01.25.62

20
To the right of the lobby will be the classroom wing with 12 classrooms, business practice and typing rooms, science labs and library. The school will also con- tain administration rooms, ac- commodations for student activ- ities, domestic sciences, art, hec!lth and teachers' room. There will also be an oratory. Work on the third regional high school, that in is' progressing satisfactorily and· favorable Winter weather has aided' in' its ·building. General tractors F. L. ColliilS and Sons have announced that all the foundations are com.., , pleted and some of the floor are being poured. The cafe- areas of the Maginnis, WalSh teria and kitchen section has peen poured and the classroom and Kennedy designed area is being poured at the pres- !'lnt time. Workmen are now the aUditorium level. The 13 parishes of the Greater Taunton Area contributed a total of $1,167,428.39 to exceed the $1,125,000 goal set up for the school drive. Ground was broken last August by the Most Reverend Bishop for high school which will ac- about 800 girls. The regional high school in the Biehop's high school building program is,Bishop Stang High in N,>' Dartmouth which serves the Greater New Bedford Area. It now enrolls three classes. The second school is the Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro which opened last Fall and which has just held open house for visitors. This third regional high school will contain an aluminum and glass entrance lobby facing the intersection of Church, Adams and Hamilton Streets. To the left of, the lobby will be the multi- purpose wing containing the gymnasium - auditorium with stage and dressing rooms, and cafeteria, kitchen, shower room and boiler room. FIRST Rt. Rev. James Dolan, pastor of St. Church, is shown giving' Holy Communion to George' P 'Theroux at the first Mass offered in the Chapel of the Marian Manol;' in Taunton. Hong Kong Work of.Church Prog.resses at Record High HONG KONG (NC)-The health, welfare and educa- tional. work of the Church here reached an all-time high during 1961, the 1962 edition of the' official Hong Kong Catholic Directory reported. The directory noted that al- though the ,Catholic popula- i,ooo free meals a day to refugee tion of Hong Kong now to- children. .. tals 174,279,' the' .Church . There are 34 parish branches serves more than 'a million of the Catholic charities organi- people-a third of the colony's z'ation engaged in youth activ- entire population. ities, free' schooling and free - The direc'tory listed 30 Catholic for poor children, and re-' free ciinic's and dispensaries pro-' . lief goods distribution. Also re- viding medical services, dental ported are pilot projects in the and pediatric care for close to vocational retraining of the han- 600,000 people; 17 food convert- dicapped.· ing units and a ,kitchen giving Tum to Page Two w, ",' k .. ·· T -' ,"'" ',' . 'Or Area: ,High" Schoo1 Moves . Rapidly McCoU'mack LOOlnS WASHINGTON (NC) The new Speaker of the House said here he favors U.S. loans to help parochial and other private schools, but he would vote for a bill which aided public schools only. - Rep. John McCormack of Mas- sachusetts, for mer Majority Leader who was elected Speaker to succeed the late Rep. Sam Rayburn of Texas, made the statement to reporters. . McCormack, a Catholic, has bep,n under attack by some ,newspapers and organizations, notably Protestants and Other Americans United for Separation of Church and State, because he announced support for private school loans at the last session, a prtJposal they oppose. . Opponents also charged that bec:l.use of his belief in Federal loans for nonpublic schools, he would be prevented' from sup- porting a public school assistance bill. ."1 have always advocated school legislation and strength- ening the whole elementary and secondary system. This includes both public and private schools," he said. Turn to Page Two . TO GHANA: Rev. Richard Lawton, C.S.C., native of Brockton and graduate of Coyle High School and Stonehill College, will leave for Ghana, West Africa, Thursday, Feb. 1. He will serve at a mission newly assigned the Holy Cross Fathers by the Holy S"ee. Jesuit Sees Rise In Enrollment At Colleges '. CLEVELAND (NC)-The 28 Jesuit colleges and uni- versities in the United States will increase their, total en- rollment by about 25 per cent in three years, from 72,500 today to almost 98,000 by 1965. This estimate is based .on a survey of expansion plans pre- sented at the annual meeting of the Jesuit Presidents Confer- ence, held h-ere prior to the As- sociation of American Colleges meeting. Father Paul C. Reinert, S.J., outgoing conference presi- dent, made the report. Father Reinert, president and rector of St. Louis University, sairl the survey showed the Jes- uit schools are planning an ex- pansion of plant facilities costing $113.5 million by 1965: He said the money would come from gifts a'nd government ioans. At present, .there are' 19 schools conducting fund-raising pro- grams. , The rise in enrollment "(ill necessitate the .hiring of 700 more faculty members within five years, 'Father Reinert re-' ported. ' Turn to Page Two Christian Hope' Theme of 1962 Week . LAFAYETTE (NC)-The , 1962 North American Litur- gical Week, to be held in' Seattle, Wash., from Aug. 20 to 23, will stress the implications of Christ's Resurrection, it was announced here. Father Frederick R. McManus, president of the Liturgical Con- ference, said a meeting here in Louisiana of the conference's board of directors that the theme of the Liturgical Week will be: "Thy Kingdom Come: Christian Hope in the Modern World." He said the theme "will focus attention on a better understand- ing of Christ's Resurrection and its implications for us here and now and at the end of time." More than four thousand people are expected to attend the Liturgical Week, which will be held on the grounds of the 1962 World's Fair in Seattle. Father McManus said that the theologians, Biblical scholars and leaders in the liturgical move- ment will be asked to give the , 10 main addresses and to conduct 15 workshops. " PRICE IOc $4.00 per Year ship and activities of the parish board. Since the parish board is made up of eleven members: the priest-director, four officers, and six chairmen, it will be most helpful for future CCD success in the parish if the eleven from each parish take the course. Ex- perience has proved that it is beneficial to choose an equal number of men and women for the parish board. A registration fee of three dol- lars will be charged to the par- 'ish for each person taking the course. This will take' care of the printed materials, necessary for the course. .Vot 6, No. 5 © 1962 The Anchor An Anchor of the Soul, Sur, tlnd Pirm-ST. PAUL STARTS OWN BUS SERVICE: Angered because 12 grade school pupils of St. Joseph's Catholic school in Nor- man, Okla., were forced to stop riding public school buses, Mrs. William E. Bittle, a non-Catholic, uses her family club wagon to pick up the Shearer boys who live on a farm outside Norman. Mrs. Bittle has two children who ride the public school buses and attend public school. NQ Photo. Need Compron:.ise, Sacrifice In 'Shared Time' Education NEW YORK (NC)-A proposal for "shared time" ed- ucation would involve compromise and sacrifice by Catho- lics, but it cannot .be dismissed without serious study, a prominent educator said here. The comment. came from Msgr. O'Neil C. D'Amour, . Stearns of Englewood, N. J. He associate secretary in charge is superintendent· of pub 1i c of the Superintendents De- schools there and a member of ' partment of the National the Board of Christian Education Catholic Educational Association. of the United' Presbyterian' His statement is in a sympo- Church, U. S. A. slum sponsored by the Religious Stearns proposes in the asso- Education Association here on a eiation's pUblicati,on, "Religious concept advanced by Harry L. Turn to Page Two The ANCHOR FoB River, Mass., Thursday.v JGiI. 25, 1962 ceD Arrnnounces Course Parish Boards The Most Reverend Bishop and Rev. Joseph L. Powers, Director of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine in the Diocese, have announced that a CCD Parish Executive Board course will pe conducted in the Cape Area. The six- weeks course will be given by Sister Dolores of the Our Lady of Victory Missionary Sisters. The location of the course will be Holy Trinity par- ish hall, West Harwich. The ses- sions will be held on Tuesday evenings from 7:30 to 9:30, be- ginning Feb. 6 and concluding March 13. ' The purpose of the course is to hE:lp the parishes establish CCD units by explaining to the present and potential par- . ish board members the total function of the CCD on the par- ish level. The center double-page of the Manual of the Parish CCD gives a diagram of the member-

description

Work on the third dioc~san regional high school, that FIRST MAS~: Rt. Rev. James Dolan, pastor of St. Winter weather has aided'in'its·building. General con~ tractors F. L. ColliilS and Sons have announced that all the foundations are com.., , pletedandsomeofthefloor in~ arebeingpoured.Thecafe- areasoftheMaginnis,WalSh teria and kitchen section has peen poured and the classroom serve at a mission newly assigned the Holy Cross FathersbytheHolyS"ee. tion of Hong Kong now to- children. .. ~

Transcript of 01.25.62

Page 1: 01.25.62

To the right of the lobby willbe the classroom wing with 12classrooms, business practice andtyping rooms, science labs andlibrary. The school will also con­tain administration rooms, ac­commodations for student activ­ities, domestic sciences, art,hec!lth and teachers' room. Therewill also be an oratory.

Work on the third dioc~san regional high school, thatin 'Taunton~ is' progressing satisfactorily and· favorableWinter weather has aided' in' its ·building. General con~

tractors F. L. ColliilS and Sons have announced that allthe foundations are com.., ,pleted and some of the floor in~ are being poured. The cafe­areas of the Maginnis, WalSh teria and kitchen section has

peen poured and the classroomand Kennedy designed build~ area is being poured at the pres­

!'lnt time. Workmen are now~orming the aUditorium level.

The 13 parishes of the GreaterTaunton Area contributed a totalof $1,167,428.39 to exceed the~inimum $1,125,000 goal set upfor the school drive.

Ground was broken last Augustby the Most Reverend Bishop for~he high school which will ac­~ommodate about 800 girls. The~irst regional high school in theBiehop's high school buildingprogram is,Bishop Stang High inN,>' Dartmouth which serves theGreater New Bedford Area. Itnow enrolls three classes. Thesecond school is the BishopFeehan High in Attleboro whichopened last Fall and which hasjust held open house for visitors.

This third regional high schoolwill contain an aluminum andglass entrance lobby facing theintersection of Church, Adamsand Hamilton Streets. To the leftof, the lobby will be the multi­purpose wing containing thegymnasium - auditorium withstage and dressing rooms, andcafeteria, kitchen, shower roomand boiler room.

FIRST MAS~: Rt. Rev. James Dolan, pastor of St.Mary~s Church, Tau~ton, is shown giving' Holy Communionto George' P 'Theroux at the first Mass offered in theChapel of the Ilewly-op~ned Marian Manol;' in Taunton.

Hong Kong Work of.ChurchProg.resses at Record High

HONG KONG (NC)-The health, welfare and educa­tional. work of the Church here reached an all-time highduring 1961, the 1962 edition of the' official Hong KongCatholic Directory reported. The directory noted that al-

though the ,Catholic popula- i,ooo free meals a day to refugeetion of Hong Kong now to- children. ..tals 174,279,' the' .Church . There are 34 parish branchesserves more than 'a million of the Catholic charities organi­people-a third of the colony's z'ation engaged in youth activ­entire population. ities, free' schooling and free- The direc'tory listed 30 Catholic ~eals for poor children, and re-'

free ciinic's and dispensaries pro-' . lief goods distribution. Also re­viding medical services, dental ported are pilot projects in theand pediatric care for close to vocational retraining of the han­600,000 people; 17 food convert- dicapped.·ing units and a ,kitchen giving Tum to Page Two

w,",' k.. ·· T -' ,"'" ',' .~. 'Or ~._OI1' ·,aun.t~on~

Area: ,High" Schoo1Moves . Rapidly

Rep~ McCoU'mackFavc~s PriVQ~e

Schoo~ LOOlnSWASHINGTON (NC)

The new Speaker of theHouse said here he favorsU.S. loans to help parochialand other private schools, buthe would vote for a bill whichaided public schools only.- Rep. John McCormack of Mas­sachusetts, for mer MajorityLeader who was elected Speakerto succeed the late Rep. SamRayburn of Texas, made thestatement to reporters.

. McCormack, a Catholic, hasbep,n under attack by some

,newspapers and organizations,notably Protestants and OtherAmericans United for Separationof Church and State, because heannounced support for privateschool loans at the last session, aprtJposal they oppose.. Opponents also charged thatbec:l.use of his belief in Federalloans for nonpublic schools, hewould be prevented' from sup­porting a public school assistancebill.."1 have always advocatedschool legislation and strength­ening the whole elementary andsecondary system. This includesboth public and private schools,"he said.

Turn to Page Two

. TO GHANA: Rev. RichardLawton, C.S.C., native ofBrockton and graduate ofCoyle High School andStonehill College, will leavefor Ghana, West Africa,Thursday, Feb. 1. He willserve at a mission newlyassigned the Holy CrossFathers by the Holy S"ee.

Jesuit Sees RiseIn EnrollmentAt Colleges '.

CLEVELAND (NC)-The28 Jesuit colleges and uni­versities in the United Stateswill increase their, total en­rollment by about 25 per cent inthree years, from 72,500 todayto almost 98,000 by 1965.

This estimate is based .on asurvey of expansion plans pre­sented at the annual meeting ofthe Jesuit Presidents Confer­ence, held h-ere prior to the As­sociation of American Collegesmeeting. Father Paul C. Reinert,S.J., outgoing conference presi­dent, made the report.

Father Reinert, president andrector of St. Louis University,sairl the survey showed the Jes­uit schools are planning an ex­pansion of plant facilities costing$113.5 million by 1965: He saidthe money would come fromgifts a'nd government ioans. Atpresent, .there are' 19 schoolsconducting fund-raising pro­grams., The rise in enrollment "(ill

necessitate the .hiring of 700more faculty members withinfive years, 'Father Reinert re-'ported. '

Turn to Page Two

Christian Hope'Theme of 1962Liturr~Dc:al Week. LAFAYETTE (NC)-The

, 1962 North American Litur­gical Week, to be held in'Seattle, Wash., from Aug. 20to 23, will stress the implicationsof Christ's Resurrection, it wasannounced here.

Father Frederick R. McManus,president of the Liturgical Con­ference, said a~ a meeting here inLouisiana of the conference'sboard of directors that the themeof the Liturgical Week will be:"Thy Kingdom Come: ChristianHope in the Modern World."

He said the theme "will focusattention on a better understand­ing of Christ's Resurrection andits implications for us here andnow and at the end of time."

More than four thousandpeople are expected to attendthe Liturgical Week, which willbe held on the grounds of the1962 World's Fair in Seattle.Father McManus said that thetheologians, Biblical scholars andleaders in the liturgical move­ment will be asked to give the

, 10 main addresses and to conduct15 workshops. "

PRICE IOc$4.00 per Year

ship and activities of the parishboard.

Since the parish board is madeup of eleven members: thepriest-director, four officers, andsix chairmen, it will be mosthelpful for future CCD successin the parish if the eleven fromeach parish take the course. Ex­perience has proved that it isbeneficial to choose an equalnumber of men and women forthe parish board.

A registration fee of three dol­lars will be charged to the par-

'ish for each person taking thecourse. This will take' care ofthe printed materials, necessaryfor the course.

.Vot 6, No. 5 © 1962 The Anchor

An Anchor of the Soul, Sur, tlnd Pirm-ST. PAUL

STARTS OWN BUS SERVICE: Angered because 12grade school pupils of St. Joseph's Catholic school in Nor­man, Okla., were forced to stop riding public school buses,Mrs. William E. Bittle, a non-Catholic, uses her familyclub wagon to pick up the Shearer boys who live on a farmoutside Norman. Mrs. Bittle has two children who ride thepublic school buses and attend public school. NQ Photo.

Need Compron:.ise, SacrificeIn 'Shared Time' Education

NEW YORK (NC)-A proposal for "shared time" ed­ucation would involve compromise and sacrifice by Catho­lics, but it cannot .be dismissed without serious study, aprominent educator said here. The comment. came fromMsgr. O'Neil C. D'Amour, .Stearns of Englewood, N. J. Heassociate secretary in charge is superintendent· of pub 1i cof the Superintendents De- schools there and a member of 'partment of the National the Board of Christian EducationCatholic Educational Association. of the United' Presbyterian'

His statement is in a sympo- Church, U. S. A.slum sponsored by the Religious Stearns proposes in the asso­Education Association here on a eiation's pUblicati,on, "Religiousconcept advanced by Harry L. Turn to Page Two

"C'-;;;mif'i'~~~ ~(B~'!.¥l

TheANCHOR

FoB River, Mass., Thursday.v JGiI. 25, 1962

ceD Arrnnounces CourseFo~ CaJ~~ Parish Boards

~

The Most Reverend Bishop and Rev. Joseph L. Powers,Director of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine in theDiocese, have announced that a CCD Parish ExecutiveBoard course will pe conducted in the Cape Area. The six­weeks course will be givenby Sister Dolores of the OurLady of Victory MissionarySisters. The location of thecourse will be Holy Trinity par­ish hall, West Harwich. The ses­sions will be held on Tuesdayevenings from 7:30 to 9:30, be­ginning Feb. 6 and concludingMarch 13. '

The purpose of the course isto hE:lp the parishes establish~eir CCD units by explainingto the present and potential par-

. ish board members the totalfunction of the CCD on the par­ish level. The center double-pageof the Manual of the Parish CCDgives a diagram of the member-

Page 2: 01.25.62

IFllIlllO~11'(J]J~ Rom..

550 Locust St.!Fall River. Mass,

OS 2-2391.Rose E. Sull1vanJeffrey E. Sullivan

-DOLAN

FU!l1ell'ol Home123 Ilhoadway

TAUNTONVA 4-5000

D.O. SULLIVAN &SONSFUI~E~Al ~OME

469 LOCUST STREET'FALL RIVlER, MASS.

OS -.2-3381Wilfred C. James E.

DriliCOIl Sullivan, Jr.

JllErF rF~ lEY E.S)l\.Dfi:.lDVAN

NecrologyJAN"2'J '.

Rev. John T. O'Grady, 1919,Assistant, Immaculate Concep­tion, Fall River.'. Rev; Joseph M. Silvia, '1955,Pastor, St.' Michael, Fall. River.

JAN. 28- Rev. Joseph M.. Griffin, 194'7,Pastor, St Mary, Nantucket. ,- Msgr. John J. Shay, 1961, Pas-·tor, St.. John the Evangelist.Attleboro.

JAN. 29Rev. Christiano J. Borges, 1944,

Pastor, St. John the Baptist, NewBedford.

Rev. Albert J. Masse, 1950, st.Joseph, Attleboro.

JAN.3t "Rev. William ·F.·" 'Sullivan,

1930, Pastor, St. Patrick, Somer-set. . , .'

Rev. Manuel C. Terra: 1930,Pastor, St, Peter, Provincetown.'

FEB. tRt. Rev. Michael J. O'Reilly.

1948, Pastor, Immaculate .Con­ception, Taunton.

DernlY ~o!l'matio.

Of C@lfi)~ervcli+~e

Cho~ QU'l1 SchoolsST. LOUIS (NC) - Two

Catholic high schools heNhave denied a. newspap~report intimating that "con­s~rvative clubs" are beillSformed at the schools.

. The denial followed publishing'of a picture in the S1. Lou"Globe Democrat. The picturElt.showing Rep. Thomas Curtis, andtwo St. Louis University HigllSc.hool -students and their pa~

ents, was captioned "St. Lout.University High School Conse"'­ative Club."

The school' is conducted bjJesuit Fathers. An accompanying

.story said that a.B,ishop DuBourgHigh School Conservative Clubwas also being formed. BishoPDuBourg school is conducted bythe Archdioce~e of St. Louis.

Non-PartisanArchdiocesan authorities said

no "Bishop DuBourg High School!Conservative Club" would belformed at the school.

Father Gerald R. Sheahal'ilg8.J., principal of St. Louis UnA­versity High School, read, mstatement denying 'that a."."Conservative Club" organize..tion would be permitted undel'school auspices.

"The school takes no officia'!position for or against any polit­ical organization," he said. "W.are neither Democratic nor Re­publican, neither liberal nOJ'~onservative."

LosesPriests·

REV. JOHN LaFARGE, S.l.

. VOURS YO II.OVIE AND YO GiVEIthe life of a DAUGHTER OF ST. PAUL. Love God

· more, and give to souls knowledge and love ofGod by serving Him in. a Mission which uses tho

· PreiS, Radio, Motion Pictures and TV, to bring·His Word to soull everywhere. ZealoUi ,oung, girl.; 14-23 years interested in thit IIlliqueApostolate may write to:

REVEREND MOTHER SUPERIORDAUGHTIRS OF ST. PAUL

50 st. PAUL'S AVE. BOSTON 10, MAli.

members at a Communion break­fast· following· Mass at Old St.Peter's Church, Barclay Streethere, on Sunday, Feb. 11.

He will be succeeded byFather Philip H. Hurley, S.J., ofFordham ,University, who hasbeen assistant chaplain for thepast five years.

Hunton, who will be 74 onMarch 24, tendered his resigna­tion to the' board after 28 yearsas executive secretary of thecouncil. He was given the title of"secretary emeritus" and willserve in a consultative positionin the area of development andpublic relations.

Hunton, . whose retirement iseff.ective on March 1, will besuc­ceeded by Dennis Clark, pres­ently director of the housingdivis~on of Philadelphia's Com':'mission on Human Relations.

C·P. HA~RI.NGTONFUNERAL HOME

986 Plymouth AvenueFall River. Mass.

Tel. OS 3-2271

DANIEl • HARRINGTONUcenle.. ~uneral Director

and Registered Embalmer

FUNERAL DIRECTORS15 IRVINGTON CT.

WY 7-7830NIEW BlEDFORD

IBIROOKLAWNFUNERAL HOME, INC.R. Marcel Roy - C. Lorraine R""

RoQ'er LaFranCt'

curb .argument over governmentaid to church-related schools,provide a common ground ··onwhich children of differing reli_gious backgrounds' can meet and"stop· the drift of secularism" illtoday's public school education.

Msgi'. D'Amour calls the pro­posal "intriguing and challeng-'ing," and agrees that religious'illiteracy is spreading today...... - ..':

. Upset Conscience

c;:'athollcs,' .he ;surinise's,' willgreet the proposal with 'sym­pathy, but the concept aiso. mustbe seen as involving "conipro~mises that will deeply upset .theCatholic conscience." .

It forces a compromise in thebasi~ Catholic philosophy thateducation is "an: integratedwhole" and that religious truthpermeates' the entire curriculum,he wrote.

However, he adds his beliefthat Catholics will stUdy the pro­posal because "compromise forthe common good is often neces­sary within a democracy." Itmight, he added, "bring about aresurgence of religious educationin our country."

Interracial COlW~cil

Pioneetr

GEORGIE HUNTON

AUJJ~~~ir~N~

!FtWlrn~Hr@~·:·If!J@tri'f\)~

",,,,len AUbertine BraughOwner and Director

Spacious Parking AreaWY 2-2957

119 Allen St. New Bedford

CatholicServices of Two

NEW YORK (NC)-TheCatholic Interracial Councilmovement loses the activeservices of two of its pio­neers this year: Father' JohnLaFarge, S.J., and George K.Hunton.

The two were among thefounders in 1934 of the firstcouncil in the country, an effortthat has since blossomed intonearly 40 councils and theirfederation, the National Cath­olic Conference' for InterracialJustice.

Father LaFarge, 81, Jesuitauthor and l~~cturer, asked to berelieved of his post of CIC cha·p­lain. The _council's board ofdirectors granted his request andhave named him chaplain eme-ritus. .

Father LaFarge will deliverhis farewell address' to council

Continued from Page OneEducation," that the schooltimeof children be shared by state­supported and church supportedschools.

stop Drift of SecularismHe suggests that children at":

tend public school for that partof their schooling which is seenas secular and -attend churchschools for. that portion .·whichthe church determines to be .ofreligious import.. .

The proposal,' he believes will

O'ROIURKEFuneral, Home

571 Second St.Fall· River, Mass

OS 9-6072MICHAEL J. McMAHON

LiCenl!ed ·Funercil D'irectorRegistered Embalmor

R.equires Compromise and Sacrific~

..' Mass Oll'doFRIDAY-St. Polycarp', Bishop'. and Martyr.. III Class. Red.. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed;

Common Preface.SATURDAY-St. John Chrysos­

tom, Bishop, Confessor andDoctor of the Church. III Class.White. Mass Proper; Gloria;no Creed; Common Preface.

SUNDAY-IV Sunday AfterEpiphany. II Class.. Green.Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed;Preface of Trinity.

MONDAY-St. Francis De Sales,Bishop, Confessor and Doctor·of the Church. III Class. White.Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed;Common Preface.

TUESDAY-St. Martina, Virginand "Martyr. III Class. Red.Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed;Common Preface.

WEDNESDAY-St. John Bosco,Confessor. III Class. White.Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed;

. Common Preface.THURSDAY-St. Ignatius, Bish­

op and Martyr. III Class. Red.Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed;Common Preface.

DRY CLIEANiNG'and

IFUR SYORAGL:

DERMODYCLEANERS

34-44 Cohannet StreetTaunton VA 2-6161

Continued from Page OneAs of October, 1961, the direc­

tory reported, there were 168Catholic schools with a totalenrollment of 101,704 students, ofwhom two thirds (65,450). werenot Catholic.

Charitable inStitutions con­duct~d by the diocese and reli­gious congregations include fivehospitals, five orphanages, twohomes for the aged, two homesand a school for the' blind,. fourday nurseries and play schools,and three centers for vocationaltraining and cottage industries.

PriestsPriests working under Bishop

Lawrence Bianchi, P.I.M.E., ofHong Kong total 322, of which24 are Americans. Thirty arediocesan priests exiled' from RedChina. Of the 634 Sisters repre­senting .21 different.· congrega­tions, '64 are American. There.are 108 Brothers. .'

Included in these figures are107 Chinese -priests, 49 ChineseBrothers, and 295 Chinese Sis-ters. . .

The expanding health and wel­fare program of the Church hereis directly administered by theHong Kong diocese through itssocial welfare bureau, known as'Caritas-Hong Kong, and by reli..gious congregations in coopera­tion with the diocese. Interna­tional voluntary agencies provid­ing assistance for refugees andother poor in Hong Kong throughthe Church include the. MisereorSocial Aid Fund' of the GermanBishops, the Catholic Women'sLeague of London, and CatholicRelief Services--Nationa1 Cath­Qlice Welfare Conference.

OlfdOl1\1@fi'y Gave!:l@$~ S~e$$Dlrng

l'he Most Reverend Bishopg3ve the final absolution follow­ing the Solemn Requiem MassMonday morning in St. Mary'sChurch, Taunton, for Mrs. Anne(P.eardon) Morris, mother ofRev. William F. Morris, assistantat thot parish.

Father Morris sang the Massfor his mother assisted by Rt.Rev. James Dolan as Deacon andRev. William J. Fletcher as Sub-deacon. .

As~isting the Bishop were VeryRe,' Patrick H. Hurley and Rev.Thomas H. Taylor. Master ofCeremonies to the Bishop wasRev. John H. Hackett, DiocesanVice Chancellor.

Legoon of.DecencyThe following films are to be

added to the lists in their respec­tive classifications:·

Unobjectionable for generalpatronage: The Bashful Ele­phant; Cinderella.

Unobjectionable for adults:. Sweet Bird of Youth.

Objectionable in part for all:No Love for Johnny (grosslysuggestive) ..

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall IUver-l"hurs., Ja". 2'5, 1'962..., . . ~ . . . '. .

FORTY HOURSDEVOTION

Jan. 28-,-St. Anthony, Taun­ton.

SAcred Heart, Fall River.Bishop Stang Convent,

North Dartmouth.Feb. 4-Holy Name, N e·w

Bedford.St. Joseph, Fall River.Jesus Mary Convent, Fall

River.Feb. l1-our Lady of Fatima,

Swansea.Catholic Memorial Home,

Fall River...Feb. 18-St. William, Fall

River.Holy Family, Taunton.St. Augustine, Vineyard

Haven.

2

Enrollment RiseConUnued from Page One

He pointed out that the Jesuitcollege expansion is made neces­sary by the expanding youthpopulation. He added:

"Our liberal college educationwill revolve around the funda­mentals of preparing Americanyouth to·meet the challenges ofour complex society.

~'Our expansion program is nota move to expand for expansion!ssak.;>, involving many 'frills andunnecessary buildings. Of theapl,'lroximately 70 new buildingsto be built, 25 will be dormito­ries 13 will be student ,unionbuildings, and seven will be newscience' centers'on Jesuit collegecampuses. This proves that ourbasic ·expansion program will bege'lfed to·the stlident needs.:

Liberal Arts:. "It reflects .the' colleges' aesires

to bring student. living off thecampus· on -to the: campus. Itmeans greater facilities for out­of-t.own· students! ~Ishing to at-tend our ·institutions.. '.

. "Our. survey; ·shows that thebaslc'liberal arts program, whichhas been'. standard in - Jesuitschools, is becoming even. moresignificant ~n the training of thecitizen of tomorrow."

Sch@o~ lC@][J'il~Continued from Page One

"I recognize that you can·'tlegislate for private schools inthe same way you can for publicschools, but· Congress can legis­1ate specifically.

"In addition to public schoolaid, I advocate long-term loansat reasonable interest rates toprivate schools for puildingclassrooms and for teachers' sal­aries, to teach science, mathe­matics and foreign languages.

"Assuming that a House com­mittee reported out a bill with­out those provisions, however, Iwould vote for such a bilt"

'THE I\NCHORSecond Olasa .Poetallil Paid .c ..ail Rlwr.l

M..... Publl.hed evel7 T1nmlda,'" tlvBilrbland Ava.... lI'aIl River. M.... ""the C.tholle Preu. of the Dloc_ 06Fall Rlv•. Subecnpltoll ............poatpaW ........ ,-.

Ch..istians, ·Non. Christians Meet.At 'Feast of Brotherly Love'

R0ME (NC)-An agape - a olie Maronite Rite Mass cele­feast of brotherly love -:- has br~ted by Lebanese Archbishopbeen held here by Catholics, Pietro Sfair, ordaining prelateother Christians and adherents for the Maronite Rite in Rome. .of non-Christian religions. Before the dinner, everyone. The meeting and dinner was pr~sent.recited. the following

. presided over by Augustin Car- prayer:dinal Bea, S.J., president· of the . "Almig~ty and Eternal Qod;Preparatory .Secretariat for Pro- . 190k kindly upon this agape, somoting Christian Unity for the that each of us, overcoming andcoming ecumenical council. repudiating the differences which

The event took place at Rome's harass and .the adversities whichPro Deo University of Social poison human relations, mayStudies, whose students include m a k e ourselves everywherehundreds of non-Catholic Chris- sowers of goodness and of thetians and non-Christians. message of love and life. Only

Each year the Catholic-ori- with your help, 0 Providentented university sponsors 8ft Creator, will the impetus of ouragape and asks its students to concord be able to shatter theinvite as their guests the diplo- barriers of egoism and misunder­matic representatives of their standings."home countries and the leadersof the religious groups to which Church iii Chinathey belong.

Opens with MassTaking part in the affair this

year were Anabaptists, Angli­cans, Baptists, Buddhists, Calvin­ists, Catholics, Coi:lfucians, Cop­tic Christians, Hindus; J:ews,Lutherans, Methodists, Moslems,Presbyterians, Russian Orthodox,Christian Scientists and Wal­densians.

The agape began with a Cath-'

Page 3: 01.25.62

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 25, 1962 3

AT TESTIMONIAL: Parishioners, relatives and friends honor Rt.Rev. Msgr. E. S. deMello, pastor of Our Lady of Lourdes Church, Taunton,on the occasion of his elevation to the prelacy. Left, Edward .s. Franco,.Msgr. de Mello, Sen. John F. Parker, toastmaster. Center, Msgr. Francis

McKeon, Msgr. de Mello, Msgr. James J. Dolan, all of Taunton, and Msgr.John A. Silvia, New Bedford. Right, Rev. Edward A. Oliveira, curate atOur Lady of Lourdes, Msgr. de Mello, Mrs. Ll:!na Cordeiro, New Bedford,sister of the Monsignor.

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He identified the modern legalpositivists as those who "attackthe very concept of the naturallaw as medieval fiction, whichserved a useful purpose in itsday but is now obsolete and

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priest-law professor charged ence."here that the traditional Amer':' "To them, inalienable rightsiean philosophy of law is under are simply metaphysical non­"serious attack" within the legal sense," Father Kenealy said.profession by advocates of a new "They deny the existence of ob­ideology which "denies the ra- jective principles of justice andtional foundations of American liberty, thus recognizing no ab­liberty and, ordered justice." solutes except pragmatic' public. .Several hundred representa- policy."tives of state and local' govern- Father Kenealy termed thisments heard Father William J. thinking as the .fundamental'Kenealy, S.J., of Loyola Univer- philosophy of the absolute state,'sity law school, Chicago, contend ·which he called a "retrogessionin .his sermon at the first Red to anCient Caesarism."Mass of the Indianapolis archdi­ocese that if the viewpoint ofmodern legal positivists prevailsthe legal profession "is destinedto play a tragic part' in the dis­integration of the free societyour forebears so gloriously con­structed."

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layman Asserrft's'Lay Apo$to~ate'

Confusing Te6"mWASHINGTON: (NC)-A

Catholic lay leader said herethat the term "lay apostol­ate" is "incomprehensible"to most laymen and should· bedropp.ed in ~iscussion of theirrole in the' Church. ..Josep~ B. Casey, president of

the Dubuque, Iowa, Archdiocesan .Council of Catholic· Men, sug­gested that the term "Catholiclay leadership" be· substitutedfor "lay apostola~e."

.. Casey also'. stated that toawaken laymen to their truefunction in the Chur'ch "will re­quire more than a campaign; itwill require almost a revolution."

. The tradition of passive laymenis centuries-old in the Church,and laymen "like their passiverole and they want to retain it,"he declared.

Casey underlined the impor­tance of lay leadership in dealingwith such issues as aid to educa­tion. "Unless we have leaderswho are prominent enough to beheard, we will not be heard," hesaid.

It is a "sorr.y situation" that'priests and bishops must oftentake the place of the Catholiclayman in speaking out on publicissues, he added.

Casey spoke at the openinggeneral session of a special three­day meeting on "The Crisis inLay Leadership."

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NEW YORK (NC)-The Na­tional Retail Merchants Associa­tion has called on its membersto support Sunday closing laws.

The a~~ociation, in a resolutionadopted at its 51st annual con­vention, opposed Sunday ·sales ofany articles except those "abso­lutely necessary to the healthand welfare of the community."

The association, which repre­sents 11,500 department, spe­cialty and variety stores with an­nual sales of more than $19 bil­lion, expressed "deep concern"over the growing trend towardSunday business.

"Competitive pressures thathave induced some stores, in­cluding members of the associa­tion, to open on Sunday must bestrongly resisted," it said.

Dec Ei'tl Sco~es

A~at~vPROVIDENCE (NC) - The

dean of a Catholic college saidhere that "civic indifference andpolitical apathy can rightfullybe regarded as one of the greatimmo~'alities of the presentday."

Father Joseph L. Lennon, O.P.,dean of Providence College, saidin a speech: "In a democracysuch as ours and in the complexsociety in which we live, everycitizen, in keeping with his timeand talent, is called upon to dosomething for the wider socialgood. He who does nothing isguilty of sin."

He spoke before the annualdiocesan meeting of the' Chris­tian Family Movement.

Love Without Action"The Dominican educator said it

is inconsistent to "profess loveof fellowman without acting toperfect government at this crit­ical time in history."

He added that "if Christians ingeneral, and parents in particu­lar, realized that the half deadman helped by the Good Sama­ritan is today represented by athousand million men, under­nourished, ill housed, under­educated-four fifths of mankind-then they would be moved to amore intense interest in govern­ment and in, politics."

P~j~st Say~ 'D~utNegro i~ P;a«:e,M..,~tical ~(O)dy of Jesus Chl1'ist"

BETTENDORF (NC) - Cath- ity'. Their silence must beoUcs must "put the Negro in his broken and their weight thrownplace," and that place is the Mys- behind justice."tical Body of Christ, a Davenport Home Is Sourceinter~aciall~adersaid here.. "Authorities say that the home

This requires greater enhg~t- is the greatest source of racialenmen~ on t.he part of whl~e prejudice. Children learn it fromCatholics, sal~ Father Marvm their parents," he said. "If thisMottet, chaplam to the Daven- is true then the home .can alsoport Catholic Interracial .Council be the greatest source of the trueIn a talk before ~he Kmghts of Christian attitude in race rela~Colu.mbus in this Iowa co~- tions. The home is the best placem~l1lt!. . . to teach all 'children to love' all

Priests who .are workmg races as God's children.".among ~he Neg.roe~ tell us ~at Father Mottet said that dis­the ra.clal. preJudIce of ~hIte crimination and segregation areCathohcs IS the greatest smgle not just problems for the South.obstacle to Negro conversions. Negroes may be treated as equalsNegro~s are a~tracted by t?e in Northern' schools, he said, butCatho.hc teachmgs of r~clal subtle and hypocritical discrtmi- .equahty. but they are driven nation denies them their rightsaway when they see that Cath- in housing and employment inolics d~n't practice what they the North.preach. "One young Negro told me,"

Hands of Whites Father Mottet said, "that he wentThe future of the Negro in to Korea and risked his life to

America, he said, lies largely in defend American freedom, andthe hands of whites. "Negroes then returned to Davenportare a political minority and where he was refused the righttherefore can't vote on their to buy the house he wanted,right," he continued. "They de- even though he had the moneypend on fair and decent whites to buy it."to work for justice. This is whywhites, especially Catholics,must know what is right andjust in this area."

Most people know what isright and want to pursue it, butthey remain silent and inactive,Father Mottet contended. "Wemust stir up this 'silent major-

Page 4: 01.25.62

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Catholic Children's Aid So­ciety here is placing childrenwith adoptive agencies in theU.s.because there are not enoughCatholic adoptive parents in 0n.­tario, the executive director ofthe agency has stated.

Ward Markle, the CCAS offi­cial,' made' this comment in II

letter published in the CanadianRegister. It was in reply toaletter from a reader who' foundit hard to believe "that there arenot enough Catholic parentswanting to adopt c:bildren."

Markle said that the CCAS"placed more than 40 c:bildren inthe United States during 1961."

Be also said: "Let me stateemphatically that there are ,notenough Catholic parents apply­ing to, adopt ... This is why wehave working agreements withvarious Catholic agencies in theUnited States-in order to findgood Catholic homes for ourchildren."

Want Good HomesIn reply to an objection that

too long a waiting period is in­volved before a child can beadopted, Markle said his agencymust obey "the regulations of theChild Welfare Act of Ontarioand the' requisites prescribed by... James C. Cardinal McGuigan,Archbishop of Toronto, in re­spect to the spiritual safegua.rds."

"We are not in the business ofsupplying children to meet theneeds of some parents--to savea marriage, to cure an alcoholicor neurotic," Markle stated."Rather, are we in the businessof finding good Catholic homes(or our children."

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HINGHAM, Mass-To accom­modate an increasing number ofvocations to the forergn missionpriesthood, the Maryknoll Fath­ers have purchased a 63-acretract of land here on which theyplan to build a new novitiate fortheir seminarians.

Construction o,f the novitiate,which will be locafed approxi­mately 20 miles southeast of Bos­ton, will begin in the Spring of1963.

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Bishop Con!!1ollyGives Abso~l!Jltion

The Most Reverend Bishopgave the absolution yesterdaymorning in Our Lady of FatimaChurch, Swansea, following theSolemn Requiem Mass of FrankB. Greene who died on Saturday.

The Mass was sung by Mr.Greene's son, Rev. James F.Greene of St. Joseph's Church,Taunton.

Father Greene was assisted byRev. James F. Kelley as Deaconand Rev. John F. Moore as Sub­deacon.

Seated in the sanctuary wasMost Rev. James J. Gerrard,Auxiliary Bishop of the DiOCEse.

Their concern focuses on theeconomkally lesser developedrountries where the introductionof scientifically advanced healthmeasures not directly related to .the economy have induced andpromise to maintain increases inpopulation that place a seriousstrain on presently limited avail­able resources.

In regard to such countries,the Catholic position rejects theuse of abortion, sterilization orcontraceptive techniques forlimiting too rapid growth asclearly contrary to Christianmoral principles.

When regulation is necessary,they propose later marriages,and the observance of absoluteor periodic continence duringsome stage of the family cycle.Such s'olutions are not imprac­tical.

Indeed, the patterns of self­discipline, deferred gratification,and 'personal dedication that

, these practices necessarily implymust be judged absolutely nec­essary if the organized exploita­tion of resources and technolog­ical advances are to proceedvoluntarily.

Above all, Catholic thinkersstress the development 'of re­sources. Hence they advocate, amultifaceted approach, includingemphasis on universal education,social and economic reforms,capital investment. that willmake the best use of the abund­ant labor supply, and neededmarketing and trade reforms.

They also insist that the goodsof the earth have been createdfor the use of all mankind, sothat the resource-adequate na­tions now have a serious obliga­tion to aid .the resource-needyregions through financial andtechnical assistance to the extentthat this appears feasible.

The above offers only a bare,outline of the assumptions, prin­ciples, and facts related to theCatholic position on population.However, I hope it is sufficientto enable you to keep future dis­cussions with", your doctor inproper focus.

Explains Catholic PosmC'ionOn ·"Population Explosion'

By Father John L. Thomas, S. J'.Ass&. Sociology Prof.-St. Loois uJiiversity

"What~s the best way to explain the' Catholic positionem the 'pop,ulation explosion' to sincere Non-Catholics? Irecently had my fourth child and in the course of a check-upmy non-Catholic doctor, who has six children of his own,brought up the whole ques­tion. I told him that Godmade the world and certainlyknows how to take care ofit. His answer was that God alspgave us common sense and thatwe should useit."

An adequatereply to yourquestion, Jan ewould requirem'Jre space thanI am permittedhere, so I shallconfine my re­marks to a fewm a j 0 r pointsthat may provehelpful. Perhapsmore forcefully than any otherissue, the current controversyrelating to population problemsserves to remind American Cath­olics that they are living in apluralist society.. The term Pluralism as used inthis context means that theAmerican people can no longeragree upon proper moral conductand practice because they' no-longer . agree on basic moralprinciples and values. In otherwords, there is no g~neral con­sensus on the meaning of manand his relationship to. God.

General PointsUnder these circumstances,

there are several general pointsthat must be kept clearly inmind when explaining the Cath­olic position on contemporaryissues.

In the firs't place, an intelli­gent judgment or "position"concerning the morality of anypractice must be based on thelogical application of generalmoral principles to this specifichuman act.

People who base their consid­erations upon different moralprinciples will necessarily reachdill,erent conclusions.

Hence disagreements concern­ing the licitness of va'nous formsof population control must log­ically be based on differencesconerning basic moral principles,and since these are based on ourconceptions of the nature, origin,and destiny of man, any worth­while discussion of disagreement.in the' moral order must ult~­

mately center on this point., Al­though thi~ seems obvious, it isall too frequently forgotten incurrent discussions.

Moreover, inasmuch as an ac­ceptable program of action al­ways represents a conclusion.based on the prudent applicationof relevant moral pri~ciples toa set of pertinent social facts, wecan discuss the Catholic positionon the "population explosion"intelligently only if we knowboth the principles and the facts.

In regard to the latter, Cath'O­lic thinkers must rely on thesame sources of information asall others. Unfortunately, thereremain serious gaps in ourknowledge relating to both basicpopulation data and the natureof the relationship between'pop­ulation ~rends and socio-eco­nomic developmentf

Moreover, we must distinguishbetween the speculative, overallproblem of world populationversus world resources on theone hand, and specific, practicalpopulation - resource problemsexisting in various countries onthe other. '

In general, the ,experts agreethat world resources are ade-quate to meet forseeable futurepopulation increases, providedwe make use of them.

"'4c-' .

Heads Atomic !BodyP/~RIS (NC) - Jose Maria

Otero Navascues, Marquis ofHermosilla, president of the In­ternational Federation of Cath­olic Men and president of theSpanish Council on NuclearEnergy, has been elected presi,..dent of the IS-nation EuroPeanAgency on Nuclear Energy.

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5

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Ex-CommunistParty OfficialNow Catholic

NEW YORK (NC)-JohnLautner, a top official for20 years of the Communistparty in the U.S., was re­ceived into the Church in No­vember, 1961, the Oriel Societyannounced here.

The society, an internationalCatholic cultural organization,said that Lautner received hisreligious instructions and FirstCommunion from Father VincentHart, S.J., of Loyola Seminary,Shrub Oak, N. Y.

The Oriel Society stated thatFather Robert Gannon, S.J., for­mer president of Fordham Uni­versity, helped lead Lautner intothe Church by suggesting thathe make a retreat in the Summerof 1961 at Loyola Seminary.

Lautner had served as a mem­ber of the Communist party'snational review commission andas a security officer of the party.He also was assigned to buildingthe party's underground appara­tus in New York state.

Tortured by ThugsOn Jan. 14, 1950, he was ac­

cused of being an FBI agent andtortured in Cleveland by COlll­

munist thugs. He left the partyshortly afterwards. The torturehe suffered is described in FBIdirector J. Edgar Hoover's book"Masters of Deceit."

Since leaving the party he hasworked closely with the U. S.Government. He is a consultantto the U. S. Department of Jus­tice and has been a witness forthe department in 20 Smith Actconspiracy and Communist partymembership cases. He also lec­tures for the Oriel Society on thetechniques and propaganda ofcommunism.

THE ANCHOR­'Th~rs.; Jan. 25, 1962

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CHICAGO (NC)-Forty mem­bers of the Apostolate of theHandicapped were confinned byAlbert Cardinal Meyer, Arch­bishop of Chicago, at a specialservice in Our Lady of MercyChurch here.

Through services of aides anddrivers the handicapped aretaken to various churches, sem­inaries, shrines and other institu­tions in the archdiocese on thefirst Saturday of each month fora spiritual program of eonfes-

. sion, Mass, instruction, Benedic­tion and 'Rosary, followed by aluncheon and entertainment.

Membership is opened to allphysically. handicapped, regard­less of race or creed, as well asablebodied persons to serve asaides.

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Pfan ConsecrationAt Richmond Feb. 22

RICHMOND (NC)-Archbish­op Egidio Vagnozzi, ApostolicDelegate in the United States,will consecrate Bishop-designateErnest L. Unterkoefler in Sacred'Heart cathedral here Thursday,- ',>, 22.

Bishop-designate Unterkoefler,,\4. is a native of Philadelphiawho was ordained for the Rich­mond diocese on May 18, 1944.ton were arrested.

Taunton'Woma.n'sThrough

Rev. Mr. John J. Nichols, nephew of Mrs. Harold T. Schofield of Taunton is stillcarrying in his prayerbook the membership ,~ard he received in 1947 when as an'11 yearold fourth grader at St. Joseph's School, Portland, Me., he became a membe; of the FuturePriest Club. His boyhood dream will come tr UfO Friday, Feb. 2 in the Cathedral of the HolyCross, Boston, when RichardCardinal Cushing ordains the Divine Word Seminary at

. Te.::hny, Ill. "We have endlesshIm. ~e son of Mr. and facts to prove that diocesanMrs. Charles T. Nichols of seminaries and other religiousMilton, his grandparents are the orders b~ides our own receivelate John J. and Margaret E. numerous candidates who prob-Nichols of Immaculate Concep- ably would never have applied,tion parish, Taunton. had not the Future Priest Club

He will sing his first Solemn nourished their vocations," ac-Mass at St. Mary of the Hills cording to Father Reed.Church', Milton, Sunday, Feb. 4, Future Fr. Nichols recentlyand following that will be as- wrote to a fonner director of thesigned to serve in a parish of club: "I thought you would ap-the Boston Archdiocese, preciate knowing of at least one

IF An Do early member of the Futureor y Y Priest Club who, with God's

The F~ture ~j~st CI~b that grace, has persevered throughyoung Nichols lamed m 1947 the years. I invite you to jointhen had headquarters at the me in the happy days that areDivine Word Seminary in Bay ahead."St. Louis, Miss. Since its founda­tion the club has been under thedirection of the Divine Wordmissionaries- '

The club aims "to give en­couragement and vocationalguidance" to its 14,000 membersin the United States. It hasother members overseas. Theonly condition for membership is"a sincere interest in the priest­hood, whether diocesan, religiousor missionary."

Any boy from the fifth toeighth grade (ages 11 to 14) mayjoin. Members say a daily prayerfor their vocation,· a daily prayerto the Blessed Mother, and re­ceive Holy Communion at leastonce a week

"To this day, I still say thedaily prayer to the BlessedMother," said Rev. Mr. Nichols. ,

The chief means the club usesto foster and preserve the

Inv9te 600 to JoinPhysidc:Rns' Guild

WASHINGTON (NC)-Ncarly600 physicians in this area havebeen invited to join the newly

,formed St. Luke's Physicians'Guild of the Washington arch­diocese.

Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyleof Wasbiington wilt speak at theguifd's rrrst meeting on Thurs­day, Jan. 25. The local groupwill be affiliated with the Na­tional Federation of CatholicPhysicians' Guilds, made up ofsimilar groups in major cities in36 states.

~(!;!JnD@ll1l\i' 5)[Iu~!telf

WAYZATA (NC) -The newSl Bartholomews church here inMinnesota will include a base­ment fallout shelter for childrenof the parish school, FatherDemetrius Hagmann, O.s.B., hasanll(\Uneed. The church is sched­uled for completion next Decem­ber,

,Pre J'a t e AssertsPop e Is CenterOf CotholDC Unity

SAN ANGELO (NC) ­The center of worldwideCatholic unity, guarantee ofapo!'tolic succession and thetrue power and authority lies inthe Pope, Bishop Thomas K.Gorman of Dallas-Fort Worthemphasized in a sermon at theconsecration and enthronementof the Most Rev. Thomas J.Drury, first Bishop of the newlyerected Diocese of San Angelo inSacred Heart Cathedral here inTexas.

Bishop Gorman said that a"thl'cefold apostolic visitation"had come to San Angelo - theerection of the new diocese, the

. consecration and enthronementof iIs first Bishop. He tracedthe succession of bishops oftoday back to the time of theApostles.

"Through long centuries ofcontroversy and bitter strife,when uncertainty about Christ'strue doctrine beat upon theminds of Christian men, whenfalsehood and bitter heresiesraised their ugly heads, menbav~ looked to Rome for guid­ance toward the truth of Christand protection from the wilesof erro~," Bishop Gorman said.

"Long ago, in the midst ofswirling controversy, when menstruggled to know where wastruth, where the Church, wherethe center of unity, where thegovernment of Christ's trueChurch lay, a great doctor of theChUl'ch cried out suceincUy andpenetratingly, 'Ubi Petrus. ibiEeclcsia.' Where Peter is, thereis the Church.

"Look for Peter and you willfind Cluisk's Church, and wherecan Peter be found save in hissuccessor, the Pope, the Bishopof Rome, divinely appointedguardian of truth in the matterof faith and morals?" BishopGorman continued.

He said that today when theworld is beset "by thle storms ofcontroversy and the attacks oferror, seeking to undermineChristian fGUndations. we mustlook to Peter to find the Church,

, to John XXIll, his successor and'like him vicar of Christ, for

assurance of Christ's truth."

Soviet Leader Bows· To Madonna Icon

BOMBAY (NC)-Soviet Presi­dent Leonid Brezhnev bowed

· when he was confronted herewith a reproduction of the iconof Our Lady of .Vladimir, Rus­sia's mq,st sacred image.

The chief of state of the So­viet Union and his wife cameface to face with tbe ancientimage of the Madonna and childduring the Bombay phase oftheir official visit to llndia. TheBrezhnevs were in an automobileprocession here when they came

, upon the 25th ll-mile walking, procession sponsored by Bombay, Catholics.

Bhezhn~who is titular su­· perior to Pltemier Nikita Khrush­, chev in the Soviet government: hierarchy - bowed when he, spotted the ancient image. Then

he hinted his eyes away.

Page 6: 01.25.62

'6 THE A..,rlJ"''',"Oi"ce5e of Fall 'River-Thurs., Jan. 25, 1962l' ", ,. 'It Makes'Sense

Why This Stand?

®rheANCHORWhat is the percentage of

Catholics in Puerto Rico?According to figures on the

population of Puerto Rico as ,of. January 1959, there were 2,090,­

000' Catholics out of a totalpopulation of 2,275,000; a littlemathematics comes up with theanswer that Catholics represent91.9% of the Puerto Ricanpopulation.

Is there a religious order mthe Catholic Church ealled theminorites?There is no specific order

known as the MINORITES. Thhiis l:lR archflic name once appliedto 'the Franciscan Friars MinOl1'The' Franciscan nuns were re­ferred to as minoresses. Becauseof the erstwhile use of thesenames there is a street in LondolZlopwhere they formerly had a co­vent, kll{)Wn as the Minorities.

,* ......Can you give me a brief

!iummation of my name-saint,St. Nicholas?There are several Saints Nich­

olas. If you know the exact onethe task of an­swering you r('uestion wouldbe simplified.Possiblythedateof your birthmight give theclue, if you areuncertain as tojust which oneis your patron;it may be thatyour birthdatecoincides with ,the feast day of 'one of them.

Most popularly known of theSaints Nicholas is St. Nicholas 'ofMyra; his feast day is Dec. 6 andis kept almost universallythroughout, the Church. He wasa Bishop and Confessor. He wasand still is among the most pop­ular of the saints, especiallyamong the Eastern dissidents..While not too much is knowndefinitely of him, there are manylegends' associated, with this saint.

St. Nicholas is honored as thepatron of many countries andcities and classes of people (es­pecially children-8anta Claus illa corruption of his name). Hewas Bishop of Myra in Lycia illthe,fourth century; his body wasstolen 'by Italian merchants 'ill1087, arid it now rests in Bari.·

Among the many' groups towh0m St. Nicholas is patron arethe pawnbrokers, and the threegolden ba~ls so frequently usedto indicate a pawnshop origi­nated in a legend of ,good "St.Nick." Maybe in the month ofJanuary the family breadwin­ners see the appropriateness of

'''Santa Claus" also being thepatron of pawnbrokers.

byRev. James A. McCarthy

St. William's Church· foil River

Who are the "Coptic Mar­tyrs"? Can you give theirnames.

Even if we knew the names.. we probably could not list them

in the space allowed in thispaper. The COPTIC MARTYRSis a general term applying to aU

_ of those who suffered martyrdomfor the Faith in Egypt from theyear 200 to 313 in the persecu­tions of Severus, Decius, Vale­rian, Diocletian and Maximinus.

Are the "blue nuns" al'"blue sisters" the same an .. 15that their real name?

The BLUE NUNS and theBLUE SISTERS are not identi­cal. The principal thing th3ltthey have in common is that thenicknames of both groups is de­rived from their blue habits (orgarments). The Sisters of the

, Institute of Marie Reparatice arecalled the BLUE ND:NS, from thecolor of their scapular and vei~

The Sisters of the Little Com­pany of Mary are known as theBLUE SISTERS, from the coloI'of their veil.

MONDAY - St. Francis ofSales, Bishop, Confessor, Doctor."In the gathering of the Churchthe Lord opened his mouth andfilled him with the spirit of wis­dom and understanding," beginsthe Introit of today's Mass. TheChurch is Christ, so it is not manwho brings gifts and talents tothe Church but rather theChurch which' enables man towhatever c'onfession of faith,wha'tever utterance, whateverwitness he may make. Everyconfessor and teacher in theChurch is a part of Christ's con_tinuing Epiphany, a part of Hisgracious manifestation of Him­self to men.

WEDNESDAY - St. JohnBoSco, Confessor. Perhaps thedifference between the greatsain~ of Christian history andourselves is as much in thequality of vision as it is in moralstamina. For Christ's ,Epiphany,His manifestation, goes on aslong as time lasts. The Epistleasks, us whether we are opento this Epiphany, this vision, in"whatever things are true, what­ever honorable, whatever just,whatever holy, whatever lovable,whatever of good repute." Dowe confront God in these ex­periences? Do we thank Him forthem? Do we rejoice in them?

Stresses LeadershipIn MQral Order

CHICAGO (NC)-When moralleadership fails to measure upand the caliber of dedication be­comes mediocre, "we are ingrave danger of substitutingshowy superficial images forideals," the Governor of Illinoiswarned here.

Gov. Otto Kerner spoke at theFestival of Leadership banquetsponsored by the Society of theLittle Flower in the PalmerHouse. The dinner benefits stu­dents for the Carmelite priest­hood.

Before students for the priest­hood can exert their influence onthousands yet to be born, theGovernor said, they must beinitiated into the "tradition ofunstinting generosity by thosewho bear the mantle of leader­~ip in our present day sO,ciety."

TUESDAY-St. Martina; Vir-'-gin, Martyr: The Epistle .speaksagain of the wonder of God's

. gifts, of GOd's providerice, for'man. Helper, protector, deliverei-,saviour ~ these are the 'termswhich indicate the unearnedblessings He has freely bestowedon His creatures. They indicatewhy His name is Love. And theGospel points to the Church asthe Bride of Christ. Every bless­ing His to give, and yet the oilof our commitment and accept­ance no less essential.

SATURDAy-st. John Chrys­ostom; Bishop, Confessor, Doctor.The Gospel points out the ob­vious fact that a city set upon amouritain cannot be hidden. Trueof great teachers of the Churchlike John Chrysostom, it is truealso of the Church. It is an ad­ditional reason (besides theessential one) why the 'presentstate of a fragmented and sec­tarian Christianity cannot bepatiently, tolerated by, sincereChristians. It is a lie to theworld.

Mass SeriesCLE VELAND (NC) - A

weekly series of televised dia­logue Masses has been launchedin the Cleveland diocese. Thenew series represents the firsttime in the diocese's history thatMass has been telecast directlyfrom a television studio.

TODAY-The eonversion ofst. Paul, Apostle. We close theunity prayer week with thismoving Mass of Paul's conver­sion. Both Epistle and Gospeltell us that -it is only Christ thatmatters, that even the highesthuman values and goods (family,property, etc.) must be seen asiTIferior to personal faith inHim, a personal encounter withHim. Catholics and Protestantsworking for reunion can apply

. this' to all that is purely humanin their own religi,ous traditions.

erhnouq.h the Wu:k With the ChunchBy REV. ROBERTW. HOVDA, Catholic University

TOMORROW - st. Polyearp,'Bishop, Martyr. It is because welove our brothers that we havepassed from qeath to life. Morethan anything else, love is themark of the Christian. And love,if it is true, seeks union, So ourprayer for unity cannot stopwith yesterday's conclusion--ofaweek of speci!!l intentions. EveryMass is a reminder of the trag­edy of a bread broken imd scat..tered, a bread meant to be a toolof union and made to be' a tokenof division. '

FOURTH SUNDAY AFTEREPIPHANY. The Catholic be­lieves in one Church, in one ship(Gospel) :.... 'the boat in whichChrist is found. And he can be-

,Heve this, without pride, with­out thinking that he himself isany better than the rest of men,because it is Jesus who bothcreates and preserves this ark.

This is the Church, the ship,the safe ship, which Christ ourLor d , Himself her' captain,leader, . head, preserves fromevery Storm and ,every threat. Acommunity of faith, for, as theGospel tells us, failure of faithendangers its existence. And acommunity of love, as the Epistleteaches. Every' sin . against theunity of the Church, against thesolidarity of the Brotherhood, isa sin against love as well QS

against faith.

TrialThe ,Devil ~,Passed' on,.. \

If such b~ one 'of his abilities, the devil must 'ha~ebreathed a sigh of relief rece'ntly to learn that he 'hasbeen allowed to remain in the Anglican cateChism' for atrial period of several years.

It seems that he has been running into' some opposition/, lately, with men of religion, clerical and lay, of that denom­

ination all' for banishing him not only from heaven buteven from hell. These feel that he is no longer fashionable,that he is no longer believable; indeed-and they, to theircredit, are not afraid to proclaim it-they feel that he justdoes not exist. '

What a cruel blow to the devil. What-if the expressioncan be used-a hell of a thing to do to him.

It is bad enough for, men of goodwill to oppose him.It is to his benefit if they ignore him and pretend he isnot around. But when they go so far as to deny his exist­ence, even he must resort again to Scripture to prove hisexistence.

Fortunately, 'cooler and Scripture-filled heads havesaved the Qay, and young Anglicans will be introduced tothe devil in their catechism, at least for several more 'yearswhen the question will be reviewed again.

This is symptomatic of the tendency that is' by nomeans new in the field of religion and morality. There wasa time when a man who ca~e face to face with a dogma ora code that offended him would simply say, "To hell withthis." Now he says there is no hell so "this" does notexist.

It may 'be a more polite way of acting. But it is adenial of truth.

And -in the interest of truth, the devil himself mustbe at' ease to know he has passed this latest'test-even

, if on trial.

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Publist,ed weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River. 410 Highland Avenue

Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151PUBLISHER

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

Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. DriscollMANAGING EDITOR

Hugh J. Golden

The uninitiated comfort themselves in the face ofgovernment policy with the assumption that those in highplaces know more about situations than the ordinary manin the street. Thu's, it is reassuring to credit officials withinformation not possessed by the mere interested citizen.And the decisions of these officials-decisions which attimes are cause for wonder~areac~epted,as the wiseSt aridbest result of inside information and knowledge.'

But such rationalization, valid as it may be in manyinstances, cannot suppress the shivers of apprehension.. overthe sight, of the United States -government's forcing the

,pro-West leader of Laos to enter into a coalition with pro­communist factions and to yield key posts in his cabinet tothese Red-aligned individuals.

It is true that the label used is not pro-communistbut neutralist. It is equally true that this label deceivesno one as to the fact it covers.

What is, the thinking behind such an act of thisgovernment? '

It cannot be that no one in Washington remembersthe same tragic policy tl).at was pursued in China in forc­ing the pro-West government into a coalition with the"agrarian land reformers"-a policy that invited the cap­ture of several hundred million mainland Chines~ by the

. presently ruling Communists.Can it be that the United States is reconciled to the

loss of Laos to the communist camp, and would rather haveit go that way, by slow strangulation, rather than supportan all-outfight by the pro-West government, or send Amer­ican material and men to uphold that government?

It is unthinkable that anyone in' an official positionin the government really believes that such a coalition willsolve the Laotian problem and bring peace to that countryand to all of southeast Asia.

Perhaps this country is following in this mattet anattitude that some political pundits have detected recentlyin the actions from Moscow, a tendency to drift, to delay,to avoid the hard stand and thus gain time.

But the citizens of the United States have a right toknow what is the thinking behind the government's stand.And all the more so when the stand is one that seems fore­doomed to disaster.

Page 7: 01.25.62

7

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Newest AlmanacReviews PurposeOf Council

PATERSON (NC) - Aconsideration of space flightprobleIll8 and a review of thepurpose of the corning Sec­ond Vatican Councll are amongnew features in the 1962 editionof the National Catholic Al­manac.

The 696-page volume, pre­pared by St. Anthony's Guildhere and published by Double­day and Company, Inc., GardenCity, N. Y., also includes articleson "A Review of DesegregationEvents" from 1936 to 1961, "Fed­eral Aid to Education," 48 pagesof news events of the past yearsupplied by the N.C.W.C. NewsService and Pope John's mostimportant addresses.

The almanac contains anarticle on the Papal Volunteersfor Latin America program, ontithing and on the third generalassembly of the World Councilof Churches. It has the full textof the U. S. Bishops' 1961 state­ment, "Unchanging Duty in aChanging World," and of PopeJohn's encyclical Mater etMagistra.

Brought Up-to-dateAll of the almanac's regular

features have been revised andbrought up-to-date where neces­sary. These include latest sta­tistics on the Catholic Church inAmerica and in the world; bio­graphical sketches of all cardi­nals and living American bish­ops; and articles on psychology,censorship, birth control, doc­trine, liturgy and Church' his-tory. '

The almanac has listings ofCatholic periodicals, papal en­cyclicals, Catholic societies andmovements, canonizations andpatron saints. Included are mar­riage laws, a glossary of termsin Catholic use, a listing of theecumenical councils, the princi­pal religious devotions, and list-

, , ings of famous Catholics, Cath­olic universities, religious ordersand secular institutions.

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thought a new' ~hurch must' be,built. Sacred Heart Church wasin disrepair but: a new one would·cost a· minimum. of, $450,000.Father Gauthier .loved the proud·old Gothic' edifice and it wassound structurally: So he' de­cided to rebuild the' originalchurch.

He was rewarded by the grati­fication of his parishioners whohave one of the finest and newestchurches in New Bedford. And,the renovated church cost aboutone-fifth of 'the money whichwould have been required for anew building of like size.

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Diocese to PublishWeekly N~wsp«ElJ)f}r

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC)-The Diocese of Rockville Cen­tre will publish its own weeklynewspaper starting in May,Bishop Walter P. Kellenberg hasannounced.

Catholics in The RockvilleCentre diocese have been serv­iced by the Tablet, Brooklyndiocese' newspaper. RockvilleCentre diocese was part of theBrooklyn diocese until 1957,when the See was establishedby, Pope Pius XII.

'come tru~ fotFather GauthIer,who firSt' came to Sacred Heartparish in 1921. Later lie servedin Fall Riyer and Westport par­ishes, returning to Sacred Heartas pastor .in 1949., 'At' first the dedicated priest

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Proud GiJihfc ·'Ediiico of Sacred "Heart" Ch~~ch~'· T1iE ANCHOR-., ... I "v" . Thurs." Jan. 25, 1962

R~piijtL;y;,ih{h~ebuibii~gbyFather Gauthier·'" .. By,Avis C.Roberts '

Late last Spring the upper church of Sacred Heart Church in New Bedford wasclosed and last October parishioners gasped With pleasure when they attended the firstkIass in the wholly redecorated' edifice. During the Summer months Mass had been heldin the basement church. Sac!ed Heart retains its quiet and elderly dignity but the 'new­ly-eonstructed church is new,modern and beautiful.

Everything in the churchis new, from vinyl floors tothe apex of the vaulted ceilings.Only exceptions to the cleansweep are retention of the pipeorgan, which was overhauledard the beautiful stained glasswindows.

Rev. Alphonse.Gauthier, pastorof Sacred Heart, supervised itstransformation. The entire out­side of the church was rebuiltin 1960 and white aluminumcl,'lpboards were used to coverthe original wood siding of the85-year-old building. Steeple,roof and gutters were put inmint-new condition:

Statues fromm ntalyLast Spring the balcony in the

Interior chur<ih was removedwith the exception of a rearsection which is for use of achoir. Arched steel girders wereerected from the wans to the pil­l~s of the edifice to increasestructural strength.

AlI existing plaster was re­moved, metal lath was appliedand new plaster was laid overall ceiling and walls..Victorianstyled, ornate altars were re­mcved and statuary, pews andflooring were replaced.

'1Iheodore Loranger and Sonswere general contractors for them:w church. Redecorating WillS

Under supervision of Albert W.Sexton and Son of Boston, famedecclesiastical art decorators.New statues were designed byJules Chartrand of Libl'l8irie St.MIchel. New wooden statueswere carved in Italy and aremarvelous works of contempor­ary design.

New StationsOak is used in construction of

thE' middle and two side altarsand each also has a reredos of

, intricately oarved oak. The Sa­ccred Heart, patron of the churoh,.. is enthroned in a statue over the',main altar.

, ,The BlessedMothe~s statue is':~llshrined on the left altar and:S~, .Anne's statue is honored at: the· right altar. The sanctuaryhouses statues of St. Theresa and

",St. Joseph... ' Oak is ·used also for .pews,:wainscoting and confessionalsnow in rear, of church. Thereare seating accommodations for650 on the main floor and ·50persons in the choir loft.

New Stations of the Cross areof contemporary design and wereblessed in October by a Francis­can priest from Our Lady's.Chapel, New Bedford.

Parishioners Give AidPale shades of ivory, blue and

.rose enhance the church's inte­rior. The sanctuary and nave are

. brilliant with gold leaf decora­tion. Fourteen symbols in thelife of Jesus are featured in thenave.

There are 25 new lighting fix-,tures in Gothic style and thereis 3 new loudspeaker system inthe church. The new altar rail­ing is constructed of oak and thesacristy was redecorated andrefloored.

Members of the Sacred HeartLeague laid the new floor, work­ing at night after ,volunteeringto complete the project.

Masses in the church are atT, 8, 9, 10 and 11 on Sundaymornings and 6:30 and 7 onweekdays. .

Makes Old ~ew

The new church is a dream '

Honors BishopENTEBBE (NC)-Bishop John

Baptist Cesana, F.S.C.J., of Guluwas invested as an Officer of theO'rder of the British Empire hereon lJehalf of Queen Elizabeth nby Governor Sir Walter Coutts.The Italian-born prelate wasamong 38 persons given honorsat Government House here inUganda.

UI'ilQvell'sity ApprovesReside!!tlt C~ub

TEANECK (NC) -FairleighDickinson University and itsstudent. government have for­mally· recognized a NewmanClub which has been meetingoff-campus here. This reverseda former university policy,which prohibited religious clubsfrom ft,IDctioning on the campus.

The Newman Club's applica­tion for recognition was ap­proved 17-0 by the student gov­

.ernment.The club had been organiZed

by students in 1958 but becauseof university policy was not al­lowed to meet on campus or use'campus facilities. Despite theSedifficulties, the club was votedthe outstanding Newman Club inNew Jersey for the 1959-60school year.

, e

t" Catholic. ChurCh. . ";

Figures, in Top"" Religious News ';

BUFFALO (NC) - TheCaroholic Church was involv­ed in six of 12 stories select­ed by the Religious News­writers' Association as theoutstanding rellgion-in-the-newBStories of 1961.

Fifty-one men and women, re­porters and editors for dailypapers and news services, votedIn the association's poll. Theyselected as the No. 1 religiousstory the controversy over Pres­Ident Kennedy's program ofFederal educational aid to publicschools only. The program wasopposed by Catholic leaders. ,

The reporters and editors se­lected as the No. 2 story of theyear the agreement of the UnitedPresbyterian, Episcopal andUnited Church of Christ to ex­plore a merger plan proposed bythe Rev. Eugene Carson Blake,chief Presbyterian administra­tive officer. The plan was en­dorsed by Episcopal BishopJames Pike of San Francisco.

Observers at CouncilOther story selections in the

poll were:3. The favorable vote of the

World Council of Churches As­sembly to approve membershipin the association of the RussianOrthodox church.

4. The sending by Pope Johnof observers to the World Coun­ell of Churches Assembly inNew Delhi, India, the first offi­cial Vatican observers ever toattend any meeting of the WorldCouncil.

5. The visit of Bishop ArthurLichtenberger, Presiding Episco­pal Bishop in the U. S., with Pope.John-the first head of theEpiscopal Church ever to call ona Pope.

Sunday Laws Decision6. A virtual tie between: par­

tIcipation of pastors and divinitystudents i n anti-segregation"freedom rides" in the South,and tbe. U. S. Sl.lpreme Court de­cision upholding Sunday closinglaws. '

7. 'Approval of the constitu~ion

,formalizing the gradual four­yea~,merger of the Evangelicaland Reform and the Congreg!l­tional Christian churches as thenew United, Church of Chrillt,"oinin~ two denominations with

I ,aiffering, tr,aditions and chur~h

~over~!TIent. .. ,8. A 'virtual tie between: rei~­giousand moral issues raised bY

, the Israelis' ,trial and death sen­tence of Adolf, Eichmann on

'charges of mass murder of JewsiD nazi' 'Germany, and Vaticanindications that observers fromother churches will be welcomeat the coming Vatican ecumen­ical council.

9. Pope John's Mater et Mag­Istra social encyclical.

10.' Church-state tension inCuba, Poland, Haiti and' theDominican Republic.

Page 8: 01.25.62

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literature SeriesRev. Edward J. Burns, curate

at St. Louis parish, Fall Rive~

will give the second in a seriesof book reviews under sponsor­ship of Fall River CatholieWoman's Club Sunday afternoon,Feb. 25, at the organization'sHighland Avenue clubhouse. Theseries will conclude Sunday.,March 18· with an address by Q

Carmelite priest. Both talks willbegin at 3 o'clock.

," Fan "R'iver NunAttends ~a~ley

Sister John Eliza'beth, S,U.S.c.principal of Sacred Hearts AC)­ademy, Fall River, attended amt*'ting of officers of the NewEngland RegL. _1:31 Unit, Second­ar~' School Departm(mt, NationalCatholic Educational Association,held'at Saint Mary Central HighSchool, Milford, Mass. last Sat-urday. '

Under. the Chairmanship 61Brother MarceiIus, CFX, Head­master, Mission High for Boys,Roxbury, members drew plansfor· the forthcoming Spring con­clave of the Unit to be held atEast Catholic Regional HighSchool, Manchester, Conn. in theDiocese of Hartford. Bishop JohnF' Hackett of Hartford winspeak at a ll;lnch,eon meeting.

Theme will center on newtrends in teaching methods witha view to showing. how thesecan be employed to reach secon­dary students of all levels ofability.

Sister John Elizabeth is fO!'­mer secretary of the Unit andhas been on its advisory bOardfo~ two years.

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School to Award letterFor Class Achievement,

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phen High School for girls herewill soon begin issuing "varsitY".type letters for scholasticachievements.. According to the plan, students

who fulfill ·all requirements forone quarter receive a merit:'card valued at 100 points. To re­ceive an "S", a girl must acquirefour merit cards, or .400 points.

Points are awarded for perfectattendance, cooperation and ac:­tivity, working to the best of'ability, and observing school·regulations.

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Officials of Sister FormationOn Latin America Study Tour

National Catholic EducationalAssociation. .

DONNELLY,PAINTINGSERVICE

'We Give Gold Bond Stamps'.

WASHINGTON (NC) - TwoSister Formation Conferenceofficials have left for LatinAmerica to learn more aboutconditions facing the sisterhoodstheir organization is assisting:

They are Sister Annette Wal­ters, executive secretary of theconference, and Sister RitamaryBradley, assistant executive sec­retary and editor of the confer­ence's Bulletin.. The conference, a cooperative'

movement of U. S. sisterhoods, isbringing to this country youngforeign Sisters for four years of'cost-free college education atCatholic colleges. Eighty-threeforeign nuns are now here, 23 ofthem fr'bm Latin America. Morewill be accepted each ·year.

Most of the trip by the twoU. S. Sisters will be spent inPeru, where nine communitieshave accounted for the majority·of the Latin American Sisterstaking part in the program.

The U. S. Sisters also will visitMexico, Guatemala, Colombia,Bolivia, Brazil and 'Argentina. '

The formation conference is adivision of the College andUniversity Department' of the,

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Grail Plans DiscussionOn Christian Unity'

LOVELAND ('NC)-A discus­sion on "Prospects for ChristianUnity". will be conducted herenext Thursday by' the GrailNational Secretariat, apostolicmovement for women.

The princjpa,l speaker will beFather Edward Duff, S,J., editorof Social Order, monthly publi­cation of the National JesuitSocial Science ..Center in St.Louis..

Father'Duff recently returnedfrom the meeting of the WorldCouncil of Churches in",NewDelhi, India. The Jesuit priestwill give his impressions of themeeting and suggest what Cath­olics can do to contribute to theecumenical movement. "

mind that grows with age.The saying that "God knew

what He was doing when Hegave children only to the young"is borne out in your attitude.Certainly the young parentsseem adaptable enough to prayin spite of the interruptions, justas they manage their days andnights surrounded by childishintrusions.

Even though there are twoMasses, probably the father andmother thoroughly enjoy goingto Mass together and want to

. make church going a part oftheir children's earliest experi­ence

As a solution for baby care,in many large parishes there isa "crying room," a soundproofroom where Mass and baby sit­ting can be accomplished simul­taneously. In other parishes,high school and college girlstake care of children while par­ents attend Mass.

You ask if we took our chil­dren to Mass when they weresmall. The answer is yes andno, as I'm sure it must be withmost parents. I'm afraid we wereguilty of annoying people all toooften, though we did try to keepbothersome baby conduct to aminimum by sitting near an exitand taking along something tokeep the baby amused until heor she was old enough to use asmall child's missal with picturesof what the priem was doing.

A Mass, even a low one,canbe a tiring experience for a smallchild. Perhaps Benediction is abetter introduction to churchgoing. It is short, and childrenlove the music, candles, the mo-tion and the incense. •

As for what you can do: Iremember so well a neighbor ofours, long since gone to heaven,who volunteered now and thento stay with our children, "so

. you . two can attend Mass to­gether." How' we loved heTkindness and how the' childrenloved her!

Come to' think of it, .thesemany years' later, - maybe ourkids bothered her in. church!

Here's Reply

Dear Mrs. Name withhel~

Your compiaint is not an un­common one. I'm sure you arenot unChristian at all, just onewho does not like to be dis­turbed - and that is a sta1e of.

Taunton DCCW plansMeeting on Sunday

Taunton District No.3 of theDiocesan Council of CatholicWomen will hold an open districtmeeting at 3 o'clock, Jan. 28, inthe CYO Headquarters, Taunton.

Diocesan officers and moder,:,ators will speak on organizationand development activities: ofthe Council.

All women of the area.' are' ....invited to attend. \

Vocation CongressCHICAGO (NC) - The Mid­

west Vocation Association an­nounced that its annual vocationcongress for girls will be heldat McCormick Place here onSaturday, Feb. 10. Attending.'willbe girls in' eighth grade, in highschool, and graduates of highschools. .

8 lHf ANCHOR~DioceseofFatlRive,,":"'Thurs., )0".25; 1962

WigglyYoungst~rsat Ma~s',CanBe Real D'istraction to Others

By Mary Tinley Daly .Dear Mrs. Daly: What 00 you think about a young

couple who insir;t ot:J. taking their two small children toMass with them? They are neighbors of ours and I don'tlike to 'say anything to them but, honestly, those childrenare the most distracting ele­ment in the church. Firston'e will crawl all over her .mother and father, thenmake for the people in the pewahead and the pew 'behind. Assoon as theyhave her sub­dued, her bro­'ther will startthe fireworks.They are abouttwo and threeyears old. Theytalk out loud,they point tothe priest, makeremarks aboutth e "funnnyman, Mommy"and about "the lady with thebig hat."

They even escape from thepew now and then and the par­ents have to chase them andbring them back to start thewhole monkey business all over.Sometimes I wish they'd chasethemselves out the front door.

I know this doesn't sound veryChristian, Mrs. Daly, but today Idon't feel very Christian. Notwhen it comes to kids in church.

i have hinted to these neigh-. bors, saying that it must be veryhard to get babies up anddressed and fed and then takethem out early in the morning.(We live in a small place where

,there 'are only two Masses.),;However" since there' are twoMasses, I should think that theparents could take t~r~s babysitting with the 'children athome, arid let the rest of us prayin peace.

, These aren't the only two di..·tractors - a lot of other youngparentS offend the same way ­but I mum say these are theworst. One time I was so an­noyed I spoke to, the priest aboutit but he's a jolly sort and hejust laughed and said somethingabout "Suffer the Uttle chil-dren ...". ''That's all well and good but

rll bet Our Lord didn't meanthat they should disturb a wholeeong!egation. - .

Did you take your children tochurch' when' they were small,Mrs. Daly? If you should writesomething about it in your col­umn it miglit do some good be­cause the mother in· questionreads your column. .

I really like this young coupleand their children, believe it ornot. The children aren't reallybad, but to my way of thinking,THEY DON'T BELONG INCHURCH.

Please don~ use my, name oreven initials.

Page 9: 01.25.62

..9

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Nursi ng AI umnaeSet Coffee Hour

Forthcoming events on theagenda, of .8t. Anne's HospitalSchool . of Nursing, AlumnaeAssociation, Fall River, includea coffee hour honoring freshmannursing students at 7:30 Wed­nesday night, Jan. 31 anel a fash­ion show of white uniforms at8 Tuesday night, Feb. 6.

Both eventS 'Will be held inthe hospital conference room.Parents of freshmen are invitedto the January Coffee hour andalumnae will be hostesses. Al­umnae planning to attend. shouldcontad Mrs. Pauline Gauthier,chairman.

Mrs. Laura Lincourt will com­ment for the fashion show. Sheand all models are among al­umn·ae. Mrs. Pat Delaney willprovide musical accompani­ments. All women whose workrequires the wearing of uni­forms are invited to attend theshowing and should contactMiss Lorraine Landry at thehospital by Friday, Feb. 2 ifthey plan to be present.

Refreshments and awardingof· a uniform as a door prize willalso feature the evening.

'Pays So Many Ways, ,At The Old Red Bank

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Save time, mOrley, Worry,steps, catching ,cold. Bank by

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, , 'forms and envelopesl $1.00still OpeM an accountl,'

, , THE ANCHOR- 'Thurs., Jan. 25,1962

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iNTERVIEW AUTHOR: Staffers from Shacady, news­paper of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, interviewMichael Novak, author addressing Catholic Woman's Clubliterature department. Left to right, Susan Landry, CarolGannon, Mr. Novak.

Nurse, 21, to Serve Three YearsAs lay Missionary ,in Africa Post

BURLINGTON (NC)-Martha doctor of Laos," who advisedGabbeitt, an attractive 21-year- her: "Get your R.N. first, thenold blonde, took the advice of come on over. We need help."the late Dr. Tom Dooley and now So she studied nursing and gotis going to realize, a longtime her R.N. from st. Mary's Hospi­ambition. She's going to the tal in Montreal.South Africa bush coun·tI'y as a Miss Gabbeitt has been ac-lay missionary. cepted to serve as the fourth lay

The Vermont nurse recalled missioner under Bis~op,.Johnthat when she was in the lower Bok~nfohr,O.M.I., in hIS .DIocesegrades of grammar school she of KImberley, South AfrIca. Shehoarded pennies to "buy" pagan will serve three years as a nursechildren in Chiria.' When she there.reached 13 she was an avid Although she is engaged toreader of the exploits of mis- marry. a Montreal acco,!-ntant,sionaries in Africa and China. shE' saId the thought o~ three

, years in· South Africa mIght beLater she corresponded with "like the end of the world to

Dr. Dooley, the famed "jungle most girls, but for me it's justthe beginning!'

,"Some people can't understand"why I waJ:l,t to., go to South,Africa," she said. "I know there.ar~' s~ck peopl,e here, too, but at,least in America help is avail­able. In some of the remote areasover there they've never even'qeard of .hospitals and clinics~"..........

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Observe AnniversaryOf Novena Tomorrow

CHiCAGO (NC) - AuxiliaryArchbishop Bernard J. Sheil ofChicago will preside ood preachat the 25th anniversary observ­ance of 'the Sorrowful Mothernovena in the Basilica of OurLady of Sorrows hEll'e tomorrow.

Two thousand perSlms attel\dedthe first service held in the ba­silica 25 years ago. During thefirst year attendance at the Fri­day devotions held every hour inthe upper and lower churches ofthe basilica totaled' more than78,000 persons. The devotionspread to 2,300 churches in thiscountry, Canada and Europe.

N,~tura~ Feeding 'of ~nfants

PO~$ib~e for Mo~fr M(Q)~~e~$

Grant to CollegeMIAMI (NC~-Barry College

het"e has received a three-yeargrant of almost $20,000 from theU. S. Department of Health, Edu­eation anel Welfare to be usedfor research in biology. Thewomen's college is administeredby Adrian Dominican Sistera.

Daughters of Charity' 'Have New Superior

EMMITSBURG (NC) - SisterEleanor McNabb has been named.Provincial Superior of the East­ern Province of the Daughters ofSt. Vincent De Paul, which hasheadquarters her.e.

Sister Eleanor, who has beenassistant provincial superiorsince last September, succeedsSister Isabel Toohey, whose 17­year term in office expired.Both are natives of Boston.

Father Francis J. Dodd, C.M.,director of the nuns' EasternProvince, said the appointmentwas made In Paris by FatherWilliam M. Slattery, C.M., whois Superior General of the Vin­cenUan Fathers and the Daugh­ters of Charity.

By AudJrey PallWil lRiRtell'Want to start a fight? Simply make this statement

to any group of women: "Every mother should breast feedher baby." Then hold on to your hat. This topic sparks moreintense feeling than any other part of infant care. Ageneration or two ago almost You have a choice. Whenevery mother nursed her there's no alternative, you gritbaby or found someone else your teeth and do what youto do it for her. Today one must do. But the perfection ofmother in four may try breast safe, clean and artificial formu-

h in las gives modern mothers afeeding, but fewer t an one choice. And because babies10 persists past thrive physically either way,the fir s t ' fewweeks. breast or bottie, many women

Why? B a v e favor bottles.worn en lost Emphasis in America on thethe i I' natiual; , female form primarily is sexual.functions? DoNo one really doubts this. Butmodern ba'bies just as a double check, howprefer vitamln- many advertisements glorifyingenriched form- the nursing mother have youulas? No, wom- seen lately? The paradox is, of

course, that many of the sameen still are the women who have learned to feelsame physicallyand babies still deeply embarrassed to be seenlove breast feeding when they nursing their babies wouldn'tcan get it. But our society has think twice about wearing achanged considerably. And with _low.:.cut dress or a snug sweater.

Any Mother Canthose changes have emerged a No real help and encourage-new set of social and psychologi- ment: In days gone by, mother,cal pressures unfavora'ble to a maiden aunt, or a hired girlnatural feeding.. In light of these pressures _ came in to give a new mother asome of which will be explained hand while she and the new

baby got to know one another.here - there's nothing particu- Today, mother may live 1000larly unfeminine or unmotherly miles away, the maiden aunt isabout women who refuse tobreast feed their babies. a carj!er woman and the hired-

, girl is a college coed. If you areNot Expected worried, you hesitate to call the

Today no one expects a mother busy doctor. And your bestto breast feed. Even the most friend is no help, slle bottlesympathetic doctors keep a feeds.fence-straddling attitude and Misinformation: Countless oldinsist that each mother make wives' tales circulate to under­her own decision. Friends and mine your confidence. To de­relatives may suggest that such' stroy a few: breast feeding doesprimitive practices went out not make a mother fat. Neitherwith hoop skirts. does it ruin her figure or keep

Many h.ospitals maintain rigid her tied to home. A mother'sfour hour feeding schedules Or rilUk never is too weak or tooallow babies extra bottles of· strong for her b a .b y. Almostmilk Both practices discourage every healthy, well':'nourishedsuccessful nursing. mother can successfully nurse

In other cultures where ali her baby if she wants to andmothers nurse their babies, and 'gets some intelligent help andeveryone is· convinced ,that encouragement.mothers will have milk, mothers

have milk. Here, women mos~ :',T,'h" '.. ' S hedul.J " S',sterhoodoften abandon natural feeding"" , ereslans . ,C· '. e. . .' ,,' ,. ',J

be~~~~:~~O~v~fn~=:~i:d_ Vocation Conference, ',i n'Coloradoing is'such that when a mothei' PUEBLO (i'lC) _ So~~: 3,000 seek to f~rther adult education:'is told or convinces herself that. delegates are expected to attend in regard to religious, ,vocationsshe has DO milk, the SUpply ac- the first National Sisterhood and the life of .the Churcll.tually decreases. Vocation Conference here on Delegates to the conference

Aug. 18 and 19. will col1sist of Jayw~m$njReli-The conference is sponsored giousand college and high a,chom

lw the Theresians, nationwide girls.organization of laywomen.dedi- ,

,cated to fostering vocations to'the 'sisterhoods. ' ,

Msgr. Elwood C. Voss, directorof the ·Theresians, said "the con­ference is intended primarily asan educa·tional Oppo1-'tunity forthe laity whet"e they can learnmore about the life of women

, Religious."The first chartered chapter of

the Theresians is in the Pueblodiocese. The Theresians also

Perinis Give $250,000To 80ston College

BOSTON (NC) - Louis .R.Perini, 'a Framingham contrac­tor, and his wife have given$250,000 to Boston College's 100thanniversary development pro­gram, Father Michael J. Walsh,S.J., the college's president an­nounced.

Perini, owner of the Milwau­kee Braves baseball team,' is amember of Boston College's,board of regents. '

The college is seeking to raise$15 million by 1963 for academicand physical g,rowth of its faclli-'ties. '

Page 10: 01.25.62

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Leader of· Serra·Tells Deterrents'To ,Vocations

" . PATERSON CN.C)-Lack'of, social' justice and sub,.standard living . conditions 'are' the top deterrents' to

'vocations to the priesthood inI;atin 'America, GeraldE'. Mische,a cofounder of· the Associationfor~, International Development(AID) said here.,

, "You can's get vocations to th~prieSthood 'if 'you don't hav~

, , basic family life. Christian fam­ily' life is impossible, down therebecause social justice isn't ap,:"plied. It's directly related to thelsocial-economic : structure andhumanization and Christianiza­tion of the temporal order inLatin America." :

Mische said that in LatinAmerica under present condi­tions very few men' are impres­sed by an organization which"pushes priests." He said parentsare reluctant ,~o ,permit their~0ll:s to study for ,the priesthood;

"We have found' that by bring­ing some of the people from thevarious economic and social .ori­entations together through Serra,there was a common interest inp~shing vocations to the priest-hood," Mische, said. '

. "Serra can be' a vehicle tobring these together;" he contin­ued.: "Then, once they do cometogether, in this' program of a

'university of Christian prin­ciples, one can bring into theirprograms various sessions onsocial doctrine, social teachingsof the Church and it will be re';ceived more objectively since itis coming from a respectedorganization.

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,THE ANCHOR-Diocese,of Fall River-Th~rs~, Ja;'.25, 1962 .",10

Co~troYel'SV ,Ove'r Private SchoolPupils Ridang Tax-Paid Buses

WASHINGTON (NC)-SchooJ authorize .the practice. But. im­buses are facing more than Win- mediately after the New Yorkter winds in at least 11 states., decision, an amendment to thetherare also being buffeted by state constitution was enactedCOJ:ltrovergy over whose children which' authorized the, practiceare' entitled to their protection~ Pennsylvania and Iowa courts

Debate on providing tax-paid, pet"mit the transportation.bus'I:ides Jor childr,en atte~ding Supreme Court Rulingsparo'chial arid other, prlvate . . 'schools is found from Alaska east The landmark d~cIslon aboutto Colorado and down into Ken..: school buses came m 1947 whentucky " the U. S. Supreme Court heldEpi~des in past months range that ~ school.district in New Jer­

from' passage of bus legislation, se! d~d not vlOlat~ the U. S. Con­in Wisconsin after a heated let- stItutIon by paymg tr~nsporta­

ter-wrlting campaign to rallying tion. costs for Cat~lObc school'support for a Missouri law be- puplls. The court'Sald:cause'of the collapse of a student '''That Amendment (the First)who was walking to a Catholic requires thesfate to be a neutralschool in subzero cold. , in its relations with groups of

The controversy is, taking ,religious believers and non-be-;­pla'ce against the backdrop, of lievers; it does not require theholdings by the U. S. Supreme state to be their adversary. StateCourt-in 1947 and ~961-that power is, no more to be used so'such I:ides do not, VIolate the as to handicap religious than it 'Federal constitution. is to favor them.

Decision Vary' , .' .. There are now 16 states in 'Thls cou~t has saI~ that par- ,which some nonpublic school ent~ may, m the dlscharge ofpupils ,ride on tax-paid sch?ol their duty, ,;mder state compu~,:, ,buses. They are: California, Con- sO~y educatIon la~s,. send thelr ,

, necticut, Illinois, Indiana, Kan- chl1dren to. a rebg~ous rathersas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mary- than a pubbc schoollf th~schoolland, Massachusetts, 'Michigan, m~ets the secu~ar educatlOn re,:"New Hampshire, New Jersey, qUlrements ~hlch the state hasNe'w Mexico New York, Oregon the power to lmpose.and Rhode I'sland. , " "It appears that these paro-

Supreme Courts in six state~. chial schools meet New Jersey'sCalifornia, Kentucky, Maryland, requirements. The 'state contrib:"Massachusetts, New Jersey "l\nd utes' no, money to ,the schools: ItConnecticut---:have ruled that the does not support, them, Its leg-'practice is permitted under their islation, as applied, does no morestate constitutions. ' than provide a general program

Courts in six other, states -:- to help parents get their chil- , 'HIGH PAPAL AWARD: Supreme, Knight Luke E. HartA 1ask a, Delaware, Missou~i dren, regardless 0.£ religion, safe- of the Kn,ights of Columbus rec,eives the p'apal award of'Oklahoma, Washington and Ne~ ly and expeditiously to and fromYork have held that the public accredited schools. Knight Commanded of ' the Order of ,Pius IX from Bishop'school codes of the states do not Ke'ep Wall High Charles Greco of Alexandria, La., K 'of' C National chaplain,

1'il V r1 "The First Amendmcent has during ceremonies at St. Patrick's Church, at Miami. He isII ODMrl'11'1reer erected a wall between Church the second American to receive the highest rank ever given'

As' .1""n...ftnll"",~~s and State. That wall must be a layman. NC Photo.~lJ1lwli"'~~wuu kept high and,impregnable. We

NEW YORK (NC) - Eleven could not approve the lightest D~~@fi'@fr®d 6t}l'@<d1r~/ Giwe~' ~I7ilVccctoonmore priests have volunteered breach. New Jersey has notrecently to serve as military breached it here." A Ao l6'l1 rmA"'IL~M\/flI ftf USS H@~~~ychaplains, F r a' n cis Cardinal The court reaffirmed its stand ~H " w MU UI:w lI'U U 0 U~ ~ oilJl!iii

Spellman, Military Vicar of U. S. in February, 1961, when it dis- SAN FRANCISCO (NC) - units on Guadalcanal island inarmed forces, announced here. missed "for want of a Federal Father Frederick P. Gehring" the South Pacific, where the U. S.

They are: Fathers Gerard J: question" a challenge to a sim- c.:M., who gained fame and dec- forces startE;!d their island-hop­McGann, John R. McNamara, ,ilar school bus law in Connect!-: orations as the "Padre of Guad- ping drive to victory over theArthur L. Reardon and Ferdi- cut. alcanal" in the early days, of Japanese. He was decorated ~ithmmd E. Slejzer of Boston arch- World War II. gave the invoca- ,the Legion of Merit and Silverdiocese; WilliamL. Brown, John Prelates Laud: tion here at the San Francisco Star for, his services. FatherC. Keith, John U. Lee a~d Fran:- Naval Shipyard at the launching' Gehring recently was promotedcis W. McDonnell of the San' Wo~k of, CC,D ' of the USS 'Halsey, new Navy to the rank of captain in the:Diego diocese. , ,I missile frigate. " ,chaplain 'corps of the U. S. Naval

Also Fathers Gerard Brennan .NEW ORLEANS (NC)-The" ,The ship is named for the late' Reserve.of the' Burlington diocese; Je- Confraternity of Christian Doc,;. Adm. Wi,l1iamF. (Bull)' Halsey, : Sponsors at the launching wererome' Reisinger' 6f the St. Cloud trine was 'characterized as "an World War II naval commander Jane 'Frances Halsey and Mrs.diocese, 'arid' Neil F. Daley,' apostolic handmaid of the 'in the South Pacific imd a ,close Margaret Denham, granddaugh-O.F.M;, 'of 'theFranci~cim Church" by ArchbishopJoseph'friend, of Fath:ei' Gehring,'''now a' , ters of the admiral. 'Fathers' ,Province" of St. John F. Rummel of New ,Orleans. ,,' spJrit~al counselor itt'St. John's " , .the 'Baptfst. , ' , ,The prelate said the success of' University, Jamaica, :N. Y.,' "'.' -------.;..-----..

With the addition of the new the CCD depends upon Ithedili-' 1\.' na~ive 9f Brooklyn, Father.'Volunteers, the Boston archdio-· gent work' of the parish CCD Gehring was'ordained a Vincen­cese will have 59 militar~ chap- . executive board. He spoke at il' tian priest in 1930 and served in'lains; the San Diego diocese 13;' CCD' meeting' at' St., Joseph's the China missions until shortly'the Burlington diocese,sev!ln;'the ' Academy here. "'before World War II when he re­St. Cloud dioces~ four, and the. 'Coadjutor Archbishop John P., turned to this country' and joinedFranciscan Province of St. John Cody of New Orleans called the Navy chaplain corps.the Baptist, six chaplains. upon the Catholic laity to par- Holds Captain Rank

, ticpate in civic as well, as In the dark early days of;Proposal Recognizes Church endeavors. He called . World War II, Fat,her GehringAuthority of Christ upon parents to keep up with served with Marine and Army

WASHINGTON (NC)~A joint their childI:en' and said young-~' , ' sters of today' are far more ad-'

resolution proposing an amend- vanced than children of previousment to the U. S. Constitution'. generations.'whereby 'this country "devoutly "Go back to the books"if nec­recognizes the author,ity and law ,essary," Archbishop Cody a~of 'Jesus Cprist, Saviour' and 'vised parents.Ruler of Nations, through whom Statistics from' September,'are :bestowed the blessings of 1960, to August, l,961-before theAlmighty God" has be~n intro,-, DioceSe' of Baton" Ro'ugewas'duced in the House of Repre'-; established' from' New Orleanssentatives. archdiocese territory - showed

The resolution was introduced ,that the CCD had given re}igious'by Rep. Victor Wickersham of instructions to 52,438 elementary.Oklahoma, and ,provides that the school' children';', 8,452 .: highamendment become valid when schoolers and 5,263 in vacation

'ratified by conventions in three'-' schools. The instructors includedfourths of the states. 227 priests, 338 Sisters, 17 'i;em-:-

It also provides that the inarians and 1,808 members ofamendment shall not be inter- the laity.preted so as to result in th,eestablishment of any particularecclesiastical' organization or inthe abridgement of the rights ofreligIous, ,speech, press and as­sem~lage freedoms.

Fatima ShrineHONG KONG (NC) - More '

than 4,000 Hong Kong Catholics,led by Bishop Lawrence Bianchi,P,I.M,E., and escorted by a SeaScout unit, traveled by charteredferry boats to the shrine of OurLady of Fatima on Cheung ChauIsland and witnessed the blessingof the rebuilt church there.

Page 11: 01.25.62

11

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Soda ~ ~frW ~1tD'esses

Bring)mnlg ChristInto B~sgmJess

ST. LOUIS - Sodalitiesmust maintain their flexi­bility if they are to meet theneeds of their members and¢. society, diocesan sodalitydirectors from all over the U. S.agreed here.

Directors from 24 dioceses at­tended the annual meeting ofthe National Diocesan SodalityDirectors' Conference, held tomap plans for the future of thesodality move~ent in the U. S.

Adult MenAmong the subjects treated at

the meeting was the formation ofadult men's sodalities, a relative­ly new development in this coun­try.

Father Joseph MacFarlane,S.J., of st. Louis, national sodal­ity promoter, said sodalities havebeen organized among profes­sional men in nine cities-Bos­.ton, New York, Chicago, Cleve­land, Washington, D. C., Phila­delphia, Newark, N. J., Buffalo,N. Y., and Detroit.

ProfessionalsMembers are drawn from such

fields as medicine, law; engineer­ing, advertising, chemistry andsocial work.

Father MacFarlane describedthe meeting as "the greatestshow of unity in years" in theU. S. sodality movement.

"-There was agreement that thesodality must adapt itself to allkinds of circumstances, that itmust preserve its flexibility," hesaid.

CombineThe Jesuit added that the

sodality directors are convincedthat laymen must combine theirspiritual lives and their occupa­tions, rather than trying to sep­arate them.

"You become apostolic by be­ing better professionally, by be­ing a better lawyer or doctor ornew~paperman," he said. "You

. do it by bringing Christ intoyour environment."

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lyweds Is "the le~on of yourfaith in God."

"Marriage made you collabo­rators in the creative work of ourheavenly Father, in the redemp­tive work of His Divine Son, inthe educative work of the HolySpirit," he said.

"In, founding a family, youcommitted yourself t9 work forsomeone, else, not for yourself,'to extend life, not to eliminate it,to establish God's· Kingdom ort

,earth, not to cr,eate a Tower ~f'Babel."

LOURD:ES BASiLICA:' This site'of Mary's appearance to Bernadettewill be visited by members of theSecond Official Pilgrimage of theDiocese which. will sail under BishopConnolly's personal leadership fromBoston, July 17, aboard the luxury.liner SS..Constitution. Other placesvisitet;l will .be Portugal, Spain, Switz­,erland, Germany, Holland' and Eng­land. For· information, wJ'ite: FallRiver Diocesan Travel League, P.O.Box 2026, .Fa;ll Riv~r.

dinal Spellman, Archbishop ofNew York, who presented themwith special wedding anniver­sary certificates signed by himand conveying his blessing.. 'Man-Made' Arrangement

On the same day,'another 2,500couples, who will celebrate their25th ,wedding anniversaries tl1is'year, were honored in their ownparishes' throughout, the arch­diocese., Msgr. Kelly in his sermon said'~our dominant- secular culture"defines marriage 'in a way· "dia­metrically opposed, to the man­~er of your own living.". "-For many moderns, marri~ge,

is a man-made social arrange­ment, having ·no divine origin,governed by: no ,divine abS;6­lutes," he said.

Lesson of FaithHe said the message of .the

golden wedding couples for ncw-, -'

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HOLY CROSS FATHERSNorth Easton, Massachusetts

FOUR WAYS TO SERVE CHRISTAS A HOLY CROSS FATHER

Priest-Teacher Home MissionerForeign Missionary Parish Priest

I'or Informatlo,; about tho

Moly Cross Fathers orBrothers, write to:

Prea@~e Cites Spiritual Side of MarriageNEW' YORK (NC)-Husbands

and wives must be aware of thespiritual dimension of marriage,the director of the New Yorkarchdiocesan Family Life Bureausaid here.

Msgr. George A. Kelly, speak­ing to more than 340 couples whowill celebrate their golden wed­doing anniversaries in 1962, toldthem' "your plan of life,' yourvision, your sense of duty; .yQurpatience are much needed by~oday's honeymooners;"I He commended the goldenwedding couples for being "al­ways confident" of the "infinitelove and affection" of God.

During the ceremony in St.Patrick's Cathedral, the couples'were honored by Frands Car-

.l­I

Joins Holy CrossB~others Today

Brother Neil Rasmussen, sonof Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ras­mussen, North Dighton, receivedthe habit of the Brothers of HolyCross at ceremonies held todayat St. Joseph Novitiate, Valatie,N.Y.

He will begin his canonicalyear of training for the religiouslife under direction of BrotherMaiir'us O'Malley, C.S.C., Master'of Novices.

Rev. John Foley, C.S.C., of theHoly Cross Mission Band, NorthDartmouth, gave candidates a10 day retreat prior to receptionceremonies. Parents, other rela­tives and friends were enter-

, tained today at a luncheon fo1­,lowing the reception.

Paths to PeaceIn 45' Seconds. SAN FRANCISCO. (NC)-In

less than a minute the presidentof the University of San Fran­cisco named the missing ingre­dients of peace--worldwide, po­litical, family and personal.

Given 45 seconds to tape amessage for television stationKTVU here, Father john F. X.Connolly, S.J., said in part:

"There can never be world­wide peace . . .. if men do notrespect the authority of God, ourCreator.

"There can be no politicalpeace if men do not respect theauthority of those who arevested with the responsibility ofmaintaining established order inour body politic.

"There can be no family peacewhen the members of this basicsociety fail to respec't 'each otherand when 'parental authority isspurned. '

"There can be no personalpeace when individuals do notrecognize any authority that hasthe power to make a law or givea command to bind the con­science of the individuaI."

Bible Bond

Father Abbot declared that"there are other Catholics,priests and theologians amongthem, who pray and work for thereturn of Protest.mts to unionwith the Church, but with allgood intentions in the world,they keep bypassing the Biblein order to stand on dogmaticpropositions that Protestants maytake or leave."

"The Bible is, or should be,a bond between us, just as theHoly Spirit is, or wishes to be,a bond between us," he state~.

Red Party LeaderHeads University

KINGSTON (NC)-The Castroregime has made Juan Marinello,former president of the Cubancommunist party, rector of' the

, University of Havana, It hasbeen learned here.

Marinello, who recently wasappointed to the Havana facultyas a professor of Cuban litera­ture, becomes head of the insti­tution with an estimated studentbody of 12,000. He succeeds Cle­mente Inclan, who was named arector consultant.

Priest AssertsBigots ThwartHope of Unity.'

WASffiNGTON (NC) -:..A priest-editor warned here \,that there are "supermili-

. tant Catholics" whose hos-,tillty . to Protestantism is a hin­drance to the Christian unitymovement.

Such Catholics "see nothing inProtestantism but heresy," saidFather Walter M. Abbot, S.J.,feature editor of America, na-.tional Catholic weekly revieW'.

The Jesuit priest asserted in'a sermon at Unity Octave cere­monies in the National Shrine ofthe Immaculate Conception. thatthe response of such Catholics toProtestantism "is hostile, aggres­sive, sometimes pugnacious."

Bigots

"These supermilitant Catholic!! .reject the charge that they are

, bigots," Father Abbot continued."For them the Christian unity,movement is warfare, with un­conditional surrender to theCatholic Church as the only out­come.

"If you see it in any otherterms-for example, if you advo­cate understanding, discussiorfsand neg'otiations with Protestantsas brothers-they call you a com- .munist or a member of what theyrefer to as the 'world c,onspiracy.'

"It seems to have made no im­pression on them that the Car­dinal (Augustin Bea, S.J.) whohas been placed in charge ofthese matters by the Pope saystheir response to Protestantismis an 'extremist' attitude. . . Ifyou are not a cardinal and yOJ1try to tell them the same thing,they accuse you of placing theone true Catholic Church on alevel with 'those other chuches.' "

Page 12: 01.25.62

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G@d lcw~ Y@tw .By Most Rev., Fulton J. Sheen, D.'D.

WIDCH IS THE GREATER HUNGER,l'BATOF BODY OR'SOULf '

• J'. •

Qur Blessed Lord spoke of t~is ,d~uble hunger when a crowd"the day after be bad' fed them,' 'followed Him across a lake. Hechided them, saying that they loved Him only because theirbodies were fed, and He urged them to yeam rather for thefood of the soul' which Be would give.

Sometimes God permits us' to meet perSonally benefactors ofThe Society for the Propagation of the Faith 'who ,have madesmall claily sacrifices over a long period of time. It Is invariablytrue that those who are coustant in' the sacrificial spirit arethose who are ab'lOrbed in bringing hearts and souls to Christ In 'the Eucharist. Let your' glvmg, then, be dictated Dot 'only by adesire to feed bodies•.Let It arise' froin a yearning to bring theBread 'Of' Life to dJirist-starvedsouls.' Only when your life ofFaith Is deeper thlin 'yoUr emotional life will both hungers ofthe mission ,world be eODque~ed. .

Send us your' old 'gold alldjewehy ~ the valuabI,ea' y~u no'ionger::Wie but ~hicil are too good to "throw away. We will resellthe ',earrings, gold eyeglass frames, flatware, etc.; and use· themoney to relieve the suffer~g in' mission lands. Our adclress: TheSociety for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue,New'York 1, New York. '

Here in the United States there is practically DO physicalhunger; in the rest of the world, there is intense physical hunger.In one diocese of India alone, some 8 million '"untouchables" do not average a bowl of ricea day. While the mission world is dying ofphysical starvation, our glutted Westerncivilization, is dying of spiritual starvation.It is bodies that are thin int/he East; it isso~ that are emaciated in the West.

The HoI,. Father has to take 'care ofboth physical and spiritual hunger. That·is why the Missions maintain hospitals.dispensaries and leper colonies In variousparts of the world. But, The Society ,forthe Propagation of the Faith implies firstthe giving of the Faith. It is not only thegrain of wheat that must be brought to the .starving; they mUlilt receive the Eucharist!

Why is it much easier to induce people to give to the hungry,the sick and the starving rather than it is to induce them tosacrifice to make converts and to spread the Redemption C?f theCross? It is 'because emotions are involved at the sight of starvation,whereas F'aith' is involved' at the I sight of paganism. The picture ofa leper makes us feel what we' would like to do, but the sight ofa ,sinner or a pagan or a Buddhist does not always dictate whatwe ought to do. Many dQ not act' until their feelings, bave beenexcite.d. Cons~quently, support of the Missions is too often sporadic,uncertain, dependent upon emotional reactions to emotional appeals.

, Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice' to It and' mail It to theMost Rev, Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of the ~ciety forthe Propagatlon of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New 'York 1; N. Y..or ,your Diocesan Director" RT., 'REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE,368 Nort)l Main Street,'Fall River, Mass. ,'. , , ': ,

GOD' LOVE YOU to AnOn'yniouS ,for, an, Engagemen~ Ring"Please give this' to the Holy 'Fatller for bis Missions. With, fivelovely children, 'r 'don't 'need it to remind me of my engagement."... to M.F. for $5 '''I always feel b~tter when I send something to

. the MisSions."" •. '. to' R.F.D. ,for $25 "In petition for my wife's,,reoovenr·".' ,

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dred couples married 50 years ormore renewed their'marriage'vows and were given parchmentscrolls at, a feast of the HolyFamily ceremony here presidedover by Albert Card.inal Meyer,Archbishop of Chicago, in HolyName Cath~dral.

New Bedfc~d GirlIs E$~@r WQll'llmle!r .

Irene Meny, a SenioI: at St.Anthony High, New Bedford, hasreceived an honorable mentionfrom the Extension magazine forher essay on Dag' Hammar­skjold, "I Sing of a Hero."

The award was given in recog­nition of Miss Meny's outstand­ing essay submitted in the na­tional contest sponsored during

'November by the editors of Ex­tension. The purpose of the con­test was to choose four guesteditors among teenagers.

Miss Meny has been acceptedas a Teen Board Representativefor the publication. This positiongives her the privilege of enter­ing submissions from the othermembers of the SAH CreativeWriting Club in the Talent Con­test spons~re~ by the ptagazine.

.Bejgian Priests Have,Nationwide Faculties

'BRUSSELS (NC)-Any priestwho has received regularfacul-'ties from the bishop of one :Bel­gian diocese may now hear con­fessions and preach anywhere inthe country. ' ,

The permission covers, both'diocesan and reUgious priests,and was decided on at a meetingof the Belgian Hierarchy lastNovember 23. Not included arefaculUes granted for less than- ,a year or restt'tcted to" localcommunities. '

Hospital ConventionST LOUIS (NC):-The annual

convention of the Catholic Hos­pital Association of the UnitedStates and Canada will be heldhere May 21, to 24.

:. 12: THE ANCHOR~Diocese of Fall River"-Thurs.; Jan, 25;1962

rf@O~@~

A~@Q1]fr

C l!Jlr r?@H1)i'

~~ng~ ,arrocdlBy Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy

The ciash of temporal and spiritual' authority,,' asexemplified in the lives of two kings and, two saints ofEngland, is the theme of two plays which have' enjoyedmarked success on the Broadway stage .last year and this.The current one is Robert drama And the writing, to re­Bolt's A Man for All Sea- peat, is Fry at the top of hissons,' which dramatizes the mature form.' ,break between' Henry VIII It is not certain, of course,and St. Thomas More. Its prede- that, when produced, the playcessor was Jean Anouilh's Beck- will be done as it deserves to beet, which purported t~ depict the done. One must' hope that 1-t willrelationship be- be as well put on as is Bolt's Atween Henry II Man for All Seasons,' which isand St. Thomas currently enthralling capacitya Becket. Pub- audiences at the ANTA Theatrelished now. but in New York. IUs the best thingnot yet staged, this department has seen for

years, a play and a performanceis a new play which will pleasurably persistby Christopher in memory. 'Fry,Curtman'ue 'Severely Simplified'(Oxford Uni-IfMr. Bolt is less of a literaryversity Press. light than Fry, he is still a very ,$3.50), which considerable writer. Every linedeals principal- in his play has been carefullyly with' Henry wrought and polished. Never isII but gives much attention to the clunk of a 'cliche heard, orBecket. the clank of the rhetoric with, Fry's focus in his drama is onHenry's concern to see the law which, as with chains, so many

, . period plays are laden.functioning smoothly and um-. Bolt does not get· all of Moreformly in' England. The king is on the stage. There is little sug­determined that there shall be gestion, for example, of howequal justice, and that it shall be learned, and variously learned,available to the least of his sub- More was. And his householdjects. ha,9 been drastically reduced. The', This requires, to his mind, that playgoer unfamiliar with thethe Church courts shall becurbed. Too many clerics are go- subject might easily believe that

More had only one child, hising unpunished, indeed untouch- daughter, Margaret.ed, for what are really, civil of- But there were other children,lenses, and too many laymen are too, and guests in unusual num­penalized by the overextension bers and range. It was a throngedof canonical jurisdiction. and bustling place, with all man-

Lonely Resistance ner of interests and activitiesBut Becket perceives that the represented. This has been se-,

king, whether or not he realizes verely simplified; so that the Seek Permit to Doit, is bent on, invading and richness of More's personality, asusurping the spiritual, realm. evidenced in himself and in his Business Olll SundayHenry's ambitions and plans'could oI,lly end in the subjuga- surroundings, is notsh~wn. LAKEWOOD (NC) - Repre-'tion of the Church to the crown. Genuine Picture. sentatives of 1,500,000 Jewish

,He is aiming a,t totalitarianism, But'what is shown is genuine., worshipers called, upon Gov.heading the Church as well as The playwright concentrates on Nelson Rockefeller of New Yorkthe State and m8I,lip~lating the' More's loyalty to God, his exact to liberalize ,that state's Sundayformer as a mere tool of the lat., definition of and adherence to closing laws so as to pertnitJew­,ter. 'This development, Becket the spiritual authority, his.keen-', ish:, mer,chants, to con'duct"busi-

. t" ness of c!>nl!Cience, h~,.· staunch ness on Sundays.re~~ss:resistance' is iOn~lY and' regard for the law both in its The ,recommendation camecostly. The' king,' pronouncing requirements 'and' Its 'liMitations. ' from the Rabbinical Council of "him a humbug ~~d a fanatic, is, ' This may make it appear that America, largest Jewish'rabbini-

, , 'alliemited and enraged; Tlle,:other :an abstract and blopdless'~oncept, c~l ,bQdy in' this, country, at its:bishops melt away from the pri": rather than. a man, is ,projected. ' annual, midwinter ,conferencemate's side not se~ing the 'issue 'But More's in·tense delightful 'here in New Jersey;sO sharply and'fearing the king's' ,humanism is cOnCretized.' ' ]iabbi CharlesWeinberg, coun-wrath. There isa long and bitter The role is superlativelY acted cil president,:recalled that during,

;" struggle, climaxing in the mur:" '; by P~UI Scofield,making his his 1958 election: campaign :Gov.der of Becket, 'but' not really AmerIcan de~ut. Physically he Rockefeller promised to liberal­ending' there, ,as Henry's subse-" does not resemble the ~ous, ize ~ew ,York's Sunday 'laws to"quent history proves. ,', ' ,Holbein portrait, butt~is does,' permit, Jews and Qthers who ob-'

Beueficiial' 'Results ' ~ - not matter once one realIzes that" serve the' Sabbath, ,to 'conductFor Henry -:. determined to:, he h~s got to the heart of'More businesses on Sundays. Rabbi

have order everywhere ,but in and IS settin.g it out with con-, Weinberg ,said the time has' comehis own life, to "give them the summate artistry: . to fulfill that promise.' Other re­city of the law even if I have to Her~ is a beautIfully sustamed ligious groups who observe themake it by fearful means"-sows and. Inflected performance" a Sabbath include the Seventh-daythe seeds of his own destruction cl3;sslc example of the use. of Adventists and the Seventh-dayby what he does with and to his VOIce, gesture, bearing. It is Baptists. 'own family, backed up by a number of other

There is contention among his unusuallr good performances.. St1l'l'ing Experiencesons, then a leagumg of the sur- .

vivors against him. There is es-' The stagmg, too, is most com-trangement and enmity between ' mendable. There is a minimumhim and Eleanor. There ii; the of sceDery, so.that the continuityswelling of the vengeful' power of the pla.y IS. not. interru~ted,of France, mistreated and hu-' lind the, unagm!lt~()n . is. gIvenmiliated by him. ~ope. The costu~ll~ IS JUst as

At 56 hp. was dead, and hard rIght. Aad the lIg~tmg,is mar~, days had come to England, But ,velous, demonstratmg what can

his resolution that law would, be done to estahlish ~lace, a~­prevail in England had bene- mos,?here, mood WIth thISf' . 1 Its i d' medium.lCla resu n succee mg cen- It i stirri g i totUries san exper ence

. At Top of Form be part of a heterogeneous twen-This forceful monarch, this ·tieth century audience absorbed

turbulent career, Fry has made and thrilled by the story of ato live. It should, come across saint dead for more than fourbiting1y upon the stage, if prop- hundred years. The ultimate tri­erly directed and acted. The umph, it is plain, belongs not t~author has done all that could be Henry VIII but to the man berequired of him. He has delin-, had beheaded.eated character t4'enchantly, es­pecially what he hed the queen,call,the "hard,subtle terrain" ofthe king.

He has marshalled the', actionswiftly, weaving together all theevents and elements which tellthe king's story, .in such III waythat something very complex ismade comprehensible in terms of

Page 13: 01.25.62

13

Today students at SacredHearts Academy in Fall Riverand Bishop Stang in North Dart_mouth are completing observ­ance of the Church Unity Octave.

Rev. John H. Hackett at SacredH~arts Academy, Fall River. andRev. Joseph L. Powers at Stangled the schools in prayer offeredfor the special intentions of eachday of the Octave. The devotionswere carried on in classroomsvia public address systems.

, Mt. St. Mary's, Fall River, wiDresume practice next week forits operetta "Tulip Time," sched­uled for showing in the schoolhaH. Wednesday and Thursday,Feb. 7 and 8.

Kathleen Raposa, sophomoreat Sacred Hearts Academy, FallRivpr, has been awarded a Cer··tificate of Merit by editors ofExtension, national Cat hoI i <!"monthly, "for meritorious effortin the field of Catholic journal­ism" The award carries with itan appointment to the ExtensionTeen Board of Editors. Kathleenis an honor student and a mem­ber of the sophomore journalismclass.

Tomorrow the fourth sodalityassembly is scheduled at SacredHearts. It will develop the themechosen for the year, "Know YourDiocese in Acti.on." Rev. Ray­mond W. McCarthy, St. Patrick'sChurch, Somerset, will speak onthe Family Life Bureau and theCana movement. Previous speak­ers have included Rev. EdwardOliveira on the Legion of Mary;Rev John H. Hackett on thefunction of the Chancery Office;Mrs. Elizabeth Turner Sullivanon third orders and the layman.

lFrench ClubThe Marian Players, SHA's

dramatic club under the presi­dency of Margaret Gillette heldtry-outs during the past weekfor freshman and sophomo!ae re­cruits. Nineteen new memberswere admitted by vote ·of themoderator Sister Stephen Do­lores.

The newly formed FrenchClub met for the first organiza~

tional meeting' under directionof its moderator, Sister AlbinaMarie. Marlene Gauthier, ju~ior,

was elected temporary secretary.The name chosen is CFD<-Club

des Debutantes Francaises.

Geoffrey Kane, St. Mary's Mansfield, pre­sident; rear, Gerard Kelley, St. Mary'sMansfield, vice-president; Richard Brezin­ski, St. Mary's Taunton, secretaary.

THE ANCHOR...,...Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Jan. 25/ 1962

Projects

COYLE OFFICERS: Senior class offi­cers at Coyle High School, Taunton, arefront row, left to right, William Desmond,Sacred Heart parish, Fall River, treasurer;

four dolls in robes of a- tribunus,legatus, ilUxilium and imperator,while Adrien Rock .and RichardMartin obviously enjoyed them­selves while making a modelcatapult that sends .paper missiles,sky-high.

A fort. with pebble court andstrong outer defenses was thebuilding choice of Richard La­montagne and Ronald Leblanc.

All are second-year Latin stu­dents.

American History Club of SacredHearts Academy senior class isfound arguing at length about

.the good and bad points of the

Roman Culture

United Nations, while its juniorclass raises funds for the yearbook by selling mothers' home­made cakes in a New Bedfordstore.

The revolving and inquisitivelight spots Bishop Feehan againas the whole school is assembledto view. and hear a film of theNew York Philharmonic Orches­tra giving a concert in WestBerlin, conducted by LeonardBernstein.

Our eyes follow the ray as i:t .hesitates over Fall River's Pre~

vost High to listen to the Sodal'7ity discussing upcoming retreats-one for juniors at the Passion­ist retreat house in Brighton, andone for seniors during Eastervacation at the Trappist monas­tery in Spence.r, Mass.

A mile farther on the effer­vescent freshmen of Fall River'sSacred Hearts Academy are seengrouped around Sister John Eliz­abeth helping her to plan nextSunday's annual Open House for8th graders. Conducted tour, re­freshments, and Benediction wilJbe the program.

Eager DebatersMoving up the river 13 miles,

the roving beacon lights up thepretty faces of four Tauntongirls. St. Mary's students Colletteand Bernadette Murphy, LouiseBury and Mary Morin are theexuberant choices to attend theGirl Scout Roundup in July. Thistwo-week conclave of Girl Scoutsfrom all over the world willmeet and camp in Button Bay,Vt. Diane Renaud stands waiting,as an alternate.

Just before coming to a rest,the artificial sunbeam sports aDebaters Notice sign on the Pre­vost High bulletin board and itmarvels that the interest, prep-,aration, and spirit of a debatingteam rivals that of an athleticteam. It notes that each school isalive with high hopes and confi­dence.

Msgr. Prevost High, for in­stance, is bolstered by its sweepof the four man match it heldwith Sacred Heart Academy inCentral Falls, R. I. Prevost will

tower; Henry Pelletier with may of Rome; accept invitations to debate atDennis Lambalot, shipbuilder; Linda Lum- ,. the Stonehill College tourney on

. I G' d d II d Feb. 3, and the New Englandiniello; and Cecie Ulmon, 0 ress:" All-Catholic boys debate tourneymaker in the manner of the Romans. All at Fitchburg's Notre Dame Highare second year Latin students.,.#'" . , on Feb. 10.

Dennis Lambalot; a Roman bathconstructed by Yvette Robidaand Diane Caplette; and a mapof Rome by Henry Pelletier.

The map is executed in detail,down to Latin labels for streetnames.

A very modern item, the pop­sicle stick, has been put to gooduse by Rachel Richard in a watchtower that "represents hours ofpatient shaping and glueing.

Cecile Guimond has dressed

dancing cha-chas, waltzes, rhum­bas, and the hokey-pokey. It wasa night out I'll long remember."

Roller Skating

So spoke the father of a Mt.St. Mary stUdent after the firstFather-Daughter dance ever heldat the Fall River high school.The girls were elated that theirfathers had such a grand time,for their feelings previous to theevent were skeptical ones also.

Junior Class President MaryMorin of Taunton's St. Mary's

. High School heads a committeeplanning the annual Junior promto be held in the school hallFriday night, Feb. 9. Decorationswill feature the theme "Tonight"with moon shining and starstwinkling above the dancers.

Chaperones will be parents ofclass officers Miss Morin, Chris­tine Haggerty, Mary Jean Yelle,and Elizabeth Brennan.

Sophomores of' Sacred HeartsAcademY in Fairhaven are look_ing forward to a let-down rollerskating party at Lincoln Parkafter mid-year exams.

United Nations

As The Anchor's searchlightsweeps the Diocese to observeschool activities it finds the Cur­rent Events Club at Attleboro'sBishop Feehan High attending apractice tourney of debating atMt. St. Charles Academy inWoonsocket, R. I.

Moving to its own school, thebeam sets its focus on the sameclub listening to a tape recordingof a' TV 'debate on State aid toprovide science and math textsfor parochial schools. Discourseparticipants are Msgr. Arthur T.Geoghegan, superintendent ofschools in the Providence Dio­cese, and Rev. J. Baldwin, presi­dent of the Rhode Island Councilof Churches. '

Switching' tc .Fairhaven, the

Students· ShowBedford

GREAT CAESAR'S GHOST: If Caesar'sshade walked today, he'd feel at home withthese items constructed by Latin studentsat St. AntJ:1ony High, New Bedford. Left toright, Rachel Richard with popsicle watch

Outstanding exhibits demon­strating aspects o:ll Roman cultureare currently on display in St.Anthony's ~igh School library,New Bedford. They are the fruitof a project aiming to depict cul­ture of the time of Julius Caesar.Each exhibit is accompanied bya research paper explaining it indepth.

Noteworthy are a model gal­leon complete with sail and deli­cate toothpick oara. the work 01

Thousands of Students in DiocesanHigh Schools 'Pounding the Books'For Important Mid-Year Exams

By Clement J. DowlingMid-year exams have cast a 'subdued and studious

.atmosphere over the 12 Diocesan high schools. Social andextra-curricular activities are'at a minimum as thousandsof students, intent on conquering the semi-annual scholastiechallenge, are pounding thebooks and sharpening theirmemories. School halls re.­sound with the' hum of con­versation centered on thoughtsof mathematics, English, foreignlanguages, history. science andother subjects. Students' are ap­prehensive as to severity ofexams and wonder If they're wellenough prepared.

Awalt Results ,Teachers have a mid-year look

too. They seem more reservedand businesslike. Inwardly,they are as concerned as students.They hope the results of theirwork for the first half year willproduce good marks. They won­der if their efforts since Sep­tember have been productive andcreative. They pray that theirstudents will show the hardwork and cooperation needed tomllture their young' and ferHeminds.

At home, parents have beencutting down on TV and radio toprovide an environment condu- .cive to study. They too are a~

important part of mid-years andthey hope and pray .that thishurdle will be surmounted.

Some, who still have a work­ing knowledge of their highschool subjects, lend active aid.

Results will be awaited withanxiety and hope. Teachers andparents share the youngsterseagerness and the reward of allwill be the pride of achieve­ment.

Father-Daughter Dance"I expected a somewhat boring

and subdued affair. Was I sur­prised! I found myself in an at­mosphere of laughter and good­fellowship. Imagine 168 fathersshowing up for a Father-Daugh­ter dance! Why, I met old schoolchums and friends I hadn't seenin years. I felt it the next day,but I must admit we had a, ball

Page 14: 01.25.62

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" ,".

',THE ANCHOR~' ,"', .••••••••••-III·.'lIl+.f.-IlI!IIl:2••te;•••Ullw ..

Th~rs." Jan. 25, 1?62

Sends Four PriestsTo Latin Ameruca

JEFFERSON CITY (NC)The Jefferson City diocese willsend four of its pr.iests ·to ,I."atinAmerica in 1962, probably toPeru.

This was announced' by BishopJoseph M. Marling ,of the Mis­souri diocese in a pastoral letter.H~ a~so asked. lay men andwomen to join 'the Papal Volun­teers for Latin America pro­gram.

·Bishop Marling said the send­Ing of his priests as missionariesIs in response to Pope John's callfor assistance to ,the Church inLatin America

"'~''''4'b' •

Canctd1i@lfi) W>li'~nate",~ . .

:Urges Grr®@fr~r

Unity Eff(Q)~MONTREAL (NC)-The

description of non-CatholicChristians as "separatedbrethren" is not a merepious platitude but expresses aprofound truth about their rela­tion to the Church of Chris~

Paul Emile Cardinal Leger saidhere.. The Archbishop of Montrealsaid baptized non-CatholicChristians "have certainly thatunion with Christ which begins

, 'at Baptism" but they lack "com­plete and perfect union with theMystical Body."

"The expression ·'separated'brethren' -is no pious tag' orempty formula, but the descrip­tion of a real and profound truth'which involves our whole think­ing on the subject," CardinalLeger said. '

"It is only by helping them tofulfill that real brotherhood and

.~ discover its true meaning thatwe may hope to overcome thedifficulties which still divide us,"be added.

'Supernatural Enterprise'Cardinal Leger, preaching at

8 Mass marking the 10th anni­versary of the Catholic InquiryForum here, urged increasedefforts by Catholics on behalf ofreligious unity. He concededthat unity is a "supernaturalenterprise" in which men can­not be the "principal agents."

"But if we cannot achieve itthrough human efforts alone, wecan at least not hinder it through

, lack of charity, lack of under­,standing and a faulty sense ofproportion in stressing the non­essentials in our holy religiones if they were essentials," hesaid. ', "We can prepare for it and do

everything to make it possible,removing as far as we can allhuman obstacles that we ,couldset against God's operations anddisposing ourselves as Catholic

.' Christians to be the instruments, "of the peace of God." ,

~,':," Positive lInsights::" Discussing the positipn of non­, Catholic Christians -in relation to,~he Church, the Cardinal, de-

.:"'clared that the leaders of the"Protestant Reformation "were"riot altogetl;J.er' without genuine

, , 'positive insights." ,,,', ""Despite all their errors' •.•

. :' they clung' firmly, for instance,to their positive insight that each

',:"~d eyery Christian soul has a":direct access to God, a living' and'personal relationship with their

, 'Saviour Jesus Christ," he said.. Cardinal Leger noted that the

Catholic Church alone has "the 'full and final revelation of God's

~. truth." He said it follows fromthis that "all religious truth thatis really true is Catholic truth,even when that truth is held out­side the Catholic Church."

'Part .of Treasury'\ . "The positive insights of the'reformers, therefore, insofar asthey are true and valid, areCatholic truths," he said.

Many of the "values" of ~on:'Catholic Christians are really"part' of the treasury of, theCatholic' Church," he continued.

"The tragedy is that 'our sepa­rated brethren have failed to

. recognize these values in Cath- . ,olicism. Perhaps we state themin terms they find difficult 'tounderstand and in it theologicalidiom which is unfamiliar to '

, tp.em."

Page 15: 01.25.62

, llf£ AMCHOR-Diocese of Folt River-Thurs., Jon. 25, 1962 . 1!S

..

.~

THEY'RE SO DEPENDABLE.'

NEVER LET IT BE SAIDIOON'T GIVE MY FAMIL'{TH E BEST OF CARE.'I ALWAVS GET OUR.PRESCRIPTIONS FILLEO AT

TOUHEY'SPHARMACY

-teachers, for liberal arts gradu­at~s aspiring to teach, and forthose desiring to profit by ad­vanced study in. a particularfield ..

The graduate division is opento both men and women and of­fers concentration in five fields.

· Cumulative enrollments havejumped from 51 in 1959 to 209in June of 1961 and 264 duringthe current semester.

Under the patronage of st.Joseph the Worker, the studentcoming to this central Connec­ticut college takes comfort illrepeating these words: "GloriousSaint Joseph, model of justiceand pattern of all who are de­voted to toil, obtain for me the

. grace to be just in all I do andto work with order, peace, mod­eration and patience, withoutshrinking from weariness anddifficulties; to work above aDwith a pure intention of pleasingGod."

nWClESAN GIRLS: Stu­dents from diocese engagein variety of classroom ac­tivities. Top left, Joan 1[ac­omber, Fall River, in lang­uage lab; right, JoanneFlynn, Taunton, with nurs­ery school child. Bottom left,

·Sis t e I' Mary Theodore,· R.S.M., president; right.Mary Bailey, Chatham,works in home economicsdepartment with departmenthead Mrs. Marjorie M. Mc­Kay, left.

- education, economics and busi­n<:lSS, English, Latin, French,

. Spanish, history and politicalscience, home economics, mathe­matics, music, psychology, soci­ology.

Courses are also offered in fineart, German, Italian, philoso-

. phy, physics, physical education,theology, as well as pre-profes­sional preparation in law, medi­cine, elementary and secondaryschool teaching.

Student life on this 80-acrescenic campus in residentialWest Hartford is varied and ac­tive. There are some 18 extra­curricular clubs and chapters ofnational organizations whichstudents may join.

Each has been organized for aspecific need or social interest.Many carryon advanced or spe­cial work supplementing that ofthe classroom.

McAuley Lectures

Besides taking formal coursesin religion, students voluntarilyparticipate in the liturgical lifeof the Church. They take part ina daily Missa Recitata, sing theMass Sundays and on greatfeasts, join the procession onPalm Sunday. Sodality and athree-day spiritual retreat eachyear help students to strengthen

. their spiritual life.Outstanding on the College's

cultural calendar are the dis­tinguished McAuley Lecturesgiven each year. Begun in 1951to honor a centenary of serviceby the Sisters of Mercy in Con­necticut, the series has broughtscholars of world renown to thecampus. The lectures, usually atriology on a central theme, are.published by the College.

Joseph the VVorker

In 1959 Saint Joseph Collegewidened its academic horizonsand opened a center of graduatestudies. The program is specifi­cally designed for in-service

Student Life

Saint Joseph College awardsdegrees in these major fields:biology, chemistry, child study,

Many Scholarships

All applicants' take the Scho­lastic Aptitude Test of the Col­lege Entrance ExaminationBoard and three achievementtests, one in English and two inother fields. Candidates are ad­vised to take the Scholastic Ap­titude and Achievement tests inDecember or January to be as­sured of consideration for ad­mission to the freshman class.

Popular with students is theEarly Admission' Plan wherebythose well-qualified may makeapplication' early in the Fall oftheir senior year in secondaryschool. High ranking studentsare considered for honors at 'en­trance. "

It is the desire of the admin­istration to place higher educa­tion within reach of as manyqualified young women as pos­sible, thus a number of scholar­ships have been established bythe College and by numerousfriends and bellefactors.

Capable students may arrangeloans through the Mary P.O'Flaherty Loan Fund and theNational Defense Loan Fund.Part-time job opportunities areavailable.

unteers working with foundlings,the handicapped, the emotionallydisturbed and the mentally re­tarded, they come to understandthe needs of society.

First Hand Training

The college estimates eachstudent's achievement in termsof the progress she makes towardthe development of her powers.Grades, as such, are not stressed.Assimilation of what has beenlearned and mental growth are.

Since the college is a socialunit for preserving and fosteringdemocracy, it aims to developpowers of self - governmentamong the students. Built arounda well-coordinated system of stu­dent government, which func­tions through the student bodywith the help of a Student-Fac­ulty Liaison Committee, theideals and regulations of theCollege are upheld and a respon­sible corps of campus leaders isdeveloped. .

In other programs students ac­quire first-hand training in goodcitizenship. As group leaders insocial-work centers and as vol-

It is affiliated with CatholicUniversity of America, memberof the Association of AmericanColleges, American Council onEducation, National Catholic Ed­ucation Association, and Amer­ican Association' of UniversityWomen.

Believing in the worth of itseducation product, Saint JosephCollege has spelled out theseaims and objectives. It views ed­ucation as a life-long processcarried on by each individual toperfect her powers of mind andbody in order to contribute pro­ductively to the welfare of so­ciety and the glory of God.

Saint Joseph College; West Hartford,'OifersOutstanding Curriculum on 'Lovely Ca~"pusSain.t Joseph College, West Hartfprd, Conn., is one of ~he fastest growing Catholic

four-year liberal arts colleges for women in New England. Founded in 1932 by theHartford Sisters of Mercy, a religious congregation with 110 years of educationalactivity in the state, the student body has grown, from 63' undergraduates and 15faculty to a student popula­tion of 1002 with 63 religiousand lay teachers. Diocesangirls at the college includeJoan Macomber, Fall River,Spanish major; Mary Bailey,Chatham, home economics ma­jor; and Joanne Flynn, Taunton,child study major.

Construction has kept pacewith expansion. Beginning withtwo massive three-story Geor­gian-Colonial buildings morethan a quarter century ago, thecollege added two student resi­dence halls in 1955, a $624,000library building named afterPope Pius XII in 1960, and ispresently completing a large stu­dent dormitory, faculty resi­dence, . and a splendid studentunion at a total cost of '$1,500,000.

By early 1962 the' college will'have eight .of its 11 projectedbuildings.

Although physical expansionhas been a necessary preoccupa­tion, the administration hasplaced even greater emphasis onthe quality of its teaching.

This insistence on standardshas built an enduring reputationfor excellence in the liberal arts.It is also reflected in the highnumber of doctoral degreesamong the faculty, some 53teachers having this degree.

College AimsFully accredited, Saint Joseph

College is approved by the Con­necticut State Board of Educa­tion, Board of Regents of theState of New York, New EnglandAssociation of Colleges and Sec­ondary Schools.

Page 16: 01.25.62

.16 THEAl'lr"-'~ "'I:,ccese of FaIlRive'r~Thurs.;jon;'25,·1962-_.. , .._---

Fa~ny Wright InfluentialIn SecM~~,i~~~g S~hools

'By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D. D.Bisbop of Reno '

State _..•••••Zone

Dance held at Mt. St. Mary Academy, FallRiver, as students danced with their best"boy friends."

r ••••••••••••••• ~.~ •••••••••••••••••••••••

......................................... -,Cit31 _....... .

Name

Street

BUNGER AND COLD -OREMF..MBER THE PALESTINE REFUGEFA They're the vic.­tims. of the Arab-Israeli War· of 1948. They live In refugeecamps In LEBANON, JORDAN. SYRIA.. and GAZA. Unable tohelp ttreJmrefves, tbey need food. clnthlng, medicine. a placeto sleep. Will you feE'd a REFUGEE FAl\f1LY FOR ONBMON'i'IJ? ft costs only $10 . , . As a token of nur thanks. we'llsend an Olive Wood Rosary from the Holy Land..0 CAN YOU SPARE ONE BLANKET? The BEDOUINS (tent­dweDers in South JORDAN> must have blankets. else they'Ufreeze to deatb. We can I'J'OVide them at $2 each.

'l'JI£ D"J..l' FAi....u.l' Jr",-- ••-. aO I>Grr.' z.ooo .~·AGOBECAtrSE 01' PERSECUTION. From ~BAUAN, In 8O-

St rh VIB'I RUSSIA. Rfugee ramilies lift

~1) "'J,. fleeing today-beeause of &lie Soviet<9 Genol' • • . 'I"IllIERAN, &lie eapiIaJ of

~ ~ IRAN, is onI7 150 miles from AZJm.l» • 0 BAJ.JAN. II1DJcbeds of Rfugees. some~ ::s of CIJem Catholies,. have lied toG"- (I) TEJIEKAN ill reeem IDODUIs fOJ' bee-+ • 110m.. ARCIIBISBOP .JOSEPH

SJ[IjtIKBA, CIle Cha!deaD CBas&emlWeI Afthlrisflop of SJWA. writes lISabout the pzoblem. He writes: "'I1Jere

• u.&. Fltt6ri. MisIitxI AirI is DO d1ureb few Ihese refugees. 110--J buiIdi:Dg wfIaSsoever wilen: Mass aDfirtk~Cbmh be offered r.- Ulem. 'Ibeft is 110

pIaee-aoI even a sbed-wflere the dliIdren eaD be saugM tileeateddsm'" • • • 'Ibe Aftflbisrrop D2eds a eomfrinatlml efIapeI-..rmoI. fmIetiUDa) aDd i'nespeusille. Mass wiD be offeftd forme refugees in me Eas&aD Bite with wtdcfI. IIle7 11ft familiar~

••• However, tile AreIlbishop bas no DlODe7 • _ • 'fbere De onb16,500 CldIloIics ill aD IBAN'.---or aue aU of evuY I-SOO ~IIODSi. The AI'dIbiSJIop lias onb five priests few lID udIdIoeese.&Iud eoven fOO.ooo sq1Jlire miles! M0Be7 is Il£lD'Ce. tile DativeCatbolics too pOOr. to rmDd motlIer efJapekdIool _ W"db$3.000 &lie AreIlMshop eao begin to build. TIre Sis&e.. who willstaff Q'Je sdIooI wiD teadt, bt addmmr ClJ tire Cafltofie refugees,Nestorians (dissident Christians), IUJdMoslems. The good theirteaching will do Uarough tile yean is ineaJeutable .. We ask~.' please, to belp . . . Your $lIP doDatiGn now will keep ourCatholic refugeeS together-under the care of the Archbishop,&lie priests aDd Sisten ... PeI1laps You'd like to fie a "f01lDder"of this seftool. Your '1" gift wiD fury more In IRAN than :Itwill in the D.S.A.! . . • Whatever you> send-dlmes, quaners.IIoltars---please send it new. Send I~ in- tJre names of .Jesus, MarylIDd' ,Iosepb. Tho wen~~ too!

GIVE' SISTER A HAND! ,aFor $Il.500-wl1at it cost!r (or one classt"OOm fn the U.S.A.­we can, build a Catholic school In many a mIssion country.. canyou thin! of a' finer melDQrial foy yom- parents. family, lovedone? , _ . Sometimes. for \aX purposes or their own eonvenieDce.donors stt'etch their payments over a period of time.-Write tous.a For ·41_ a day 1$12.50 a montb. ~n50 a year) you can train aSister for the missions. SISTER PURISSIMA and SISTER EM­ERIT are preparing to become SIS'I'ERS OF THE DESTITUTEin ALWAYEo INDIA. They need financial assistance, as weD asyOur prayers. Would you like to "adopt" one of them? A Sis­ter's training lasts two years, costs $150 a year. or $300 alto­getber.-Write to, us.D For 3tt l;t day ($1 a montb> you can-by joining a MISSIONCLUB-help regularly in our work of education. MARY'S BANKis Ute dub which EmPPOrts nalive Sisters. Our club. THE BA­S1LJANS,. supports Catholic mission smools . . , Why not joinboth (EJ.r If day. witb daily prayers\!

Dear Monsignor: -Please enroll me in a MARY'S BANK and/or a THE

BASILlANS.

IRAN: NOT ONE. cAmOUf IN 1,OOO!

MOUNT DANCE: This happy BunnyHop line, led by Miss Maria· Rodriques,shows the success of the Father~Daughter

AVLMERe~HYANNIS, MASS.

Tel. 775-5544

GARBAGIl:- ANDRUBBISH REMOVAl!.

Clean PickupsServicing Hyannis, Hyannis­port, Craigville, Centerville

Sees EcumenicG~

Movement MostSignificant E"ent

ALEXANDRIA (NC) ­The movement toward unionof separated churches wascalled the "most significantreligious event Since the Refor­mation" by a Jesuit specialist inecumenical affairs.

Father Gustave Weigel, S.J.•professor a.f ecclesiology atWoodstock (Md.) . College, a,Jesuit seminarY, spoke to some450 persons at Blessed Sacramentparish hall here in Virgin~.

His appearance was a highlightof joint Catholic-Protestant ob­servance of a "Week of Prayerfor Christian Unity" parallelingthe traditional Catholic observ­ance of the Chair of Unity Oc­tave, which concludes today.

Representatives of 13 Alexan­dria . area Protestant churchesand numerous individual 'Prot­estants were among those whoheard Father Weigel, speak on"Protestant-Catholic Relations inthe U.S.A."

. Offer FrieJlldsllipFather Weigel told bis au<ll­

enee that "all needless hostHi­,ties" betWeen Catholics andProtestants ·are melting away."Today we look upon each other,with kindly eyes. We reach outour right band in friendship," hesaid.

The priest foresaw no imme­diate chances for Catholi~Prot­estant reunion, but added that"we all have to live in the hopethat He who wanted one churchwill make one church."

Among obstacles he sees in theway of better Catholic-Protes­tant relations in the UnitedStates are Church-State relations-"here Catholics must do mostof the work for we have notclarified our own position"-andparochial schools - "not theirfinances, but simply our need forthem. which Protestants don'tunderstand."

Father Weigel also said thatthe Catholic viewpoint 00 birthcontrol and censorship "does notfall 100 well on the majority ofProtestant Americans."

The other maj or event in theobservance will be a panel dis­cussion today on "The Nature ofthe Unity We Seek" at the FirstChristian Church of Alexandria.Participants are a Catholic priest,.an Episcopalian clergyman anda Presbyterian minister.

Protestant Praises·Mater et Magistro

'ELM GROVE (NC)-A Prot­estant theologian has praisedPope John's encyclical "Materet Magistra" as "one of the mostsignificant papal pronouncementsof modern times." ,

Dr. Jaroslav Pelikan,' a pro­fessor at the University of Chi­cago divinity school, said the en­cyclical is "a genuine attempt tomake the message of the Churchcontemporary arid relevant to theis'sues of today."

Its "most striking feature," headded in an.article in CountryBeautiful 'mag;lzine publishedhere, is its effort 'to ."address themoral and spiritual problems ofan industrial technological so­ciety."

to find it unacceptable to themajority. .

She became the ally and c0­

worker of her fellow Scot, Rob,.ert Owen, and it may have been,under his influence that shecommitted the blunder of openlyadvocating a system of free love,or at least "extra-legal matri­mony."

Frankly Anti-ChristianIn the '30s she married a

Frenchman who shared her ideas,but the compatibility was not

.enduring. In her' later years,spent largely in New York, shedevoted herself to the advocacyand promotion of her scheme ofsecularizing American education.

As a convinced materialist,frankly and militanUy anti­Christian, she openly sought theelimination of all religious influ­ence in the public and state-sup­ported schools. There is litUequestion but that her mark wasmade on the system adopted byNew York within a few years ofher death in 1852.

state Schools"I was for a brief time in her

confidence" Brownson contin­ued, "and 'one of these selectedto carry into execution her plans.The great object was to get ridof Christianity, and to convertour churches into balls of science.

"The plan was ,not to makeopen attacks on religion, al­though we might belabor theclergy and hring them into con­tempt where we could; but to,establish a system of state-wesaid national - schools, fromwhich all religion was to be ex­cluded, in which nothing waS tobe taught but such knowledgeas is verifiable by the senses; andto which all parents were to becompelled by law to send theirchildren."

Setting a pattern for all sub-'sequent educational tyrants,Frances wrigJit and her cohortsenvisioned taking the child fromhis parents at the earliest.pos-

. sible age, and rearing, him atstate expense as a complete, sec­ularist.

How far in actuality' herscheme was .given a respectfulhearing, how many propagandacells were organized, Brownsondoes not say, for'he parted eom-'pany With the group about 1830,long before her career· hadreached its climax.

Dewey the FlowerHe was convinced, however,

that her influence was far-reach­ing and was a principal factorin the gradual secularization ofthe public schools.. . "It would be worth inquiring,if there were any means of ac­certaining,' how large' a sharethis secret infidel societY, withits members all through thecountry, unsuspected by the pub­lic ... have had in giving her theextraordinary impulse'to godlesseducation which all must haveremarked since 1830, an impulsewhich seems too strong for anyhuman power now to resist."

If John Dewey was the flowerof the new dispensation; FannyWright was its root.

fCalVfi ~owerr ~MBncdlMembers of the Catholic Guild

for the BI~nd, Fall River region, .will hold their monthly meetingnext Sunday in Sacred Heart'School. The meeting will be pre­ceded by Rosary and fl~ . ~dictionin the church at 2:15 P. M..

Who remembers Fanny Wright? Not many on a wager,although there was a time, better than a century ago, whenshe was the most controversial woman in America. Shedefied the conventions of her era, appeared bold as brasson public lecture platforms(which no lady should everdo) , and advocated, alongwith emancipation, femaleand ~olored, even more startlingproposals, sucb as the abolitionof the bankingsystem and thepromotion offree love. Atough - mindedla d y, surely,but not alto­gether attrac­tive.Orestes

Brownson knewher well. In thedays before hefought his way

• into the Catholic Church he wasthe intimate and confidant ofhalf the intellectual blue-stock­ings of New England and NewYork. Soon after her death hepaid her the oblique tribute ofsaying that she was the brainsand inspiration behind the mainattack on Christianity in thepublic schools of the UnitedStates.

He so expressed himself in anaddress given before the Philo­

. mathian Society of Mount St.Mary's College, Emmitsburg,Md., on June 29, 1853.

Like so much of Brownson,who was beyond question one ofthe prime"miiuls of the 19th cen­tury, this lecture, a magnificentpel'formance, might have slum­bered on in 'the pagel! of the col­lected Works, save' for the keen.eye, of Father Robert I. Gannon,the former president of FordhamUniversity. who reelills it in hisurbane memoir of his educa­tional career, The Poor Old Lib-era' Arts. .

, Regrets Association-"It is not without design,"

Brownson told the young menof his audience, "that I havementioned the mime of Frances~right, the (avorite pupil ofJeremy Bentham, and famousinfidel lecturer' through oureountry, some 20 years ago; forI happen· to know, ~hat maynot be known to you all, that sheand her friends were the greatmovers in the scheme of godlesseducation, nOw the fashion inour· country.

"I knew this' remarkablewoman well, and it was myshame to share, for a time. manyof her views, for which I ask

...' pardon of God and my country­. men."

She was born in Scotland in1795, and became a wealthyorphan as a child. Rebelliousagainst the authority of herfoster-parents, who seem to havebeen kindness personified, sheinsisted upon forging her owneducation, though it may be anexaggeration to say that she wasBentham's favorite pupil.

Once of age 'she elected tocome to America, first as an ap­preciative visitor (her inevitable

. travelog was a refreshing relieffrom the ruck of British diatribesagainst all things American), andlater as a permanent resident.

'Extra-Legal Matrimony'Having impressed the fairly

Impressionable General de La­fayette, she accompanied him,willynilly, on his tour throughthe States in the 1820's causing amild sensation.

ConfidenUy she prescribed forthe ills of the nation, pouring hercounsel into the receptive ears ofJefferson and Madison, amongothers. She produced a solutionfor the slavery problem, based,not unexpectedly•. en compen­sated'relocation, and was grieved

Page 17: 01.25.62

The Parish' P;1.radeST. STANISLAUS,FALL RIVER

The PTA and Alumni Associa­tion plans a penny sale at 7:3DSaturday night at Pulaski Hall.ll'Irs. Arnold Lawlor, Mrs. Wil­liam French and Mrs. JosephPetl"es are in charge of arrange­ments.

ST. ANTHONY OF DESERT,FALL RIVER

Rev. Ferris Kleem. C.s.C., willaddress the Blessed Mother Guildand Holy Name Society at 8Sunday night, Feb. 18, at FatherSharbel Center.

ST. .JOSEPH,NORTH DIGHTON

The Women's Guild will holda cake sale within the next fourweeks. Members viewed a docu­mentary film on Distant EarlyWarning installations in Canadaand Alaska.

ST. PATRICK.F AlLL B.IVIER

Mrs. William Jones, Women'sGuild president, announces thatplans are under way for award­ing a ,$500 scholarship to a highschool girl graduate of the parishplanning to further her educa­tion.

Presentation of this award willbe a highlight of the guild's 25thanniversary celebration plannedfor Sunday, June 3, at whichtime the annual installation willalso be held.

ST. MARY'S,NEW BEDFORD

The Women's Guild plans aValentine dance Saturday night,Feb. 10 with Mrs. Marcel Lor­anger and Mrs. Raym!:'!ld E.Gamache in charge. The regularFebruary meeting wiU feature aprogram on the art of make-up.Future events on the calendarare a parish show in March anda whist in April.

SACRED HEART,FALL RIVER

The Men's Club and Women'sGuild will eo-sponsor a Valen­tine square dance Wednesdaynight, Feb. 14 in the school hall.The units win also share l'eSPQn­

sibmty fur a St. Patrick's enter­tainment Sunday, March 18-

The Executive Board of Seout­ing will hold a Fund-ota at '1:30Wednesday night, Feb. 21 in theschool auditorium. Refreshmentswill be served. Mrs. .John B.Reed and Mrs. Joseph Taylor areCO-4:hairmen.

SACRED HEART.NORTH ATrLEBORO

The CYO will sponsor a rollerskating party from 7:30 to 10:30tonight at Bobby's Hollaway,Pawtucket. Members' will leavethe church grounds at 7:14.Jeanne Marcil and Robert Poi­rier are co-chairmen, and theyare also in charge of arrange­ments for a pre-Lenten dance tobe held in the church hall from7:30 to 11 Saturday night, Feb.24.

Members and friends of Attle­boro area CYO grou,ps are in­vited to attend. Music will be bythe Durels band and features willinclude refreshments and award­ing of record albums.

The Good Will Club will meettoday in the cafeteria. Aims andscope of the new group will beoutlined and new members mayjoin by giving their names toRev. Roger LeDuc.

Jeannine Ouimet, Ernest Gau­dreau Jr. and Richard Pinson­nault are chairmen of an exhibitfeaturing work of the lay apos­tolate which will be held in thechurch hall in April. Activitiesof parish societies will be em­phasized.

Future CYO activities will in_elude a Communion Supper onAscension Thu!rsday, a Springfrolic and the unit's nextregu­lar meeting, Tuesday, Feb. 6; 'to .w!,ich new members are invited.

OUR LADY OF VICTORY,CENTERVILLE

The Women's Guild plans aValentine food sale Wednesday,Feb. 14.

ST. JOliN BAPTIST,Nl:W BEDFORD

Mrs. GiJlbert Ferro headls newofficers of the Ladies' Guild.Serving with her are Mrs, VitoGerardi, vWe presirlent;MJrs..IInrry Dunham, treasurer; Mrs.Mnry Roderick, secretary.

ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA,FALL RIVER

A mystery ride and malacadasupper are among coming events­for the Council of CatholicWomen. The ride, to be heldSaturday, Feb. 17, is in chargeof Mrs. Mary Silvia .and Mrs.Evelyn Martin. The supper isset for Saturday, March 3, andwill be followed by a penny sale.

Next regular meeting will beTuesday, Feb. 20 and will in­clude a sewing session, for whichmembers are requested to bringwhite cloth. .

.ST. PATRICK,FALMOUTH

Family Sunday is scheduledfor Jan. 28 by the Holy NameSociety. The day's program willinclude Family Communion atany Mass, Benediction at 5 in theafternoon, and a spaghetti sup­per at 5:45 at K of C Hall, BrickKiln Road. Co-chairmen are Dr.George DeMello and RaymondKnispell.

OUR LAJIli1( OIF MT. CARMEL,NlEW BED!FORD

Miss Hilda Matthews and MissEvelyn Hendricks are in chargeof arrangements for the annualinstallation banquet and dancefor the Women's Club, to be heldat 7 Saturday night, Jan. 27 atStevenson's restaurant, Westport.

Mrs. Frank Rodriques will beinstalling officer and Miss Nat­alie Ferreira will be mistress ofceremonies. Art Perry's orches­tra will provide dance music.

S'E. PlIlUS X,SOlIJTlIi 1(ABR:IOUTIHl

New officers of the Women'sGuild are Mrs. Hollis G. Batchel­der Jr., president; Mrs. John T.Simpson, vice president; Mrs.Gerald C. MacC.auiey, recordingsecretary; Mrs. Robert Close,corresponding secretary; Mrs.William P. MacDonald, treas­urer. February meeting of theunit will feature disclosure ofsecret pals for last year andexchange of gifts.

ST. LOUIS,FALL RIVER

Annual Winter meeting of theConfraternity of Christian Moth_ers is set for 2 Sunday afternoon,Jan. 28 in tib.e parish hall. Rev.John P Driscoll, assistant gen­eral manager of The Anchor, willspeak cn "Wants and Needs."New officers will be installedand thl" program will also in­clude musical selections bypupils of Adam Furgiuele and acoffee hour.

OUR LADY OF THE ANGELS,FALL RIVER

The Knights of the Altar willsponsor a Cake Sale, Feb. 25, tosupply the altar boys with newcassocks and surplices. The Ad­vancement Ceremony of thegroup will be held on the firstS~nday of Lent. Apprentices,pages, knights, knight command­ers and grand knights will bereceived.

The officers are: Joseph Ma­chado, supreme grand knight;Robert Bandarra, vice supremegrand knight; Theodore Correia,secretary; Michael Neves, treas­urer.

All pa~ents and guests are in­vited to attend Charter Night ofTroop «76" of the'Boy Scouts tobe held Saturday at '1 o'clock.

The regular meeting of theCYO will be conducted Monday1U.ght at 6:30.

Sunday is Recollection Dayfor the youth group and all willreceive Holy Communion andparticipate in the Mass responsesat the 9 o'cloek Mass. A Break­fast will follow the iMass;a HolyHour will be oonductecil at 3,­followed by a social hour. Rev.Manuel Andrade will conduct the3 o'clock serviees.

Girl scouts will.meet Saturdaymorni?g at 10 o'clock in the hall.

The March 3rd Mardi-Grasand Malacada Supper committeewill meet Sunday.

TheCCD will meet Tuesdayevening, Feb. 6, to hear a specialreport by the Parent-EducatorCc>mmittee.

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION,FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild will spon­sor a bean supper at 6 Saturdaynight. Jan. 27, in the parish halD..'il'idrets will be available at tlIiledoor Mrs. James Bentley isc1bakmcln.

TO HIE: PAGE: DavidPowell, Coyle High Schoolhonor student from Mans­field, will be a Congressionalpage boy this Summer beforeentering Boston College tomajor in history. He willserve Rep. Robert A. Everettof Tennessee and is probablythe first page ever chosenoutside a Congressman'shome state. His father; kill­ed in. World War II, was anative of Tennessee.

!L@)f ~®!r~@rn:l J@iJffi}$

1F!kl@@B@~)f $clro@@)~NEW YORK (NC)-The first

lay person to teach at the three­year-old School of Theology forLaymen operated by Domi.nican

, Fathers here has joined the fac­ulty.

She is Miss Margaret Flana­gan an employee of the NewYork Post, who will teach aoourse in eatechetieal methods.

A graduate of the New Yorkarehdiocese's Confraternity CYfChristian Doctrine course for in­structors, Miss Flanagan hasbeen teaching catechism in par­ishes and homes here for sixyears.

Ordained In CapitalCONCORD (HC) - Father

l'lhr. H. Roby ()f Concord wasoil'iained in the priesthood of theMissionaries of Ute Sacred Heartin ~.he first ordination' .ceremonyeVff held in New Hampshire'scapital ,city. ~ishop Ernest J.Primeau of Manchester officiatedat ,he rite in St. John the Evan­gelist church.

HOLY NAME.NEWBEDFORD .

The Women's Guild will holda square dance, Saturday night,Jan 28, from 8 to 12 in the Par­ish Hall. Mr. E1ward Vieira aprofessional caller, will cond~ctthe affair.

The annual card party of theGuild will be held on Feb. 28undel the co-chairmanship ofMrs. Ernest L'Abbe and Mrs.Stanley Walsh.

ST. JOSEPH'SFALL RIVER

A whist at 8 tonight in theparish hall on Brightman Streetwill be sponsored by theWomen's Guild. Junior CYOmembers will hold a dance from7:30 00 10:30 oomorrow night.Crownin:lg oil' a king and queenwill be among features.

ST. RYACINTIll,NEW BEDFORD

A public ham and bean sup­per to benefit the church fundwill be held from 5:30 to 8 Sat­urday nIght, Feb. 3 in the parishball on Rivet Street. Tickets areaVaIlable from committee mem­ber<; or at the. rectory.

New ·officers of S1. Anne'sSodality include Mrs. LucilleBra~S&d, presicilen't; Mrs. BlancheLet·~ndre and Mrs..EvelYn Char­tier honorary presidents; Mrs.Ri~a Damm. vice president; Mrs.Anna Games, secretary; Mrs.Cedea Delorme, assistant secre­tary

/Also Mrs. Laura Maille, treas­IIrer; Mrs. Clara Ostiguy andMrs Rose Woods, mistresses ofcerem01ll~. lVIirs. Ostiguy, Mns.Chartier and Mrs. Rene Methenre visitors to tb:e sick.

THE ANCHOR~D.iocese ofFen River-Thurs., Jan. 25, 1962 17

Sees Church Unity Prospects BrighterDET~OIT (NC)-The climate hemisphere's ranking OrthodO!l:

for umty between the Catholic prelate.and Orthodox Churches, is The prelate said that not only~arm~r now t?an at any other are relations between the ChurchtIme In 'centurIes. . of Rome and the Orthodox

. This is the opinion of Arch- Church at an all-time high, butbIShop Iakovos, who as head of that the divided Orthodoxthe Greek Orthodox Church in Church also is moving towardNorth and South America is this oneness.

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Page 18: 01.25.62

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-HEADS TEAM: FatherAlbert J.,Nevins, M.M., pres­ident of the Catholic 'Press'Association: and. editor, ofMaryknoll-' magazirie, headsa, team, of Catholic journal­ists going to ,Latin Americat9 study Catholic programsin the mass media. NC Photo

By Jack Kineavy, .

Can Spring be far behind ?- Tonight mar~s the occasionof the 23rd' ann"..al dinner of the Boston Baseball Writers'Assodatiim' anr.i a gala aff~ir it proposes' to be. There is avery real prob~bility -that two of ,the' invited guests, Bob

'Feller and JaGkie Robinson; " ., , candid Jensen was good copy. ,

may', be making, their first Also -settled early' this' week'public appearance after hav- ,wa~ another sports mystery.,ing been elected to memb'er- Named to succeed Ernie' Hefferleship in Baseball's Hall of Fame. 'at Boston College was Jim Miller

who comes ,to the Heights fromThe balloting and tabulations the University of Detroit where

,weI'€: to 'havebeen concluded he has compiled a fine record.yesterday 'a n.d The security surrounding Mil-the consensus is' ler'~ appointment was in keepingthat Rapid Rob- . with the best traditions of Capeert i~'a-sure-fire' Canaveral and had been the sub-candidate with, jecl for more than a little lam-Robinson just'a pooning.'step., behind. 'InMeanwhile, former Eagle men-the event Jackie tor Mike Holovak inked a two-makes, it, he year contract to pilot the BostonwiJ.1 be the first Patriots to what is hoped willo'f his race to be the top spot in the nascentb P. en roll e d AFL. Genial Mike reportedly,among Cooperstown's elite. This wiiJ: receive $20,000 per yearis as it should "be since it was milking him one of the higher, ifRohinson's exemp1ary efforts not the highest paid coach in thethat broke the race barrier in league. He has never had a los-baseball. ing season and his career go~s

~ ""n.... ~ A n~ IL ~ack some 12 years.lrQtllfIlerr £'W\!tYUQlIll\\f His was no easy path. I recallY that Brooklyn trained in Havana, Schoolboy Ball

New PrOVDrrU:ua~ Cuba in the Spring,of '47, pre- Another big week in schoolboysuinably to avoid racial conflict basketball. Top game tomorrow

NOTRE 'DAME (NC)...:....:Father' in Florida which at that time night finds Durfee at home toBernard I. Mullahy, C.S.C., has was the mecca of major league At~leboro in the feature gamebeen named Provincial Superior: baseball. En route on the exhibi- of the BCL schedule. Both facedof the Holy Cross Fathers' Indi- ti911 tour there were rumblingll top-flight competition last Tues­ana province, according to word but Branch Rickey was adamant, day but whatever the results thereceived here from Father Chris- Robinson courageous, ,and the S.RO sign is certain to be hungtopher 'J, O:Toole, C.S.C., Supe- negro had arrived on, the scene' out early at the Bank Streetrior General of the Congregation. of the national pastime. Armory. Attleboro won the firstof Holy Cross in Rome. round match, 64-53. The Jewel-, 'Fathe'r Mullahy, 51, wl'll,s'e,rve' : Fe}ler was just.great. He came

t Cl 1 d · 1936' th ersare a high' scoring, combine.-as' Provl'nCl'al Supe'r'l'or u'n'tl'l n'ext up 0 ,eve an In at e' ,f .", '" 'They went' over the 'century

July when a g'ell~,<r',a' I' chap'ter' of' ~ge' '0 sever-teen and p~oceeded ' .to blow, that blazing fastball,past marl!: against· North, Attlebpro

the, Congregation of Holy Cross a jittery bunch of' A. L. hitters. and last week humbled Taunton,will convene in Rome. ' ' F,)!I~ years in the Navy-most of 94-56." He will fill the unexpired term th 't' t t k tit 80 It was, Ii disappointing weekof ,the' late Father 'Theodore J: e our a sea- 00, a ' eas-, , . 'victories aw'ay from Feller whose' for New'" Bedford VocationalMehling, C.S.C., who died while lifetime total numbered' 262. A which dropped successive gamesy;:,iting,in Santiago, Chile,Nov;" gentleman 'all the way,' he has to Durfee'and Coyle. The losses

be' n a cr'ed·t to the 'game 'and d.ra,Dped Voke agame be.hind the' A 'na,tive' of Fitchburg, Mass:, e l, -'richly deserves to be numbered, defending Tri-champions going

Father Mullahy has been serving among baseball's greats'. ' 'into this week's schedule. Work-as Assistant 'Provincial Superior il)g hard to move into the firstsince 1950. Except for a three- Jensen Through division is a hustling Coyle teamye~r, period, he was, a , faculty that could make hay this weekmember in the' department' of The speculation over Jackie against Taunton and North Attle-phil9sophy at the University of Jensen's status is at an end. The poro.Notre Dame from 1939 to 1954, Sox' front office early this week Drawing plaudits of the trackheading the department from confirmed the rumor that the gentry was the performance ot"~~52 to 1954,. In his teaching and Golden, Boy has ,called it a Somerset's Willard St. Onge who.research he specialized iiI the career. Thus ends' one' of the

h'l h f t strangest sagas' in the annals of equalled the BAA schoolboyp I osop Y 0 na ure. meet record of 5.9 seconds in the

maior ,league ball. With a shotat aimexing' the coveted RBI 45-yard low hurdles. Will is atitle in '59, Jensen passed' up the senior at Somerset and the cap­last game of the season and left tain of the Raider track squad

, co:'!ched by Bob Simpson. Afor home. He stayed out for a member of St. Thomas More par­whole year, then attempted acomeback in, '61 meeting with ish, St. Onge has been a valuableonly mediocre success. member of the Fall River squad

in the annual CYO Track Meet.Fear of air travel, visits to

psychiatrists, an impromptuweek's absence from .the clubearly in the season servedto heighten the controversy sur­rounding the talented Jensen.The writing was on the wallov('r the latter stages of the sea­son, however, when Jackie madefewer and fewer appearances inthe starting lineup. His depar­ture will constitute a real lossfor Boston writers for whom the

Court Upholds Ban0''; Weekend! Burial"

NEW YORK (NC)-The Newyork ,State Supreme Court hastossed out a suit seeking to pre­vent three cemeteries from end­ing the practice of weekendburials.

Justice joseph A. Gavagan, inhanding down his decision, lifted

'a temporary injunction that hadkept the cemeteries on a six-dayschedule pending the outcome ofthe suit.

The three cemeteries involvedin the suit, and several others,announced last month that theywould accept interments only onweekdays. This action was takenafter a new union contract pro­vision was adopted requiringovertime pay for all weekendwork.

Contraet@1rS sinlCe 1913.

WYmanl 3-0911? : .::- .. ~

Missiol1'il~ry-Physican

Heads Relief A~encyDAR ES SALAAM (NC)-A

Maryknoll missioner who is alsoa medical doctor has arrived hereas first permanent representativein Tanganyika of Catholic ReliefServices-National Catholic Wel­fare Conference, the worldwiderelief agency of American Cath­olics.

Father Edward M. Baskerville,M,M., will organize the distribu­tion of food, medicines and otherrelief supplies by CRS-NCWC.He will study problems of hun­ger and disease in East Africa.

Father Baskerville receivedhis medical degree from the Uni­verstiy of St. Louis in 1937.After World War II he enteredMaryknoll. He was ordained in1953, ,and spent seven years inTanganyika as a missionary doc­tor.

,tinue, ,to be ,'appropriate underunforeseen ftiture'con~Iition~.

Undesirable PolicyThe authors are also opposed

to this formula for other reasons.They think that a uniform wagepolicy does' not allow for suHi­cient diversity in the movement,of wage rates. And. they arguethat 'voluntary restraint in' thedetermination of 'prices andwages is not a workable policyin the long run and is not evendesirable.

I don't completely agree thatvoluntary restraint in the settingof wages and prices is not desir­able. They may well be correct,'howc:ver, in stating that such apolicy is not workable over thelong run. But if so, where do wego from here? Their answer isthat there ought 'to be an annualLabor-Management Conferenceon' 'the P,-:esident's EconomicReport.~ ~'The objective of this Confe,r­

ence," they say, "should be to'share information among leaders'of government, labor and man­agement and to develop a deeperun'derstanding of economic proc-

,esses, especially as these are ,re­lated to union and company ,pol­icies in collective bargaining."

I would like to see a series of,such meetings at the level of in,.dividual industries or:trades. Iam 'not tertain,' howev,er, that Ifully understand the reasoning

" which led the CEn, study groupto' put their hopes in' such' aConference.

Government Restraint, , 'Why go to the trouble of trying

to develop a deeper understand­irig on the, par,t of labor andmanagement of nationaleconO,ni­ic processes unless it' will enablethe two parties to exerCise re­straint in their demands if:, itis demand'ed by the commongood?

Are labor and managementsupposed to file all the informa­tion they acquire at a Conference-or use it in the' interest of thegeneral we"lfare?

If not the latter, they ,will liveto rue the day for, in the absenceof a minimal degree of self-re­strainton the part of labor andmanagement, the government islikely to clamp some 'stringentre-straints on the two parties.This they ought to try to avoid atalmost any cost. .

THE ANCHOR-Diocese cf Fall Ri'ler-'Thurs., Jon. 25,,1.96~• • •• # - • ~.. • '. • -•.•• -. .'.-18'

S;Il'Il'lI·~'(1ted ClassesHONOLULU (NC) - Several

hundred high school seniorsfrom Oahu who inspected Cham-

~ indae College, Hawaii's Catho­lic college, took part in simu­l<Jted classes to get a feel of,coHege life. The institution iscc;nd,ucted.. by the" ,Mar~ap~stFathp"r' ,,",' " .. ,,', '<:',~;

"Q~~sti()b1S: ,Value of. A~~,UQ1~'Lah,o',r~,lrnldu$ftry' Confer~n~~, " :, , .By l\1sgr., George G.. Higgins ""Director, NCWC Social Action nepar~ment.,' ,

,Preside~t Keimedy, and Secretary ~f Labor, Goldberghave, cautioned UniOnS to exerc:ise restraint in their wag~demands d~rl"lg the next ~ound of, collective 'bargaining

'negotiati"olls. T"!1eystateclrather po~ntedly that they wantover-all wage movem¢ntskept in lfne with increasesin productivity. I was justa few, .feet, from President,Kennedy when he$poke on this,subject at the recent AFL-CIOconvention in '

'Miami. At theconclusionofhisremarks, he wascheered enthu­siastically andwas publicly as":sured by Presi­dent Meany ofthe Federation~hat the Unionsaffiliated witht h' e AFL - cmwould cooper-

• ... ate with the Administration 100per cent in its efforts to curbinflation.

I anticipated then that the del­egates would qualify this corp.­mi'tment. This they did in a res­olution 'on national economicpolicy. They made it clear thatthey intend to press for substan­tial wage gains in 1962,' contend­ing i'hat most employers are ina position to grant sizable, wageincreases arid still make a hand­some profit without raisingprices.

Would'Resent EnforcementThere is no way of, telling at '

this 'point whether or notorgim­ize::l labor will succeed in raisingwages substantially during thenext round of negotiations. It isalmost certain, however, thatlabor would fight back very vig­orously if the Administrationwere to try 'to enforce its produc-'tivity formula. ' .

At present, of course, there is,no~ indication "that the 'Adminis­tration intends to force the issue.Secretary Goldberg has alreadyindicated that "there is plenty ofroom" for wage increase - insome industries' at least-withinthe limits of the productivityformula.

The theoretical"question arises,however, as to whether or notthis formula is valid in 'theoryand workable in practice. On thesurface, it looks like a fairly sen­sible approach' to the problem.But many competent economistsand labor relations experts op­pose it on ethical as well aspragmatic grounds.

Present Sharc BasisThe ethical argument against

the productivity formula is statedIIi\ very succinctly in a new study

referred to here, in a differentcontext, several weeks ago­"The Public Interest ~n NationalLabor Policy" (Committee onEconomic Development, 711 FifthAvenue, New York 22, N. Y.$2.00). '

The' authors of this study-acommittee of nine nationally rec­ogl1lzed authorities in, the fieldof labor-management relations­point out that "The proposal tokeep the price level stable and tokeep wage increases in line withchanges in output per man-hourlogically implies acceptance ofthe proposition that the wage­eal'ner's present share of nationalincome is correct and should notchange.

"When this implication' ismade explicit, we do not believeit will command the support of~

the parties. Although we have nospecial reason for feeling thatthe wage-earner's share of in­come is either too high or too lowat this time, we cannot subscribeto the proposition that the pres­ent share will necessarily con-

Page 19: 01.25.62

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 25, 1962

BOB SUCHY COACH FRAN O'BRIEN BOB BLECZINSKI -Mid-Way Hoop Record Is 10-2

Banner Year Looms for Stonehill

BILL CREEDON

..'

...

Chieftains have been eyeing I

trio of rough encounters that artfast approaching.

Saturday night - next homtgame for Ston~hill - Siena Col·lege will be invading the OliveAmes High School gymnasium b:North Easton for a clash withthe O'Briens., Then on Feb. 3, homecominr

night for Stonehill alumni in th(Southeastern Massachusetts area.the Chieftains will host Fairfie1l'University. And on Feb. 14Stonehill will be going all ou:in the Oliver Ames gym agains',St. Anselm's, to avenge.a setbacl.·earlier this season.

Make Rapid StridesBuilding any sports team to :-.

level where it gains nationa:'prominence is always, a slow.gradual process. But Stonehili'has been taking rapid strides illthe right direction.

With its young, energetic staff.the fine caliber of its players.'and its acceptance into theECAC, Stonehill is on the roaeto becoming a leading collegiat~..basketball power;

GEORGE PETERSON

Castro's Prisoners'Pr«llY Ros(!Jry D«!Iily

MIAMI (NC)-Men captureciduring the ill-fated Cuban inva­sion last Spring and still heldprisoner recite the Rosary alouddaily, according to one of theirformer chaplains.

Father Cipriano Cavero, S.J.,said the prisoners taken duringthe unsuccessful Bay of Pigs in­vasion in April, 1961, includethree priests who were servingas chaplains to the invaders.

Father Cavero said 1,183 mG:lare now held by the Fidel Castroregime' in Havana's Prision delPrincipe. He said many of themwere formerly active in Catholicyouth groups or attended Catho­lic colleges and invaded Cubalast year "to fight for relillionand country,"

year at Williams, Jim is 6-2and weighs 175.

Senior on the squad is BobReddy of Somerville.' The big6-5 Reddy, a 195-pounder, is agraduate of Cathedral HighSchOol in Boston.

SiX-foot, 3-inch Charlie Byrne,lone junior on the team, is alsOfrom Somerville. Byrne, whoweighs in at 165 pounds, is' an'alumnus of St. Clement's HighSchool; Somerville.

Rounding out the crack Stone­hill cage squad are Ed Pare ofBrooklyn, Pat Hart' of Newtonand Jim Fallon, also-of Brooklyn.'

Pare, the team's little man at5-10, is an adroit ball handler.He was named to the New YorkCity all-Catholic high sehool fiveand is a graduate of BishopLQughlin High Scho·ol.

A valli-able reserve center,Hart, who stands 6-5, is a demonoff the backboards whenevercalled upon for'action. He weighs'190 and was graduated from Our'Lady's High School in his hometown. '

A high school teammate ofPare, Fallon is another valuablereserve who can haul his shareof rebounds off the boards. Fal­lon stands 6-3 and is a 180­pounder.

Studies Come FirstIn his second year as mentor

of the Chieftains, 28-year-oldCoach O'Brien will have no easytask of building a formidablefive to cope with increasinglystronger rivals the college isacquiring.

But O'Brien, athlete of theyear just six seasons ago' at TuftsUniversity, has been bringingalong a unit which shows greatpossibilities for future cam­paigns.

Stonehill's stiff academicstandards multiply O'Brien'sproblems, since his hoopmenmust - besides being topflightplayers - maintain quality aca­demic records.

Assisting ,O'Brien along theroad to making the Chieftainsan Eastern power is Bob Hegartyof Reading, a Stonehill graduateand former hoop standout.

Next With SienaWith the current season al­

ready at the halfway mark, the

Columban's Seminary, fits wellinto the starting unit despite thefact he had limited high schoolhoop experience.

A former Lawrence CentralCatholic star, Bob Bleczinski ofMethuen is capable of' hittingdouble figures in the scoringcolumn with consistency.

Murphy SidelinedBleczinski replaced starter

JQhn Murphy recently, when thelatter received a broken bone inone of his feet in a game againstNasson, Me., College. Bob stands6-2 and weighs 180.

Rounding out the starting fiveis informal floor captain JimSwan. A standout performer atArchbishop ,Williams High inBraintree for a former Stonehillstar, Coach Don Edmonston,SWl\n is from Quincy. Namedmost valuable player his last

JIM SWAN

Pl/'elQlte Starts FundFor P~ll'l!.I SUb"Whf@lfS

CAMDEN (NC)-A relief fundto aid the survivors of the ava­lanche which killed' some 3,500persons and wiped out entirevillages in Peru has been estab­lished here at the direction ofArchbishop Celestine J. Dami­ano, Bishop of Camden.

In a letter read at Masses inall churches of the Camden di­ocese, the Archbishop said: "Forthose who have died so suddenlywe call on our people in theDiocese of Camden to offer thealms of their prayers at allMasses celebrated on Sunday,Jan. 21. For those who werespared, as well as the thousandsof others who will have to beevacuated from nearby areas, weask the mercy of material helpfor these poorest of the poor."

Pleasant Surprise

Suchy stands 6-2 and tips thescales at 185 pounds.

One of the pleasant surprisesCoach O'Brien has had this sea­son has been Bill Creedon ofCranston, a former seminarian.The 6-3, 186-pound Creedon,who previQusly attended St.

Besides their regular rivals,the Chieftains will clas~ nextyear with the likes of the Uni­versity of Massachusetts, Fair­field University, PhiladelphiaTextile, Adelphi College, SienaCollege, St. Michael's Collegeand Lemoyne University.

Stonehill will remain a mem­ber ,of the growing SouthernNew England Conference, but inaddition the team will play itsstiff independent slate of games.

Peterson Tops

Leading his sophomore team­mates in Coach O'Brien's startinglineup is George Peterson ofFlushing, N. Y., 6-foot, 3th-inchscoring ace. One of the top scor­ers in New England, Peterson isa solid 185-pounder and has beenaveraging 17 points a game thisseason.

Peterson last year was -namedto the All-New England fresh­man team; to the Catholic Col­lege All-American team-honor­able mention-and to the South­ern New England Conference'sall-star starting unit.

Runnerup in the scoring col­umn this season has been BobSuchy, a steady performer whohails from Yonkers, N. Y. Agraduate of Fordham Prep,Suchy came to th~ college inNorth Easton after being namedtQ the All-City team in NewYork and to the Iona College all­star tournament team.

By Frank Trond

Sporting a glowing 10-2record with the season at itsmidway mark, the StoriehillCollege basketball team­with a starting lineup of fivesophomores - is currently theleading college cage unit in NewEngland.

This year's edition of Chief­tains is an ll-man squad, com­prised of nine sophomores, ajunior and a senior. The team,with a sophomore coach" hasbeen impressive even in defeat.

Coach Fran O'Brien's chargeshave been upended only byQuinnipiac College of Hamden,Conn., pacesetter of the SouthernNew England Conference, by' afive-point margin, and by pow­erful St. Anselm's College ofManchester.

Collegiate Conference

Outside the collegiate ranks,the Stonehill hoopmen were de­feated by the New York AthleticClub, a squad composed of someof the country's top college starsof recent years. Gotham fanswere surprised to see the Chief­tains trailing by only five pointsat the end of three periods ofplay.

While Stonehill is but a 13­year-old institution, the collegewas admitted this season to theEastern Collegiate Athletic Con­ference, a feat worthy of note.

As a member of the ECAC, theChieftains have a bright futureahead. Rev. William F. Gartland,C.S.C., Stonehill athletic director,has reported seven impressiveopponents have already beenscheduled for the 1962-'63 sea­son.

Page 20: 01.25.62

.~

Orlando Conforti and Italo Giannotti. In.terest from the fund will be used by theBishop to award a high school scholarshipto some worthy student. Friends of FatherSullivan donated, th~ money.

"

Newm'an 'Gro.upsTo Present 'GiftTo Po~e John'

WASHINGTON (NC)The Papal Secretary of Statewill present Pope John abust of John Henry CardinalNewman on behalf of the Na­tional Newman Club Federationin a Vatican ceremony tomorrow.

The presentation by AmletoCardinal Cicognani, formerApostolic Delegate in the UnitedStates, was announced here byFather Charles W. Albright,C.S,P., executive secretary of thefederation.

The national organization pro­motes a program of religious ed­ucation and Christian social ac­tivities for Catholics who arestudents at U. S. non-Catholiccolleges and universities.

Memorial ProjectThe life-size bust of the famed

19th century English convert isintended as a gift in connectionwith the Holy Father's recent80th birthday observance, F~therAlbright, a Paulist, said.

The bust, he added, was com­missioned by the federation aspart of its Cardinal NewmanMemorial project to stimulateinterest in the cause for the Car­dinal's beatification. The bustwas sculptured by Los Angelesartist Carl Romanelli.

Cardinal Cicognani is makingthe presentation not only be­cause of his quarter century asso­ciation with the U. S. Church,but also because of his specialinterest in' the Newman mqve­ment, stemming from his owndays as a Catholic' chaplain !itan Italian state university,Father Albright said.

DIRECTORINSTITUTE OF ADULT EDUCATIONStonehili CollegeNorth Easton, Massachusetts

..........................._ __ ----

"STONEHILL COLLEGE',North Easton, Massachusetts

INSTITUTE

Please Register with:

OF ADULT EDUCATION1962 SPRING SESSION

Co.educationalMoridays'-';February 5th through April 23'

Registration by mail or February 5 and 12-7:00 P.M. to 9:30 P.M. in Holy Cross Han

'Tuesdays-Febr~ciry,6through April 24.Registration by mail or February 6 and 13-7:00 P.M. to 9:30 P.M. in Holy Cross HaD

Minimu~ registration per class is 12. ·fee $20'payable in full at registration

NAME

Red .Policyvening a'nd conducting the Cath­,olic ecumenical council."

. . TUESDAY CLASSES (start February 6), 7:30-9:30 P.M.AN INTRODUCTION· TO HOLY SCRIPTURE -. ,. "KNOW YOURSELF (PSYCHOLOGY FOR 'THE LAYMAN) (An informal study)LITERATURE OF FAITH FOR AN AGE OF CRISIS (Dante's Divine Comedy, Book

of Job, Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins, etc.)CONVERSATIONAL FRENCH " (Will, be geared to student needs)EFFEC.TlVE SPEAKING AND THE CONDUCT OF MEETINGS (Gain 0 mastery of

youreslf and control situations 'which confront you)HOW TO ENRICH YOUR ENGLISH (Continuation of English usage, oimed at

, improving writing through reading)INTRODUCTION TO THE RUSSIAN LANGUAGE " (For students who have had

beginning Russian) . 'MANAGING YOUR MIND AND EMOTIONS (Considers principles of sound mental

health, correct mental habits, emotional control)THE FINE ARTS AND MAN (Architecture, sculpture, painting, minor arts-to

Grecian period) ,

BETTER SALES MANAGEMENT ("Good sales managers can write their own ticket")CERTIFIED PROFESSIONAL SECRETARY REFRESHER COURSE (Will include Business

Administration and Accounting)INSURANCE-BROKERS' AND AGENTS' REFRESHER AND LICENSE EXAMINATION

REVIEW COURSEMASSACHUSETTS CRIMINAL LAW FOR PEACE OFFICERS (For police, conservation

officers, guards, wardens; for the general public) .MASSACHUSETTS REAL ESTATE BROKERS' LICENSE AND REFRESHER COURSE

(To prepare for license examination. Refresher course for brokers and salesmen.),TH ABC's OF INVESTMENTS (Learn of the risks and rewards of investments)

C.HARM AND POISE* (For career women, .housewives, teen-ogers. Stand out in 0

crowd. But still keep that natural look.)DRAWING AND PAINTlNG* (A well-known portrait painter will teach you to

paint the first night)SPEED READING* (Double your' reading speed, strengthen comprehension and

retention, think critically)*1 credit for each course except those asterisked

ADDRESS : _ •• ._ .

COURSE _ _ __ _ _ _ .. •••_

, MONDAy., : ·TUESDAY"" _ __.. _

(please make checlcs pay~ble to Stonehin ,Collego)

MONDAY CLASSES (start 'februarY 5), 7:30-9:30 P.M.CONVERSATIONAL FRENCH I (FOr beginners) .INTRODIICTlON TO THE RUSSIAN LANGUAGE I '(For beginner.)IRISH LITERATURE (Slides and lectures) - ,

, . LOGIC AND ME",ORY DEVELOPMENT (Practical foo' students, employees, employers).REFRESHER ARITHMETIC AND MATHEMATICS (Win be 'geared to studetlt Reeds)REPORT WRITING (For business p~ople, students and others);SOCIOLO.GY-:THE. MEANING OF ,CULTURE AND GROUP LIFE (Leom obout the. .fabric, of society) " . '. .' .' . ,ELEMENTARY STATISTICS FOR EVERYDAY BUSINESS USE (largely non-mothematicol .

techniques applied to business sit,!ationsl

Promoteof'a centralized union as pro·posed by the Roman CatholicChurch. .

"Anti-Catholic activities in theUSSR have been stepped up withthe approach of the CatholicChurch's 21st ecumenical coun­cil, which the Soviets fear mayprovide a platform for officialecclesiastical condemnation ofcommunist theory' and practice,a fear well justified by proposalsaddrE!ssed to the. Central (Pre­paratory) Commission for con--

fo~m A"<aIo~aJlh!eWASHINGTON (NC)-"Prej­

udice U.S.A.," 16 mm. soundfilms of a series of four televi­sion programs produced by theNational Council of CatholicMen, is available at $10 perprDgram from the NCCM FilmCenter, 1312 Massachusetts Ave­

nue, N.W., Washington 5, D. C.

Rosary CrusadeIn Philippines

MANILA (NC)-Father Pat­rick Peytc;m, C.S.C., has broughthis Family Rosary Crusade backto the Philippines with a sched­ule so tight that tWo privateplanes are in use .to .carry himthrough it.

The planes were provided bytwo citizens of Manila.

Father Peyton expects to reach10 million people iri his flyingcrusade through 14 of the Re­public's 51 provinces.

.The. Irish-born Holy Cross'priest recalled that his last Ros­ary Crusade· in the Philippineswas climaxed with a rally of1,500,000 people.

'Record Unsurpassed'.It was the biggest number of

people I have ever seen," saidFather Peyton of the rally that

. took place in Manila on Dec.' 6,-1959.

"The record is still unsur-passed" ,

. The crusade will end March17; "before the impossible hotweather begins," Father Peytonsaid.

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lO~~BiE~S

4ge -lb.

Orthodox

. U"'.!!ON· WHARF, FAIRHAVEN,

·.Mac~ean/s Sea

Claim'

SCHOLARSHIP FUND : A $5,000 schol­arship honoring the late Rev. John J.S~l!livan, former pastor .of Holy RosaryChlirch, . Fall River, is presented to theBishop by, left to right, Edward R. Casper,

,Labo&" C@(§~, BoostCUlft@i~$" ~M(fu«:ills

On W ®@~®!ro<dlsNEW YORK (NC)-Cath­

olic cemeteries in the Arch­diocese of New York and theDio'cese of Brooklyn havejoined with a number of non­sectarian cemeteries to curtailweekend burials.

The move stems from a laborcontract provision that went intoeffect Jan. 1. It calls for over­time pay for Saturday and Sun­day work by members of theCemetery and Greens AttendantsUnion, Local 365.

The ban by nOl)sectariancemeteries falls with particularharshness on Orthodox and Con­servative Jews, who are obligedto bury their dead as quickly aspossible. Protests have beenlodged with the State CemeteryBoard by Orthodox Jewish or­ganizations and mortuary trad'eassociations. '

Affects Catholic CemeteriesThe Archdiocese of New York

:notified undertakers that the\new five-day schedule wouldapply to Calvary Cemetery inQueens and Gate· of HeavenCemetery in Hawthorne, N. Y. ,

The Brooklyn diocese tooksimilar steps for Holy CrossCemetery in Brooklyn; St. John'sCemetery in. Middle Village;',Mount St. Mary's Cemetery inF1ushing, and St. Clair's andResurrection cemeteries in Pine­biwn.

Many of the cemeteries in­volved in the change said they NEW YORK (NC)-The Rus­would permit burials on one of siim Orthodox Church joined thethe weekend days if there was World Council of Churches toillness in the family' or a holiday promote tenets of Soviet foreignfell on a Monday. policy.. and to form a' common

, "Serious Crisis' . front against Russian Catholi-cism, according to a reference

A spokesman for the Orthodox paper distributed in' the U. S.'Jewish community here termed and Canada... .

. the new cemetery policy "one of - The paper, distributed by the·the most serious religious crises America'n Committee for Liber­that could affect the New York ation, also states thafthe Soviets'religious 'community." anti-Catholic' activities' have- He said that his group, and been stepped' 'up' because of aother Orthodox groups had al- fear that the forthcoming Secondready considered organizing Vatican Council will issue antheir own .cemeteries in the event official 'condemnation of com-the problem is not resolved sat- . munism. .'isfactorily. . The' paper' was ,compiled by

According to Orthodox Ju- the Institute for the Study of thedaism, he explained, it is a dese- USSR'in Munich, Germlmy, de~cration of the dead to permit a '. scribed as "a free corporationbody to rer:nain unburied longer of scholars ", who have left thethan is necessary. Even a com-·. Soviet. ,Union." The .institutepromise limiting' burials to the issues a, journal edited by a pro­early Sunday hours, he .added,' fessor B.' Ivanov:would.. be una~ceptable.,. '..' ;President. Of the American

JeWIsh bUrIals do not, take,:, Committee for Lib'eration' isplace on Saturday, the. Sabbat~." Howland Sargent, a former StateTh~ Orthodox. sp,okesman saId. Department "officilll, concerned'.that ConservatI~e .Jews face ..8 with U. S. information programs.lesser, though SImIlar problem. abroad: . '

~ront Against cathoiicism ,'. The Russi~n Orthod~x Churchwas admitted to membership inthe World Council. 'of Churcheson November 20, 1961. '

"Attacks on the Vatican whichhave recentl~· 'been appearing in

.the Soviet ecclesiastical andsecular press indicate that', t~e~oscow Patriarchate has joinedthe World Council of ·Churches

.. not only to promote the, basictheses of Soviet foreign policybut' to promote the formation ofa common front against. RussianOatholicism as an irreconcilableopponent of the materialist worldoutlook and communist doc­trine," the reference .paperstates.

Step Up Activities"This is apparently one rea­

son," the paper continues, "whythe Moscow Patriarchate is soactive in defending the conceptof a federative ecclesiasticalunion in the ecumenical move­nient as a counter to the concept

,Foundation Gets:CO'DV of Treaty

WASHINGTON (NC) - Acopy of a papal treaty drawn upin the 15th century was pre­sented here by Spanish Ambas­sador Mariano de Ytul'Talde toan official of the Jamestown(Va.) Foundation.

The treaty, drawn up by PopeAlexander VI (1492-1503), in1494 divided the Western Hemi­sphere between Spain and Por­tugal. This division was not ac­ceptable to the two nations,however, and the treaty was notfinally signed until 1506.

In the final division, Spainwas given additional rights toterritory that later developed asthe Philippine Islands, and Por­tugal received the territory thatis now Brazil.

The document was copied inthe Spanish Archives of theIndies in Seville, Spain, and wasbrought to the U. S, by Jose de1& Pena, director of the archives.

SmlWt ~D~~WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep.

Carroll D. Kearns of Pennsylva­nia has introduced a bill (H.R.9648) in the House of Represent­atives to ban young people frommovies,' stage plays and exhibi­·tions in the District of Columbiafeaturing "tl'1due exploitation",of sex, crime and violence and'barring the broadcast here ofradio and' tc'~vision programs

.featuring .. "~";lIe exploitation". of. these,:~hl>u~t:S. .,

~' .2'0 .. ' TH,E ANCH,OR:::::··':'-; ,_.Thurs., Jan.', '25, , 1962

-