient's thousands "f hungry, ill-clothed. desPi'Jl'ate peoples. William A. McNeil second engineer aboard the S8 China Mail, started "doing something about it" aiter seeing thousands of destitute people on his many trips to Orient POTtS. For some time now, Mr. McNeil has been cxamming clothing, tools, food and other supplies into his stateroom to distl'ibute to the needy on his trips to the other side of the Pacific. Cluttered Basement Between trips, with the help of friends and neighbors of Blessed Sacrament parish, the engineer stores his collections in the basement of his home. "My wife is used to having the basement cluttered up with packing cases," he said. Mr. McNeil's ship, in the service of American Mail lines, usually stops at Yokohama and Kobe; Japan; Pusan, Korea; Naha, Okinawa; Taipei, Formosa; the Philippines; and Hong Kong. His shipmates have a hand in keeping the supply line in operation by making room in their staterooms for some of Mr. McNeil's overflow supplies. Clothing About 90 per cent of the supplies the men take with them for the needy consist of clothing. But they also take books, tools, dismantled sewing machines and medical supplies. "Actually, the people can use anything from a toothpick to a telephone pole in most of these countries," said Mr. McNeil.. A recent search in Seattle for pharmaceutical supplies was so suc<;essful that Mr. McNeil re':' ceived three truckloads of materials, including 50 hospital beds. The 81. Vincent de Paul Society helped transport the equipment and the Society for the Propagation of the Faith helped ship it. Mr. McNeil personally distributes the supplies among refugee centerl!, orphanages, hospitals and other institutions.

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of Fall River-Thurs. June 22, 1961 •

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Mission'F'orcet ~ . In So. America .

Court Decision

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The Supr~me Court. Decision upholding the so-cailed

"blu~" laws prohibiting business as usu~l ,on ,Sunday calls

for a certafn amount 'of comment. . While it is wise that the distinguished jurists h.ave . recognized that· these. laws-religious in origin but civic in purpose now~are necessary to set up a day of "rest, repose, recreation and tranquility," it is to be regretted that at least a nod was not given to one day of the week as a day of dedication to God. It remains ~. fa.ct' that this'country was founded upon belief in God. If any man wishes to be an atheist, then he is not forbidden to hold such views bY, the law of ' this land. · But he, in turn, shouJd not expect' this country, founded ...... , · :with. recognition of' . ,Almighty; ,to deliberately exclude all·mention of God just ',to refrain from injuring' his views. . 'So it ,w'ould have been quite in keeping' with ~he Con- • sti.tution of the Uni~ :Stat.es for. the justice~ .to .. make . some recognition of 'a one...day-a-week ,day of rest asalse ,,":,a day of payirig·tribute:1Jo God. ,~, '. . ' " " . 1 . • .-.. , ','" . . - . ", ,;,Anotheraspect of,'.these ··~lue" laws is· that th~re needs -to; be- a careful reappraisal of them and~ a 'new: series drawn'up;' No one is objecting':to the' carrying: on of every busin'es~~on'Sunday. Some 's~tvices' are nece.ssary 'Qr:. oon~ , ' /. . ' not. he_cuttail~d:'with~u~.seric):Qs incoIivenieric~ . to :tQe .pub- . .. ,; ,', ,...~, lit. New laws: are need;ed:tO spell out .these. services:': " ' . But: there isstre.nlious ~oppositi~n . to .' ~ny'thing that .... . .' would make Su.nday just :an.oth~r'~ay,;~ bU8~ne8sai'~8ual ,.','; day, ··aIi oppOrtun.ity to rob 'one .day·,of ·the· week ·of ·itA! . .. ,'. sacred.. cha.rader. and, rob the publicO! ·the. ·physical. and , ...."': ' :··.,psychologicli~·: change' neCessarY. tA»refr~8h . bodies aDd .. ' .,':. , . 'Ipirits: . ':'.. :. "':'," '. " . . .', "," ,

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PEABODY (NC)-RicllM8 Cardinal Cushing, A r •• bis~op of Boston, will .pNot side and preach at a de~ ure ceremony here on FridaaJ June 30 for seven Carme1Hli priests assigned to Latin Amee. lean missions in Lima and' . . cuani, Peru and Santiago Cb_ . The Sicu'ani mission ill tile newest to be taken over by tile Carmelites, wpo began ~ there in 1959. Bishop Nevin . . Hayes, ·O.Carm:, a native of a.. . c:ago, is' Prelate Nullius' til ~icuani. '. . The mission covers· a· terr~ about· the ,size 'of ·New JerBe7 .. alt~tudes ·rangipg. from 11,000 ~ , , . 22,000. feet...Sicul\ni, the largNi , ~:w:n,;bas. a p'ol?ulation of 8,o;or.. Its adobe cathedral is on gro_ . higher ilian 'Pikes' Peak and . .built 100 years before the~ :iea~ Rev.olution...' .... , ·.Papal Volunteers -. ._. .' Father. KieranJ. O'~ O.Carm:, ,'Dllssion' procurator'" : ..the 'Car:ineliies' Chicago" p........ . ince, says the June 30 depart-. ;., .' eerf!mony' wiir m'ark' the stari .. a stepped-up Carmelite mii.ieil

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' -"'''. ..he.repo~ts. . , . . , 'rbe. Carmelites also pla".- .. .TODAY-St. lPaulinus, BishOp,' ·FIF.rH SUNDAY AFTER PEN-send lay missionaries to· ScNa Confessor.' Unity fn love is hot, . TECOST.·: We Ani:eri~~ns': "~re ,America. Scheiluled to lea.. merely. a pious hope and spirit- never happy about a:C:ceptinii. ihe : th;is country'· in October·, . . ual intention. Both' Epilltle and paradoxes in things.:A1lth'ority is 'Sic;uani 'are ;Elizabeth. FootJIl, Gospel today reduce it to a very always opposed to freed'om: The ,Beverly, Mass. nurse,Norma concrete sharing and community individu'ill is always o~posed to Greer, St. Louis school teachew of goods. If our treasure is not the comm·unity. Yet this 'i s never and. Helep Gresoja; Chiea.. shared with our' brothers, our irue in human life, in"'hmri'an nurse. hearts will not be shared with experience. The refusal ,to'. actL . them either. It is that simplf!- . cept paradox can only end 'in One of ,the characters in a Canon Sheehan book, a and that ·difficult. But can't we frustration and cynicism.'·· a!ruo ICIS. schoolteacher in rural Ireland, charges hi~~. pupils 00 live say the human race is at least Our public worship feels' this according to the. basic virtue of reverence. Andh,e explains beginning to approach this Gos- tendency toward a rigorous pel morality? And is not the monism, too. Those who oppose NEW YORK (NC)-Secu.... bow the other V irtu~s, personal and social, hinge on this. duty of Christians. rather than the Ch'iu'ch's efforts to revive ism ,has attained such vigOl'. He-shows them ,that they must exercise reverence for' of communists, to speed its re- popular participation in the lit- ' the U. S. that it has placeq. reaGod which is the'spirit of worship, .and reverence for their alization? urgy still speak as if Jesus; only gi~n, particularly Catholici-.'es .Whl·c;h, I·S. p'url'ty, and r'everence for thel'r -nel'ghbor . instruction on prayer. hair been .. iii 'a defensive position, Au~Bbodl TOMORROW-Vigil of St. the secret '''closet''one 'as jf He . iary Bishop CharIes R.. ~ which is justice and for all of God's children which·:ie .John the Baptist.· Prophetic had 'not p;ayeciwith'}h~"ai>osties . iooney 'of Brookly~ warnedbflM. " charity', an.d so forth. And he makes a. . pOint that there . voices will never be' wanting in nor promised 'His,' 1>6wer'ahdThe Bishop.' silid. at comm'eoo.o. our 'Lord' . .or: , .three . , _ men te~erClses ' . , f St• J"h" U~ the Church. After' ...must be"- rev''e'r'e'n'ce' for on"e's' 'country ·and thi<>" is patri.otism.' .. Himself;' . the to any' ·two 0f'n..s, w-St.John' is greatest presence . " t th t th'0 ··t·

_. '. 'There objection 'anything that wou'd"ridicule .theee :: . , .. laws· as old~fashioned; as' out of place, as not .needeq nor' .' wanted'.. Behind such ridicule lurks 'a dollar sign. Perhaps ,,,. , the Supreme ,Court has' put'this to rest-for. a whi~ ·at least. But work shouid be done on the existirig l~w8te prevent another' assault.. upon them.

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A ·Questio.n of Reverence

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'. That i~, putting :patri~ti~~ . in its right .perspective. : of' the prophets of the .new dis- :~~h~~peio~~t~:~~Y~sntt~~·i~ri 7:s~'i~be~in~r:;;~~~1o~t~:i,r• ..' .and 'as 'the, F.ourthof July comes arourid it is gOod' to renew ·perisation,!»f ,tb~ .new testament. '!isho'" false such . thihkij;~{ i8J:' aganda diiectedagainst state . . : h f' " f ' .' h ··rt " '4s we prepar~ for his fe~st; the . . ,,'."" ." . to· parentS "or' children' __ '. .' t e ervor 0 suc a VI u e . , .' . ·pray:ero£. the. Catholic should be .. MONDAY-SS. John' a.na Pa~II,Patroni~e 'or . attend' 'reli~ ':': "One i~- ~~tch"a~vini~ti~.·i~:':havirig:re~~rence:ior,hiethatwe,to~allof uS-may' be . MartyriJ. The whole"cycle' the . schools." '. •... · ~oun try:' It is not 1>eing a wide-eyed innoce.nt.to feel '89:rne : graCed .tobring to 9-4 r w,0rl? an.d . ~in~ iii bureommoIP:prayer: i,Il:' ~ "-':'1 cannot' escape the. c~ I8 ....:.,...., . :stirrings 'of. ;sentitn'ent :at the:sight ~f a' .flag,· th·esouJ)d.to , °Go,urd·f~lldo.W.sh'~ h~or.dli wb~ch ··to . .witness· 'to ; the. ':itrIport3nce' :of: : ..t~on,~" . the. BisJlOP··. conti~~ f '." . , . o. . an. w. IC ca s m~n community 'in' the. Gl1ristlaJ{'view ,~that with aU the commenteilf' "'Of a; iniu:tial air, ,the ~eading of the. Decl~r~tioh.of Ind~, <,;oci. '.;. . . . ..... . . of life. Not· only th'ei :co~irl\i,liiy, .' .and·cieb~ie. thil't has .follo~ ...... ,.,.: :'Pendence·. -:For 'when', these things have lost the. power, -w .' '. O~r, p,:,-b!I~WOr!!hlpshould 'be universal in spaee;:'birid:In'g: all- ,'. sirice· P~sident Kennedy's, TaiIi ... ; "movei .then··men have lost the r~verence for·.their countiiy: ,.~~mspmlbon .ofp.r~phets,~b.e men on esarth, here and now, . force issue~ their reoomm~ , .' 'that inspires to work and struggle and sacrifice .' ,..] . m~ker o£.prophe ts ·. Anhdh,thce'hPr;o- together. But al80 ·,the com,.:.tion,for·liirge.Federal grantS_ , .,. .' ..' " ,. .. ~h~tic .~essage ~h IC t. e. ~JSmunity; universal in time',' blnd- ' public scpools-to the excluM.Oiit ." . '....... ,Indeed, too :many have :died from a. spirit of reveren~e' tian Will never tIre.o.f .re.pe~tmg ing·together .men . ' of· everY-of religious.sChools-religion" .,..... ,;for their ·countrY. to allow·those who live the indulgence Cit· is the message OfUOlty In love. Iige;the living and":the' dea'd.:the· contribution' ofrelig"* " :looking in any'patroniziniway ·on love of-·country.. ' . ,.,.SATURDAY.....;.Birthday of, St. The ,Gospel.,counters.our.. fear: forc.es.tothe nation's welfare·. . . Re'vere·.nce·f.. o.r couiit..·ry·. shows itself in many ways :::.-.. .John tlH! B'aptist. As St. 'John was of death. And tlH!~l?istl~ co~:- being -seriously und~restima~ ehosen from his mother's womb, mands us to revere ,our ap'~estor8,' undersold and even Impugne4. ,'in :r;espect for: all' authorit.y,in interest'· in thew:orkings otlio we have been choSeri by Bap- to "declare their praise." . .' "Distortion' of Truth ·govemment, :in vocal support' of, or opposition to, currenttism and -Confiririation and our . . . . :"We 'must face the fact· .... legi.slation, ,in. ~lose examination of civic servants,' in . prophetic spirits have been nour. TUESDAY-Mass as on' Sun- the vigor and force of the move. islled in' the weekly Eucharisiic day. This community Se'nse, pr~iJ- ment for secularism in our coa... insistelic~ upon honesty in· elected and appointed offiCials. celebration. For· the prophet's ~r1y .held,-does not frustrate t~e try have' placed the forces .. is one of the shames of our times that scandals ill word is not his own,.is no humim individu~l, b~t I?erfects. an~ religion, and ,particularly ... . Igovernment no longer have the power to shock.. And it is invention. . . - serves him. LIkeWise: the c;om- Catholic religion,' in a defensiw an added shame that a .goodly share' of those charged with God speaks through men. And mon prayer of the Ch!Jrch's pu.p- position ... Whim:i once religiom . men must. seek the purity, de- . lic worship does. not frustrate was held in 'honor ,now it iii unethiCal cqllduct are Catholics.. To those who know them, tachnient and unselfish love private. ·and i!1divi~ual pJ,"ayer suspect." ' these men represent the Church. How ill served is she in which will invite God's power to and contemplation 'but perfects Bishop Muirooney said· '"tt .. some of her children! use them and manifest Himself and serves them. '. . : a strange and dreadful distorti. . " . , through them. God wills to visit So .the MaSll instructs that o~r of the truth" when those· .... It 'is no good 'looking the other 'way; pretending that .men,through us.. He wills to relatio~h,ipsin .the cO ll1 gJunHY have the interest of the counaw , . these 'are .ncit' the facts, .. attempting to ·explain away speak to men 'with our. vokes of man arepar.t and ~arcel of the at heart "are made.to appear br crookedness. with the term'misunderstanding. and to' minister to them with ·gift. we bring to Jesu~' sacrifi~, the forces of secular propagandlll .. , . our hands and goods. St. John, ,of ·our part in it. Any hat.red_OF. as 8 threat to our national ,.... ',: What isrieeded is reverence - for country, for oners . pray for us. . ill-will, any p~ejudic~: or: dis- . fare." ,own personal integrity, for the God. Who sees and judg~· , . crimination, any f~lse, pri~eor 'and Whom men must serve. Suggests,St. Paul as jealousY, because theyaffect·.the Apostoli~ Delegate community, nece'~ri'ly ... ·bring Blesses Seminary . . Model. for Apostolate hypocrisY into its worship.. _ ST. .PAUL (NC)-St. Paul has' DETROIT (NC) - Archbillhei» been proposed as a model for WEDNESDAY.;..;. Vigil of ·S8. Egidio:Vagnozzi, Apostolic Dei.. those who seek to combine inner Peter and Paul, Apostles. "If ·you gate in' the United States,' de60 spiritual .growth with apostolic love me, you will feed my flock;" cated Maryglade Seminary • a.ctivity by Father Barnabas M. Jesus. is saying in effect to Peter Memphis" 40 miles from ~ Ahern, C.P., prefect of studie's at. in th.e Gospel. Isn't' this another only. major seminary in thII Sacred. Heart Retreat, Louisvilie, way of saying that one cannot country' of .the, P.I.M.E. miss"-" OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER' OF. FALL RIVER love God.. if he does not:lov~ his .aries. ' ,.,'. . 'OF . '-THE DIOCE'SE . .. . . . speaking. at St. Paul Seminary. . He said the epistles .0fSt. Pliul fellow man? . . ' The papal representative .. 'ublishe~ w~ei<ly by The fath~lic Press ofthe Diocese of Fall Riv~ give. :insight' into "the nature of .Community, again......:as·iri 'the served that .the seminary .... . 410 Highland Avenue" .', t!l~ true. aposto.late/' especially Epistle~ where P.eter·'and .John, help the .United States to _ _ River, Moss. . . OSborne 5-7151 .... . its "con·stant· spirit of supernat- . 'who have ~ gold,' share with "a tremendous opportUnity ... ,'.. Fall . '," . ',',-," . any.' brother those gifts o~ the .the mission effort." uralness.'~, ." . , PUBLISHER' ' . . St Paul's ,treatment· of even Spirit which ,.theydo. possess. .. He was assisted at the de..... . Most Rev., James· L Connolly;D;D.; PhD. " the most commonplace .problems . Any 'piety ·then which is dis-,. tion by Archbishop JohB .. . ~ENERAt' MANAGER . ASST: "GENERAL MANAG·ER is characterized by its supernat- turbed by common prayer im'd Dearden. of Detroit and Fa.... Rev. 'Daniel F. ShaUoo, M.A.Re~.:John P. 'Dri~~oli; ural approach, the Paulist said; common song,'by minglirig with Nicholas Maestrini, P.LM.E., U ... .adding that "there is no question ..one's brothers in a common .reli- superior of the Pontifical MiBio MANAGING EDITO~' .that Paul adjusted 'constantly to .gious act is neither Christian nor sionary Institute of SS. Pet.Hugh J. Golden holy•. ' . .., . and. Paul~the P.I.M.E. Fau.ethe needs of aU his converts."

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ReligiO'u5 'Gro~ps Unn~e in Attack

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.HARRISBURG (NC)' ~ Statewide Ca.tholic and Prot€stant organizations}nivEl thrown support behind'" & three-point program to cotri\)at 3uvenile delinquency 00l the loCal ~vel with state aid. .. The Pennsylvania Catliolie Welfare Committee ond ·the Pen n s y I van i a Council of Churches (Protestant) issUed n j~int statement asserting 'that' 0 bill pending in the LegiSlature b allocate '$756,000 for the pro@'::un is "sound and positive." The statement added that 'the ll:::nd would be "weU spent."" 13-Month Program

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Tlie Catholic and Protestiint groups were joined by inaiv·j'dl.ial .I'tlbbis of the Jewish faith hi:'sup·pori of the measure, which calls '" (1 IS-month program. ',' . 'it Includes assistance ,'c~~­ munities in establishing' proBrar:ns. to cope with the j,uvenile ·ri'ciligs problem, $108,00.0;. s)l,bpayments to, local. gover,r.ments for salaries of policemen who specialize in ..prevention" of juvenile crime,$824,OOO.; a~d PROJECTED .CATEDRET1"CAJL SCHOOL CENTER, 3Ubsidy payments to counties for fuvenile -probation officers' 'salaries; '$324,000:' . I William B. BaU, execotiv,e ,CINCINNAa'I ,(NC) - , 'New headway with ,-the' Jl\all who in ·.4,Uector. of the Pen~sY.1v~~i!l :M6ci'co's Father EBward J. Mc- .secure iJl, ;the possession'~f hio 'C'riaiolic Welfare Comtriittee, l!ened the statement on 'bt';hii'lf ',earthy is billed :asthe o~Y' job, his home,h.is .family," lie priest in the :nation whose 'full- said. "Andcrt'idit unions provide , .~ ~e Catholic body. . .e, tinie job is 10 'make parish credit .that'kind· of ·secUrity." '. 'uoions work. ... father Mcdarthy',' who 'was ap"And he enjoys it, he said :here pointed by Archhishop Edwin V. visits with local leaders 'Byrne of Sarita 'Fe as archdio'c:" Inlne~SpaCe ·between oi"the credit' union movement. esan director-of':the'credit union .PURCHASE .(NC) Inner The Minnesota-born, 'former program, makes"it clear that the llPace should get more attenhion Colorado pastor said he'is con- grass roots, ·scl.f-·h'elJ;l credit sys:" today than outer &pace, new ·"ineed that .creditunions . "fit tem is "just' a means to an end, graduates of Manhattanville Col- 'perfectly into the framework of not a way of'll,fe.w , .' le,!!e of the Sacred Heart were ,Catholicism" and that .'th~ . a r e l F e w e r .i!".rohleDlfl lold. "the complete answer to com"The necessity of the moment ·munism." From his own :experience as ·Secure pastor of Sacred·Heart church in .hi not to reach and conquer the vast areas of outer spae.e," aaid /'Communism can make no Alamosa, Colo., w.here ~ "feU. into" the credit unIOn mq,vement, Father Charles J. Lavery, pres-. ident of St. John Fisher College, 'he learned ·that a parish will. pr.i~ses First M«Is~ Rochester, N. Y. "The profound .have. fewer financial problenUi· need of this moment of history if its parishione.rs.areshown how to handle thiir own money pru'Js !lor us and the ;world to attain NEW ORLEANS (NC)~When dently: '. . , llle' peace, the tranquility, the newlY ordained :Father .Robert "If the .pastor is gtmuineJ.y equilibrium' of inner !ij'lace---in J. Miller, 5.J., offered .his£irst . . Jthc depths of our own souls." . 'solemn . Mass . here, his .two sympatheticabout.the economic :toldthe graduates that Gcl~ 'brothers, alsO jesuit priestS, ptcibl~~ of ')11:;( p.ari!ihioner~ eliiific 'adva~ces have brought VJere "deacon -B'nd siJbdeacon. ., Three of' his' sisters, "SchoOl .Detroit · ~'pie.s o'f the world closer I?hy.~:­ J.m.Uy .but they are .sep/ilratE;ld Sisters at Notre Dame, .also. attasM~,dcd. , spiritually' by ,di£fetiin~ .pri!lc,- ,tended' the 'Mass in OUrLaaY :oi " DETROIT \(NC) -'Msgr. VIri'<,;ood Qounsei~urch. :. ",: . il?1~"V?~ p.ut:PQse and morali~. cent' V: Boiko.wi(:%· nasbeeD. " ,.GQd .Center .of Existence .. ' named' to rec'eive :'the FidelitQs .CJgr~·, . ~aduates .today., he . sUited, MedaFfor 19fh.. : ' ' ~ve. a· solemn obliga.tion .'Itp The medal, a.w:~rded an~uaib' Alexander·t(erensky· ~ie .and ..dominate the -pre&ent SANTA CLA'RA (NC)-::"'A'1e.it- 'by thEiSS.. GYri! land '1VIe~odi\l8 m~~ent Of 1).istorr, to .measure tinder 'F. Kereilsl<Y., who "headed SemInary;; St. .MMj's College 'lind .... intellectually in 'the light. 'of .tbe 'provisionaf. RUssian govern:- st. 1VI:lii-y's 'PreJ;l'arator,y' SChool . ~ ..standar.ds" .." Orchard' Lake. ::Mioh., honiJrlI merit after the Czar was a~posed , ~he task of establishing an in 1917, was presented with the outstandirig·.·'Catijolii:·d.fPoIish BUthoritywhich 'will respect annual Cross' Cur.rents· Award descedt:for "fidelitY in' serving· human' dignity., and of .creating for' his contributions to "the God, .and countr5' 1hrougb -&he .a social. order in <whioh ,the per.. cause,bfpeaceimd libertY in'our realization of .,the '..religious :and son exists, come about when times'" at Santa:Clara University, cultural ideals:· at our foreGod is recognized as the center operated by the 'lJesuits 'here. .: fathers." :of all existence," Father Lave1";y' . ,Msgr. ,BorkowWz, native of Mr. Kerensky gave 'anaddress said, dealing' with "The Beginning of .Buffalo, has 'been :a pastor .here the 'World 'Crisis."His Tegime 'in Detroit since 1926. He cis noted ·SaCr,ed Congreg~tion was overthrown by 'the 'B'ol~he:' . as.a speaker, '£or:his welfare and under Nikolai Lenin lil. few .youth work, ,and :for .his interest AdV'ances months after its estabii.shment. . :in ,Polish-American activities· in VJ\.TICANCITY (NC) - Th& .educational, civjc, .organization beatification causes of an' Italian Since that' time he .has been ,smd'religious spheres. priest and a French Sister have ~esiding in several countries in been. advanced by the Sacred Europe and in the United £tates ">-<&~<:>• • •'• •" '• • • • Corigregation' of Rites. . and has been occ.upied as a ~our- \~ A fAMILY' 'YMA1J I . The congregation has ~pproved I;l;llist, lecturer and ·profellsor. BARRBRQ ... C HlCKENS . ·tWo miracles worked through the . 'rl'"'-""""'=""""'---~~""""-=9 intercession of Father Innocent Happiness ill II ",ental llttitude llnd of Servio, O.F.M. Cap., who died .ono may be "" hopp.v 'I.. II cottsgo GO hi 'Bergamo in 1890. It ,also ruled FARMS , in a mansi""", Sister Eugenia of JeSWl, . 145 Washington St., Faill'hav6ll! tounder Of the Sisters of the \ Just off. ...Route 0 . Assump.tion of the Blessed.. V~ REYNQLDS"DEWAlT gin Mary, practiced 'virtuea w.,ra :WY7-9336 heroic degree. . Wiilialil&8econd S~ Watch. for 'l3lgru . " T.hea,pproval of the miracles While·out;for;a Drive . New Bedford' WY 6-8234 worked through Father Innocent Stop III lh1s ''I>elightful Spot leave only a iew formal cere' ~ monies to be completed before he' is beatified. In ruling on ·the her'oie nature of Sister Eugenia'. . . YOU&ooD '. ~ Sewing Macl1ines-AII Makes FOil ... -praCtice of virtues, the congrega, .AT WHO'~ESALE,P~ICES . tion gave her the title "VenerPlasficCovered i~~""ily able.\' Miracles 'Worked ·thITough '$~Q, .be!" intQrcession remain t8 . . ;.. . !Praye~ ,Oa~ FALL RIVER....:PS. 4~571' .•.•.. ',.' I • approved. . . ..., ... TAUNTON~'VA.4-86.51 ., ....... 8~.,X.~ ' . ., Attleboro-CA. 2-6300 .' 25 APPROVED PRAYERS· HO~'pih~;:ls~.l.eader· New '.Bedford-WY. 7-0682 ONlY.· ·25 CENTS 'DETROIT (NC)-Msgr.Gl~ ·tent G. Schinle:r, ,director"of.bOS:- .. Engli!lh"Froncih~forfvgues'8 ,'EAST 'Pitals in the Belleville, m" dio~, is the new president of thit BetterWorld ~nterprise ,I, .• , ..'IP; Ciltholic Hospital eASSOeiatiOlL·Btl 1823 Acushnet Avenue . . . ~ . . .. 'wcceeds . Msgr. K. 'W. JeSs Of New ,Be'~for~; ·Mass. lo' No. Westport. Mass.

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to its economie' advantageg, • he .said. offers its members the' opportUD;':'Anyone who buys"on 'Urne can . 'ity ,of learning how to work profitably make use of the serv- "together with their neighborn,.be ices, of mcredit ..union,. E:ather added. McCarthy said. B~t in additima Chief Need ..' '. . The credit union movement-. '.G~rmans chief need, he said, is to enlist . "capable youIig people who aN -properly motivated and who win 'acquire the necessary .technical DUESSELDORF (NC) - Cor-' knowledge" to. advance the respondenc~ courses in Catholic move~nt. Also needed is more theol~gy will be started thi8 "family counseling" by credit August for Catholic lay people. un'ion leaders. The central association of Ger"You can't r'al~ n f,am"'man Catholic .young women said ..,..... ....., .the courses will be inaugurated well," he said, "unless you man.at a stuqy .week at Haus Alten- age your economy well." berg,seat of West Germany's Father McCarthy contended Catholic youth' organizations. Ed- many more parishes could SP01lF eltraut Staimer,who herself sor credii unions.

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holds a doc.torate in theology," "The hOJ;le of the future for.th8 :will be in charge of the under- . whole movement lies in the taking. 'The courses will include 36 parish credit union," he said. separate lessons .to be spread o:,,:~ra two-y,~ar period. .The\parA Delicious ticipant:s will be expected to take " ,Part in three study weeks, and Treat 'to,do.:three'papers··at home, l,'l'he corJ;espondence courses .are' aimed particularly at girls young w~men and win .be . similar to cour.se~·~hich have alreadY ,pro:O'~':"successfUl' :in 4-ustria and,. S.witzerland.

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CathorlC, WorneR Aid C61umbians

. Tr'E'ANCHOR-Diocese of Fa" River-Thurs; JurHt ,,~,' 1961

Knowledge of Fur·nitur.e Styles 'Importa,nt in. Planning Decor' By Alice Bough Cahill , To have a knowledge of various furniture styles will be very helpful, 'whether you are about to invest in new furniture, or to make use of something you inherit. Taste ahould be based on knowledge. Try to learn the different

styles of furniture and what· after the best form~ and designs these styles express. You of yesteryear. need. not reproduce 'anyone' Classic Modern makes its' apstyle down to its last detail. peal on the basis ~f ~he ess~ntial , It is the blending of styles that ?rt el~ments.that I~ mcorpor~tes <Can make your home personal mto Its desIgns; l~ emphaSIzes and individual - the beauty and gram of natural Youmayachiev~ wood~.' . • very interesting UnlIke ClasSIC Modern, 'Orresults through ga~c ~?~ern" c:eates its o~n mixing' styles ' desIgns, It s experImental. ChaIrS but one 'should are lightweight. and molded by mix per i 0 d s ?ew manufacturin~ techniques · carefully, seInto shapes that conform to the r' lecting sty Ie 8 contours 'of the body. HONOR STUDENTS: Rev. John H. Hackett, chaplain, that have the presents National Honor Society pins to students at Sacred same spirit. . Lovel, Antiques .A simple fop.. Though you may live in streamHearts Academy, Fall River. Left to right, Ann Turner, mula that· has' lined simplicity amidstcontemMargaret Silvestre, ~lda Lyons, Mary Camara. . worked succeSs.., ,. porary furnisliing,' chances . fully' with persol1il. who have col- you still can't resist ~e charm of Jections of many styles is to lovely antiques; Perhaps yOU I' 0 match the background. Here's have family heirlooms stored one way of following this forawa~ Hunt them up and let mula-have background un com- . these,handsome' old items enrich Four members of the cl~ss of' For the- initial year of the plicated, repeating the same your decorative scheme. 1962 at Sacred Hearts Academy, newly. formed chapter at' the colors in every room. Select antiques' which wl)l Fall River, have been elected by academy, seniors, juniors, and It mighi work out this wl;lyblend harmoniously with your the faculty council as· charter sophomore meeting the require"tr.eat all vyin~pwsa]jke; use the other furnishings and then dis,:" members of Douai chapter of the 'ments have been accepted as J?roCatholic Agency H~.iP5 same up)lolstery mater-ial on dif_ play them proudly. Old copper, National Honor Society. bationary candidates. They may ~erent 'pieces to establish a kin- for instance, is very attractive They are Mary'CCamara, Walda tionary candidates. They may': 2,602 Cuban Refugees ship among unrelated articies. over a contemporary fireplace. Lyons, ·Margaret Silvester, and win full meml;>ershipwithin the MIAMI (NC)-The worHiwide .:You'hfind that the same' c~isp Maybe you have a "free-flow- Ann Turner, 'all High Honor . next year if they fulfill the other relief agency maintliined-by tJ, S. oolors, carried skillfully from ing" table 'supported by a divider . students. Ann· Turner is 'top- requirements. . .Catholics, has resettled' 2,602 li'Oom' to room, give .your home in your dining area. You can, raIlking member of her class and . Cuban refQgees, it was disclosCGl @I compelling harmony. create a very beautiful table willleaGl the sch091 next Fall as Probationary candidates in- , 'here. . '.' ( '. . B~w' 'toMi", seftingby making use of antique' Captain' and President of ,the . clude five seniors, 15 juniors and . Hugh McLoone, in charge d Suppose ' you. favor colo'nial ceramic plates,' which combine Student Government. Margaret 14 sophomores. the resettlement office. here c« :New Englan1 style; quaint, .sim-·' beautifully with· sOme 'of' the .. Silvester is president Of the deThe name of the new cl:lapter Catholic Relief Services-National · 'd' f I th h crystal and silver flatware a! ,bating society. Walda Lyons is hono.rs' the birthplace of the' Catholic' Welfare Conterenc'" 1e, smcere.an ppicturesque·. In orma,' ed.itor-in-chief of the 19.62 year- religious 'of the Holy Union. of said the total includes 339 fam,... ... What could,ougor . ,con.temporary de.sign. : woul~,-you mix with this style? Bear in'miQd that with taste book, and Mary Camara· will be the Sacred Hearts. ' nies consisting of 1,200 peI~son~ Remember, styles that express and common sense, one can businesS editor. plus 1,402 other persons.. T):Ieir Membership Requirementl!l The order was founded in 1826 resettlement has been effected 'illl ·file Same things go well together. blend ~ev~ral woods' ,and several You thight use the simpler periods. It is not .wise to thro~ Membership in the Honor So- in Douai, France by Father jean 43 states and two territories, the Queen An'ne p~riod pieces, early . out a ~omfortable pi:;ce of furn~- ciety requires candidates to meet' Baptiste Debrabant and is de- Virgin Islands and Puerto Ri~ ture JUst because everybody s voted to the education of youth. 1._ t d Chil?pendal~,PennsylvaniaDutch, . M·. ". . ocriteria of scholastic achievemen ..., sate . wFreIien.. Provincial country . ,go~ng . Od~:, : : :~outl perlodo criteria of scholastic achieveAt the close of the indu~tion Mr. and Mrs. Emiliano Prat::lJ lIt.yles. llln enJoy • a . . ment, character, oleadersip, and assembly the outgoing' School and their eight children, ranging . Moderriis.ts want no 'part with, ., service. Seniors and juniors are Captain; Carol Nor. P"A--"'~d in age from one to 12, are one of the past, but most of us will take. NeY.' Orle<in5 NU.rt Heach eligible for full membership; Sister John Elizabeth, S.U.S.C"; the largest groups t() be resettlec:ll Modern in moderation. We do St. Qor:ninic Missioners sophomores may become proba- academy principal, with an en- by, CR,S-NCWC.They arrived edmit that one can ,get an unNEW·~ O~LEANS- (~N'C) _ .tionai:'y candidates. graved gaveL recently at the Cuban Refugee eluttered look decorating with . . '.' . ,.Emergency Center in Miami eon temporary designs. ~ Mo~her Mary Francis Br<!u; 'New' Caldwell College Honor, 5 ,from Havana..via Costa Rica. Mr. ·t t' of' d h" Orleans, has' been elected Mothel!' .,' ' . . . . • ,'Glft For .Preslde....t. . ,Mc.Lo,one said CRS-NCWC. hac.. · A r.c; h 1 ec Sm()l;lrn ouse.s General,of the Eucharistic Mis- A d tUN C I l\eQn heaVilY"on 'natlIral'- red- siOnaries' of St. Dominic: She .1' a . . 9unCI :' ',' WASHINGTON (NC) _ Nuns ,~ac;i~ arra,ngemen!s fo,:' tIj1~ to woOd,.,for w.oodwork· and' naked' CALDWELL (NC)-Mrs. Peter fr U I' H' h S h I live In PhIladelphIa. bricks for .interi\>r walls. ' su.cceeds Mother Ma.rg~:t'e~ NIal'Y 'Cass of Bloomfield, N'. J., perom rsu me. Ig c 00, ., : ... · One perso.n's description of aa Grouchy, Baton·Rouge,La.· manent representative to the YoungstowJ;l,. OhIO.. present~d a." ," Foresters Whist: ' M o f h e r Mary'," Francis; 1m UnI'ted Nations EconomI'C and . han~-made mosaIC table f.or tll1tra-modern house may express Pdt K d t th Wh t ,Our Lady of Victory Co.u:n. .your views: "a sm~IJ-town gym alumna of' Loyola University of Social Council from the World reSI en ~nne.y a e. Ie F II R' after a .ha.rd basketball season.~· the South and the University of Federation of Catholic Women ~ouse.Pre~IdentIal speCIal as.ah . IVe! FQresters, wil~ hole!' Q, . Notre Dame, taught in the New and' Girls, was 'honored by Cald;. sIstan~ DavI,d Powers accepted· 'Jl1 1st at 8 Tuesday night, Jlme. 2*1 If Y0l}, were faced with ~urnish.. .Orie~ns schools before she jQi.n4:ld' well College for Women. . the gIft f?r ~r., Kenne~y" 'Yho . in A.merican. Legion Hall,. ~ Ptg such a· hom~,. what could, .~) s i s t e r h o o d . : . Th lleg 0 d t d b th "was vacatIomng In FlOrIda .. The ~4ird Street, ,Fall Rive~:" ';.': t, YO~""~se of period furniture pree co e, c n uc e y e .. m '.' hed the P 'd t'al datmlr.thepresent era? . Benedic,tine Sisters, conferred its. se~~,IC s ow reSI en I · For." the sophisticated "Crassi.: Hyacinth' ~irde': Marian Award on her for out:Modern;" with a formal'or inforHyacinth Circle, New Bedford standing community service. The Fund Raisers. ma~ tiair, you might use Chinese Daugh~rs of Isabella, will hold presentation took place at com.. St. Catl,1erine's Fund Raising Chippendale, Sheraton, English 1lI Neighbor's Night social Tue8- mencement exercises. ,Group, auxiliary to the Park Regency, Fr~nch Provincial, day,' June 21, with Miss Ellen Street Dominicans, Fall River, College President · Duncan' Phyfe, or Qrganie Gaughan liS chairman. Membets WILKES-BARRE (NC) - Fr. will hold a Dominirola in NoModern. " will join, in .H,e organizatiol'\'s NEW BEDFORD Lest we. confq..se I you, when annual Day Of Prayer at, Holy GeorgeP. Benaglia, C.S.G., has vember. Regular meetings of the will resume Tuesday, 8ep- . we sp:eak of "Classic Modern" we Name Church at 7:30 Thursday been reappointed presiden~ 0If unit tember·12. . , ~in~. cSt. "~p.:to-date adaptations night, June 29. A mystery ,ride King's College here. The appointINDUSTRIAL OILS cf.'the,stYles'of',the,past. The. best is planJ)e~ for Tuesday, July 25; ment . was made' by Father· iD 'Classic Mo~ern )s' PatternE?d ~ith 'J\frs. ,Jo~ph Bernardo IM!' .George'S. DePrizio, C.S.C.,,' Pro"MEAliNG OilS vincial of the Holy Cross .. '~ain:nail: Fatners' Eastern 'Province. Fr. nMK~, Be~agl~:~, a native of Taunton, p'rovinciaf Superiof. , , has served as president of the . EI'fGLEWOOD (NC)~Mother . eollege for six years;'Tbe,college OIL BURNERS Marian James,' native CJf' Jersey was' founded in 1946. 9ity, has been named 'Provincial Superior of the Eastern Province For your Building MateriCII'1I of the Sisters 01. St. Joseph 01.

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WASHINGTON (NC)Mothers in remote sections (!'fI Colombia will receive new cloth.ing for their infants as a resuli of efforts of women in VariOU8l parts of the United States. o The shipment of new garmentiJ valued at more ·than $5,000 arrived in 'Colombia fro~ the National Council of Catholi@ Women, in cooperation with Catholic Relief Services:"Nation.a:1 Ca~holic Welfare Conference. Donations for the layettE3 come from NCCW affiliates ia all parts of this country and them are given in the name of Pope John. They are directed by the Pope tQ poor children all OVel? the world. Radio Schools The garments sent to Coloma> bia will be used as a stimulus til better child care by mothers whe partiCipate in the radio classetl in baby care which are conducted by Dr. Alejandro SalQfl on Radio Sutatenza. . '. , This program is part of .~ Radio Schools of Popular Cultural Action directed by M~ Joaquin Salcedo. They bring basic education including literacy to aimost 400,000 active participants in towns, villages anell the most remote country settle=ments of Colombia.

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.-:,J'une Is Month of:'Ertds~ Starts for Families Throughout Nation .

THE ANCHORThurs., June 22, 1961

Deplores Wane Of Femininity

By Mary Tinley Daly

To the readers who asked, "Did both girls make it at .ehool?" the answer is yes, Deo gratias. As in most families fit. considerable size, late May and early June bring momen"'s small personal highlights, not singly but in doubles IlIld triples. For us, within "There she is!" said the maa ODe week were the three behind us to his wife. happy occasions of a Chri8tA few days later Mary, who . .ing and two commence- recently was in a tizzy over the -.entB, Little Michael Leonard J;lrennan, done up in a long frilly white· dress and • atching bonMe; ("like a sis_," according to W. father) wall baptized in St. Ann's Church, Bristol, Va. by rather Jam e s Bickie. Wit h IOdparents Pat • adMikePat't-icia D a I y ZmmoRS and Michael Olmert-Michael Leonwd. renounced satan and au.. his worlu and pompa, licked the salt put OR hi~ tongue, ll1liled as the . .ten of Baptism were poured. .-ret' his fuzz Gf brown. hair, and pllCllDptly fell asleep.

Oab' ODe 'rwo bours later, at commence-.ot exercises of VirgiBia In-

terment College, Markie beeame • Il'aduate nurlle. Somehow, no matter how ....,. commencements ODe attends, when one of the graduates i. you.r own, it is a never-to-be. forgotten experience. Like an the other parents in the beautiful amphitheatre, there was just one of tholle cap-and-gowned girls who was the focus of our attention. "There she is," the Head of the Bouse nudged me as Ma~kie walked slowly to receive her tliploma.

dreaderl senior college "comps,"

learned that she had passed and would receive her degree with the 1961 class at Trinity College. So-another baccalaureate, an_ other commencement, another line of cap-and-gowned young women-and with each set of parents waiting to hear that one name ... "There she is," the Head of the House nudged me as Mary walked slowly to receive her diploma. "There she is," said the man near us whose daUghter's name also begins with D. Thus is family life all over this country. After all this, what could be more natural than a party! Nex~

sw.

And then, some day. later: Mary Daly filling out forrill~ for job applicationa ("Thank DeSS I can type!"). Markie Daly with IlOlIe ill the books preparing :for "state ooards"-those horTendoll8 exams which make all the difference betweeB beiftg a graduate and a registered nur_still "cliff hanging." Little Michael Leonard Brennan, now a member of the Catholic Church, but not exactly working hard at it as yet. It has been a week at our house as it must have been at yours. witnessing completion of one phase of life and beginning ()f the next.

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Editor Urges More Powerful Fight Against 'Progressive' Education . BUFFALO (NC) -The editor f/I. the National Review urged helle that a more vigorous fight be waged against progressive edueation. William F. Buck1e7, Jr:~, told poaduating seniors of D'YouvU~ College that only the first phase oltbe battle against SUeft educa~ has been won. ~ fight that remains unwQll II that of actually taking power," 1M said. "It is one thing to· perIIUlcie the leaders of the com."DRy that a local high school bas no business teaching hotel lIuuwagement and community hygiene in place of English and

Iaistol'y. "It is another actually to step .. and dispossess the zealous administrators of noneducation, actually shoo tbem out and begill the process of re-educatioft. That, alas, is a political fight and fresh and differently trained and eqUipped troops are needetl to wa&e it." M..- State Aims Mr. Buckley also said: "I do DOt believe we will ever be conYincing in our effort to mobili7.e the nation in behalf of good edueation until we state the aims (}f -tINlt education more intelligibly. "And, this we cannot do _" un. . we free ourselves of the $Uperstition of academic freedom. So long as academic freedom is Wlderstood to mean the right of

the reasearcher to pursue knowledge without being hindered by law, the doctrine is unassailable." He stressed that to get on the right track, ~ducator. must start with a premiee that not all things are good, that the students must be given something, such .. the Teo Commandmenfa, .. a guide to u-uth.

Scholarship Anne Marie Albel'naz, daugh~r of Mr. " Mrs. John Albernar;, 39 Donnelly Street, Fall River, and a member of the Immaculate Conception Parish, has been. awarded the scholarship from the parish Women's GuIIG. Anne Marie graduated this morning from the Davis School and plan. to joill her sister, Jeannine, at the Dominican Academy, Fall River.

CINCINNATI (NC)-The tendency of women to become "less feminine" drew sharp criticism here from the president of the National Laywomen's Retreat MQvement. Miss Clementine M. Stein of Bremen, Ind., acknowledged: "I am mortally afraid of the apathy . and indifference of our Catholic people in regard to the things of God, their appreciation of values..." She spoke to some 250 delegates from Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky at a midwest regional rally of the NLRM. Deploring the "loss of the feminine" in woman, Miss Stein wal especially critical of "how little eoncern" many women have for ,modesty in dress. Unique Opportunity "But if the picture we see of. the world today is a frighteninl IT'S ALL YOURS,. SISTERS: Sister8 of the Holy one," she said, "it also provides Union at Sacred Heart School, North Attleboro, receive '61 Ii great challenge. We, as women, car ~rom Duvernay Council 42, St. Jean Baptiste Society, true to our deepest nature, have unique opportunity to reas part of unit's 60th anniversary celebration. Left ro right, the deem this situation. We do have Sister Marie Lucille, Sacred Heart superior; Sister Beatrice it within our power to heal thill Therese; Adelard Canuel, chairman of presentation com- humanity ... "If we as women are faithful mittee; J. Henri Goguen, president-general of Society. Gift our nature, to our feminine ineludetl expenses involved. in putting car on road and one to beauty, to wisdom and to majyear'. free service from a local garage and service statioa. esty, we shall inspire mea lie ,..eat dee<U .•• "This we can only hope .. achieve if we live our lives ill union with God, with a fidelUr made possible through a sacraCLEVELAND (NC)-A widow Another IOn, William, 15, ill a mental life kept .elflesa by • IOPhomore at Cbanel High of 1% years was graduated magna periodic check-up--namely, CMW annual closed retreat." cum laude in th,e same week t.... School.

Mother Graduates From College As Children Get School Diplomas

of her three children reeeive4 school diplomas.

Mrs. Mary Madsen graduated Saturday from St. John's College with a bachelor of science degree in education. She completed the four-year course in three years. She plans to teach and start work toward a master's degree this Fall. Her daughter, Christine, 17, was graduated from Villa Angela Academy as class valedictorian. She plans to jOiR the Sistet'll Ott. st. Ursula. On the same day, her' _ Arthur, 13, was graduated from. St. Jerome Grade Scbool. He plaftS to enter BOITOIDeo Seminary high school .. stu4r' ... tile priesthood.

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called for renewed dedication to Christian ideals as a sure means of conquering communism. Bishop Nicholas T.Elko, Apostolic Exarchate of the wryly, "nobody sent back UI Byzantine Rite of Pitts- much lIB a quarter." burgh, spoke to nearly 1,000 Comforts Knights of Columbus and Bishop Elk() said the commun-

Opposes Delaware's Whipping Post Law WILMINGTON (NC)-A priest WId state legislators here the state's whipping post law doesn't 1I01ve penal problems. Father Thomas Reese, director eI. the Catholic Welfare Guild, spoke specifically against a Senate bill to extend whipping tG eonv:icted rapists and armed. ~bbers. . . . Defaware is the only state iJl the union still with a whipping post law. Father ·Reesesaid that whipping "the poor or the unre8Ponsible" doesn't solve the problem of t.he "real 'culprits"the persons or conditioIlS which ~red the cri~es committed.

ists are convinced that Americans are dedicated not to the future of their country but to comforts and push-button luxuries. '''Dhe Russians are pin-pointing our weaknesses, our lack of dedication to an ideal," he said, recalling the Khrushchev criti-' ciam of a Hollywood movie as obscene and recent Russian newspaper ads indicating that the Moscow performances Of an A mer i can play had been "cleaned up" for presentation to the Russians. Sacrifice The word "sacrifice," he continued, is "very popular with the Russians, but unpopular with us." Moreover ,the word they use means not only sacrifice but also labor and dedication. "They believe they will win our minds . . . that they won't need an army to conquer us," the Bishop said. "But if organizations such as the Knights of Columbus remain in America," he added, "I don't believe the communists will come over here. They didn't come into the nations of Europe until religion and the people dedicated to religion went out." Lay Participation . Bishop Elko emphasized the importance of lay participation in the work of the Church. But the greatest need fo' the future, he said, is to "teach our young people to appreciate" their religious and their American heritage. "Don't let anyone tell you that you can't do anything with today's young people," he said. "They're full of vitamins. And by 1970, a sociologist has predicted, one-half of the popula,tion of flhis country will be un, der 27. We must show them that they have to dedicate them.selves to the future of 0\11' De·tion"'. To convince the rising generation of this need, the Knight. of ColumbUlS and other adult Christians m u 8 t themselves "show a dedication to a great cause," the Bishop said:

CITIZEN OF YEAR: Rev. John F. Hogan, director of St. Mary's Home, New Bedford, with Dr. PaulO. LaBelle, outgoing president of New Bedford Lions Club, at banquet at which Father Hogan was honored by Lions as Citizen of the Year.

Workers Protest Spain's Monopoly

WASHINGTON (NC) _ Catholic, Protestant and Jewish leaders have joined in a "declaration of con-

is considered a man's world, he added that "the role of married women on the bases needs more recognition and development. "Throug,h offering dynamie family programs, we can help ensure not only successful individual family life but also the organization of families having similar values," he stated. ''By living a strong family life, military families can make one 01. t,he greatest contributions possi'ble to their country." Topics Msgr. DeBlanc will dis·cuss at the institutes include the following: "The Christian Apostolate in the U.S. Air Force," "Leadership in a Changing World," "What It Takes to Make Marriage Click," and "Single People--A Positive AnBWer to Their Problems." The Monsignor said he will also have the opportunity for private counseling with Ail' Force personnel on various aspects of family life.

On his seven-week trip, he will address Air Foroe personnel at bases in Hawaii, Japan, the Philippines, Spain and Germany. Other tlaces he will visit include Thailand, India, Pakistan, Lebanon, Austria and Italy. Msgr. Finnegan said he is "pleased to have secured the services of Msgr. DeBlanc 110' condUCt Air Force institutes OR ' leadership and family life. Leadership "An Air Force officer, COI1\misioned or noncommissioned, i.' less effective 'a leader," he said," "if he treats his sUbordinates as il!lOlated individuals instead of lUI products of families and participants in religious communities." MSIT. DeBlanc said before his departure: "Life in the service presents both a challenge and an opportunity. The mobility of military life uproots individual. and families from normal community life and may require' them to adapt to new values, customs and ideals. But this very challenge gives the Air Force f ami I y the opportunity to

Institute Trains Lay Leaders SANTIAGO (NC)-Fifty-four teachers have enrolled in an intensive six-month course here designed to qualify them te serve as directors of religious education in their native lands. The students, selected by their bishops, represent eight Latin American countries. The school, the Latin American Catechetical Institute, has been established at the Catholic University of Chile, and has set as its goal 100,000 trained lay teachers of religion. Receive Scholarships Father James McNiff, M.M., director of the institute, said the figure of 100,000 was set last year bY'the bishops of the I:.atilll ,American Committee for the Preservation of Faith. . The first step toward that .goal,· the priest said, was the establishment (J/. ,the present institute. Students are maintained bsr 'scholarships supplied by the U. S. 'bishops working' through' the .' offices of the Pontifical Com'mission for Latin. America.

Maryknoller Rejects

'B etter M ouse t rap'

DAVAO (NC)-An American priest here in the Philippines has discovered "a better mousetrap," but after watching it in action he prefers the mice. Pesterered by mice in his mud-hut rectory, Father Francis J. Taney, M.M., of Geneva, N. Y., tried many extermination methods without success. Then one morning while having a cup of coffee, the priest watched a "baby" python slither across the dirt floor, snatch a mouse out of a hole and devour it with one gulp; "I quickly gave up my :first impllise to'makea pet mousetrap out of the efficient reptile," the Maryknoll missionary sa i-d , "when I pictured the python, full grown, and perhaps anxious to add.· little variety to his· meals by tryIng me for lunch· someday."

sole legal political party, the Falange, and its National Movement control all aspects of indusST. LOUIS (NC)-The Blessed Virgin Mary and St. Agnes are try and labor relations. But the influence of the Catholic groups the new patrons of parishes in the St. Louis archdiocese formeras independent social action cenly dedicated to St. Philomena.. ters for some 100,000 young Msgr. James T. Curtin, pastor adult Catholic workers is growof the former St. Philomena ing. parish in House Springs, Mo.. The conflict is only part of a . announced that permission had been, received tG rededica.te the dangerously explosive labor situation in Spain today, where ,parish to Out' Lady Queen of more and more, workers, deprived Peace. In Bloomsdale" Mo" Father Gf freedom and ,representation through normal channels, are Ferdinand G. Wieberg, pastor of the former St. Philomena parish, taking recourse to agitation and announced permission had been subversion. Government represgranted to dedicate the parish .. sion ,through the police or the St. Agnes. military is quick to follow.

ernment trade union monopoly is flaring up ovel the issue of representation in elections. The Young Christian Workers organization' and the' Workers' Guilds - both Catholic Action groups--have filed several recent protests concerning the way union elections are conducted and against the lack of real freedom and representation for the workers. The Church' grollps have no trade union standing. Spain'.

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development of the Academy 01. the Sacred Hearts, Fall River, for close to 60 years, friends, former pupils, their parents and alumnae are establishing the, Sister Adrienne Marie Memorial Scholarship Fund. The memorial will recognize Sister Adrienne Marie's contribution to education in the Fan River area and will be an expression of gratitude from the hundreds of students influenced by her forceful personality and unflinching idealism. As principal at the academy from, 1906 to 1939, as dean of the College of the Sacred Hearts from 1934 to 1947, and as director of speech and drama. in her private speech studio up to the evening of her sudden death, Sister Adrienne Marie exerted incomparable influence for good on all with whom she came in contact, according to academy spokesmen. The Fund will perpetuate her name and be a means of continuing the work to WhiCh she ~­ voted her long life. Worthy eighth grade graduates of Holy Union Schools in the Diocese who need financial assistance to receive a Catholic education at the Fall River Academy'will be its beneficiaries. Contributions are payable to the Memorial Scholarship Fund and may be sent directly to The Reverend Mother, the Academy of the Sacred Hearts, 466 Prospect Street, Fall River, or to Mrs. David W. Boland, 525 Woodlawn Street, Fall River, who initiated the fund.

STARTING YOUNG: First thing you do in school is graduate - at least that's true of tots at St. Mary's parochial school, North Fairhaven. Left to right, Rev. Harold A. Whelan, SS.CC. and Rev. Edmund G. Francis, SS.CC.congratulate Weber Torres III as he receives diploma as member of first preprimary "graduating class" at St. Mary's.

Quebec Releases Ban on Movies QUEBEC (NC)-Quebec's laws barring children under 16 years of age from attendance at movies have been relaxed. A bill relaxing the ban was passed just before the close of the recent Legislative Assembly session in keeping with recommendations of the National Catholic Center of. the Cinema and, representatives. 01. the movie industry. Children under 16 years of age will now be permitted to attend movies under the following conditions: 1) Movies given without charge in institutions of learning lor ~hildren and the teachers -.:Ily. .. .. '.

2) Special free children's movies shown before 6 o'clock in the evening, Jin a parish hall or any similar hall approved by the Board of Censors. 3) Special movies for children at least .10 years of age, shown before 6 o'clock in the evening, and authorized by the Board of Censors.

Honor For Priest MONTREAL (NC) - Father Gerard Dion of Laval University, Quebec, was admitted to the Royal Society of Canada ;it its congresS here. He is director of the university's industrial relations department and has writtea ,xtensively 011 labor relations.

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Migrant Workers In Need of Help, Religious Stress

WASHINGTON (NC) --;- (The director of the Family Life Bureau, National Oatholic Welfare Conference, will conduet a series of family life institutes in the Orient and Europe under auspices of the U.S. Air Force. Msgr. Irving ,A. DeBlanc, who is also a strengthen its solidarity and to technical adviser to the share more fully in a completeChief of Air Foree Chap- ly Christian way of life." lains, Msgr. Terence P. Man'. World Finnegan, left Washington GIl Noting that the military I1t'e May 31.

Parishes Drop Name Of St. Philomena

MADRID (NC) - A long smoldering conflict b€tween Catholic workers' organizations in Spain and the gov-

01)\

Institutes for Air Force

In tribute to the memory of the late Sister Adrienne Marie, S.U.S.C., first prine). pal and guiding force in the

CINCINNATI (NC) - An Eastern Rite prelate who is in constant touch with Catholics behind the Iron Curtain

T-He ANCHORThurs., June 22, 1961

I

Will Honor. Late Holy Union Nun

Bishop' Discloses Priests' Behind Iron Curtain

their wives at the 62nd Ohio State K. or C. convention banquet. "We must be optimistic enough to convince others that Christianity is the good news, and see what we can do in our era to make God better known," the Bishop said. Communism will be conquered, he said, "when we dedi'eate ourselves to prayer, to penence,to our Faith." Hungry for Truth The 51-year-old Bishop said bis ~experience of preparing weekly broadca~ts tG Iron Curtain countries has convinced him that the oppressed people "are hungry for the truth." As a result of the Radio Free Europe broadcasts, "we are in touM with 1,126 families" under Moscow rule, he said, and with 112 Catho.ic priests, living behind the Iron Curtain as foresters, miners, millhands, and laborers. One of the Soviet newspapers recently devoted an entire page, he said, to denouncing the work of "Elko - Vatican Agent." It carried letters from Russian families who had received aid from the Pittsburgh Exarohate laying, "We don't need your help," and "Give it to the underpriviliged in America." "However," the Bishop noted

Family Life Head, foGive

Memorial Drive

THE ANCHOR-Diocese oHaU River-Thurs. June 2tt 1961 ,

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science" to Congress urging reform of the Mexican farm laboP program. The religious leaders believe 1:he nation has an "inescapable moral responsibility" to reform the program under which hun:ireds of thousands of Mexicans, :alled braceros, are imported in:0 the U.S. each year to work 3n farms. Lack Protection They charged that the program undermines the economic position of domestic farm worker:l. Among the signers were Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, Archbishop Edwin V. Byrne of Sante Fe, Archbishop Robert E. Lucey 01. San Antonio, Bishop Stephen S. Woznicki of Saginaw, Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord el Washington and Rabbis Theodore L. Adams and Julius Mark, both of New York. Lowest Level , The signers of the joint statement pointed out that domestie migrant farm workers earn all average of less than $1,000 a year and are excluded from the benefits of minimum wage laws, unemployment insurance, and workmen's compensation. "Perhaps the most harmful 01 all." they declared, "is the categorical exclusion of farm workers from legislation that protects the right of other workers to organize into unions and bargain with. their employers. "Without this protection, farm workers are mute and impotent, relegated to the very lowest level of our economy and the fringe of our society, truly a strange and wholly indefensible position for the workers in our greatest industry."

Seek Referendum On Maine Law AUGUSTA (NC):"-A move. block tllx7paid bus rides for private· school students, permiited under a newly enacted state Jaw• will soon get' underway in earnest, according to one of its SpODSOl'S.

State Rep. Ernest C. Smith said circulation of petitions wiD begin shortly in a campaign te obtain 42,000 signatures to force a referendum on the new law. ' The referendum move .. headed by a group calling itself M a i n e Citizens for Publie Schools. Rep. Smith said the movement "is well organized, and ev~y single person in the state, ell-' cept those known not to' f".."or our thinking will be contactP.d." 'Quiet Drive' '"It will be a quiet drive w1t1l about 1,000 people working," mt . . said. Rep: Smith met here with about 25 legislators,' clergfmea and privatec:ltizens to map ):lIan. for the drive. The measure pennitting tallpaid bus rides for private S( hool students was passed by the rltat. Legislature in mid-May and signed into law a week late!' by Gov. John Reed. If enough signatures are 0btained to force a referendum, the enabling act will be suspended until the referendum actmdly takes place. That might blt . . long as 18 months from now,

Fr. Koob Is to Serye In Education Post WEST DE PERE (NC)--Fr. C. Albert Koob, O. Praem., of. Philadelphia will serve as associate secretary for the Secondary Schools Department of the National Catholic Education Association. Father Koob, member of the Premonstratensian order, Stl()oo ceeds Father Richard D.• Muto. roy" O. Praem. His appointm~ is effective July 17. Father Koob, ordained in Ju~ 1944 has been principal of Southeast Catholic High School, now Bishop Neumann High Sch~, in Philadelphia since 1954.


12 ,-

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;:;e of Fall River-Thurs. June 22. 1961

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God Love You By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.D.

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy Early in his new book, Christians in the World (Sheed and Ward. $3.50), Canon Jacques Leclercq analyzes the breviary readings (lately considerably shortened) for the feast of St. Louis, King of France. Louis, of course, was a layman, not a cleric. He was in the Church was the only conan excellent king, husband, sumer, The producers were exand father. The readin~ clusively the priests and relistate "that he twice went Oft gious." Today the layman must crusade, that, remaining five 7ears in Palestine, he there converted many of the infidel and ransomed many Christian captives, that he built many monasteries and hospitals, t hat lie gave much jn alms, that he ..sited the sick, ministering to them with his ewn hands, that be dressed simp17 .and praeti8ed. .aortification." What is JO remarkable hece! ""at, by this account, ~. Lou. -.ight have been a cleric, not a layman. The fact that he CG"ferned his people well is not men4lioned, nor that he. avoided war Mld established a just and lastine (NNlce with England. It is DGt even said that he was married. a would seem that wbatevet" eoncerns the temporal order 01. .ings is deliberately avoided. Deeds BeaU,. C01ln~ The reason for this may well . . that a person is canonized because of the quality of his interior life, his spiritual eminence. But that will be manifest in his deeds. The ordinary layman, living and working in the midst eI. a secularized society, will not have the opportunities for the ~ecific sort of holy living that was open to St. Louis in a speeifically Christian society. Can he indeed live a truly hoi,. Bfe? May he, if he seeks holiness, be concerned at all about the temporal order? Can he bring a jlenuine Christian influence to bear on the temporal order? These are some of the questioNi which Canon Leclercq considers. .' At the very hear. of his !>Gok • the single, bask questiOft: Can "a thoroughly lay man" be • saint? That is, for sanctity mu. • person enter the religious life . ., even though remaining in the world must be imitate reHgioU8 _ d be sort of a lay religious! Vital Qaeaao- TNa,. Such inquiries are vital at the present moment For the secularkinc of society proceeds at an even faster rate. Services which *be Church previously rendered Etn the field of charity, for ex-, ample) are more and more preempted by the state, The trans6)rming of. people's lives is increasingly accomplished b,. political means (as in the eomlIlunist system). At the same time, it is Dnly iIle layman who can bring the· presence and power ~f C~rist into the community at large. He. has an indispensable role to play in the cause of Christ and the m.ission of the Church. It is a aew role, and this is a new age ill. the history of Christianity. Concern for Laib Hence theologians are now far m.ore concerned with the laymar than ever before. Does Canon Leclercq go too far, does he overstate the case, when he says 1tlat previously the layman's role was merely negative and that he eounted for nothing! At any rate, this Louvain professor is being precise when he declares, "To borrow a comparUlon from economics, the ,layman

Boston College Aids In Urban Renewal WASHINGTON (He) - The hderal Housing and Home I'inance Agency bas announced . .t Boston College will assist tile Massachusetts Department of Commerce in using a $61,633 l'ederal demonstration grant to develop methods to help busiaesses 0isplaced by urban reaewal. The college is operated b,y the .le8uit Fathers.

be producer as well as consumer, else the functioning of the Church falters and the Church's impact on thl! world diminishes. High holiness for the layman is possible, because all holiness consists in living the life of Christ. That is within the reach"' of all. Grace is available to all, not only in sufficiency but in superabundance. He also explores the possibility of contemplation for the busy iayman, showing that this is by no means out of the question. It is, he maintains, not only compatible with a very acticve life (as some would deny), but ab*Jlutely essential to sustain a truly Christian active life. Twe-r... Taek It is Canon Leclercq's conteRtion that the right dispositions, the flowerin« of a sound interiot' life lead to authentically Cllf:oi__ Uan influence and accomplishment in the temporal order. He explicitly denies that faith hall all the answers fO!" ecOnomic pr.oblems, for. example, QlI' 50Cial questions. For these, there are technical s~lutions which are beyond the realm of faith. His point is that "the man who approaches earth_ ly realities with a Christian spirit will approach them in a different way from a non-Christian ... If charity is his first c{)nsideration and if this charity i. divine love living in him, his attitude towards earthly realities will be different." Hence the author sees the task: Df the Church just now as twofold: first, the transformation of souls by grace; secondly, the transformation of the world by those living in grace. And the second "is the province of the laity acting under their own ressponsibility." 'Selbrible' Book It is this lut whick ill new, and which many regard witA suspicion and disfavor. Can t1M laity be trusted? Will the,. reliably represent and communicate the Christian Thing! Yes, if properl,. formed by the cleelY. The clergy, he says, should address themselves to the task, leaving aside their own preoccllpation with the temporal ocder. "When a priest concerns himself with a temporal question, he either does so inadequately because he is a priest or el$e he loses the clear-cut awareness of the exigencies of his priesthood." Rather, the priest should be readying and encouraging the layman to devote himself to temporal things "with a Christian soul, animated by supernatural life, steeped in the Christian values." Canon Leclercq comes to grip in these pages with a central difficulty of the present age, examines it thoroughly. and proposes a practical answer f(}r it. He has written a sensible book, which is the more inspiring because of its firm hold on homely reality.

Lawmakers Consider Communism Course CONCORD (NC )-New Hampshire legislators agree generally that high school students should be taught the dangers of communism but they differ 08 how S\tCh a program should be administered. State Sen.tO!" Laurier Lamontagne of Berlin is the propGuent of the measure which would require every public high schOGl senior to take a course DR "Americanism VI. Communi8m." Senator Lamontagne says he ill aware that the Red menace ia already being taught in some schools. He said he feels the ittstruction il needed ia every school and the way to accomplish this is to write it into .Law•

I

Stop Dieting! Fast!

La'jman :-:Jas Indispensable 'Role in Cause of Christ

WHAT ARE SOME WAYS BY WHICH WE, IN UNION WITH OUIt LORD, CAN HELP REDEEM THE PEOPLE or AFIUCA AND ASIA! The Scriptures have always recommended fasting. Our Lord fasted for forty days and nights. And not because He needed .. do penance. He was fulfilling what had been prefigured both by Moses and by Elias who, themselves, las-ted fof' forty day.. Indeed, many Old Testament figures support~d their prayers of adoration and petition with fa!Jtmg. Esther and the Jews fasted fOl' three days before she went into the king's presence to intercede for her people. Esdras proclaimed a thirty-day fast on behalf of a safe journey. When Nehemias learned that Jeru, salem was in ruins h~ fasted and prayed to God. This tradition continued throughout the New Testament. There was fasting when it was necessary to choose a new Apostle, ill partiCUlar he who was to hecom~ St. Paul, and before the ordinatiQll of priestos.

EDITOR: Father Harold A. Buetow of the Brooklyn Diocese has been appointed senior staff editor of the new Catholic Encyclopedia sponsored by the Catholic University of Ameriea. NC

Photo.

Cardinal Cushing Hails Franciscan CHICAGO (NC) - Richard Cardinal CtlShing Itu praised the new interracial program of the Francisca. Third Order. The Archbishop of Boston, episcopal protector of the Third Order, says the project ia "worthy of every Franciscan." "St. Francis himself gave the example in word and deed that all men are united in the Fatherhood of God and the brotheehood. of man, irrespective of race, creed or color," the Prince of the Church recalled. Belone Together Cardinal Cushing's comments were made in connectiOll wit. the announcement of the estaBlishment of the Third Orde(-'. new interracial prograN. _der the title Action for lawracitlt Unders.tanding. Cardinal Cushing notiecl ltMIt interracial justice ill "a ~ whick few people caB. appreacft without feeling 901De deIt"ee fit emotional warmth." "Yet no controver.,. . . . arl_ in modern times whiell it ia greater need of being separaW from emotional overtones which might distort tile DbjectiY'e tl'lIttl ~ the issues involVed," he pointed out. The Cardinal declaretf thet "we all belong togethet" Ood has so created us." Eniire :RaM "We must all liv.e to!letber &ad work together because OUI" JOlidarity in the society into which we are drawn by our temporal and material needs is the refleetion of the higher unity of cmr incorporation with Christ our Lord.

Dee.tI"

Cuban Church Continued from Pace 0 the island. about 18 remain. There are approximately 100 Cuban clergy remaining in the country. More than 200 Brotherl have also left Cuba. Meanwhile, 109 more Religious -including eight nuns forced from their cloister by Castro agents and 83 Marist Brothers whose institutions have been siezed by the regime - arrived. here by chartered IN- fNN. Cuba.

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Readen, Itop dieting. Fast! What ia tile difterenee betweea tile two? Materially, none. You will lMe tea pounds either wq. But there is • spiritual difference which l~ in the motivatiOli. Y01l diet. make tour bod,. beautiful, if that is pouible; yov. fast to make your *Jul beautiful, which is alway. possible. 11.: Wh,. net lolIe tea ....... b,. lJeD.diaC' 11M ,. 7 lIPen. _ _aeks &ad. swee6BT . .~ lIIake ..... ,. tu&iDC' aDd not lIIerel,. :u we .... to brine CbrW .. AIIia aa41 Afrioa we . . . lint take awa,. frOBI. o1lrselv.. DeJllrive J'oullelf fer Bia sake and Ut_ sea. ,.. . . tas~-_,."" .. TIM Soeiet,. for tile Pro.....aUon ., the Faith. F'" _

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GOD LOVE YOU to Mrs. C.B.R. for $5 "I- am 83 years old and not able w work hard, but I collected this donation by selling . address labels. Please use it to help our missionaries buy rood." • • • to A.M.B. for $5 "In thanksgiving to St. Anthony for !aVOl'S received." •.• to A Third-Grade Catechism Class for $13.08 ''This represents pennies, nickels, dimes, quarters and a few half-dollars sacrificed for the poor children of the mission lands." • . . w Lt. and Mrs. J.L.N.V. for $50 "Every pay day we put part of our pay in the church envelope of our budget book. This offering UI what WM left after our parish obligations had been met for the year. It does not seem like a sacrifice as we had never thought of it as DUrs. We are simply returning to the Lord a small part of whet 'Ie h .. giveD. lIS." • Tbe tea 1et6ers of GOD LOVE YOU spell out a decade of tile .......,. . . tlle7 eneil'cle the medal originated b,. Bishop Sheen .. I a _ the MHoana of the World. WitJa 1:0- requetllt and a ...-resPO.utlllC oIterina' ,._ _,. order a GOD LOVE YOU IIledal ill ..,. ... ., .... follewlac Ryles: , J -.11 III,... , S -.11 It k &'old tilled , 5 laree s*erliac sih'er ' " larce 11k ... filled

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Cvt . - tIIu. ool-.l, pin your sacrifice 110 it and mail it 110 the I'ultoa J. Sheen, National Directol" of the Socieq for the Propaaattoa 01. the Faith, 366 Fiftb Avenue, New York 1, N. Y., 01" ,-.oUr Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, . . Mona II_ Street, FaD River, M ...

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Prelate Directs New Canadian Peace Corps MONTREAL (NC)-:-Ca~ ada has set up its oounterpart of President Kennedy's Peace Corps. It is the Cana-

Mother of Three' Pays Tribuw to Sisters As Schools Close for S~mmer Vactwn

THE ANCHOR-

Thurs., June 22, 1961

ClergyCommittee Promotes ',SociG~ , Action Program

By Mary F. Gamache Another school year is ove~. My "examination-weary'P fourth and fifth graders have tossed their battered schoolbags into the darkest corners of the house and my little fiyst-grade "weedling" is bubbling over wi th the excitement of vacatio~ months ahead, ][ always experience a feeling of regret when my children leave a. Sister whom I haw come to know and trust " through the 10 preceding months. The knowledge that the nuns have been with my

dian University Service Overseas. The first chairman is Msgr. If. J. Somers, president of st. Francis Xavier University, Ant!Bonish, N. S. Vohmteell' lFlnancing children through so many hours The CUSO is a nationwide agency to co-ordinate existing 'of each school day, teaching them programs which' are offering not only subjects the school curriculum requires but also courtechnical and intellectual assisttesy, honesty and responsibility, ance to underprivileged countries. It is an expansion of seven 10 very comforting. Of primary importance' is the volunteer services composed of Canadian students for overseas fact that the Sisters teach my work. It was established by rep- children about God. It is 'marresentatives of various univer- ' velous how a first grade teacher can incorporate the mysteries of sities and their student bodies. The CUSO will be financecll the Faith into a handful of picthrough individual agencies, non- tures and' easy words and present government sources Q&:\d volUJ)- them to little minds in an uncomplicated way. teer programs. Little ones keep these first Seeking Assistance Volunteers will not be paid impressions. I know I kept mine. First Teacher salaries or wages while serving abroad but they will receive exI had many wonderful teachpense allowances, travel fare, in- 0E'S during my school years and surance and other requirements, some are still my close friends. Msgr. Somers said. None, however, can take the Many countries. particularly special place of my first teacher the emerging nations of Mrica in my five-year-old heart. and Asia, are turning to Canada She was a convert; but to III for trained' personnel at all first grader, this has little siglevels to ,assist them in the gi- nificance. She ma'de learning to gantic task of building up their read an enjoyable game and she countries, the Antigonish prel- held our hands, as most 'first ate declared. grade teachers do; to help 1IJS scrawl our first shaky words. 1 remember once she gave me the ruler on my legs for jumping over the seats when I should CHICAGO (NC) - A noted have been sitting quietly in mine! philanthropist who often said What makes this Sister unique that "God is my partner," left IIll my memory, however, is that an estate of $20.017,000, most Olf whenever she talked of Jesus or' which will go to the Church, it His Blessed Mother, her face was disclosed when an inventory grew red, her eyes watered and' of, his holdings was filed in teaf'S trickled down her pretty Probate Court. face. "Why is Sister crying? Frank J. Lewis, who made his She must feel terribly sorry for, fortune from a tar products and God on' the Cross! Sister must paving material manufacturing love Jesus very much to cry over company, died last December :u the story of Christmas!" 1 wanted to love Jesus very much too, beat the age of 93. Lewis, who gave. millions to cause Sister did. the Catholic Church and its inMy f.aith was born with' the stitutions ,during his lifetime, Inspiration of this nun who was provided in his will that most of. so moved by love of God that the estate should go to Church she could not hide it from her organizations after individual children. She was a calm, softbequests and trust funds totalinB spoken woman, not the loqua$1.5 million were deducted. cious, emotional type. Assets of the Lewis ,estate I~ "ittle Children cIuded $4,028,000' in bonds, If a bee came in through" & $400,000 in mortgages, $665,000 classroom window, there would in notes, and $463,605 in cash. be no panic, but simply r~assur­ The balimce, the bulk of the es- ance from Sister that if we sat tate, consisted of stock in 50 still arid went on with our numcompanies. bers, she would put "Mr. Bee" out! No, this was not a woman 'quick to hysterics. This nun 200 Non-Catholics who could hardly speak of God Attend Open House without teara bad something TORONTO (NC)-Some 200 non-Catholics, including Protestants, Jews and Hindus, attended Strongarms Priest an open house lil¢ St. Peter'. In Escape Attempt' church here. AKRON (NC) - A prisopel' In preparation for the event, threatened to cut a priest's throat the Paulist Fathers at St. Peter's with D jagged piece of metal conducted a novena for religious while using him as a hostage In unity, attended by almost 100 an attempt to break out of the non-Catholics. An intensive pub- Summit County jail. licity campaign encouraged nonFather John F. Wessel, assistCatholics to be at the open house. lint at St. Bernard's parish, weilt At least one non-Catholic min- to the jail to hear confessions. ister, an Anglican, who had He was approached in a cell heard about it, announced the block by Kenneth F. Schmigal, event from his pulpit and urged 28, awaiting trial on a kidnap his congregation to attend. charge. The prisoner Said he had During the open house, guides something confidential to discuss. took the visitors on a tour of On the way to the conference the church and explained Cath-,' room, Schmigal stro'ngarmed the olic practices to them. Ben'edic- priest, and held against his tion pi the Blessed Sacramelltt throat Ia piece of tin shaped like closed the program. Ii knife. Father Wessel squirmed free, sounded an alarm bell, and DevoteVacationTime a guard subdUed Schmigal. Bebeing sent to a· maximum To Mexican Project fore security cell, Schmigal said he CHICAGO (NC)-College stu- had no intention of harming the dents from' various parts of the priest. "I thought he could get U. S. are donating their Summer me out of here," he said. "Life is to help build a family life center Ii gamble. It's all or nobbing, and in n low income neighborhood 1 lost." of Mexico City. The project, sponsored by th0 Christian Family Movement of the U. S., and Mexico, will be staffed completely by volunteers. Land and most of the building ti?l~D1IlDi' .B«nUl50n, Reg. 1?'1h~i'M. materials for the center have IDlDAlalE1TUic 'A~ID $U<C~ ~OOM been donated. $lIJl?lP'~U[E$ When the center is completed, the Christian Family Movement 2©L.l A$IXJILIEY IS(j)UJ~1W AR[Q) of MexicQ will administer a pro[("!ew ~i<lc1(fci'Ql gram to promote,family life ed\!.. WY ~·ia@6,l~ cation.

WORCESTER (NC)-A1ll interdenominational Clergy Committee on the Community has beeIF' establiRhecl here for "the promotion of socic~ action programs" The committee was establishe~ ~ meet "the need for greater in_ volvement of the clergy in- community affairs," according to Father Robert G. Howes, elected ns its first chairman. Father Howes was awarded El master's degree in city plannin!! l~ year by the Massachusetto Institute of Technology. ' The new committee will work ill such fields as urban renewal, local and regional community planning, juvenile delinquency. the obscenity problem, racial and religious discriminatioDt pl!'oblems of the aging, and menhealth. . , States Pur})08!El Father Howes stressed that the !lew group will not seek to engage in theological" 'dialogue' m any sense of the word." ' <, "This is not a group to discu811 spiritual and liturgical differences," he said. "It is tota)ly anti! simply a combination to re-establish the relevance of religioEl m the community." , The committee will meet uS least monthly beginning m September. During the Summell, members are preparing positiolil papers dealing with issues an which the group may act, Fa~ Howes said. The Catholic Bishop of W02\oo rester, . Most Rev. Bernard J. Flanagan, and' the president cd the local Council of Ch'urches ~re tm-officio memberB of the new

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Bulk of Estate Goes Church

to

JANSON'S Pharma<ej'

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gJroup. I

THIS IS THE DAY: Schoofs out today for kids alll youngs ten

over't,heDioc~se. Hard to tell who's happier ' . orr,pooch. .beautiful within heir lmd it shone through. Did she cry because God ifl perfect and we are so imperfect? Or because God is Love and the world rejected Him? Did she cry because we were little children with big, wide eyes and hearts full of wonder land she prayed we would keep our ooull3 , spotless all our lives? Or maybe it wan that she bed been o~tside' the Church and 'was grateful to be home. Whatever the reason, my life was forcibly influenced and I shall ever be gratefl,\l to her for instilling in me something that can neveE' be lost-love of Almighty God.

pomice Raid Allegecfl Obscenity Center PHILADELPHIA (N C ) Police confiscated, more thaa 200,000 allegedly obscene booM and magazines in a raid on II distributing center whose wan. were said'to be sold near some '75 public and' parochial schools. Three men were arrested, CG smut charges as a result of thE) raid on ,the B & D Distribu.ting ,Company. The raid followed alll investigation based on complailllts that ,pornography Wail being sold to high school sOudents. , Conviction for distribution ~ obscene literature carries a jail sentence of two years or III $2,. fine or both.

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THE ANCHOR~Diocese ofFciIlRiver::":'Thurs: Ju:ne

;~lFijJjtfMre' ofC~frholic Schoo~s I

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,It was characteristic of Slster'Madeleva that she' should

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ad,dress het: students for the 'Iast£timi{ President of: · .St. Mary's CoIleg~, Notre. Dame, in terms of prophecy,' not '. i"eminiscence. Her retirement from office after 27 strenuouS!' .

,.

WASHINGTON (NO)'-Supreme Court 'been asked tDreview .. lo~ei' court rulings which upheld II Post Office Department ban on three "physical culture" magazines. The Post Office held that the magazines were obscene 8llAl'l nonmailable. The, publisher of the threo magazines is Herman L. Womack of Washington.The court refused on. March 27 to review another case in which Womack Watl found guilty of violating postal anlli-obscenitsr laws' and sentencedto one to tlu\ee years in jail. :,;The.magazines involved in his latest appeal were' banned from the mails by the"Post Office'10 April, 1960, During departmental hearings psychiatric' testimony ..was offered to' the 'effect that the magazines· would· appeal to sex-. ·~al deviatel!.· . ;'J. VOITectllnterPretation' In his appeal til the SupreIhG Court Wo~ack ar,gues that tho magazines' are not obscene ac.'lording to ~e h(gh court's o'wn test of obscenity-its effect· on an avetageperson. . 'But the U. S. Court of Appeals, upholding a ·U:S. District Court ruling in s~pport' of the POst 01;fice Department, held . Oa Ma'rch 23,'1961,thlit ·thecor~ect In~erpretation of the Sl4prenie Court's obscenity 'test takes-ilito ~nsideration, not the effect of material on an average member of the entire community, but OD the average ..member .of that gl-oup fOl' whiCh the material. mtended. . .

haa

The U.S.

Most Rev: Robert J..D·wyer, D.D•.. )Bishop of Reno.

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.. years, one of the longest . leaderShip in every ~ea ~uche(l tenures on record, would by Christian philosophy. ..' · have justified a backward It must make I). m.ighty and' .' glance and a summing-up. heroic· effort not simply ta com. But· it was tomorrow that occu- pete ·wit4 secular education but . · pied her mind at her final' Con- to' SurPass it in value and pro,. vocation,' the ' ductivity. . .... . 6hape of Cath: lH!l&I Honorable Reputatioe·' 0lic . education "'~ same thing mUst ·~.said · for t y yea r s' 02 Catholic education iii Ainer-..from now, at lea:' on' ail levelS. The survival . the turn of the ~~l).tality . must. be eliminated. .; \llleWcentury. . If 'the' system huilt up such . ,,(J,'he, history of :sacrifice its to"'pay dividen,ds' 'iIi i;: /Catholic educaspiritual.gains andilitellectuaJ: , ..t ion in America pr~ss it too.must calculate itll i • . has ·.yet to be 'resources ~s~gainst its risk,s, ita i ~itten ... 0 n I y' program 3;s' aga~nsttlie.: d~msngD . '~' ,partial accounts Which will be madeorit:·· . . · have been pubIt,~·hasi 'a' .corps of :dedicated- ' .;' ,:" TWO roO]:S ON· THE' IF'L'UTE: .Bartdlea:der· Lawrence lished thus far, rapid attempts ~ . men ·and women, religious and Welk tries a' few chords on his flute for Father' Gordon · cover the ground and'· give:" I) lay, 'as its prime asset; it has 1he M;ycue,direc.tor of ,the aPostolate .forrad'io arid. televisio.·n. . k massive supPort of the Catholic' r.)_ :"q,u~c '. perspective. For 'all"OIK' body, and there is evidence ofa . in the S~ Paul. archdi9Cese.. Father Mycue .is general . . .prlde ID our achievemen,t, whi~h hel"htenecl sense at. 'respons''ib'il- ·chairm.an 'Of the 13th annual con<n"<>cQS of..;.the Catho'lic B'road. ,an 'be qualified as one of· the ... b~~ ;'greatest ventures in private. en_Ity on thepart.;oftbe American °wters:AssOCia~ion,riowmeeting in MiIineapbIis. NC Photo. terprise in the memory of: thE) laity as sharinf' in this enterprise, ~.' race, we have failed'to produce a 'not ail recipient only but as c». ·S·ou·~d·s;;".:·.W.· a'r~I",n' II '.·;tft . . te·'I~e'·c·:t· ;lIia.,i~. definitive work which would 'partner.withthe hierareJ:IY.· .. :," 11111I 11,11 :I V . 1.1I 'i 'l'll!Il ov se.t forth the record in detail ,and .' It bas an'·honorablereputation. :-' :'''Continued from Page _One architecture,' decoration, litUP"o >iSUggest a !:riticism which .w.P'uld perhaps'sOmewhat overweighted •. ; theories and opinions which .gicalpainting or- ·sculptUre.:"' .. ', . . . : .. .be based on facts, not on asSu.,mp- as a dominantlyeonserVative 'can' receive 'the definitive stamp '. ,...rh·'···' "., · ·.tions and impressions.. . ..... 'force, ~ut not without recoghi- 'of:' truthfulness' only' from the .emamreason, I believe,}fl ' f 'ts te t'al .. ~ 'magl·sterl·um' . of the.Chur·ch.·.·. that co.ntemporary a.~ itself as ..' a .... 'T.his lack may. accoun't .·.f·or· tl on 0 I· , po n 1 . lllJ.a h I h as rarely produced works .. genume... . "Th s' -A:'·.B ks'" f :th woe '80.'~e of the freewheeling' :'and; liber al IZmg 'power; . . e ac..,,,,, 00 o · e . th I ' t' I f"ld 'hi' · lIs,.....· ·... l·ble··are t.!-. basl·cal·ly. funda.J.!1.... ..e ee<,c.. es..l!l.sIca, . Ie w c h .Issae JUUS' D vv ~ 11 b · exuberant criticism which" haD ~ been aired' in the public' press. One further adv'illlt&ge .' b mentai, .. to· be .left to the ·'in" . ~ve ee~ ~ccep~ed by our people Long Struggle ' ., ·promised.. It·dependa· upon tho dividual and 'pI'ivateinterpreta- ~. t~ly mSPV~honalan~ con~~, ....But at least we kiiow'-'in'" n moral integrity of the American tlon of even 11 birge' numberaf clve,~ a feelIng "of umon WIth . .. C th li body If thi bod ~holars.'" '.'" God .. ' he stat~, Liturgical. art general sort 'of WllJ' what. we a 0 c : s ' y, 'quite .... b e ' Aid ~ve done in America over the simply, holda the line 0Ill the Archbishop' 'Vagnozzi said the ..~mnot .... co.nsic;Ieredfroma~ . . .. . fundamental is ...tJ b'...... lltur.-w I_·th. d' f' ld ._esthetic pomt of. Vi.ew. It has . to CHIC~GO (NC) -'Th~ presl· past century and a half and what sue u.. uou con;6~'" e secon Ie . - b e " . ' . .. ~ent of the American Jewish 'we are doing at the Present . trot. in four decades many of the which there exists among some '. art, and It has to be lIturgical. 'moment. We may not be satis.. ,arguments which appear in- ~tholic scholars· "a certain ..Archbishop ·Vagnozzl alluded <;:ongresssaid here that his orified,and it would be. a sQrry surmountable ilI)' 'non - Catholic amount of discontent with the also to the "complaint voiced ganization must continue to thing if we were,' but eniphat- America today will· have beeil current. practice of the Church." . more than once that in high ec- pose Federal aid to private · ica!ly we have no reason to 'bel disposed of' substlmtially. • "So many liturgists believe to- oclesiastical circles the intellec- .schools, including Jewish day · IlShamed of the pe.rformimce. ",' T h I [J remark, incidentally, ,day that they· have found the ·.tual·w often underestimated . schools. "Nothing must change 'our .stand in this .regard," Jo· It has 'been a long stiuggie·gives us no'satisfaction. It would perfec.t formula in order to bring ~d ,also, m.istrusted. · again'st poverty, bigotry and in-' be infinitely better to hammer the litur~: nearer· to the peopJo '. "The question is;" he asserted. 'achim Prinz of Newark, N ..J .. e*perience, but it has re~ltecI 'fn the debate .out' on Its merits thaD.·and the people nearer to God." '''whether we are Confronted with ·toldthe .governing council of tho · .. 'permanent educational sYstem. to win it 'by 'default. '. he stated, "Actually, they seem true .and ,genuine intellectualS-:-:- ~ewish Congress. ~. is' inconceivable, shoft ofilie .·Federal·aid; I,)ir more precisely, .more in agr~ement in the matter who are mspiredby a 'oillapse' of America herSelf .'as "iipublic ·assistance. for' the Cath-' of.criticizil1g ~.the liturgy as .it.tll lOve' Of tru~ iU,UDbly dispOsed '4:0hstitutional democracy;·tllat· olie educationalllystem., lis inev-tQdlly.1J:lan iI} a,comroon and con- to submit·lIb GOd~s Revelatio~ ·me' CathaI" d . t"" I "," itable;!givenUme fortheidea"to ~~ . plan ,for, r~asonaDle . ~ and the'·sutliorih. ... of. 'His Church'"'' , ,._ ' . . IC. ~ llca lon~ .. p~?:" penetrate .the Ameri...............:;." , f " " ; ' :.'i?..af!1.~?o\llq eIther ,~eclU1e.. ? t ' . . . .' . ':'~ '-U~ .orms. ':'" <.':'''.' , . . . . ..:.:..or' whetheFW'e 'are'ci>nuonted 'eease to play an increasintfi>art . science. :But,,;ai~'of""whatev~ :. ..",.Ad (:ontrary.,to·~II)I,. See',,' with intellectllii,lB'whoI>elieve,.the..total picture. ,,' sort, or lD-1DlY gIven. am~lUnt. llJ ;,The ArchbistJ,op.:pointedout first' of all,'in th:eabsoiute .~ t".-, . j" ..' '<." Federal' Aid " ,i'.;: 'i";' n~ t~e, ~~l ~!1sw~ ..to.::th·e ~prob-' . that, ~the.i e ,is ~ll~ .~. found premacyand''unlimited. freedom i was perhaps unavoidable lems confronting us in the y~lilll,ry.,.almostJana.t.i~l ins.istence on' o!- human reason, reason whi~h ~ that the initial proposal to extend. ,a.h~ad.. ,,\ :. ." .. ', ~.st~ap.cingpr<Qposa~ which. ··,the has shown itSelf 'SO. ofteftfallaJ!!msT .'FEDERAL SAVINGS · ~ederal assistance to ·the'·Catho- .' ·.T~e real-answer lies in t!Io :ij9~y ~ has. opep}.y.. considerecl· cious~alia subject to 'error:'" and Loan Assoclatioe: .of Fall Ri:ver ; lie schools should have suggested' : willingness' of those responsible; with diSfavor. . . ., 1 North Main St.. : ~ :question as to their ability'·~:' hierar~hy and clc:;rgy; educators "Take; for m~ta.n~.the qu~ . . Fnll River. Mass. !~rvive without· it This question, and laIty, ~ fulfIll the. promIse. tion 'of the'use·o'f.the vernacular, ;.06viously, . is entirely distinCt·. of th~ ~~pc~ Ca~holic sch~l 1n.the Mass," 'he sald.:"It Iis·en,;. .Please ,,,,,,,d form. ,and ,pastas-; from any consideration of' jus- Survlv~l IS' not the ISSue; the Ii;-: dent' that if the;MaSs were eel&pai4, 'SAV&-UY -MAILonvelopea, 1tiee and equity involved. It s~e is)i1e. . . .· :brated in the mlXiernlivmg ~" I!'H ;ad1ould never have been raised. Old M" . " guages, ~he'pe<;>ple couid' follow , . . _ _•..,...__ _ ;.... .' '~~or if there is one point upoa .. Church more closely ·the! word5 of tM' 6 . . :~~lIC~ t~e .C:atho!ic body., in,:.".S 27Historic Site . Mass.' .. ~; :!~JnerlCa IS umted m deterquna.,.."'. WASHINGTON (NC)-A ,.. "But still the Mass is the uniCHARlESF. VARGAS ;tion and effort, it is the welfare 'I i ", . reg- versal and perennial· Sacrifice of OrR' _ ,.of' Catholic education. . : ,0 ut on. mtrod~c~d m the Ho~se Ghrist ... and. the use of Latin .254ROCKDAY AVINUI ! It rna be th t th _ of RepresentatIves would deslg- for the Latin Rite .gives to it lil NEW·,~,MASI. ·p"Ii i .y t'll' a. e. em nate a' 255-year-old' :: mission 'sense of unity and universality." · as s IS s I concentrated on·· church a " . t· I h~ t -.., ' f " :~e parish' school rather '~.Mn ·Tt. would :~v~Q~~ lti~rlCt ~i. He added that it has alwaYlll ,rPon the total system, from first ~ n . . . IS . :.e o . been a source .of "profo.und· satigpde though gradua'te schoo~ cia Xe;tvler... churc!ii~ound.ed isfactlon"to hiin ."to see tho i~~t i.t. ~~llresents'a hard Core Of ..:... a:7:~Ck,Je:~ ,.DiiSSlO~I«JHacOtlyly.Mthe~.·s·ameeleebcraertedemo·wnl.iesth ~ .OOlJ,VlCtlOn. ., D······ , I nia!' d" ........ :.;" . Right to ]Leadership '~hur~;eo·bO'..A' 8Yil: ti~ the same ·:words.. amoitg vart~ ~ .; .But' h' t f t - Is '" . - .... a ase u .. opera 000 peoples..A the world" . : .'. w a. 0 .omorrow r ... far muCh of the' Catholic m i & - U 1 . E&chaccount insured safe by aD l~ be concelv~d m terms of s~- sionary activity in the Middle Church Art ~enC'Y of the U. S. ~vt. . Yival only, or .must it encount~r.. At1&ntic region.' Toaa", it ia Archbishop' Vs'gnozzi said ato' I~n~ conquer. those chang~ served as.an historic" pre- fblrd "area of. restlessnescf' f.~hl~h are already upon us? ... museum. ., . shrfn:e llDd amongCatholie intelleclualo b i. Sister Madeleva. speakingfos: that of eCclesiastical art. OF ~~e Cath?li~ woman's college,' He conc~edthat contem~ :was candId m .. acknowledging I) lit.. 'M'ARTI~I ary art h8s'not'been :Widelsr Be: ~ch;ange of mind", a' recognition .ft. •. K II~ cepted by Catholic .authoritieS, j()f shortcoin~ngsand limitations' SCRAP,. METALS .'. but he said he does not think . • ,Bristol CoUD~ .1.arIraSt 'of. the past which will be IntolWASTE PAPER - RAGS the reason for this lack of em-lred<mal Savlns., As:soctatd ~~able in the decades ahead. ThO:' mUCKS AND TRAILERS thusiasm steins· ftOm the' ..... INorill MaIDS&., cor. Bedford' l~~tholic college can no longer' PAPER' DRIVES· stinate oPpositio~'toContempoJl'Open Fridays D A.M.·to 9 P.M • :00 satisfied with occuping 'Q de-" ,CHURCHE~-" SCOUTS and &U7art as expressed, fil' Church. . J~psjve positJollt merely as the CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS .... . .~:;.~.. " ;guardian of inherited values 1080 Shawmut Avenue i;., .~. .. ~ ':' ~~ . "~wever precious these may' be: . "Ne~ ~.dfor~ ':, WY 2-7828 ., . ·T.· ... of' l"n'I"t~'r'I";"~"-It·· must bring its .. CatholiciSm' 'Wl 'Y 11II IN NEW' BEDfORD, ~ IT'S . '. :Wo the var. of intelle!:.tua~ pr6g-.,' ", '.', F~ l\{iLe.,'·~ .. ;ress and .vindicate its 'right' ·to t" . ':.".-" .;,'<:." . , j ' . 'CWIlil,!J1] ..;;J

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THE ANCHORThurs., June 22, 1961

New OffHlefll

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::Thei',:':M~UTH annual bazaar;

sponsored by the Women's guild, will be conducted on Monday afternoon and evening, July 17, from 3 to 9 o'clook. Mrs. Richarc:J. ,Maxwen is serving as chairman,' . Mrs. Harold Hayes. "\'ill bead the' committee planning·the food sale for Saturday mor~ing at il o'clock in front of Erwin'sPhar-' macy at the Yarmouth ~hopping

P]~Z:'exhibition of hoo~ed rugs

and a demonstration ;'of rug. hooking by Mrs. Frank: DaBella . is scheduled for Wednesday evening, July 12, in the Church Hall' on StatiC?n Ave. ..," The next regular meeting of the guild will beheld. (In Oct. 10. OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION.

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Jects telling the story W' the early missionaries in thfJ

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Southwest have been placed OIl display in the new Hall of Re.li:o gion here.' The exhibition features objectit from the Cathedral of St. FraJllc cis Museum. It jncludes vest/.> ments which were worn' 1W Archbishop J. B. Lamy,' fir~ Archbishop of Santa Fe, a silvt'll' lavabo and cruets. a concordanflfl . dated 1567, a Mass missal, • breviary and· other valuablrll volumes from .the chancery ... NEW PARISH: Priests of parishes from which new fice collection. Immaculat~ Conception parish in Brewster was formed are These items have been loand

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honored ·.at r.ec .. eqtion g.ive..n by" paris.hion. newch.urCh.. L~ to right, Rev. Francis M. Coady, assistant· at St. Joan of Arc,Rey; James E. Lynch, St. JOt,ln of Arc;' Or:1eans;' ·R . Ch' t h B d . k St. p' . X Cl_· th ~v• . r18~Op er. ro ~~c " " l~, '. "'Y• . armou ; 'th R J ' h N I' M S I ." 1 te. .Co .' W! '. ev., 08~P ". 9 lJ~, . • .". mJll~u a . nception pastor.',

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DrW')" of· Christ the Khti Church, here, a member of museum's board of trustees ~ ~'n ·advI·ser. to: the gallery', . ...,., . ..first ever histalle'din a museu. . In· addition to Christianity, ~ Hall of Religion, located 'on ~ ~ "~ campus of Texas Technologie8ll w:,r-, . 0 IC College, containll displays''; . LONDON; (NC) - ·Cath~lie. tisb childten ~ttend' privately' ~\l~aism, Hil1duism, BUddvi~ schools, in Britain 'enjoy subst&n,. .maintained. sChools; Publicly' ~n!!lcianism a_nd Islam.. , tialfinancial help .from a gov- maintained' scho.ols have 867,000' . Hospita Is Seek Aid ernment ,that considers all edu- students,. arid schools that take r. cation a' matter of hation&l DO financial help from the gov-' rror n igent. Sick be.nefit. . ernment, have 22,000 students.-. CLEVELAND. (NC) - Fivitl In Scotland; which has its own.' Pays Salaries . . Catholic hospitals here haWl ~ucational system distinct from Engla'ndand Wales, more joined 22 other 4C?spitals in legal that in Englimd and Wales, the' than 600,000 of..the 7.5 million action requesting that· Comm~ government builds· and 'entirely' schoolchildren attend Catholic Pleas Court order Cuyaho~ sustains schools· for Catholics schools suPPoJ.'te4 by the govern':' County to resume payments :t. and other denominations. Teach- ment. Teachers' salaries and hospital care of the county's iDol ers are paid by the government,' most other maintenance costs are digent citizens. . and appointed by the government paid by the government, which The 18-month old disputfl from lists' drawn up by author- in many instances supplies 75 originated when the countyities of the church concerned. per cent of the costs of building because of lack of funds-diS'» . Only a tiny proportion ~f Scot-· and repairs. claimed responsibility for abom The gov~rnment also provided half of the hospitalized sick PaOJl, Resolution Supports loans at normal bank-rates to ASts.av~esult of the county's acti~ cover the remaining expenses of . 10cent Charity Hospital, )0., Freedom for Cubans .c(lnstructi,o~ and repair. These . cated in the hE)art of a poveJ1Y WASHINGTON (MC) - The loans run 15 Ol' 20 yea~s, or area, was receritly forced to tUI!lll undergraduate 'stu!lent council longer. . away the sick for the first U.of the Catholic University flIf Tuition in state-aided schools in its 109-year history. AmeriCa has passed a resolu.:. is free.' . . For 25 years the county _ tion supporting "d~sires .m the .. Despi~ ..suchhelp from the paid for. 80 per cent of the ~ people ot'Cuba for freedom.'" government, Catholics in' Eng-' . pital's bed-care cost of tIMl "We sta'te our .opposition:· to landancl" Wales have a harder county's indigent sick. Under thfl Cuban Premier 'Castro's denial educatiop~l row to hoe' th,an . new policy the individual heec to his people of basic 'democratie ,.'?1embers.of other churches. This, . pitals are no~ required to ... rights, such as their freedom of ' HI.. a nutshell, is because. t.hey su~e the entIre cost of thfllMl religious worship and their right :. gen~rally have more children ,.patlents or send them acr~ 10 vote in open elections,'" 'tlle . and smaller. pay envelopes. '. town. to the one county hospital. resolution .states.. "We:';.,. sup- _ ............ _ . . . . '_":- __ . . . . . . . . . :..;' pOrt and enc:O!lr~~ tho~'Cubans,.. ~~-~~! dIIh TdIIh T ~ T dlIh T.dIlh v dIlh'" ~ T .iIIh· T dlIh T dlIh T dI!h T ~ T~. who ar.e prudently using·Pl.,ilita.ry . • €il .. "." '. . . ' . .. ." . . ".. , . a..:: revolution, an~ other . '.' 00 at vOIDC'O" "0 . . .. a' attempting to free theirmeans:"iJI, peoples." -.~. '''CI • , -, . . . ' ./1. '. .' . ..: . .'

MP A' I ERI L V ALlANl

OSTERVILLE New Mass schedules . ':101' Our Lady of Assumption; S~" Jude's Chapel, Santuit and for .Poppon- , essett are as follows:· Our . Lady cd Assumption,Sunday MasSe.' at 'I 8 10 and 11 st Jude's Cba~l,' Sunday Mas's at' 8; Pop-' ponessett Community· Hall, Summer Sunday Mass at 9:15, with eonfessions heard before Mass.' Rev. Thomas .,.. Foley, M.M.

:~=:s ~::cng~ S::m~pe

lLUBBOCK (NC) - Many rare and historic CathoJi(j

rCHRpY-LSyL-MERO·UT·-H·~~. Sal es· S ' P ar . ts e.rvlce·

9

Di$p~ay Features Early Southwest I M·· • ts ISSion OIL l!Jj]ec

The Parish Parade

ST. PETER'S. ST• .JOSEPH, DIGHTON FALL RIVER The Women's Guild will have The Men's Club win sponsor as new officers Mrs. Clinton its fourth annual free parish Rose, president; Mrs. George picnic all day Sunday at 81. VinGoulart, vice president; Mrs. cent de Paul Camp, Westport. Joseph Fleck, secretary; Mrs. Parishioners may bring lunches Vincent Hebert, corresponding or purchase refreshments at the secretary; Mrs. Edward Linhares, camp. Games and prizes for all treasurer. The unit will resume ages will be featured. Cy Mar-, in September. cille and Bob Gagnon are coST. LOUIS,' chairmen. FALL RIVER New 'Women's Guild officers Mrs. Raymond Morin beads are Mrs. Henry Bernardo, presnew officers of the Women's ident; Mrs. Franklin Fairhurst, Guild. Supporting her are Miss vice president; Mrs. Edwin Agnes Murphy, vice president; Rosario, corresponding secretary; Mrs. John Rowe, secretary; Mrs. Mrs. Alban Vezina, recording Fred O'Neil, treasurer. secretary; Mrs. Raymond HeyA potluck supper. and open worth,· treasurer. meeting will. be held Tuesday, IMMACULATE' CONCEPTION, Sept. 12 by the Women's Guild. , FALL 'RIVER ST. KILIAN, A Mother Goose bazaar is NEW BEDFORD plannea. by the Women's Guild The CYO's annual CommuniOft tomorrow' and Saturday at breakfast will take pla~e in the parish hall. Tomorrow's hours schoo~ hall this ~unday" Weekly. are 7 to 10· and Saturday's are Friday night ,record hopswi,n.. 1 to' :10.. ·M.rs. 'Delores Cahge1l6 continu~ throughouUh e S urn mer. . and Mrs. Lucy ·Ward· are' ST. PATRIf)K?S, chairmen. . ." FALL RIVER . . ST JOAN ·OF. ARC· The Women's Guild will have ORLEANS' ,. for new off~cers Mrs. William E. The amiual ·Summer Fair. • Jon~s, presl~ent; M~s. Jo.hn .W.· . planned; for Wedn'esday; .July . S~llivan,.. v~ce. presldel'jt, ..Mr~·12; Tables ,will include foods Thl?mas Ba~ley" secr~tary;. Mr!l. aprons; .. dolls and toys, 'whit~ John Morgap., t~easurer. elephant, plants,. old books and HOLY FAMILY, parcel post. Grabs and a ehilTAUNTON... dren'scorner. will also be fea.. Holy ~ame .Soclet! offlce!s in: tured.· Mrs. Bertha Meade. and elude Michael Larkm, ~resldem, Mrs. Barbara Ilkovich are coRussell Chamberland, vI1ce pres- chairmen. ident; Edward Cameron, secre:-,. ST. MICHAEL'S. tary; Joseph Mazzone, treasure~. FALL RIVER. SANTO CHRISTO, The Council of Catholic WomeJl FALL RIVEI,t . will have as officers for the com_ The CounCil of Catholic. Wo- ing year Mrs. Manuel Rezendes. men plans a dancE" at 8 Satur- president· Mrs Edmund Raposa day, night, June 24 at SteveJ?- vice pr~side~t: Mrs. Arthu; son s r~st~urant.. Mrs. O~he1Ja Machado, secretary; Mrs. Joseph C. Momz IS cha.lrman. . Motta, .treasurer. Regular councli. meetings are SUesmPebnedresdhl'pfOtreathieS ps~~:~rf~ Bishop Neumann Life m .... September with Mrs. Agnes Re- In .....ew Paperback zendes in charge. PHILADELPHIA (NC) -The SACRED HEART. St. Paul Catechetical Guild has NORTH ATTLEBORO published a' book on the life of The senior choir will have n Venerable John N. Neumann, supper at Rome Restaurant a~ '7 whose cause for beatification is Tuesday night, .June. 27. Rev. presently being considered by . Roger LeDuc, choir ~irector, w.ill the Sacred Congregation of Rites.' be host an.d other members of Edited by Father Francis A. . the clergy will be~uests. Novak,C.SS.R., the paperback' Lea Muenier is winner of this describes the life of Bishop Neu":. ye;lr'li' scholarship to a member mann as one of "hard wor)c, keen of the 8th grade gradua'ting ClasS; suffering, co~stant .~crif~ce ·arid·. Her average has been 97.5 'and . unassuming sanctity:" Imprimalier award is a four·y~a.r tuiti~n tur is Archbishop William O. scholarship' to . Bishop i Feel)an 'Brady '01. St. Paul. . . . .. HIgh S<:hool. . :.),.... . . . .', ..' Othe.r.st.ud.e.n.t.s.. wer. ~_.i.aw.a.·r. d..ed·' . Get~. St-.dy Grant· .: . r~cogn.lt1(~n ~or gen.era~ .exce.l-· eHICA.GO (NC)---,.A research lenc~ 10 studles. achl~vrment m . grant ~f .$4~,176 has been re-. specific fields, effort anf. poJite~ ceived. by a .. Loyola Uniyersity J:less. ( .. ': faculty member for.a study of· HOLY C R O S S ' . e p e r g y metabolism in .schizoFALL RIV.ER .~. phrenic patients. Dr. Alexander.. New offlcer~ ~or ~he; Parent- . P.· Remenchik, .assistant profes- . Teacher ~ssoclahon ~n<:l,ude Mrs. sOl- of medicine at the univerRuth Plekos, pr~slde?t;.·~rs. si'ty's Stritch School of Medicine, Helen YC~IJ?an, vIce preSIdent; received the grant from the psy,.. . Mrs. Vlrgmla Lev~SqU~, ~ecre-. chiatrlc training and research. tarY; Raymond Plichta; treasu- authority of the illinois Depart- . r~r; ~rs. Stanley ,Fronczek, ment of Public Welfare. fmanclal s e c r e t a r y . . '

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..'Cites Cooperation o.~, T rad~ Councrn~D Building I~du~trw By Msgr. George G. Higgins

Director. NCWC Social Action Department

The new administration has made a number of urgent pleas to labor and J!lanagement to exercise voluntary reIItraint in setting wages and prices. The Wall Street Journal take~ a very dim view of this. "Well, it sure sounds nice, . all this voluntary restraint,'~ craft unions. and Catranel, Ine., the Journal editorialized on developer of residential. areas, June 9, but then went on to signed .a pact which authorizes a number of cost-cutting methods _ way that "the main business and bars strikes. They were mo-

(1)f unions is making good wages tivated by a desire to provide and that the main business of good housing for middle income management is families at reason'able prices. making good Features of Contract h money both ....-- This contract covers the conlI'estrained by. struction of some 1,400 homes in ilhe self-enforcCatranel's proposed East Hills llng disciplines residential area near PittsburgJi. 0f the free mar: Some of the key features. of the l3:et." contract are: T he Journal -The Pittsburgh Building I2haracterTrades Council guarantees that tzes . this as a WASHINGTON HOSPITAL ·MARKS CENTENNIAL: Archbishop Patrick A. there will be no work stoppages . "practical ~ n d over jurisdictional disputes: O'Boyle 'of Washington (second from left) and' Sister Eleanor of the Daughters of time-tested ar-The Council recognizes auCharity (second 'from right) join in the celebration of the lOOth anniversary of gument." The. tomation and industrialized conchurches, on the other hand, Providence Hospital in Washington. The' Catholic hospital was the first privately-owned struction methods and guaranhave long since rejected it as an tees that there will be no resishospital in Washington to care for inilitary patients during the Civil War. The other :. Qrnpractical fallacy and a rather tance to the use of new equip- two inaividuals are attired in costumes of the Civil War era. NC Photo; oiangerous .one at that. , ment and new construction The position of the Catholic methods. <!:hurch, as outlined in the -The Council authorJze's the . lJOcial encyclicals of recent popes, builder "to hire labor wherever Is summarized as follows in a available if unions are unable to ' DeW book by two French Jesuits. supply workers within 72 hours SANTA FE (NC)-An Albu'True Social Life' afrer requested by the builder." querque movie theater has been If competition is not kept -The contract eliminates prewithin just limits, it becomes mium pay for Saturday work declared "out of bounds" to Catholics of the Santa Fe arcRMONSOONS. COMMUNISM, BANautiJP.lC;a.'-bow does ODe transformed into a battle" more that is' performed to make up for teH adequatel)' UIe s&ol7 of this poor parish in INDIA! The . . less violent, for the greatest loss of a full weekday because Of diocese for showing pictures condemned by the National Legion . ~t ~ Catholics iD KULASEKHARAMAN" possible gain. Such competition inclement weather. ~,. ~'J,. GALAM are aD island in a pagan sea. _ ·makes those who participate in it President Anthony J. Furlall . of Decency. '" .. Povert,-stl'icken, most of them, the, slaves of that which they seek: The . action was taken: b1 of the' Bliilding Trades Council fl:t ~ .. to Mass CNI Sunda)' in a church etey cease to want legitimate. says that the contract conces- Archbishop Edwin V. Byrne of . CW . 0 theirg-randldben built with their - ·.tisfaction of legitimate needs, sions by the unions' were "never' santa Fe. In a letter read Sun~ ~ own bands- 14 7ears ago. The church but think only of maximum befOl'e included in a labor con.,. day in all churches here, he rec;fA is small aOO crowded. Attending Mass, struction contract in this area or' . quested Catholics "to stay' away profit. . " + .. moreover, is something of a risk. The "It is not competition but anywhere' else in the Nation." ' altogether from this theater" un, winds and rain that shake and soak lJOcial justice and social charity. til he has received "satisfactory Roland S. Catarfnella of CatKULASEKHARAMANGALAM eve.,. _ which ought to regulate all ecoranel, Inc., adds the following' assurance" that.it will not agaia 7ear bave ·Ieft the church a hazard. . ·momic relations, including those . comment: "The labor agreement exhibit condemned pictures. HrL PatIxrt Mission AitI The walls are crumbling bit b7 bit; lof exchange. In other words; the establishes a new frontier in UlJ. there's danger the building will colThe theater is now showing " :ceconomy ought not to be reduced union-management relations. It the film "Never on Sunday," for tht Orimtal Chmrb lapse. But. to their credit, the parish~ a disintegrated mass Of indireflects the cooperative attitude which has been classified as hmers in KULASEKHARAMANGALAM began 7eall'El ago to viduals, each in. pursuit of his of both union and management, Class "C", condemned. by, the save for a larger, more permanent church. The-y wanted an /ll'ea test possible profit and inedifice in pagan UNDIA that would properl7 house tbe Blessed which is necessary to accomplish Legion of Decency. The theater . dividual advantage. ,Sacrament. After years of saving, they bad collected nearly the task of providing good houshas alsO shown another con. "It must not be thought of as . $2,000•. Tbey deposited the money in the local bank, looking ing for moderate income' fa~­ demned picture,. "Expresso forward to the day when they could begin to build. Then the it field of battle. Or. the contrary, ilies." Bongq." Communists came to KULASEKHARAMANGALAM, and plans ik constitutes. an organie unity, This is the' sort of cooperative . Similar Action 00- build had to be postpOned. When the Communists left, the l!l true social life." (Jean-Yves effort that the late ·:pope Pius XII bank in which the $2.000' had been deposited went into bankCalvez, S.J. and J. Perrin, S.J., was calling for whim,' in the The Archbishop took' similar Il'Dptcy. The $2,000 was completely lost. The Archbishop writes The Church and Social Justice. co.urse of an ·address .in 1949 to a action last June against another us: "Now everything is halted; the old church is just falling Burns and Oates, London) .. group of delegates from the In- , Albuquerque theater for showapart." What to'do? The pastor, FATHER ABRAHAM PADAYAternational Labor Organization, ing "grossly· indecent motio~ All' of this ~plies that labor THIL, has the Archbishop's approval to start all over agaill. Be he stressed --the social service pictures." And in 1959 he banned and management have an obliis afraid, he sa,s, that unless he starts immediately, the people illation to exer--cRe a high degree character of the building in- Catholic attendance at two will lose hope. II the)' losebope, there's danger the)' mll)' lose dustry. . drive-in movies in Albuquerque. ~. discipline and self-restraint faith. The Archbishop wonders if we 0lUl .belp FATHER Sounds Nice, Is Nice Ht the setting of wages and 'He lifted .. the bim. however, PADAYATHIL : ..• What we'd like to do is this •.• We'd like "If the building industry.... His . when he' received a writtea prices. to ask 200 American Catholics to cive $10 each to build a new Holiness said, "helps to turn statement from the head of the Many American employers and chureh ill KULASEKHARAMANGALAM. If you'll be ODe of modern industry towards pro- theaters that condemned pictures Jabor leaderS" are trying to fulthose . Catholics, we'll find 199 more. We'd like to show Ute fill this obligati6n. There is ob~' duction aimed at satisfying the would not "knowingly" be shown Catholics ill KULASEKHARAMANGALAM that we, too. would basic needs of man, instead of at them. viously room for a great deal of . like to help house the 'Blessed Saerament properly ill INDIA, allowing itself to be governed by improvcl1},ent,but we seem to and that we are witb them side by side im the war against In his most recent .letter, the accidental price movements, it Archbishop commended other be moving in the direction of a paganism. Will yoa help as! Your $10 donation DOW will will be deserving of its ti~le of conscious and systematic pracencourage the KULASEKHARAMANGALAM Catholics trementheaters in Albuquerque "for a social service, for it will have tice of the virtue of social justice. tlously. If. 7011 can't _d $10, send what you can. We'll make ret:tising to exhibit' films" conled the economy itself away ·eve.,. tlime, quarter, dollar count. And the Catholics ia For example, recently the demned by the Legion of &ULASEKHARAMANGALAM wm remember yOIl forever. Pittsburgh Building Trade Coun- from the errors of a miscon-· Decency. eil, representing· a group of ceived competition to the straight track of collaboration in Ii truly PRIESTS ••• social order." SPEAKING OF FATHER PADAYATHIL. we're reminded that The Pittsburgh Building Trade -like all of us-he's not getting any younger. If the Church is Council and Catranel, Inc., are tie prosper ill INDIA we must develop a SHEET METAL to be congratulated. To borrow Dative clergy. To do so takes time, of course. J.. TESER, Prop. the language of the Wall Street and it also takes money-which. usually, Journal, the discipline and selfRESIDENTIAL Indian young men who want to be priests restraint exercised by both parINDUSTRIAL don't have. Th~re 'are students at ST. ties not only sounds nice but is COMMERCIAL JOSEPH'S SEMINARY ill ALWAYE. INvery nice inde.ed.. 253 Cedar St. New Bedford DIA, who need your help-students such as SEBASTIAN THOTTAPPILLY, GEORGE WY.3-3222 . KAVUMPURAM, . VARGHESE NALIATH and JOSEPH MAKNEW YORK (NC)-The New . KOTHATKATT. Would you like to help make it possible for York archdiocese has established one of these young men someday to offer Mass in India.? To its • 402nd parish, Francis Careducate a native priest during his six-year course of training dinal Spellman announces. It costs $6OO-$100.a year. You may pay what you like, when you will'be named in honor of one of like. Write 118 it you're interested. We'll send you eomplete the Church's most recently candetails. onized saints. St. Gregory BarOUR LORD MUST LOVE THE PALESTINIAN REFUGEES barigo, whose feast day is June. .' •• HE. TOO. WAS A POLITICAL EXILE IN THE NEAR 17. EAST. THE REFUGEES HAVE NOTHING . . . THEY NEED FOOD, CLOTHING. MEDICINE, A PLACE TO LIVE. MARK Dairy' YOUR DONATION "REFUGEES" . . . tT WILL TOUCH THE 'VA 4-5000 HEART OF CHRIST •.• WE H.A VE A LiMITED NUMBER OF "SPECiAR. MILK OLIVE WOOD ROSARIES ON HAND ... IF YOU CAN SEND US $10.00 (WHICH WILL SUPPORT A REFUGEE FAMILY From Our Own lFORONII: MONTH) WE'LL SEND YOU A ROSARY AS OUR Tested Herd" P. DUFFY -rHANK YOU." Acushnet, Mass. WY 3-4457 'Funera8 HE ADS HOSPITALS:

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THE ANCHOR-

Life Becomes Song for This family After Series of Sharp Setbacks PLAINFIELD (NC) - A job that never was filled and Do hastily arranged singing performance brought about the unusual odyssey of a choirmasterorganist who moved from Holland into St. Bernard's parish in Plainfield, New Jersey. Harry Gunther, 41, was a choirmaster who handprinted musical scores in his native Volendam, Holland. Two years ago he accepted the offer of a business' opportunity in Puerto Rico. He and his oldest son, Alphonse, 16, went to the island to make housing arrangements. Ten days before Mrs. Gunther and their other six (now seven). chi~dr~n .were. to foll~w, the mUSIC prmtIng fIrm wh~ch. employed Mr. Gun~her was lIquIdated. Other Friends Bewildered, Mr Gunther took' a. plane. to New 'york. where reSIded hIS only frIend In the New World - Alphons DeVre, who tunes pianos at the Metropolitan Opera House and Carnegie Hall. Soon the choirmaster had another friend, Fat~er Charles H. McTague of FairfIeld, N. J" wh.o arranged for a house and furm. ti f th e arnva . 1 of tur e In me or the other Gu thee H I ' n s. e a so a~ranged for Mr. Gunther and hIS three daughters to give several concerts, including one at Seton Hall University. Singing Msgr. Charles. B. Murphy pastor of. St. Bernard's here: heard the Gunther concert at the university. His parish was without an organist and choir and he wanted to know if the' Gunthers could sing in his church at Christmas. . , "Cou'td we sing?" Mr. Gunther recalled. "We sang at Midnight Mass, and at the 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12 o'clock Masses," Christmas dinner followed at Msgr. Murphy's table. Msgr. Murphy again had a question. Would Mr. Gunther like to eome to Plainfield to be choirmaster and music teacher at the school? "I said 'yes' right away,", Mr. Gunther remembers. Mixed Choir Now St. Bernard's has a 35voice mixed choir, in which hia

wife and three daughters sing, a boys' choir and singing school children. There also apears to be a musical career, ahead for the Gunther girls, Afra, Marion and Anneke, who are to appear at Pittsburgh's Carnegie Institute this Summer, with brother Alphonse, now an accomplished organist. Mr. Gunther has one complaint. He said: "American men are not interested in singing in the church choir and the people in the church know little more than the 'Holy God, We Praise Thy Name.''' {Jongre ation He hopes to ;hange that. In the Fall he plans to institute congregational singing at Mass. He said: "We'll start with rehearsals once or twice a month for everyone who likes to sing. We will choose some easy Gregorian'Masses and use the school children to lead the others. As it grows we'll increase the rehearsals." , He professed a desire to instill a love for Gregorian music. . GregorIan belongs In church. Its . . atmosphere IS the most devotIonal in the 'world." MUll'al A mural on a wall in the Gunther home outlines the family philosophy. In exquisite lettering it proclaims: "Cantate Domino Canticum Novum" (Sing to the Lore!- a new song.) It is flanked ~:. a hand-painted organ pipe, hghted candle and backed by a painted stained glass image caption~d: "Sanc~ .Cecilia Ora Pro NobIS (St. CecIlIa, Pray for Us.)

.M ission Su(:cess Depends on laity

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Full accomplishment of important tasks in the Church;s global mission is the direct responsibility of the laity, Father. John J. Considine, M.M., director of the Latin America Bureau of the National Catholic W elf~re Conference, said here. Speaking at the first annual dinner of the Pittsburgh Committee of the Association for International Development (AID), Father Considine declared that Continued from Page Oae Gomes was transferl'ed to his "our laity, and in mlmy areas of present assignment at Santo th.e globe only olir hiity, can win Christo in June 11)53, giving him back the millions of disaffected." AID is, a volunteer organizaeight years at the Fall River tion of Catholic laymen which parish. Father Gom~ Ie especially recruits and trains people for well known among the young work in underdeveloped areas folk of the Diocese. He has been of the world and which is also most active in the diocesan engaged in a hospitality program Family Life Bureau, participat- among foreign students in the ing at Pre-Cana, Cana and United States. Youth Forums throughout the Father Considine encouraged diocese during the 10 years that Catholics to dedicate partial or agency has been in operation. even full time service to proFather Gomes is also well grams such as, those sponsored known in the athletic life of the by AID. city. He has directed the parish "Too many Catholics have the CYO activities at Santo Christo . mistaken concept," he said, Church and has seen his team "that the laity pray and the laity win the Fall River champion- pay, and that they have no other ship title. function."

Administrator

Thurs., June 22, 1961

PD'e~Olli'@ ~U'!r'e$ses Duty \f@ !J{e®p Sabb~{(~ Diely NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archbishop Joseph F. Rum,. mel of New Orleans has scored' "tendencies to make

B][G PROJECT: Attleboro Christian Family Movement members, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Finerty chat with Cubans sponsored by their group, Armando Piquero, left, and Manuel Soto. ' ,

Cuban Families locate in Attleboro Continued from Page One told us that CFM members from all parts of the oountry have shown a particular interest in helping to resettle the refugees." Meanwhile Mr. Piquero and Mr, Soto are settling down in Attleboro. They are working for different companies, largely so that they will not be tempted to lapse into Spanish and w'm be forced to use English with 00workers. Mr. Piquero is already fluent in the tongue, but Mr. Soto is a beginner. The men were friends in Havana, where Mr. Piquero was an advertising sales executive and Mr. Soto was a shoe salesman and part-time artist., They are happy to be 'starting a new life here. Most of all, they are grateful to the Christian Fami~ Movement.

Pontiff Recalls Divine Promise of Support VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope John told thousands of pilgrim!! at a general audience they should not be pessimistic since the Church is forever young and full of vigor. Noting the enthusiasm of those at the audience in St. Peter's Basilica, the Pope said: "We are not sons of speculaticm or @f a cold philosophy. We aft supported by the guarantee and promise of the Divine Teacher: 'I will be with you even to the consummation of the world.' Because of thill' the vision of the final victory comforts us, tM vision of serenity and of holy joy."

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'ass Reading Tests With Flying Colors DETROIT (NC) - A survey conducted among fourth-graders in the archdiocese of' Detroit schools disclosed less than 10 per cent read below their grade level. This compares to national figures which show that a 25 bo 40 per cent lag is normal. The survey was directed by Sister Mary Laurianna of Madonna College here at the request of Msgr. Vincen~ Horkan, superintendent of archdiocesan schools. The tests were conducted by a reading committee of 128 teachers .' among 724 fourth graders in 16 schools. The results also showed that many of the ~urth 'graders read at a level considerably above their grade.,

little of" the obligation to ob-serve Sunday in a fitting mal!? nero The Archbishop, in 'a pasto!roI letter read in all churches of tho archdiocese, stressed the dUt.y both to take part in divine worship and to refrain from unnee=essary work on Sunday, He said in referring to Sunda17 business activity: "lI'here -is no value to the excuse ... that employeeS have their day off during the week, because this does not by any twist of the imagination compensate God for the honor ~ which He is deprived by trello passing upon His day and Vi0co lating His right to service." Ancient Tradition Archbishop Rummel notedl that it is an ancient Christian tradition "that the first day O'.f the'week belongs to the Lord oW' God to be observed as a day of rest for strengthening of the human body and as a day c1l prayer for strengthening tho human soul." Catholic leaders and churcb-o men of other faiths have beeD cooperating in a campaigm against unnecessary Sunda(v business activity here.

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ntE" ANCHOR- . Thurs., June 22, 1961

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CanadianAsserts World Leaders Missing Goal

By Jaek Kineavy It was a great spO~ year for the Blue Wave of Holy Family and their first year coach, Jack Nobrega. The New Bedford Parochials closed out the season last Saturday at Brandeis University Field where they were edged 4-2 by powerful Wo- status but .John Gonsalves, bum for the ClassB Taunton's first baseman, was championship. Leo Paradi6, named to the first team bench . . -4l:-t 1 . composed of boys who were suffermg hls.LU1:I 088 m serious contenders for regular

,. OTTAWA (NC) - Lea4-en!' of the free nations aN) sl;e~ding too much tirM ','''fritt~ring debates" inste~. of hammering out a set of prin--

12 decisions, pitched well enough

ciples' upon which free m~ everywbere can "agree and cro.. fend, says the rector of Ottawil 'University. Father Henri F. Legare, O.M.llo;) who is also chairman of tbfl Canadian Universities FoundB= tion, advised the Ottawa grad~ ates' at tbeir commencement: "Never have the lines geQ3 praphically and strategically dividing the free world from tM menacing forces threatening ~ been. so sharply delineated throughout the globe. Never 1,1~ it· been so evident that free me~ and free societies everywhe~ must unite to defend the aspiJl'> ations and principles they valu(». Primary Import · HYet· these same men and SG<> cieties do not yet agree on the essential constituents of politicnD systems based on freedom witll justice for all." Father Legare asserted thaQ Hprecious time is lost in frittep.. Jng debates between general Ur.P certainty and awkward frustra-~ton 'while a dynamic and ruth-less philosophy advances ineJF> orably to destroy justice, libertw Dnd·. respect for the individual , "Difficulties of secondal'y ilft:> portimce must be set aside," 'M sta'ted, "and concentration Ii&> voted to establishing those p~intil upon" 'which free men eveli'3i!-' where can agree and are williDtll to defend."

bertbs. Terry Lomax continues to able to mount shine in C.Y.O. Suburban coman e f f e c t i v e petition. The ex-Durfee rightoffense against hander recipient of the Tom Woburn. Gastall' Award, tossed his second Holy Family successive shutout last Sunday outhit Woburn, victimizing strong Holy Rosary 9-7 and seven by a 1-0 count. The Stars, now bases on balls 2-1 in league play, give every kept Rotondo in evidence of being able to bold t r 0 ubi e contheir own and then some in the. stantly. But the fast after dinner loop. key hit and the Despite tbe fine. showing of big win n i n g the Boston Red Sox to da~t:, atnever did mate-. tendance has been lagging. rialize. Ironi~ally, the only b~t. Weather, of course, has been a less member In the Holy FamIly great factor and a new schedlineup was Paradis, who had'8 uling form~t has caused some 33-game hitting streak snapped. inconvenience but most sources Leo's dista~ce cloutl?g was a point to the absence of Ted Wilreal factor In his team s l1urge to Iiams as the major relison for . EDUCATIONAL TV. IN SCHOOLS: A nun and her the fore and the youngster ~ichly the decline. The Sox are in a deserve~ th~ MVP Award 10 tbe period of transition, a rebuilding pupils at Chicago'.s Resurrection elementary school watch Narry CirCUit. . stage, if you' will, and it's going 'a TV lesson beamed from a plane circling high over Central Not even the most rabid Holy to take a little time for youngIndiana. Resurrection is one of two Chicago schools Family partisan would, have sters like Schilling. Yastrezemski participating in th~ trial phase. of the Midwest Program dared to predict tbe team s_ sue- . and Co. to gain public stature. for Airborne' Television' Instruction. Starting next Fall, cess at the outset of the season. They've made a good ,start. It lack~ size and experien~ and It's a good thing Mickey Ver- ·~videotaped lessons will· be televised from the plane on a didn't figur~ to hit ~ a un:-t . Yet non. is an en1Jinanimous individ- 'daily schedule to· public and parochi~.1. schools in a fivethe table setters, Tim 0 Leary aat. Most often skippers would state area. NC Photo.' -\ and Rick Brown, seemed to get have blOwn sky~high upon th-e Oft consistently to set the stage dissipation of a 12-5 two-out I' for Paradis, Ponicbtera and ninth-inning lead. The' big blow, Frechette.. O'Leary walked lID Pagliaroni's grand slam off exoften against Somerset that we Soxer Dick Sisler, was the young charged Coach Nobrega with catcher's seeond of three hits in BOWLING GREEN (MC) minister, ·Mr. Stanage came to rubbing the boy wiD ball l'epel- the Washington series. All were The president of Bowling Green the university in February, 1959, lent. . homers-; two were game winning State University rejected as and four months later w~s The .bottom half of the. order, blasts. Pag's hitting circa .235 but Hrkliculous" a .charge that II named head of the philosophy Meredith, Tweedie, Caffe~ and in . Fenway Park his left field Newman Club chaplain exercised and l'eligion department. Lloyd proved equally pestiferous. power makes him a tough eus- undue control over faculty apLater Mr. McDonald assigned Individually the y appe~red tomer. . MINNEAPOLIS (NC) ~ . pointments. ' ~i~ to ~evelop ~ program of r~harmless enougb but collectIveThe emphasis in baseban University president Ralph W. liglOUS IDstrucbon at the um- official of the Holy See's agene:!\' ly they were tough. Reflected i~ seems ever worn to be swinging MCDonald said Father Jobn 01- versity, modeled on sim.Har ~~o­ for priestly vocations will attend every game we saw was the toward the homerun and RBI Hvier the Newman chaplain, had grams at such "tate umversltles the' 19th annual Serra Intcrn&o great Hol~ Family spirit ~upled' columns and ~way from the high made' "no effort whatsoever" to as lo\"'a, Illinois and Michigan tiona I convention as an observell. Msgr.· Giuseppe Nebiolo will with an mdomitable deSire to average man. Moose. Skowron influence such decisions. . State. join 40 bishops, 150 priests ~ win.. was quoted recently as having The charge was' 'first aired by. Student Demonstrations 'Their defen~ was strong an.d said that he would:be very hap- l!l group of u~iversity gr~duate.s However, Mr. McDonald said, en expected 2,000 Serraos an(! on it they relied ~e.atly. ThiS py' witn a .250 average provided ~nd form~r.ald~~. protestin~ Mr. the' plans submitted for the pto- wives at the conventioilto be held .here June' 29 to July' 1, was an opportunistiC club.. T~~ hit 40 home' runs and drove M~Donald s deCISIOn to termmate gram by Mr. Stanage were 'not boys' hus~led every' step of the in 100. Teammate Roger Maris is the..contract; o~: Sherman~. satisfactory. By the end 'of the Msgr: 'Nebiolo is a member ~ way and if they may not be ~d- in" that groove right now with Stanage, cham.n~n,of the .phll,:" present term, he said, the deans the' Pontifical Agency for Pries$.. judged the best team to repre:- 25 round trippers'and 50 runs- 08.0llhy and rehg~on department. of the university colleges agreed 1,. Vocations of the Sacred C~ .gregation of Seminaries a~ eent the· sc~ool in recent yeal'll, batted-in despite·· a:' lowly .235 , '. Appeal to' Governor tbat' no progress had been made Universities. they' certaInly were the most average. I Six protestors, formed a deletoward the type of program successful. . · A ~~~~inal, two achbishops gatiOt'l which went to Columbus sought by the administration, Prophet PeUagrim Six 'bishops will be among ~ :fur. an audience with Ohio Gov. and it was for this reason that Boston College coach Ed Pel"principal speakers at tbe sessio~ Michael V. DiSalle to:protest Mr. the' decision was made not: to Iagrini proved ~imse.lf somewbat The organization is composed CJj of a prophet and an incisive jud~e VATICAN CITY (NC)-Tur..:. Stanage's "impending ·dismissal. renew Mr. Stanage's contract. catholic business and prof• . They brought, with, them a list of I Tempers at the university have of baseball talent when he pre- key's ,. new ambass~dor to the sional' men devoted to increasini dieted that Southern California Holy See has t61d Pope' John that grievances against 'Mr. McDon- been fraye/i since student· dem:. vocations to the priesthood eDi:l' aId's: administration,' including onstrations before' the 'Easter would cop the N.C.A.A. title last he iii' remembered in Turkey religious life. . " the· charge .that :Father Ollivier vacation against administration week. PeHy informed newsmen, "with grateful admiration." upon his return home with the The new ambassador, Gen. exercised '~undue control over disciplinary measures. Religion B.C. squad that went to tbe semi- lhsan - Kiziloglu, recalled the' the selection of 'faculty mem- was not an issue in those dem~ NO' JQB TOO BIG finals, that U.S.C. was .one of the Pope's 10 years as. Apostolic bers.", The Governor declined to onstrations, but has been rai~d in the controversy over Mr. Stanfinest college baseball tearne Delegate in Turkey 'wben he receive the delegation. . NONE TOO SMAll Mr. McDonald announced re- age's dismissal. Mr. St~lDage hal! that he had ever seen.; presented bis credentials. Pope cently-. tbat Mr. Stanage's conclaimed he is being dismissed for This revelation was !\bort-lived .John, then Archbishop Angelo when it was learned; that the Roncalli, began bis assignment tract w"ill not .be renewed next siding witb the stude.nts. . Sox's roving ambassadpr of good. in Turkey 'in' 1934. ' yel!f.' An ~r4a~ne4. Methodist 'willaod dispenser ~. valuable . Gen. 'KWloglupledged hiin':' Boys', PRINTERS bitting tips, one. 1,'. ,. Samuel lielf to' preServe lind develop the Castr~' I Wllllams, had .Indeed speD.t some bond!! between' .Turkey 'and the. .:Trudr Body 8uiIden .. ' Moin Office and Plc'nt, time with the, Trojan squad early Holy . HA\TANA (tole) '..:.::. The SOviet . Aluminum or Steel _., ,, ,,' :,LOWEU, MASS• last Spring 'a~d had Corpe ~way ,. ,. ship' that 'btO~ght :000 Soviet 944 County St. 'favorab~ . itnpressed . with the to· students Cuba is' scheduled to· ...•.1telephone Lowell . . MlWBEDFORD:MASS: ' .: . . I,· batting acumen several.of the sail 'hackio, t~ . U:S:S.R. with CalifOrnia' stars. Perbaps Ted " .01. U333 and GL 7-7500 WY 2-66" 'cuban farm. boYS on bOard bad a little to do wit~ bringing . CHICAGO (NC)·- A priest, the collegiate baseball diadem prhicipal. of ~ high school, ·has f~ indoctrination in'·~· Soviet' Auxiliary Plants back to bis native stat!!. been appointed cbalr:man of Unum; BOSTON Durfee Higb's Ed Berube was suburban Niles police and fire named to the Boston Globe's All- C9mmission.. , 'OcEANPORT, N. J. Scholastic team rel9ased . last Father John Van Wolvlear, Mi~hael PAWTUCKET, R. I. Sunday. This talented pitcherC.S.C.; principal of Notre Dame outfielder, only a sophomore, Is Higb School for boys, was apInc. one Of the very few second ,year pointed to the position for three men ever to be accorded the years by the Village Board. bonor. Paradis, Holy F am. Board president Nicholas M. FUNERAL 'SERVICE lIy's "than-whomer," was se- Blase said men;lbers of the board 1ected 011 the Class B team. A' agreed that'Father. Van Wolv~ In 549 COUNTY·ST. host of boys from area schools lear's experience in working Summer were given' bonorable mention 'with m'en and boys will be of NEW BEDFORD, MASS. . significant valutl to thecommun,Ity. .,

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Bowling Green .President Rejects Charg'e Against Newman Chaplain

Vatican Observer At Serra Meeting

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WASHINGTON (NC) - U.S. Senator Kenneth Keating ofNew York bas lDtroduced ia bill' In the Senate which would extend to public schools second class mailing privileges' now 'llmited flO private schools and state col.leges. Sen. Keating told the Senate exelusion of publie 8Cbools froIa the privilege "apPean to UWl beeJl an oversight.·

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Ttff ANCHOR..,...DioceM of FafUiver-:-Thur•• June 22; 1961

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i~hllrch:Plans' to Use Paid Lay Theologians Co~_vert Workers to Release Pries~~ for Other Duti.es

They will move out equipped with sociological surveys OD. 'their respective parishes, compiled by a Jesuit priest for hiD ·doctoral dissertation. , ,Plan Spreading , SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-The Church in Southwest For next Fall's course at the , United States is ,ready to begin a bold experiment, using instituleFather·Zimmers already ,salaried lay theologians to devote themselves to convert has four recruits, but he will travel to interview anyone who 'work, thereby freeing priests for pastoral and sacramental · writes him. He checks out can· duties. Members of the hierarchy, reljgious and laity,' will didates on intellectual ability, be watching ~he experiment laymen can do the job. A good personality, career accomplish· closely inasmuch as it may salary will attract. the kind of ments, dedication to and understanding of their Faith-espe,well comm'ence a new and man needeq and permit them to cially as it must be lived and exciting era in Church work work full time." exemplified in an era of greater in this country. Vari~d Employment lay integration into the Church. The experimenters are Jesuit The kind of men who reHe anticipates' no difficulty Father Eugene R Zimmers of sponded to Father·Zimmers' iqea lining up qua'lified men to meet the University of San Francisco, a year ago: the institute's promised turnout 12 pastors in Arizona and Cali- . Thomas R. Keene, 26, ex-paraof 18 inquiry directors a yeai' fornia and six lliymen, agE;s 26 trooper, teacher and recreation for the Tucson, Monterey-Fresno, to 35. director, married and awaiting and Sacramento dioceses. And The men, three with 'families, . the birth of a second child. he's negotiating with Spokane ere charter graduates of the uniMartin H. O'Brien, 35, greying and Reno. 'versity's Institute of Lay Theol- insurance broker who has been The institute implements ·ogy, founded by Father Zimmers. workin'g part time to support his Father Zimmers' conviction that They will move out to spearhead wife and six children. 20th century Catholicism can't -they hope-a breakthi'ough in Roger E. 'Armstrong, 26, conbe satisfied with 16th-century 1IJ. S. conversions. Their object vert and graduate philosophy RECORD CLASS: Rev. Columba Moran, SS.CC., pastor methods, that "the Mystical Body \ Is to prove that parishes can pay, studerit. , ,today must be alive from top to os well as pray, their way to Joseph E. Fresques, 26, sociol- of St. Joseph's Church, Fairhaven, with Gail Hudon, left, bottom, full of joy, full of commore converts. ' ogist wno has been counseling and Patricia BonZcek, scholarship winners to'Sacred Hearts mitment to Christ." The 12 parishes, eight in Ari- delinquent teenage' boys in Los . Academy, Fairhaven. Girls are members of largestgraduat. Enters Priesthood 'zona and four in California, will A n g e l e s . ' h dHe knew he had laymen ready 'pay the men to conduct inquiry, George C. Randol, 30, copy 'ing 'class parochial 'school has ever a . . . .to c'onvert the kerygmatic ·courses for people interested in editor' at 'the San Francisco " " (Chrhit-centered) approach, into men have a real vital role to play' great· numbers of people 'but for -or ignorant of the Catholic Chronicle and father' of two.' , ., action. 'Ch'urch and l'ts doctrl'nes. Each ' .Grace,' . ' in .the Church, more than just 'myseU well." ThomasP. 26,h~gh . 'as . "I was convinced of it during recel've $500 a n:tonth, with. _sch,ool his.tory and. rnath teacner. . , . passing the collection, basket OIl ,- The lay theologians-inqu,ir,. '--'1'11 ~ , • 'seminar on the Trinity when increments. to $1,000 by,·1~64. ' ' The six have been through' 650 Sunday." , 'director.will be their parish. title Each will' work' in .. tw.o. contig-, class hours of ,theology,. liturgy, Mr:Randol: "Sure'I want to' -will 'give' fully prepared; pro-, all six men were shout,ing at the ~uous parish~s'that wih sha,re Jl1G : public relations, fan:tiliarizatioJi,. earn, a. good living; but 1 want .,fessional lectures using audio- _top of,. th~ir lungs-and I'd thought ·this was going to be Il 'Iiost. ' " .' _.'.", with other' religions" platform, integrity--:-24 hours il day."., visual .aids. They, will work 'dull session.· Right then I knew ,. Effective Approach " speaking!l n 4salesm~nship: " M~. Grace: "I saw. an oppor- within the parish, do no street- "the plan W!l8 going' to work," A 'solid return is ,expoected on " . "t' f 'preaching, engage in no debates" Twenty.,.seven umvers~ y pro es-, tunity' to make life's goals 'more -Gte iIlvestmt!l1't. Converts become .sors, Prot;estan,t ministers,.publie. , . take on only such luncheOn talke 'Father Zimmers· Observed. , He, had only one drop out from :parishioner~. More parishioners .relations experts and advertising 'real, more· vivid, not' only for . they f~eltheY've time ·for.,: the 'pioneer class: A seventh represerit·' added parish income .agency' executives have had a member,' a 34-year-old accountand it .should 'be more' than hand in their instruction. . ·ant" after finishing the' course enough to defray' the salaries' of 'Each has acquired a theology NEW YORK (NC)-An exten- 'work is to expand and initiate decided to enter the Jesuit the convert-makers. 'That' is, if library' at his own expense ($240' Ilhe quality of the Catholics pro- to' $600.) They are out about sive study of 11 Latin American 'measures for the peoples of Latin_ novitiate. duced is as high as the experi- $6,000 each in. sacrificed income.' countries covering a' two-month America to employ their own _ In bringing, laymen into the mentel's anticipate it will be. period . is being undertaken by resources in achieving soCial and life of the Church, Father Zimmers is aware he's doing someSaid Father' Zimmers: "The Real and Vivid Father Joseph B. .Gremillion,· economic' progress. ' thing the missions have 'long done 'l!nquiry' method has already been Said Mr. O'Brien: "I woke up so~io-ec0J.l0mic dir~ctor of. ~athFather Gremiilion will meet with lay catechists. 'proved effective; not only with one day and discovered I didn't olIc ~elIef ServlCes-Nabonal with U.S. embassy and local govWith this difference: For lack Catholics but non-Catholics who want to be in the insurance busi- CatholIc Welfare Conference. ernment officials Latin Ameri- of funds, a missioner in 'Burma are poorly instructed in the ness the rest of my life. I felt I'd Father Gremillion's study will can Catholic ch~rity organiza- has to do without a catechist ·1F·aHh," says Father Zimmers. .be more willing to knock myself . be concerned with promoting and tions credit unions school labor who'd' be glad to work for 50 " "The problem is lack of priests ·out for something personally coordinating Latin American unio~s and CRS-NCWC p~rson­ cents a day. . :who can devote enough time to more satisfying." Catholic activities in such fields ne1. He made a similar sui-vey , At the going rate of $500 'a It. We believe properly trained Mr. Fresques: "I feel that lay- as housing, ~ducation and health. in Latin America for the agen~y month, the institute has a waitThe purpose of the priest's in 1957. ing list for its products.

as ,Extensive' Latin American ~tudy

'Old .Biblical Question Re-Echoes ,In Fall Ri'ver Qioc:ese Today

It's the fashion in many dr- at a distance. eles to low-rate the Fall River We have trouble ; bringing 'area. Ind.ustry is leaving, 'young holiness home' to ourselves as .-: 'people can't wait to follow suit,. something we should be working 'the rest of us might·:as well give at;, " up.' . " " c . - ' We'd be very uneasy if'some, But whlit .about, the spiritual' onepoiilted ~ finger at us and lride of things?,Our local prophets said "You should be a saint, you <Df doom are, uncomfortably know." Theoretically, of course, 'reminiscent, of the Biblical in-, we'll, admit, it. Only saints· ,get QuireI' who asked, "Can anything into heaven and no one' wants to ~ good come from Nazareth,?" say he's not hoping to get there. We all know ,Who' came. . '. But to work ~t ·it as seriously , Then, nearer our own time, 'as at our j,obs; say, or our house·there's the Cure of Ars, shippe5! k~eping~w~ll, it just, isn't .done. , : off to otie of the poorest parishes But it should be. "' . of France where, presumab'y, _ ,Why does it seem so 'strange ·be 'eQuld dQ. very little:. harm." . to, tliink .of a saint as a manor•. "We all know:too"what'he'ma'de" woman liI~e ourselves, wa~ing·"" of AI'S arid ',himself. ...., ... : ,,'our streets,' dropping; in at.. t!:te, In ,fact" it' would. seem ~hat,pari~ll,churfli'. for a yisit,' sh!~p:- ',: l!JPiritually ,.speaking, ~t's posi-ping in the dime store,s, paym~ 'tively 'jm .advantage to live in ~ 'utility, b!lls, 'struggling wearily place that isn't exactly basking ',to get out of beel t~ care for a in what the world· calls good crying baby,. ,worrying,about' fortune. ' taxes, . the cost: of food and' Granted that the diocese of· clothing-just like ourselves. Fall River hasn't yet produced Except, oh yes, he' or she any canonized saints; but neither would_have a constant care for has Cincinnati, or Lo,s Angeles, his neighbor, his home would' be or Boston or San Francisco, o r a place of tenderness and ,Iaughany other'diocese, with the ex- tel', a true center of. Christian eeption of Chicago, whose Mother hospitality. He'd be a blood donCabrini, however, wasn't a na- or probably, our twentieth centive daughter. So we're on an tury diocese of Fall River saint, even footing with the rest of the he might find time for CYO United States as far as sanctity or Boy or Girl Scouts, he'd help ~ concerned. in parish organizations, he'd be It's funny how saints seem to approachable and above all belong with the catacombs, in- charitable; not so much in terms habit foreign lands, and occupy of dollars and cents as in the themselves wit h converting ancient-' meaning of, the word~ b,eathens, putting down heresies 'love of God and of man for the and 'working miracles.-It's more sake of God. , oomfortable for, us to keep them . He'd constantly ask himself, Ift ' ·CO",·.J· Pe Il, ..I1'.... llment· our saint,_ what Christ would do II\. e • U IS;;I. V or say, were He in his position. NOTRE DAME (NC) -The And what a heaven on earth 'iD'niversity of Notre Dame haa our diocese would be if it were <l»pened its largest Summer sea- filled with men and women askoon with a record enrollment of iog themselves these questions! more than 3,000, including abo~ Could anything of good fail ·to ~400 Sisters.. . 4:Ol'ne from iU, 4

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