08.29.63

20
. .. 1lI Nation Demands Racial Equality . Tens of Thousands Join in Civil Rights March on Washington -WASHINGTON (NC) :- A: r c h b ish 0 p Patrick A. O;Boyle of Was h i n g ton, giving the invocation before . vast throng at the civil rights march here, prayed God to send the Holy Spirit "to open the eyes of all to the great truth that all men are equal in Your sight. Let us understand that simple justice demands that the rights of all be honored by every man," Archbishop O'Boyle prayed in ceremonies at the Lincoln Memorial climaxing the huge March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. Archbishop O'Boyle asked Goo's blessing on the marchers and all people "to whom the cause of justice and equality is saered"; on the President and Vice President, Congress alid t_ courts; 011 c" .. . and on the nation at large. Referring to those who have taken a leading role in "the struggle for justice and harmony among races," he said that "as Moses of 'old they have gone before their people to a land of promise." "Let that promise quickly be. come a reality," he prayed. "May we move forward with- out bitterness, even when con- fronted with prejudices and dis- crimination," the Archbishop said. "May we shun violence, knowing that the meek shall in- herit the earth. But may this meekness of manner be joined with courage and strength * * *" When representatives of the Fall River Diocese joined yes- terday's civil rights march on Washington, they were among thousands of Ca,tholic partici- pants. Involvement of members Diocesan Group Diocesan Catholics parti- cipated in yesterday's mas- sive civil rights march on Washington. Included among marchers from Fall River were Miss Michaeleen Ruttle, Sacred Heart parish; Mrs. Walter Con- rad, HoI y N am e; Clement Dowling and Mrs. Owen Mc- Gowan, St. Joseph's. Miss Judy C 0 u sin e a u, St. Dominic's, S wan sea, also marched. of the Church was e:x:tensive and varied. Catholic groups, local and na- tional, marched under. identify. ing banners, a Catholic arch- bishop offered the invocation at the Lincoln Memorial, a Catholic layman who was one of 10 co- sponsors addressed the outpour- ing, extra Masses were sched- uled in downtown churches and Catholic institutions' offered overnight accommodations. Archbishop Patriek A. O'Boyle of Washington accepted an invi- tation to deliver the invocation at ceremonies held at the Lin- coln Memorial. The archbishop is chairman of the local Inter- religious Committee on / Race Relations. Other members of the Catholic __ hierarchy were present. They in. eluded Archbishop Lawrence J. Shehan and Auxiliary Bishop Thomas A. Murphy of Baltimore; Co- Bishop John J. Russell and Aux- iliary Bishop Ernest J. Unter. koefler of Richmond; Bishop Michael W. Hyle of Wilmington and Auxiliary Bishop Philip M. Hannan of Washington. In addition, Protestant and Jewish groups were representeli. Rabbi Yuri Miller of the Syna- . gogue . Council of America de- livered il brief prayer midway through the Lincoln Memorial ceremony and Rev. Dr. Benja. min Mays, president of More- house College and a Baptist lead. er, gave the benediction. The 10 leaders of the march also spoke. Representing Negro ,Civil liberties groups, Protestant Turn to Page Twenty Diocesan Schools Expect Record 25,000 Pupils The Rev. Patrick J. o'Nein, _ Next Wednesday, the first number and have an of junior class at Bishop Feehan 76 students. Diocesan Superintendent of High School, Attleboro, will start Espirito Santo School, Fall Schools, announced today a studies, whilE! the new River, will have a new building, new high in enrollment in Cassidy High School, Taunton, but the enrollment will stay the the schools of the Diocese. There with four classes will have a same. St. Patrick's School will will be approximately 19,700 30% increase enrollment over have two first grades starting ANCHOR en roll e d in the elementary last year for a total of 380 girls. nex't Wednesday. schools in the Diocese when In the past decade, the ele- Our Llldy of Lourdes Paro- classes. begin for the new year mentary school enrollment has chial School, Taunton, will open next Wednesday, Father O'Neill increased from 15,938 to 19,700. a parish school with four grades reported. - The' increase in the During the same period, the high and a pre-primary :fEll' a total of various high schools in the Dio- school enrollment has more than 180 students. - cese will bring the secondary doubled-from 2,325 to 4,800. enrollment up to 4800 for a Immaculate Conception School; '.l'he growth represents a 19% grand total of 24,500 pupils New Bedford, and Holy Name gain in the elementary grades $4.00 per Y •• yol. 7, No. 36 © 1963 The Anchor in the schools School, Fall River, will add an- and 106% in<:rease in high '1tICE 10e of the Diocese. other grade to their preSent schools. Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Aug. 29, 1963 Equal Employment Opportunity Key to Race Problems WASHINGTON (NC) - many of the Negro's other basic "limited steps" in' this area, it making it "extremelY difficult, workers that they can help rem- Equal employment opportu- human rights will depend * * * says, labor, management and if not impossible, for them to edy abuses "by playing an in- on whether or not he is given an - government have so far "hardly qualify for membership." - creasingly aetive role in the nity is the "master key" to equal opportunity to develop hjs scratched the surface of the total trade union movement." This is done by refusing to the nation's race problem, native skills and talents and to problem." - tile Social Action Department of secure gainful and suitable em- enroll Negroes in apprenticeship Employers. The statement de- "Much more can and should programs or by arbitrarily lim- clares that "Christian moral the National Catholic Welfare ployment on his own merits and be done *• * to protect the basic iting the number of Negro ap- teaching requires em- Conference says. without regard to the color 01 rights not only of Negroes, but ployer to maintain and enforce The Social Action Depart- prentices. And other unions dis- his skin," the statement says; of Mexican Americans, Puerto non-d,iscriminatory policies ill ment's 1963 La-hoI' Day statement crhriinate by confining Negroes The Social Action Department, Ricans, American Indians, peo- to so-called "auxiliary" locals. mring, upgrading and discharge." MYs the "ultimate success" of whose director is Msgr. George ple of Asian background, and racial justice efforts largely de- . While calling on union leaders Acknowledging the difficulty G. Higgins, calls on trade unions, the members _ of other minority pends on implementing "a uni. to take steps to remedy these faced by individual employers employers and government to groups who, in varying degrees, versal policy of equal employ- conditions, the Social Action De- in this matter, it recommends- take immediate action to guar- are the victims of prejudice and ment opporunity for Negro partment at the same time that local and national employ- antee equal job opportunities discrim·ination," the statement _ workers in every industry and stresses the need for rank-and. ers' associations and trade asso- for Negroes and other minorities. declares. kade." file efforts on behalf of racial ciations "come to the assistance . The NCWC· department makes ·'The effective exerc.iae 01 While recent months have seen justice. It a1so reminds Negro Turn to Page Twenty these recommendations on equal employment opportunity: Trade Unions. While there are no longer any unions which are "lily white" under the terms of their constitutions, nevertheless "a number of key unions" in practice exclude Negroes by Father Steakem Is First Chaplain At Feehan High The Most Reverend James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of the Diocese of Fall River, announced today the ap- pointment of Rev. John J. Steakem, assistant at Immacu- late Conception Parish, North Easton, as chaplain at Bishop Feehan High School, Attleboro. Father Steakem will remain in residence at the Immaculate Conception Parish while serving as chaplain to the students at the Attleboro Diocesan High School. Feehan High's first chaplain was born March 13, 1933, in New York City but moved to Paw- tucket in his early youth. The son of Mrs. Mar gar e t M. O'Rourke Steakem and the late Turn to· Page Eighteen MARCHERS TO WASHINGTON: Participants in yes- terday's civil rights march prepare to leave Fall River. From left, Clement Dowling, St. Joseph's parish, Fall River; Miss Judy Cousineau, St. Dominic's, Swansea; Mrs. Walter Con- Holy Name, Fall River. NEW SCHOOL REGISTRATION: Sister Marie La-. boure, R.S.M. registers Francis yaz for the first grade and his sister, Joanne, for the foilrth grade in the new Our Lady of Lourdes School, Taunton. Rt. Rev. E.S. de Mello is pastor of the Taunton parish.

description

of the Diocese. other grade to their preSent schools. boure, R.S.M. registers Francis yaz for the first grade and his sister, Joanne, for the foilrth grade in the new Our Lady of Lourdes School, Taunton. Rt. Rev. E.S. de Mello is pastor of the Taunton parish. -WASHINGTON (NC) :­ enrollment up to 4800 for a Immaculate Conception School; &#39;.l&#39;he growth represents a 19% grand total of 24,500 pupils New Bedford, and Holy Name gain in the elementary grades $4.00 per Y•• • Turn to Page Twenty

Transcript of 08.29.63

Page 1: 08.29.63

. .. •~

1lI

Nation Demands Racial Equality .

Tens of Thousands Join in Civil Rights March on Washington -WASHINGTON (NC) : ­

A: r c h b ish 0 p Patrick A. O;Boyle of Was h i n g ton, giving the invocation before . • vast throng at the civil rights march here, prayed God to send the Holy Spirit "to open the eyes of all to the great truth that all men are equal in Your sight. Let us understand that simple justice demands that the rights of all be honored by every man," Archbishop O'Boyle prayed in ceremonies at the Lincoln Memorial climaxing the huge March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.

Archbishop O'Boyle asked Goo's blessing on the marchers and all people "to whom the cause of justice and equality is saered"; on the President and

Vice President, Congress alid t_ courts; 011 c" .. . and on the nation at large.

Referring to those who have taken a leading role in "the struggle for justice and harmony among races," he said that "as Moses of 'old they have gone before their people to a land of promise."

"Let that promise quickly be. come a reality," he prayed.

"May we move forward with­out bitterness, even when con­fronted with prejudices and dis­crimination," the Archbishop said. "May we shun violence, knowing that the meek shall in­herit the earth. But may this meekness of manner be joined with courage and strength * * *"

When representatives of the

Fall River Diocese joined yes­terday's civil rights march on Washington, they were among thousands of Ca,tholic partici ­pants. Involvement of members

Diocesan Group Diocesan Catholics parti ­

cipated in yesterday's mas­sive civil rights march on Washington. Included among marchers from Fall River were Miss Michaeleen Ruttle, Sacred Heart parish; Mrs. Walter Con­rad, HoI y N am e; Clement Dowling and Mrs. Owen Mc­Gowan, St. Joseph's.

Miss Judy C 0 u sin e a u, St. Dominic's, S wan sea, also marched.

of the Church was e:x:tensive and varied.

Catholic groups, local and na­tional, marched under. identify. ing banners, a Catholic arch­bishop offered the invocation at the Lincoln Memorial, a Catholic layman who was one of 10 co­sponsors addressed the outpour­ing, extra Masses were sched­uled in downtown churches and Catholic institutions' offered overnight accommodations.

Archbishop Patriek A. O'Boyle of Washington accepted an invi­tation to deliver the invocation at ceremonies held at the Lin­coln Memorial. The archbishop is chairman of the local Inter­religious Committee on / Race Relations.

Other members of the Catholic __ hierarchy were present. They in.

eluded Archbishop Lawrence J. Shehan and Auxiliary Bishop Thomas A. Murphy of Baltimore; Co-

Bishop John J. Russell and Aux­iliary Bishop Ernest J. Unter. koefler of Richmond; Bishop Michael W. Hyle of Wilmington and Auxiliary Bishop Philip M. Hannan of Washington.

In addition, Protestant and Jewish groups were representeli. Rabbi Yuri Miller of the Syna­

. gogue . Council of America de­livered il brief prayer midway through the Lincoln Memorial ceremony and Rev. Dr. Benja. min Mays, president of More­house College and a Baptist lead. er, gave the benediction.

The 10 leaders of the march also spoke. Representing Negro

,Civil liberties groups, Protestant Turn to Page Twenty

.~Diocesan Schools Expect Record 25,000 PupilsThe

Rev. Patrick J. o'Nein, _ Next Wednesday, the first number and have an Incr~se of junior class at Bishop Feehan 76 students.Diocesan Superintendent of High School, Attleboro, will start Espirito Santo School, FallSchools, announced today a t~ir studies, whilE! the new River, will have a new building,

new high in enrollment in Cassidy High School, Taunton, but the enrollment will stay the the schools of the Diocese. There with four classes will have a same. St. Patrick's School will will be approximately 19,700 30% increase enrollment over have two first grades startingANCHOR en roll e d in the elementary last year for a total of 380 girls. nex't Wednesday.schools in the Diocese when In the past decade, the ele­Our Llldy of Lourdes Paro­classes. begin for the new year mentary school enrollment haschial School, Taunton, will opennext Wednesday, Father O'Neill increased from 15,938 to 19,700.a parish school with four gradesreported. - The' increase in the During the same period, the highand a pre-primary :fEll' a total ofvarious high schools in the Dio­ school enrollment has more than180 students. ­cese will bring the secondary doubled-from 2,325 to 4,800.enrollment up to 4800 for a Immaculate Conception School; '.l'he growth represents a 19% grand total of 24,500 pupils New Bedford, and Holy Name gain in the elementary grades$4.00 per Y••yol. 7, No. 36 © 1963 The Anchor ~eivi.ngtrainingin the schools School, Fall River, will add an­ and 106% in<:rease in high

'1tICE 10e of the Diocese. other grade to their preSent schools.

Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Aug. 29, 1963

Equal Employment Opportunity Key to Race Problems WASHINGTON (NC) ­ many of the Negro's other basic "limited steps" in' this area, it making it "extremelY difficult, workers that they can help rem­

Equal employment opportu­ human rights will depend * * * says, labor, management and if not impossible, for them to edy abuses "by playing an in­on whether or not he is given an ­ government have so far "hardly qualify for membership." - creasingly aetive role in thenity is the "master key" to equal opportunity to develop hjs scratched the surface of the total trade union movement."This is done by refusing tothe nation's race problem, native skills and talents and to problem." ­

tile Social Action Department of secure gainful and suitable em­ enroll Negroes in apprenticeship Employers. The statement de­"Much more can and should programs or by arbitrarily lim­ clares that "Christian moralthe National Catholic Welfare ployment on his own merits and be done * • * to protect the basic iting the number of Negro ap­ teaching requires ~very em­Conference says. without regard to the color 01 rights not only of Negroes, but ployer to maintain and enforceThe Social Action Depart­ prentices. And other unions dis­his skin," the statement says; of Mexican Americans, Puerto non-d,iscriminatory policies illment's 1963 La-hoI' Day statement crhriinate by confining Negroes

The Social Action Department, Ricans, American Indians, peo­ to so-called "auxiliary" locals. mring, upgrading and discharge."MYs the "ultimate success" of whose director is Msgr. George ple of Asian background, andracial justice efforts largely de­ .While calling on union leaders Acknowledging the difficultyG. Higgins, calls on trade unions, the members _of other minoritypends on implementing "a uni. to take steps to remedy these faced by individual employersemployers and government to groups who, in varying degrees,versal policy of equal employ­ conditions, the Social Action De­ in this matter, it recommends­take immediate action to guar­ are the victims of prejudice andment opporunity for Negro partment at the same time that local and national employ­antee equal job opportunities discrim·ination," the statement _workers in every industry and stresses the need for rank-and. ers' associations and trade asso­for Negroes and other minorities. declares.kade." file efforts on behalf of racial ciations "come to the assistance

.The NCWC·department makes·'The effective exerc.iae 01 While recent months have seen justice. It a1so reminds Negro Turn to Page Twentythese recommendations on equal employment opportunity:

Trade Unions. While there are no longer any unions which are "lily white" under the terms of their constitutions, nevertheless "a number of key unions" in practice exclude Negroes by

Father Steakem Is First Chaplain At Feehan High

The Most Reverend James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of the Diocese of Fall River, announced today the ap­pointment of Rev. John J. Steakem, assistant at Immacu­late Conception Parish, North Easton, as chaplain at Bishop Feehan High School, Attleboro.

Father Steakem will remain in residence at the Immaculate Conception Parish while serving as chaplain to the students at the Attleboro Diocesan High School.

Feehan High's first chaplain was born March 13, 1933, in New York City but moved to Paw­tucket in his early youth. The son of Mrs. Mar gar e t M. O'Rourke Steakem and the late

Turn to· Page Eighteen

MARCHERS TO WASHINGTON: Participants in yes­terday's civil rights march prepare to leave Fall River. From left, Clement Dowling, St. Joseph's parish, Fall River; Miss Judy Cousineau, St. Dominic's, Swansea; Mrs. Walter Con­~ad, Holy Name, Fall River.

NEW SCHOOL REGISTRATION: Sister Marie La-. boure, R.S.M. registers Francis yaz for the first grade and his sister, Joanne, for the foilrth grade in the new Our Lady of Lourdes School, Taunton. Rt. Rev. E.S. de Mello is pastor of the Taunton parish.

Page 2: 08.29.63

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fart River-,Thurs. Aug. 29, 1963

Diocese of Fall River

OFFICIAL

APPOINTMENT

:Rev. John J. Steakein, assistant at the Immaculate Con­ception Church, North Easton, as chaplain at Bishop Feehan High School, Attleboro. He will remain in residence at the lminaculate Conception, Parish, North Easton.

Appointment effective Thursday, Aug. 29, 1963.

~~/e;;4-Bishop of Fall River .

ILet the Barriers Fall!1 Pope Says in Unity

GRATTAFERRATA (NC) - "Let fall the barriers that separate us!" Pope Paul VI pleaded in a call to the ancient Eastern Churches at the Oriental Rite monastery of St. Nilus here where he came to celebrate Mass. He motored here from his Sum­mer villa at Castelgandolfo, about five miles away. The survival of the 960-year-old Oriental monastery, nursed and encouraged for centuries "at the very gates of Rome," said the p()pe, is symbol, a presage and an augury'."

Speaking without a text, Pope Paul addressed "a salutation of honor to the ·old and great East­ern Churches" and said: "If I were to state my feeling of ven­eration it would be truly ex­pressed with the greatest sin­cerity and with the same· frater­nal expansion of spirit with which a bishop of the Catholic Church, Bishop (Francois) Char­riere of Fribourg and Geneva, was authorized recently to go and honor Patriarch Alexei at Moscow on his 80th birthday."

Pope Paul took fully upon himself tbe task which he re­called Pope John had under­taken but was unable to see ful­filled in his lifetime.

Single Tree OIl Unib "I desire to make mine," he

said, "the wish which, with INdden ·and spontaneous genero­sity, welled up in the heart of my predecessors, especially John XXIII. I wish to issue the in­vitation, and would tbat we could truly make our voice like the trumpet of lUl angel wbich says: Come!

"Let fall the barriers that

Legion of Decency The following films are to be

added to the lists in their re­spective classifications:

Unobjectionable for Adults­Condemned of Altona; .Two Are Guilty.

Objectionable in Part for All -Cry of Battle (Objeetion: The confused moral values of this film tend to justify wrongdoing).

FORTY HOURS

DEVOTION

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

Our Lady of Mount Car­mel, Seekonk.

Sept. 8-St. Anne, Fall River. .:)t. Dominic, Swansea.

Sept. 15--H 0 I y Cross, Fall River.

St. Joseph, Attleboro.

Sept.22-St. Roch, Fall River.. Sacred Heart, Taunton.

separate us! Let us explain the points of doctrine which we do not hold in common and which are still objects of controversy. Let us seek to make our creed common and firm. Let us seek to articulate and compose our hierarchial union. .

"We want neither to absorb

~~rtit~ ~lst~i~ ~:~:c~~U:~~h~: wish to regraft it to the single tree of the unity of Christ. May the cry become a prayer. Let us pray that, if not in our age at least in succeeding ages, the unity may be recomposed of all who are still authentically Christian, and let us pray espe­ciallyfor unity with the most

POPE GREETS SOVEREIGN: Pope Paul VI receives in private audience Sir Wilberforce Nadiope and his consort. He is hereditary sovereign of Bu.soga, a small kingdom in

.Uganda, Africa. NC Photo.

I Africanized Christianityl Monastery in Congo to Serve as Tes't ,.

. Center for Beginning New Era NEW ORLEANS (NC) _ A

villiting missionary said a mon­astery to be built on a moun­tai.n overlooking Leopoldville in th<e Congo will serve as a test

venerable and holy Oriental·. center for the beginning of a Churches."

Family Is Basic In Education

.UNITED NATIONS (NC) - A United Nations-sponsored semi­nar on child rights which brought together experts from 24 European countries reached agreement that the family is a fundamental factor in the edu­cation of the cbild.

The U.N. Office of Public In­formation said that the meeting, held in Warsaw, showed a con­sensus upholding that while State and private socia.l organi­zations must cooperate with the family, interference by the State is justified only if parents neg­lect their duties.

The experts agreed that chil ­dren should not be separated from the family unless the in­dividual family's influence is recognized as harmful. Partici ­pants also held corporal punisb­ment of children inadvisable.

Among the participants in the seminar were experts from eight countries under communist rule. Tbe Holy See was represented by Fatber Henri Bissonier.

Holy Ghost Fathers Released in Haiti

SANTO DOMINGO (NC) ­Two Haitian priests who were arrested and imprisoned in the Haitian capital at Port-au-Prince have now been released, it was learned here.

The priests, both Holy Ghost Fathers and professors at the Port-au-Prince minor seminary, are Father Jean-Claude Bajeux, 32, and Father PaUl Claude, 31. They are editors of a review called Rond Point. They were originally imprisoned at Fort Di­manche, but n~ow are only under police surveillance.

THE ARCHOI second Class ~tage Paid at Fall· River,

Mass.' Published' every Thursday at 410 HiehlanG Avenue Fall River Mass. by the Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River. Subscription price IIJ 1lIIi1, postpaid $4.00", JU'. '

new era of Christianity m Ai·rica.

An "Africanized" Christianity _ complete with native music and culture _ is the only way to counteract the strong reversion to paganism in Africa. Father Boniface Luykx, O. Praem, said Oil a visit here. He called for aid in the project from U.S. Negroes.

The missionary working in AJ7ica in past years had to put

Mal.Ordo FHIDAY-St. Rose of Lima Vir­

gin. III Class. White. 'MaSll Proper; Gloria; Second Col­lect SS. Felix and Adauctus, Martyrs; no Creed; Common Preface.

SATURDAY-St. Raymond Non. natus, Confessor~ III Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface.

SUNDAY-XIII Sunday After Pentecost. II Class. Green. Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface of Trinity.

MONDAY-St. Stephen, King and Confessor. III Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface.

TUESDAY-St. Pius X, Pope ,and Confessor. III Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface.

WEDNESDAY-Mass of previ­ous Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; Common 'Preface.

THURSDAY-St. Lawrence Jus_ tinian, Bishop and Confessor. III Class. White. Mass Proper;

.Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface. One Votive Mass in honor of Jesus Christ, the Eternal High Priest, permitted.

Honor Clergy SEOUL (NC)-Among the 250

persons honored by the Korean government d uri n g Indepen­dlmc~ Day ceremoilies at Seoul Stadium were Archbishop Paul K. Ro of Seoul and Father Law. rE,nce Yun of the Seoul Archdio­CE,se, who received the Presiden­ti:al Award. Fatber Joseph Oh of the Diocese of Tae Jeon waa given the National FoundatioD :Medal

h~s energies into building hos­pltals, schools and churches, Father Luykx said. Unfortu­nately, he added, there was no time for him to give much thought to developing an "Afri ­canized" Christianity.

"The skin was baptized and there ~a~, a general Christian ~ood WIll, ~ather LU~k~ added. But there 15 no ChrIstIan cul­

ture" . 'God Is Forei«n'

Christianity, he said, was in­troduced from the standpoint of western culture. With the tur­moil, revolutions and resulting materialism, this Christianity has been shed, looked upon as a foreign religion, Father Luykx said.

"Even God is con sid ere d something foreign to Africa," he added.

The "new era" must accom­plish the building up of an African Christianity based on the primitive message of the Gospel, the missioner asserted.

This can be accomplished through the monastic life, he said. Througb the monastery, be added, "Christianity can ,be shown as an example of the living Gospel • • • a place where we try to make God present by worship, by manual and intel­lectual work, by art."

Necrology SEn. 3

Rev. Thomas J. McGee, D.D., 1912, Pastor, Sacred Heart, Taun­ton.

SEPT. 5 Rev. Napoleon A. Messier,

1~48, Pastor, St. Mathieu, Fall Rlver.

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Church & Mass Information

Diocesan ·Brother Receives Habit In Providence

David J. McCarthy, for­merly of 252 B I a c k s ton e Street, Fall River, and of SS. Peter and Paul Parish, will receive the habit of the Soci~t1

of the Brothers of Our Lady of Providence on Saturday morn­ing at 10 in the Novitiate Chapel in Warwick.

Ht. Rev. James V. Greene, Pas­tor of St. Mary's Church, New­port, will invest the postulant wbo will also receive his new name in religion and will begin his one-year period of novitiate.

Msgr. Greene will also receive the profession of two novices.

The speaker for the occasioa will be Rev. Edward J. McGov­ern, Director of the Diocesall Bureau of Social Service ill Providence.

Anniversary On Tuesday, Sept. 3, the

Brothers will observe the 4th anniversary of the founding of the Society by Bishop McVinney. At th~ present time, Brothers are serving on the staff of the Re­treat House for Boys in Peace Dale. Others have been giving Catechetical instrucnons. One Brother will soon complete a business course at Johnson and Wales School and another will begin his studies for Registered Nursing at St. Joseph's HospitaL ~n addition to staffing C.Y.O. Centers and serving as Social Workers, the Brothers are also offered the opportunity of serv­ing in the missionary Diocese of Santarem in the Amazon River

. region of Northern Brazil. Any young man between the

ages of 17 and 25 who is inter­ested may write to Director of "Yocations, Brothers of Our Lady of Providence, Warwick Neck Avenue, Warwick, R. I.

Lutheran T-heologian Says Liturgy Bond

WEBSTER GROVES (NC)­The liturgy can serve as a stron. DoDd of unity among Christians, a Lutheran theologian said at Webster College here in Mis­souri.

The :Rev. Arthur C. Piepkorn, professor of theology at Concor_ dia Seminary in Clayton, Mo.. told an audience of teacbers wbe are attending a SWnmer course on liturgy and music that the "liturgy, especially in the Sacra­ment of Holy Communion . em.. pbasizes our unity in Christ."

.The more the liturgy can show people their unity in Christ, greater is the hope for the unity of all Christian Churches, He.. Mr. Piepkorn said.

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Page 3: 08.29.63

Confusion in Ohio Over Bus Rides

MEDINA (NC) - Confusion over constitutionality of bus rides for parochial school chil ­dren was highlighted as school boards in two neighboring Ohio ~unties arrived at contradic­tory conclusions on the issue.

The Medina School Board voted 2-1, with one member absent and one abstaining, to provide bus transportation for 114 puils attending St. Francis Xavier School and living within the public school district.

But one county away, in Geauga, the West County School Board rejected 5-0 a request for transportation for some 240 pupils who wUl attend the new 51. Anselm School when it opens lin September.

Request Opinion While the Medina board ap-.

proved the transportation, As­sistant County Prosecutor Jack Kinney formally requested a legal opinion from Ohio Atty. Gen. William Saxbe. Kinney said lie does not expect an answer irom Saxbe for several weeks.

The only previous ruling on ftte issue by an Ohio attorney general came in 1927. That opinion held that providing tax­paid bus rides for parochial school students is illegal in Ohio.

La 5alette Priest To' Mark Jubilee

Re",. Lionel Aubin M.S. will lMark the silver jubilee of his Ordination at 11 Sunday morn­fog, Sept. 8 with a Mass 01. '!'hanksgiving at St. Michael's Church, Ocean Grove, followed by a banquet at White's restau­rant. A reception will be held at the restaurant from 2:30 to 4:30.

A native of Fall River, son of 4he late Alexander and late Alida Aubin, Father Aubin en­~red the La Salette community in 1927 and was ordained at the Basilica of St. John Lateran in Rome in 1938. He completed 6ltudies for a Licentiate in Sa­tll'ed Theology at the Gregorian University in Rome and at Cath­elie University, Washington, D.C.

Brother In Community Father Aubin has spent his

entire priesthood as professor of dogmatic theology and spir­itual director, first at Altamont, N. Y. and since 1945 at Ipswich, Mass.

The jubilarian's b rot her, Brother Raymond, M.S., is also a member of the La Salette coIri­Illunity, also stationed at Ipswich. Other relatives include Joseph A. Aubin and Mrs. Leo Pineault, Swansea; Mrs. Ernest Morris­sette, Fall· River; and Mrs. Lucien Emond, Westport.

Msgr. Henri Hamel, pastor of St. Jean Baptiste Church, Fall River, will be among clergy at­tending the Sept. 8 celebration· honoring Father Aubin. Also present will be Very Rev. Wil­liam Crane, M.S., La Salette pro­vincial; and Rev. Philibert O'Hara, M.S., superior at the Ipswich seminary of the com­munity.

A celebration at Ipswich will follow the Fall Rilver observ­IlIlce at a later date.

THE ANCHOR­ 3 Thurs., Aug. 29, 1963

CatholicAgency's Overs'eas Relief Million Tons

NEW YORK (NC) - The agency of American Catho­lics for overseas aid an­nounces that for the first time in its 21-year-history its shipments of relief supplies abroad will reach the million ton mark.

In the first 10 months of the 1963 program year ending Sept. 30, Catholic Relief Services­National Catholic Welfare Con­ference will have made 1,792

. shipments of relief goods having a total weight of 804,000 tons.

Edward M. Kinney, director of the CRS-NCWC purchasing and shipping department, said that shipments of goods abroad during the next few weeks will bring this' year's total past two billion pounds.

CRS-NCWC, the world's larg­est private voluntary relief agency, con t rib ute s food, clothing, medicine and other re­lief supplies in the name of the American people to the hungry, homeless and destitute in areas of need in 67 countries through­RECEPTION, PROFESSION: Reception and profession ceremonies were held by I~- . out the world. The agency also

maculate Heart Province of the Religious of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts at conducts socio - economic and Sacred Heart Church, Fall River. Front, from left, Sister William Maria, Holy Name self-help programs in a number parish, Fall 'River; Sister Francis Margaret, Holy Ghost parish, North Tiverton, who of underdeveloped countries of took perpetual vows; Sister Virginia Emmanuel, Holy Ghost, North Tiverton, first vows. Africa and Latin America.

The previous high annual totalRear, Sister John Eleanor, St. Patrick, Fall RiTer; Sister Edward Christine, Immaculate of shipments abroad by ORS­Conception, Fall River. Both received habit and religious names. NCWC amounted to 840,561 tons of relief supplies..

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They're on the way! Carload shipments of new Fall styles from America's leading furniture fac­tories! We must make room immediately to properly display these tremendous shipments and are clearing out all floor samples, odds and ends, discontinued styles and hundreds of one and few­of-a-kind items regardless of cost, loss or sacri­fice. Every department is represented with price­

slashing reductions-bedroom, living room, din­ing room, rugs, carpeting, T-V and appliances are being disposed of at a fraction of their worth. If you love a bargain-get over to Mason's quick. See the items listed and hundreds more in this dramatic clearance of nationally branded mel!­chandise. -

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Page 4: 08.29.63

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Aug. 29, 196;

Fr. Laubacher, S.S. to Conduct Dioce~a" Pri~~ts An~~al R~t"eat

Rec. James A. Laubacher, S.S., S.T.D., professor of dogmatic theology at St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore, will be retreat master at the annual retreat for dioc­esan priests to be held at Dioc­esan Retreat House, Cathedral Camp, beginning next Monday night.

Priests will attend in two groups, with Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of the Diocese, presiding the first week and Mcst Rev. James J. Gerrard, D.D., Auxiliary Bishop, presid' ­ing the second week.

A native of Malvern, Ohio, Father Laubacher was ordained in May, 1932 for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles and joined the Sulpician Fathe.rs in September of that year. He was professor of philosophy at St. Mary's from 1933-1935 and sPent the next three years doing post-graduate studies in theology at the Cath­olic Univ~rsity of Louvain, Bel­gium, earning a doctorate in sa­cred theology.

Returning to St. Mary's in 1938 Father Laubacher taught dog­matic theology for five years and served as rector and professor of ascetical theology from 1943­1958.

Following a two-year term as superior of the Sulpician Novi­tiate he resumed teaching dog­matic theology in 1960.

For the past 12 years Father Laubacher has served on the Executive Board of the National Catholic Educational Association and last May was named a "Per­Hus" of the Second Vatican Council.

The Chancery Office has im­nounced that the following priests will attend retreat the first week:

Rt. Rev. John A. Silvia" Rev. Patrif'k H. Fp..l~y, B"v. E-"."~rd

L. O'Brien, Rev. Edward B. Booth, Rev. Joseph A. Cour­noyer, Rt. Rev William H. Har­rington, Rev. Walter J. Buckley, Rev. Joseph Eid.

Rev. John J. Casey, Rev. Lorenzo H. Morais, Rev. David A. O'Brien, Rev. Joceph R. Pan­noni, Rev. George E. Sullivan, Rev. Ubalde J. nenea111>. Bev. Christopher L. Broderick, Rev. J(>'1o V. Be-sendes.

Rev Thomas F. Walsh. Rt. Rev. Raymond T. Considine, Rev. James E. Gleason, Rev. Francis A McCarthy, Rev. Leo J. Duart, Rev John J. Griffin, Rev. John J. Hayes, Rev. Arthur G. Considine.

Rev. Bernard H. Unsworth, Rev. John E. Boyd, Rev. Gerard J. Chabot, Rev. Arthur G. Du-

Set Clambo.1 St. Elizabeth's parish, Fall

River, will hold its 13th annual clamboil and field day Sunday, Sept. 8. Open to the public, it will feature Portuguese foods, music and an auction. Manuel Perry and Gilbert Amaral head a large arrangements committee.

puis, Rev. John T. Higgins, Rev. William R. Jordan, Rev. Lau­reano C. Reis, Rev. Arthur W. Tansey.

Rev. Ambrose E. Bowen, Rev.. Daniel E. Carey, Rt. Rev. Ber­nard J. Fenton, Rev. Lester L. Hull, Rev. Edwin J. Loew. Rev. Lucien Madore, Rev. Leo T. Sul­livan, Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo.

Rev. Ernest R. Bessette, Rev. Maurice Souza, Rev. Herve Jal­bert, Rt. Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros, Rev. Roland B. Boule, Rev. Ernesto R. Borges, Rev. ;V[anuel M. Resendes, Rev. Wil­liam A. Galvin.

Rev. Lucien Jusseaume, Rev. Joseph A. Martineau, Rev. James F. Kenney, Rev. James F. Lyons, Rev. Daniel A. Gamache, Rev. John F. Hogan, Rev. Francis A. Coady.

Rev. Arthur C. Levesque. Rev. Reginald M. Barrette, Rev. Ber­trand R. Chabot, Rev. Edward C. Duffy, Rev. Joseph L. Powers, Rev. James P. Dalzell, Rev. Dan­iel L. Freitas, Rev. Cornelius J. O'Neill.

Rev. George' J. Sousa, Rev. William F. O'Connell, Rev. Jus­tin J. Quinn, Rev. Edward A. Rausch, Rev. Roland J. BouSquet, Rev. Casimir Kwiatkowski, Rev. Paul G. Connolly, Rev. Paul F. McCarrick, Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill.

Rev. John P. Cronin, Rev. Clement E. Dufour, Rev. Edward J. Sharne, Rev. Luis A. Cardoso, Rev. John R. FoIster, Rev. Ber­nard F. Sullivan, Rev. Robert W. Dowling, Rev. Bernard J. Lavoie.

Rev. John J. Smith, Rev. John F. Moore. Rev. Thomas E. O'Dea, Rev. Manuel P. Ferreira, Rev. Maurice R. Jeffrey, Rev. Roger LeDuc. Rev Lucia B. Phillip­pino, Rev. James R. Porter.

Rev. Joseph P. Delaney, Rev. Thomas E. Morrissey, Rev. Gil­bert J. Simoes, Rev. Bernard R. Kelly. Rev. Edmund T. Delaney, Rev. Richard P. Demers, Rev. James E. Murphy, Rev: Arthur T. DeMello.

Institute Schedules Co'nse of Traininq

CHICAGO (NC) ~ The first six-month course of the newly formed Inter-American Cooper­ative Institute will begin in January, 1964, at St. Mary's Uni­versity in Ponce, Puerto Rico, the Institute's director, Father Harvey Steele. S.F.M., said here.

The purpose of the organiza­tion is to recruit and train vol­unteers from North and South America to nelp the peoples of Latin America to improve their living standards.

Volunteers will live'and work with Latin Americans. They will organize community proj­ects, credit unions, cooperatives and do similar work that will en­able the Latin American people to assume responsibility for their own welfare.

FATHER LAUBACHER, S.S.

D,onates Building FC)r Center

_ BALTIMORE (NC) A re­modeled and refurbished house has been donated to> the Balti ­more archdiocese to serve as a Cat:-lOlic center for personnel at Johns Hopkins Hospital and Medical Center here.

Th.e house was presente'd to Arch.bishop Lawrence J. Shehan of Baltimore by Mrs. Henry J. ­Knott and will be known as Carroll House-in memory of Bal­timore's first Archbishop John Cal'l'oll.

The building contains a chapel in the basement, a student lounge and kitchen on the first floor, offices on the second 'floor and quarters for priests on the third floor.

Ontario Increases Aid for HO~lI)itals .

TORONTO (NC)-All hospi­tals in Ontario-including those direeted -by Religious-will ben- , efit by the increase in grants an­nour ced for new hospitals and for hospitals planning' additions.

The Federal government con~

tributes $3,000 towards construc_ tion costs Of each new hospital roorr., and Ontario has been matching this with another $3,000.

Premier John Robarts of On­tario said Ontario henceforth will pay $5,500. It is hoped that legislation will be enacted in­creasing thl'! Federal hospital construction grant to the same amount.

Hil'llh School Superior NEW YORK (NC) - Sister

Catherine Marie has resigned as president of the College of Mount St. Vincent here and has been appointed superior of the new St. ~roseph - by - the - Sea High School for girls at Huguenot, N. Y., which will open in Sep­tember. The transfer was an­nouneed here by Mother General Loretto Bernard of the New York Sisters of Charity, who op­erate both institutions.

Superintendent of Diocesan Schools Announces

Co lenda r for 1963-64 Academic Year First Semester

SEPTEMBER 19 days 4-0pening of schools

OCTOBER 23 days

NOVEMBER 17 days I-Feast of All Saints-no school 8-End of First Quarter. Examinations

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

ll-Veterans' Day-no school 28-29-Thanksgiving recess

DECEMBER 15 days

20-Christmas vacation begins at close of school day

JANUARY :!Z days

2-Christmas vacation ends; classes re­sume

24-End of First Semester. Examinations given during this week. Report cards issued within one week following.

Second Semester

JANUARY 27-Beginning of Second Semester

FEBRUARY 15 days 14-Mid-winter vacation begins at close

of school day 24-Mid-winter vacation ends-classes re­

sume

MARCH %l .ays 7-High School entrance examinations

for September, 1964 27-Good Friday-no school

APRIL 17 days ~-End of Third Quarter. Examinations

. given during this week. Report cards issued within one week folhJwing.

17-Spring vacation begins at close 01. school day 27-Spring vacation ends-dasses resume

MAY I-Palmer Examination~

7-Feast of the Ascension~no school 14-I5-Catholic Teachers Association Conven­

tion

JUNE 15 dayS 1-9-1Q-Diocesan School Picnic 12-I7-Final Examinations

I9--Close of sch'Jol year Schools reor: en September 9, 1004

Vietnam By Father Patrick O'Connor, S.S.C.

SAIGON (NC) - Archbishop Paul Nguyen van Binh of Saigon has issued a second pastoral letter explaining Catholic teaching and Catholics' duties in relation to the current dispute between the government and a large sectiOIl of the Buddhists in Vietnam.

often originate with personsHe calls on Catholics to be living abroad have no validitythe "peacemakers" in the against the truth which is that

Gospel sense, pro t est s against foreign press misrepre­sentations of the Catholic posi­tion, and distinguishes between functions of the State and the Church.

He links his words "to the ad­mirable message of peace that Pope John gave to all men of good will, the encyclical Pacem in Terris."

Peace, the Archbishop says, must be founded on truth. He notes that in pUblic 'statements here and in demonstrations around pagodas, nobody has blamed the Catholic Church or Christians as Christians.

Confuse Authority

"Yet rumors unfavorable to the Church have been heard and several harmful articles have been published in the foreign press. Some of these are ob­viously s e l' v i n g religious and political interests in their locali ­ties. (This apparently refers to some Southeast Asia countries.) Others confuse the political authority that governs Vietnam with the spiritual power that rules the Church in Vietnam."

The Archbishop points out that the Church has no respon­sibility for the recent "inci­dents." but has deplored them and their consequences.

"We must also refute those who * >I< would have the world believe that Christians have op­pressed Buddhists in recent years. These calumnies which

FATHER O'CONNOR

religious peace based on toleP­ance has reigned between Chri... tians and Buddhists.

"This peace still reigns be­tween them after the incidents of Hue and Saigon * * * I have already asked Christians to make whatever personal sacri ­,!ices may be necessary for the sake of peace. I ask this of them now and will ask it again."

Independent of Politics

The letter applies the teaching on distinctions between Church and State saying "Christianlll ought seek for peace, remaining independent of all purely human politics in everything that con­cerns the Faith. At the same time they should remain- none­theless perfectly subject to the State when fulfilling a function willed by God it makes laws ill accordance with the common good.

"We practice our religiOIl freely in South Vietnam just as the faithful of other religioua denominations. Let us rejoice ia this freedom.

"But let us not try to add ex­cessive 'rights' and privileges to it. Let us no~ confuse the spread of the Faith with the develop­ment of political influence or social prestige and let us make use of the natural means we may have at our disposal with purity of intention."

Tak~s VOWS JONESBORO (NC)-Sister M.

Jeanelle, daughter of William W. O'Donnell, managing editor of the GuardiaT'. J" le Rock dioc­esan newspaper, was one of 11 young women who professed perpe,tual vows as an Olivetan Benedictine Sister here in Ar_ kansas. Sister Jeanelle was born in' Providence, R. I. The O'Don­nell family moved to Little Rock nine years ago.

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OF NINE THURSDAYS IN PREPARATION FOR FEAST

OCTOBER 28th Begins Thursday, September 5th

Preacher: Fr. -Richard J. Callahan, O.F.M.

CHAPEL DEVOTIONS 10:00 A.M.-12:10 Noon-5:10, 7 and 8 P.M.

WSAR WPlM

RADIO NOVENA - Fall River-1480 on Diol-6:45 ~.M.

- Plymouth-1390 on Diol-9: 15 P.M.

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Page 5: 08.29.63

5 'nfE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Aug. 29, 1963

...

HAVING A BALL: Sister Marguerite Marie, S.U.S.C. of Sacred Heart School, North Attleboro, looks as if she's about to have a ball, literally, as she supervises basketball game for parochial school students. Right, Sisters of the community prepare next day's assignments at jumbo study table designed for them by Rev. Edmond L. Dickinson, curate. From

Nation's Bishops Call on Leaders To Cooperate

SANTO DOMINGO (NC) -The Bishops of the Dom­inican Republic have called on the country's leaders to cooperate with one another in trying to overcome the republic's present "bitter reality."

In a statement issued during t'heir annual meeting here, the Bishops said that there is not a "single home in the Dominican Ration which enjoys complete peace."

They addressed their appeal ·particularly to those who are nsted with public authority, to aU political, labor and manage­ment leaders.

"May each one of them help decisively and effectively in working for the common good of. the people. This can be ob­tained only on the basis of un­derstanding, generosity and sac­ftfice which ensure complete re­spect for man and for institu­tions created for order and progress.

'BiUer Reality' "'The Bishops cannot hide

their profound concern before the bitter reality that Dominican 80Ciety is experiencing-uncer­tainty and mistrust. As these be­come more pronounced, the hopes of the true Dominican family for two great benefits, peace and bread, are pushed further and further away.

"Furthermore, it must be said that recent political events have not succeeded in establishing a tl'ue peace for all the people." . A constituent assembly has

been working on a draft consti ­tution to replace the basic law which governed the Dominican Republic during the 30-year dic­tatorship of Generalissimo Ra­fael Trujillo. The assembly is composed mainly of members of President Juan Bosch's Demo­eratic Revolutionary par t y . President Bosch took office in February.

Slate Consecration MADISON (NC) - Auxiliary

Bishop-designate Jerome Has­tl'ich of Madison will be conse­crated on Tuesday, Sept. 3 in St. Raphael's cathedral here. Bishop William P. O'Connor of Madison will be the consecrator with Bishops Stanislaus V. Bona of Green Bay, Wis., and John P. Treacy of La Crosse, Wis., as the ooconseeratora.

Holy Union.. In Taunton,

the Sisters as they begin their 40th year of service to the North Attleboro parish. Rev. Edmond D i c kin son, curate, notes that Sister Louise Rita, S.U.S.C., one of the Sisters who opened the school in 1923, will return to its faculty this year.

After spending 33 years at Sacred Heart, she has been at st. Cecilia's School, Pawtucket, since 1956. She will teach eighth grade at Sacred Heart.

Groton Headquarters The Holy Union Sisters at

Sacred Heart belong to the Pro­vince of. the Sacred Heart of the Worldwide religious community. Their headquarters are at Gr{)­ton, Mass.

The province was established in 1946 and has as its provincial house the former Lothrop School of Design in Groton. Pro­vincial Superior is Mother Alice Marie, a native of the Fall River Diocese.

Superior at North Attleboro is .Mother Marie Lucille, who also teaches fifth grade.

The cGmmunity was estab­lished in Douai in 1826 by Rev. Jean Baptiste Debrabant. By 1850 the community numbered 700 Sisters in France, Belgium, England and Ireland.

In 1880 the Sisters opened houses in Sotuh America and in 1886 arrived in the United States, making their first foun­dation in Fall River.

In 1902, however, troubles struck the European Mother House, when the anticlerical French government expelled all teaching religious. The Sisters transferred to their houses in other countries and the Mother House was established in Tour­nai, but in 1959, in accordance with the wishes of the Holy Father, it was moved to Rome.

The Groton pmvince numbers

Vincentians to Meet FQllowing Benediction at 7:45

Tuesday night, Sept. 3 at Blessed Sacrament Church, Fall River, members of the Fall River ,Par­ticular Council of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul will meet in the parochial school hall.

left, clockwise, Sister Claire Elizabeth, Sister Lorraine Edmond, Sister Marguerite Marie, Sister Gabrielle Lucie, Sister Marie Martin, Sister Blanche Marie, Mother Marie Lucille, superior, Sister Claire Antoine, Sister Therese Jeanne. The Sacred Heart School opened in 1923 and the Holy Union Sisters have taught there since its inception.

Sisters Staff Parochial Schools

North Attleboro Communities In October, ever-active Sacred Heart parish of North Attleboro will hold its second

Lay Apostolate Sunday. It will be dedicated to the Sisters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts who staff the parochial school "in recognition of their constant interest in the progress of Catholic education, especially in Sacred Heart parish:' This honor comes to

schools, 13 in New England and one in New York. .

Meanill&" of Emblelll The distinctive silver cross the

Holy Union Sisters wear symbo­lizes devotion to the Hearts of Jesus and Mary. The monogram of Jesus-Mary is formed by the letters JHS with an M interlaced with the H. The monogram is superimposed by a cross, signi­fying sacrifice. The instruments of the Passion are found on the lower part of the cross, together with the letters OCSS, standing for Obedience, Charity, Silence and Simplicity.

Some 450 children attend Sacred Heart School in North Attleboro, almost every child in the parish. There's an active Home and School Association to bind parents and teachers to­gether in the interests of the children and, with the coopera­tion of the parish unit of the St. Vincent de Paul Society, there's an exceilent medical and dental service provided the youngsters.

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With Sister Gabriel Lucie in charge, there's also a' special class for children with learning difficulties.

Sisters of the same Holy Union

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province also staff St. Jacques' School in Taunton with an en­rollment of over 400 and an out­standing record of vocations among alumnae. Eleven sisters form the faculty and the 9Upe­rior is Sister Therese Lucille, S.U.S.C.

Candidates for Sacred Heart province of the Holy Union Sis­ters should be between 17 and 30 and "possess health, intellec­tual ability, and good character." Although teaching is the com­munity's primary work, there are other activities available.

Applicants may -see any Holy Union Sister in this Diocese for further information or write Reverend Mother Provincial, ReligioWl of the Holy Union, Main Street, Groton, Mass.

Invite Ministers To Workshop

DETROIT (NC) - Letters of invitation to a Catholic pastoral workshop here have been sent to some 200 Protestant ministers who are affiliated with the De­troit Council of Churches.

Dr. G. Merrill Lenox, execu­tiv director of the Detroit and Michigan Council of Churches, expressed "immense pleasure" for the invitation to the work­shop, whose theme is "The Teen­age Parishioner." He said that the Council of Churches "wel­comes every opportunity to join with our Roman Catholic friends in exploring matters of mutual concern."

Because churches of all faiths are concerned with the problems of teenagers, "we must be sure that we measure up fully in our duties to satisfy their needs," Dr. Lenox said.

The Council of Churches will send letters to its ministers urg­ing their participation in the pastoral institute, Dr. Lenox added.

Archbishop John F. Dearden of Detroit is expected to address the ministers and some 250 priests at the opening session of the workshop.

15 convents in 14 cities, and has a teacher training school affili ­ated with the Catholic Univer­sity of America, four high schools, and 14 e Ie men tar y

HOLY UNION of the

SACRED HEARTS

KINDERGARTEN Pre-School Training 50r Bays and Girls

Who Are .4 Years Old

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Transportation can be arranged for Somerset pupils

August 24 and 25 or by Appointment

Apply:

SACRED HEARTS CONVENT FALL RIVER

Prosped Place - Phone' OS 2-4918 or 2-7452

Page 6: 08.29.63

6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Aug. 29, 1963 Legacy of Love

The March Some people may think that the march in Washington

is a great waste of money and time and organizational skill. They may brand it as impractical because the mem­bers of Congress are aware, for the most part, of the issues involved and have already formed their own con­clusions about civil rights.

But the march shows that a good many people are willing to inconvenience themselves for what is right. It spells out the intensity of their conviction. It serves notice that there are many ready to· suffer for truth and justice. In a nation where pressure serves a legitimate purpose in making laws, it exerts pressure for fairness in public life.

It is a sad fact that in a large measure the Negro has received of his rights only what he had demanded. His de­mands have in turn awakened the conscience of the nation and of individuals.

If the nation and if men have been made more sensitive to matters of justice and rights because of the march, then without accomplishing anything else it has been a great success.

Strange Reasoning In a matter of days, students all over the United States

will be returning to public school classrooms. And they will erhnOU.9h i:h.t. <'Wuk <'With th.£ ChWlek be met there with the Supreme Court decision forbidding them to recite the Lord's Prayer and to listen to readings ._ [ By REV. ROBERT W. HOVD~ Catholic Univel'8ity from the Bible.

Reactions to this decision have been many and wide­

lIy REV. JOHN L

FOLSTEI

st. Anthony's Church, llew Bedford

Readers are invited w submIt qu~ tum on religious matters oj general interest. As evidence 0/ good laith" all questions must be signed. Name. will Mt, however, be published. Address inquiries w Rev. John JI. Foister, St. Anthony Rectory, 13lJ1

We hear more a.nd more of a "common Bible." Didn't God inspire just one Bible?

B.B., N.B.

The Bible is not a book as such. There was no one author who one day started with G e n e sis and went through the Maccabees; took • break and then wrote the New Testament. Nor did a number of authors come together or suc­ceed each other and each add· their contribu­tion.

The Bible is a collection 0 f different kinds of books, written by var­ious men, in

'rODAY - Beheading of St. But for man there is no neutral various languages. The varioU8ranging in their approval or disapproval. But one fact is Jo:lm the Baptist. In the First area between doing good and books are not arranged chronol­inescapable: no matter what value, great or little, was Reading we learn that Gild com­ doing evil. ogically but rather according to attached to paying lip service to God in the public school manded Jeremy to stand up to If we do not good, we thereby the history of our salvation ~

classroom, this decision has pushed God one step further the rulers, the priests and the do evil. If we do not do evil, according to the type of litera­

away from public life. people of Israel. The Gospel re­ we thereby do good (First Read­ ture: his tor y, poetry, and veals John calmly announcing ing). The business of public wor­ prophecy.

And this at a time when there is growing concern ship is an example. Refusal toth~~ judgment of God to the These various books were re­over the breakdown of public morality and the alarming king. Scripture lessons at 1V£ass take part in the Sunday assem­ written, translated, copied, ete. growth of crime. are not history-they are God's bly of God's people is not a neu­ down through history. There

present Word to His people here tral act. Insofar as it is deliber­ were other books introducedNoone, of course, would want one religious group and now. His message to us to­ ate, it is already idolatry and sin. that spoke of the same thinglleomposing prayers to be recited b~ others against their day is the old question: "Do you or events. The Councils of Car­

will. But, in public life, there should be at least the recog­ wve me more than these?" TUESDAY-St. Pius X, Pope thage III and IV (397 and 41st nition of God. This nation was founded on belief in God Confessor. The Gospel is not a sorted out the various books andFRIDAY-St. Rose of Lima, message devised by men or sub­and in God-given rights. The traditions of the country are listed those that were truly in­Vilrgin.· God's jealonsy (First ject to men's approval. But 10 spired and to be included in "therich in references to Him and protestations of dependence Reading), though. a figure of preach it, to exercise leadership Bible." The others were rejectedupon Him. spE~ech, illustrates the great dig­ and authority in the ChurCh, one as 'spurious, interesting but justi

nity to which He has called us,And yet one woman, a self-styled atheist, has been must love the whole race of men plain reading.ti'w dignity He has given us inIlUccessful in objecting to public recognition of God in the to ~hom the Gilspel is addressed The Jews of course did notJesus Christ. If the purity and (First Reading). And one mustclassroom and her will has been imposed on the nation. single-heartedness He commands recognize the New Testament

love Jesus Christ, so that one is nor did they recognize any bookseE'ffi to us beyond our strength,But, it may be said, she was objecting in the name of content and proud to be IDs not written in Hebrew. At thewe must recall that our dignity vicar and His instrument (Gos­her conscience. Then she should have been told to follow time of the Protestant Revolu­as Christians is also beyond our pel). Authority in the Church Jaher conscience and let others follow theirs. powers. He can accomplish that tion, some books were cast a work of love. aside. The Church in the Coun-:wh ich He has ordai.ned.Other individuals have risen up in the past to object, cils of Trent and Vatican I (15id

in the name of conscience, to such things as health programs SATURDAY - st. Raymond WEDNESDAY - Mass as OIl and 1870) only reiterated what Sunday. Prescriptions, regula­and innoculations in public school. And yet these have not Nonnatus, Confessor. "You must had once been declared final. tions, formulae--these things bybe ready," (Gospel) Jesus points Some translations differed.been allowed to impose their consciences on the rest. They themselves mean bondage. Theyout specifically today, although Today, with all the hope andwere told that they could follow their consciences for them­ mean slavery to the human ele­it is implied in every Mass. If the interest for unity, there is talkselves and their children and, meanwhile, the health pro­ spiritualization of all creation, D).ent in the Church. But faith in of making one Bible that would

gram for the others went on. The plea that their children thE' bringing of creation to its Jesus Christ breathes holy lib­ be acceptable both to the Catho­erty into the Christian's life,would feel "different" watching others being innoculated fulfullment, depended on our ef­ lic Church and to the manywithout injuring his respect forforts alone, pessimism would bewhile they were not seemed to carry no weight at all. sects of Protestantism. There islaws and dogmas. The latter con­justified. Since it does not, even a growing appreciation of thevince us of our limitations, ourBut in the matter of public school prayer, an atheist thc.ugh it is through our efforts books not contained in the Pro\­weakness and infirmity. Faithwas allowed to bend the nation to her will. that the Saviour will accomplish estant list by these many sects. it, we may be surprised and must convinced us of God's certain There has even been urgings to

It just doesn't make sense. be "ready." and everlasting love. ' restore these books to the King It may well be that this decision will bring into sharper James Version' by Protestants

13TH SUNDAY AFTER PEN. themselves. Today, most Protes­focus certain truths: that education must be God-centered; TEIDOST. "Covenant" and "faith" Bible World's Most tant versions contain them in •that parochial schools are of even greater value now than are the themes of today's Mass. Translated Book . section of the Bible.

ever before; that parents have the right to send their Thl~ God in whom we believe is NEW YORK (NC)-The Bible A common Bible would be onea God who has affirmed our val­children to such schools without being penalized by sup­ which "would contain all theis still the world's most trans­ue to such an extent that He hasporting two educational systems; that government aid to lated work, according to Index proto - and deutero - canonicalsought us out, even in our sill

education should be given to the child and follow him· to and disobedience, and promised Translationum, an international books of the Old and New Testa­bibliography published here by ments (those in and out of ourwhatever system - public, private, parochial- that he us the world and more. And to the United Nations E,ducational, list), a Bible that would resuftmake these promises a covenant,attends. Scientific and Cultural Organ­ from the combined efforts 01.to make us capable of accepting

But no matter what kind of a blessing in disguise the them, He has poured into our ization (UNESCO). Catholic, Jewish and Protesta~

scholars '" '" *"Supreme Court decision may prove to be, it still remains hearts a divine gift we call faith. The Bible was translated 246 Faith is our "yes" to His prom­ times during 1961, a slight drop This would be a great help· toa piece of strange reasoning and shows little respect for ises and to His love. from the 258 translations printed the ecumenical movement be­the consciences of the mtl.jority in the nation. in 1960, the bibliography states. cause: (1) it would "allay theIf a person loves us, we find

In second place were the works suspicions of Catholics and non­OUI selves performing I 0 v i n g

of Lenin, with 185 translations. Catholics alike that the otherdeE,ds. It is natural for us to love, There were nine translations of party's Bible was textually dif­and to act our love in return. the works of the late Father ferent, had even been subject 10Bu': these deeds are not the rea­TeiIhard de Chardin, French an­ dogmatic tampering;"son the other person loves us.

They are a great response. So our thropologist and scholar. (2) there would be no great danger to dog mat i c belief;

reason God loves us (First Read- . "All Biblical scholars - no deeds, our "works," are not the@rheANCHOR ing). We must give thanks by Chalice for Shrine matter what their denomination

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER our deeds, as did the Samaritan BERLIN (NC)-Stefan Cardi­ - rely on the same manuscripts

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River , (Gospel), but our thanks do not nal Wyszynski, Primate of Po­ for their translation of the 410 Highland Avenue win us health and life. Only land, has sent a chalice which· Bible."

the late Pope John XXIII used Catholic scholars in Rome andFall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 faith, His gift, does that. for Mass to Poland's national Jerusalem have joined eminent

PUBLISHER l\IONDAY-St. Stephen, King, shrine at Czestochowa, according Jewish and Protestant scholars Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. Confessor. Man is by nature a to reports reaching here. Before both in Europe and America for

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

MANAGING EDITOR

doer, an actor. The villain of the Gospel story thought he was re­fraj,ning from acting, and wanted to refrain because he feared the

he died, Pope John said that he wanted to give the chalice to the Czestochowa shrine. His Holi-· ness Pope Paul VI gave it 10 the

this end. The result would be an equal respect for the Word of God, a charity in outlook that would leave no place for suspi.-

Hugh J. Golden Lord, he feared responsibility. Polish Primate. Turn to Page Fourteen

Page 7: 08.29.63

7 tHE ANCHOR-Diocese OfFaft Rtv"":'11lurs. Aug. 29,1963

KNOW YOUR POPE: By Rev. Edward 1. MitcheD

(final stolT of aeries)

The busy Archbishop of Milan, G i 0 van n i Montini, found time in 1960 to visit the United States. He came here to receive an honorary de­gree from Notre Dam.e Univer­sity and for other undisclosed business. During his stay in the United States he was received by President Eisenhower and visited Chicago, Boston, Phila­delphia and Washington before going on to South America.

Other recent travels have taken him throughout Europe and to many of the new nations of Africa.

At home in Italy's largest dio. eese, Cardinal Montini was a hard worker and an early riser. His day usually began at 6 A.M. with the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. Then came part of his breviary, a light breakfast, a careful reading of the morning newspapers, and a busy morning of interviews or trips to the fac­tories.

TremendoUI!I Memory He never seemed in a hurry,

always having time to study each problem individually, no matter how simple or how com­plicated. He has a tremendous memory.

Lunch was the despair of the nuns who ran the kitchen. It never seemed to get underway before two o'clock in the after­noon, often later. The Cardinal was a simple eater, usually tak­ing only soup, meat and fruit. He rarely drinks wine and does Dot smoke.

After an hour-long rest, he r~

oeived calls again, unless he went out on one of his many trips around the diocese. During the course of a year he went out *>me 150 times around the dio­eese.

Tonebini:' Encounter After an 8:30 supper (taken

with his priest-secretaries) there was a half hour of television news. Then he wrote letters in his study and prepared his pro­gram for the following day prior to retiring for the night, usually long after midnight.

Late in the month of May, 1963 when Pope John fell critically ill, Cardinal Montini rushed to his bedside. He was one of the few non-Curia cardinals ad­mitted to the bedside of the dying Pope. Witnesses reveal that the encounter, of the two men was a very touch~ one.

Following Pope John's death, Cardinal Montini spoke a moving eulogy in the Milan cathedraL "It is necessary to investigate and to define the reasons for such a cordial and universal sor_ row as that which i5 accoffil)aD¥­

fng .Tohn XXIII to his grave," said the Cardinal.

Truth, Love "It was another simple com­

bination," he continued, "that is, the combination of truth with love."

Despite the loss of so great a man, said Cardinal Montini, the Church and the world must look ~,the future. Perhaps he was spelling out the program for his own: poptificate when he said, , ~'Another prospective lies be­

fore us, enlightened by the can­did figure of Pope John: let us not look behind, let us not look at him, but to the horizon which he opened before the road of the Church and of history.

,''What did John XXIII leave to the Church and the world that can never die with him? John XXIII indicated some landmarks on our road which it will be wise not only to remember but to follow.

Check for Peasant "Can we deviate from the path

which he blazed with such bold_ ness to rel~ious history in the

CARDINAL MONTINI WITH CARDINAL CICOGNANI

CARDINAL OTTAVIANI PLACES TIARA ON POPE PAUL VI

making, the path of the univer­sality of Catholic faith That of ecumenism?"

Cardinal Montini's commit. ment to the progressive policies of Pope John were clearly spelled out for the' whole world to see. But there were many who feared that his outspoken

_ liberal stand might cost him the papacy.

Shortly before he left for the conclave, Cardinal Montini signed his final check-a check that was so characteristic of him. A peasant from the hills near Milan had, written the Archbish. op saying that his donkey had died and asked for help to buy another.

The Cardinal asked his chauf­feur to find out what the price of a donkey was and then sent the peasa~t a check for that amount.

TlI Be Back' As Cardinal Montini prepared

to board the jetliner that would take him to the conclave in Rome, his chauffeur said to him: "Have a nice trip, Your Emi­nence, and I'll see you back here soon."

Then, realizing what he had said-Montini, after all, was spoken of as the most "papabile" -the chauffeur, hastily tried to correct himsedf: "I mean, have a nice trip"''''· about returning...',

"Don't worry, Antonio," the Cardinal said, "I'll be back"'· • I'll be back."

As the whole world knows, Cardinal Montini did not come back. Instead, on the morning of the third day of the conclave the College of Cardinals elected him as the 262nd successor of St. Peter.

Propoessive Policies Not many were surprised at

his election. Nor will many be surprised if he follows the pro­gressive policies that he pursued as an archbishop, or those which he praised so liberally during the pontificate of Pope John.

This brief biography that has appeared in the pages of The Anchor is but a sketchy intro­duction to the life of a great churchman. Pope Paul VI con­tinues to write his own biogra­phy with each act of his pon­tificate.

The world wants him to write a great biography, one that will

Life of

live on in the minds and hearts of all men, as did that of Pope John.

Pope Paul surely has the mak. ings of an outstanding pope. And he has the prayers of the world and the promise of Christ, "I will be with you all days'" • ."

Commends Devotion To Blessed Virgin

CASTELGANDOLFO (NC)­Pope Paul VI tOld a general au­dience here that devotion to the Blessed Virgin "leads us to the unique and supreme cult" owed to Christ.

The Pope told the audience he hoped that what he said would help his listeners "to understand properly and to practice well" devotion to the Blessed Virgin.

Such devotion "expresses our loyalty to the Church, which has in Mary its most holy and most beautiful daughter," he said. It also "teaches us to imitate Our Lady and her virtues, so sublime and still so human, above all in faith, in the acceptance of the Word of God, which initiates our souls in the life of Christ." The Pope spoke in Italian, French, English, Spanish and German.

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Paul VI Proposes Statue Of Patron Saint In San Francisco CASTELGANDOLFO(NC)

Pope Paul VI received Cali­foraia Gov. E d m un d G. (Pat) Brown, his wife and daughter in a private audience. Brown presented the Pope with a volume on the natural beauties of California. The governor is on a tour of Europe to promote trade and tourism between his state and Europe.

Before his audience with Pope Paul, Brown told a press con­ference he was considering a proposal to raise a statue of St. Francis of Assisi in San Fran­cisco which is named for the saint.

On Alcatraz Brown said the statue might

be placed on the island of AI­catraz in San Francisco Bay. The island was used for more than three decades as the site of a federal prison, but now is vacant.

Brown said the project was suggested to him by authorities of the saint's hometown, Assisi, during his visit there. The As­sisi officials offered to pay part of the cost, he said.

The governor said the project will be submitted to a council of experts in California. He sug­gested that pink stone for the statue could be quarried from Mount Subasio near Assisi.

Pope PauI Receives Bust of Pope John

CASTELGANDOLFO (NC)­Pope Paul VI said in receiving a marble bust of Pope John XXIII that he feels "especially bound to follow his teachings and his example."

The bust was a gift from em­ployees of all ranks at his Sum­mer home here.

The Pope said that the gift was an invitation to meditate deeply On the ideas and soul of the Pope of goodness. He said he has re­ceived "many privileges" from Pope John and was deeply moved by the gift. The bust will stand in the Room of the Swiss in the papal Summer residence.

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Page 8: 08.29.63

.. 8 ,THE,ANC;HOR--Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Aug. 29, 1963

,Family Life Comes to Standstill As All Hands Seek Stubby

By John Jay Daly

The Bead of the House is guem columnist for Mary Tinley Daly tbis week.

"Does anybody know where Stubby is?" The voice came from the kitchen. Mary was preparing dinner with Ginny as her helper. "I can't find Stubby," came the second call. So Stubby was lost again. Maybe we'd have to 'call the rescue squad this time.

out for missing persons - and"What happened to Stub­things. They say, put yourselfby?" came the distress cry in the position of the missing

again. "Hold your horses," I and see just what you would do, yelled, running up the stairs where you would go. Once, in from the downstairs writing the case of a lost racehorse, a room. Maybe this time we'd Pimlico detective did just this, have to call the F.B.I., if Stubby explaining, "I imagined I was a had gone over a state line. We horse, and I asked myself: Sup­live not far from one, but I pose 1 were a horse now, on this hoped that wouldn't be neces­ day and date. What would I do? eary. In truth, I thought 1 knew Where would I go?" where Stubby could be found.

Answer's SimpleNo Panic "I'll find Stubby," 1 told Mary~ After meditating a while, he

end dashed out the back door. went where the horse would An outsider hearing all this have gone, under those circum-'

hubbub, the dashing around, stances, and there he found the slamming of doors, hollering ­ missing animal - at the starting "Where's Stubby?" - w 0 u I d gate, though the race was three think;naturally, that Stubby was days away. our problem child, or a favorite It's that simple. child, or a child in need of dis­ So, this' day, while Mary was cipline - a child that ran away still asking for Stubby, I said from home, an adventurous to myself, "Where do you think child. Stubby might be?"

No one could blame a person And then I got the answer. It :for so thinking, one not familiar, came to me like an inspiration, with the routine. With us, this a Shot out of the blue: "Why, was old hat. "Where's Stubby?" Stubby would be just where "I can't find Stubby." "Do you Stubby was left - and who had know where Stubby is?" "What's left Stubby where Stubby might

'happened to Stubby?" and so on be found?" ad infinitum, ad nauseam, ad Why, I had. convention and all that sort of So I went in search of Stubby. stuff. Often, it occurs to me that Sure enough, Stubby was out Stubby is, at times, a first-class in the back yard. nuisance - and yet. Stubby, I should explain, is

That's just -the point. When­ Our fav.orite kitchen knife. I bad ever the' cry comes, "Where's used Stubby to clean the electric Stubby?" instead of the habitues lawn mover, scraping mulch_ at our house getting panicky, or from the inside. Stubby, you frustrated, or peeved, all hands , see, is also an all-service knife, pitch in, form a 'searching party 'one that can be used for any­and go all out for' Stubby, thing and usually is, such, 88

looking here, searching there opening cans, shaving wood, and yon. carving statues and - with the

There is an old axiom handle - cracking ice. among private detectives who Stubby gets its name from_ must sometimes go on the look- stature - short and stout.

Mother Casey Solves Textbook Problem by Composing, One

OMAHA (NC) - A Sister de- what Mother Casey was doing, cided it wasn't logical to teach they asked her to have the book logic without a textbook, so she published. During the time, the wrote her own. book was in preparation, Mother

The first copies of Mother Casey wrote almost 4,000 pages, Helen Casey's book, "Logic, a so many that stacks of paper Practical Approach," have just filled her room and spilled out been printed by the Henry Reg- into the hall. nery Company of Chicago. "I'm Before she began work on her simply thrilled," Mother Casey logic book, Mother Casey was said as she thumbed through the dean of Duchesne College of the pages of her book. Sacred Heart in Omaha from

Mother Casey began to work 1930 to 1940, and served as presi­on the text over six years ago dent of. the college from 1940 10 when she was assigned to teach 1949. a high school logic class in Chicago. When Mother Casey Canada Churches Active discovered there were no text­,books for the course, she first In Credit Union Work lIsed a college text on logic as HAMILTON (NC)-More than • guide. But her students com­ 400 churches in Canada were· plained that they couldn't un­ sponsoring credit unions 'for derstand her, so Mother Casey their mem,bers at the end of,began to' compose her own text­ 1962, according to figures re-. book. leased here by the Credit Union

When other teachers heard National Association. The majority of these credit

Tells Kentucky School unions were owned and operated by Catholic parish groups. There

To Stop Bible Reading are also Anglican, Baptist, FRANKFORT (NC) - Ken­ United Church and Jewish con­

tucky's Attorney General has said gregations operating c red i t he will issue shortly an opinion unions. advising public schools they Church credit unions repre­must drop daily Bible recitation. sent 8.76 per cent of the

Asked his opinion of the U. S. 4,638 credit unions chartered in Supreme Court's decision against Canada at the end of 1962. Total religious practices in public credit union membership was schools, Atty. Gen. John Breck­ 2,884,100, almost 16 per cent of inridge told the state school. Canada's population. board that Bible reading must stop. Nurses' Dance

Kentucky law requires public Alumnae and the junior class school classes to open with the of St. Anne's Hospital School of reading of Bible passages. Nursing, Fall River, will spon­

sor the annual senior prom fromStyle Show 9 to 1 Friday night, Aug. 30 at

St. Anthony of Padua Council Pocasset Country Club. Miss

Urges Laywomen Foster Vocations

ALBUQUERQUE ( N C) ­Bishop Loras T. Lane of Rock­ford, Ill., has asked that girls be given the opportunity to learn more about religious life by as­sisting nuns in their work.

Bishop Lane, speaking on the campus of the University of New Mexico at the Theresians' Na­tional Sisterhood Vocation Con­ference, called for the formatioR of service groups which would be open to all girls.

Women must work to build a type of society in which voca­tions to the religious life will grow, the Bishop told the There­sians, an organization of lay­women devoted to fostering v0­

cations to the sisterhoods. The Theresian must work to

present the true image of the nun to the laity, the Bishop said, To do' this, he explained, $he must be thoroughly acquainted with the life of the nun. Too often, Bishop Lane said, non­Catholics think of the nun ,as someone covered in yards ofNUCLEAR STUDENT: Mother M. de l'Enfant Jesus, serge - a remnant of the medi­

R.S:H.M., assistant professor of chemistry at Marymount eval Church. College, Tarrytown, N.Y., recipient of a National Science The Bishop asked that women Foundation grant, is one of 12 science teachers participating avoid any tendency to down­iII a four week special program in "Isotope Technology" grade the vocation to the

married state in their efforts toat the Oak Ridge (Tenn.) Institute of Nuclear Studies gain sisterhood vocations.given in cooperation with the U.S. Atomic Energy Com­

mission. NC Photo. Three-Vear-Old Steals

Show at Site Blessing Parent's' Agent MONTREAL (NC) - A three-.

year-old girl stole the showI~relate Explains Role of Catholic Teacher when dignitaries of State and

Church gathered at L'Isle RondeAt World Union Congress for the opening and blessing of

LONDON (NC) - Catholic creating a division of loyalties the site of the World Fair there teachers from all over the world in the mind of the child. in 1967. w,ere ,told here that they must "This is why we insist that After Paul Emile Cardinal never usurp the rights even of the child of a Catholic home Leger had officiated at the bless­inadequate parents. should be entrusted to the care ing of the site, he took his seat

Bishop Andrew Beck, A.A., of of Catholic teachers." on the main platform, alongside S~llford, chairman of the Catho­ S.W. Exworthy, .president of of distinguished political and re­Ii<: Education C~uncil of Eng­ the Catholic Teachers' Federa­ ligious leaders. Then three-year­le ad and Wales, told the fifth tion of England and Wales, ex­ old Dominique Cartier ran up trjennial congress of the World, pressed fears about the effects­ the steps of the platform and Union of Catholic Teachers that an eventual union between Great climbed on the Cardinal's knee. the teacher is the "agent and ' Britain and the European Com­ In a'few moments she fell asleep, auxiliary of the parent in the mon Market would have on with the protective arm of the work of education." Catholic education. Archbishop of Montreal around , Some 250 represent,atives of her.Henri Sterges, a delegate from

half a million Catholic teachers Luxembourg, said that in his While some 2,000 people at ­in 50 countries took part in the country, which belongs to the tending the ceremony listened to congress held in London Univer­ Common Market, "religious edu­ speeches by Canadian digni­sUy's Institute of Education. cation has complete freedom and taries, little Dominiquecontin­

Fears Effects Catholic priests give instruction ued to sleep peacefully in the lap "If a child is to grow harmo­ to Catholic children." of Cardinal Leger.

niously to balanced maturity," Bishop Beck said,. "home and school must work hand in hand as far as possible without stress or tension, above all without

'<i&lNOWExplains Preparation MERCIIANISFor Religion Teacher lPHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

th:reefold preparation-doctrinal, ....-.•---_... spiritual, pedagogical-is needed ....for the religion teacher who .-r-' , NEIGHBORHOODwould initiate children to a m(~ting or encounter with God, II.--,~" BANKSaCI~ording to Sister Rita Clare, superio~ of Holy Family Con. =......= vent, Seattle, Wash; , At Ii study session for elemen­ • II!!! each one a tary scliool teachers at the 1963 ._~ full-seryice bonkNorth American Liturgical Weelt pere, Sister Rita Clare said that ".J.~/ th(~ basic plan for the doctrinal formation of the catechist com. LUNDS CORNER BANK 'pr,lseS "the three different edi­ Acushnet Ave., near lund's Cornertions 'of God's Revelation: Scrip­ WEST BANK ' ture, liturgy and theology, -of which the first volume, Scrip­ Kempton Street, at Mill Street ture, is text, 'and the second and DRIVE-IN third commentary." DARTMOUTH BANK

"If the religion teacher real­ Dartmouth St., near Rockdale Ave. izes that God is present under BANK From th€l 'species of Sacred Scripture' SOUTH BANK as well as under the species of Cove St. at Rodney French Blvd. brc~ad and wine," she continued, YOUR CAR"h,~ will find therein the living NORTH BANKPerson of Christ who will lead him and his students to the Acushnet Ave. at Coffin Ave. Father."

CENTER BANK•Style Show Purchase and William Streets

~l'he Women's Gui~d of St. Eliz_ ab<~th's parish, Fan River, will TO SERVE YOUR EVERY BANKING NEED hold a family fashion show at 7 Sunday night, Sept. 15 in the pa:rish hall. State Sen. Mary L. qJ,j~ERCH,,ANTSFonseca will be commentator and refreshments will be under chairmanship of MisS Rose Ma­ CJ'Ia1iotuie BANKchado and Mrs. Mildred Cantin.

of Catholic Women, Fall River, Maureen Griffin, chairman of General chairmen are Mrs. Alice Member Fed~rc" ~posit Insurance Corporationwill hold a style show Thursday, the junior class, announces the Correira an.d Mrs. Alice Fernan­Sept. 12. at White's l'e.s'taurant. 'affair will be lemi-formal. den, aided by Mra. Mary Ferreira.

Page 9: 08.29.63

9

p

Acquiring Co~plete Maturity Is ,First Step To Sanctity

By Father Walter W. Imbiorski

Dear Father: . We just had a mission in our parish, and the prlest

said we have to make our children saints. Frankly, my five children don't look very much like the pictures of St. Agnes with her lamb or St. Aloysius in his buster brown collar. lfhey are certainly not given

jostles you on a crowded bus)~ prayer or mortification. or under-respond (the husbandIs sainthood a realistic goal who returns home to find his for modem children - and wife has been taken to the hospi­In()derll parents? tal but calmly keeps his plans

Louise to go bowling). Dear Louise: Emotional maturity is not the

First of all, remember that stifling nor yet the unleashirig there are two categories of of emotions, but their control .ints: Saints with a big "S" and and channeling toward what is Aints with • little "s." important. Thus, S 0 met i m e s

A saint is not an austere, aloof strong anger can be the mature character standing in a stained­ emotional response. glaltS window with a lily in his The teenager who knows he hand. Saints are flesh and blood mould not stay out too late but

, people. They come in all shapes does so when his "friends" call and sizes. They come from bat­ him ehicken, is a typical ex­tlefields and the courts of kings. ample of emotional immaturity. laospitals and mission huts, from The emotionally mature person .niversitie. and slums, from a<:ts in the correct measure. He convents and kitchens. The eould be said to possess the Baints the church will canonize moral virtues of prudence, jus­in 1999 will look pretty mucll tice, fortitude and temperance. like you. Volititmal. MatIlri&,.

In the earlier times all good Finally there is volitiona,lChristians were thought of u matul'ity. This is the ability to_ints, the holy ones, the bap­ make decisions on principle,tized, those who are bound for even if the result is not per­heaven and going to put lip a 90nally rewarding, even if losscood fight. The process 01. or suffering be entailed. It t.eanonization and other facto" the ability to choose .the goodbave changed. this idea. for ourselves and otbel'S.. It coul4

Caaonl:lat~Prooea be called the beginning of the Canonizatioll is the formal ad­ virtue of charity which is love.

dition of a penon's name to the You might $Urn it up in this Jist of official Saints - ~t .... way. Tiny babies in a sense are ta those wha are definitely wli the most selfish critters on earth.. to be saved, who lire public17 The,. know nothing but them­honored, and to whom miracles selves. H they are warm aDli are attributed. This procedure dry andfed,all is well. It is the lias turneci Saints into a JIl)ecial challenge of parents to lead them eallte of super-heroes and we to the awareness of the needs begin to think sanctity is not for anci :ri~ts of others, to respGn­the likes of u. sibility, and finally to selfless " Saints are simple spiritual pe0­ love. ple. This doesn't mean ghosu IX' :aedDWD&'8 of Saad&t,.ascetics who pretend 1hey tIon't Place your little finger beforehave bodies. Saints are people a ltaby; he closes his ftst .poaresponsive to the Holy Spirit, the it and irasps it to himself. TheS{)irit of Love. They are pectple pa1'ent mU5t gradually teach him·who commit themselves to God's to open his hand, to extend hUI'Will, who open themselves to it . arms in giving, and finally'"In prayer, and carry it out .. stretch them to the measure ofIICtion. Sanctity consists in a life Christ's on the Cross, to the Loveof virtue, that is, in habitually which: lays down its life for .. ~eking and doing the Will 01. friend.t;od.

If you ean. teach ,"our child theIs sanctity a realistic goal for way of maturity, to know whatyour children? The psychologists is .right. to know what is im­mean something quite like sanc­portant, to control and channeltity when they talk about com­his feelings, and finally toplete maturity as a goal for your choose the good, even at a costehildren. They distinguish three to himsel1, he it! on his way ~kinds of maturity. the beginnings of sanctity. Let

Intellectual Mat~t7 him ill addition then grow up in First, intellectual maturity. a horne where faith and prayer

'rhis is not the mere knowing of are important, and God will do many t h i n g s. It is rather the rest. . knowing the Yalue and im­portance of things. The intellec­tually mature person orders h.i& Hold Public Ceremony kllowledge and creates a hier­erehy and schema of values. He For Nuns' Profession knows n<lt only what is im­ DUBUQUE (HC) - The fint portant (e.g., truth more im­ public eel'emony of. profession portant than money and justice of ¥ows and reception of Dew more important than security), members of a sisteibood ill the but also when it is more im­ DubuqUe arclldiocese WM held portant. ia &to Columbki11e'.e ehurell

A nucleai' physieist gaining here. tame but seriously neglecting his Special permissiOD, from. the ehildren is immature. A learned H()lY See waa required to ho.14. Ia~er apendinc too much time tbe ceremony outside of the

.with his family neglecting hi8 community's motherhouse. Aux­practice is also immature. iliary Bishop George Z. Bi....

Intellectual maturity ia tile of Dubuque first presided at a possessioft of a true sense of ceremony in which 14 white­nlues. In the Christian life we veiled novices of .the Sisters OIl might call it 1Ile virtue of wis­ the presentation of the Blessed' demo Virgin Mary made their profes,.

EJnotioul JtlataritF sion of vows and received the Emotional maturity is next. black veils.

Emotional maturity is the pro­ The Bishop presidedlleyeralper reaction and respoJae to hours later at a second cere­8ituations, the llelf-control to do mOllY ill whicll 12 poatulantIwhat we know is important. The from Mount Loretto Convent CD­emotionally mature person does tered the ehurch dreSsed ..80t over-respond (using your brides, received their religioUIIumbrella im. tile head of the habits and their names in sister­Jittle old lady who accidentally hood.

Centerville Officers Reading May Continue New offi~ of Our .x.~ of .wASBINGTON (.MC) - '!'be

Tictory Guild, Centerville, are head of the Board al EducatiOD Miss Mary K. Gross, president; here in the ntrtion's capital said Mrs. Peter Ostrander and Mrs. public .00001 teachen may COD­William Murzic, V'iee-presidentB; tinue to beein classes with Bib. Mrs. Paul LanUee, treasurer; readlne and a.e Lord'. Prayer.Miss Mary CoRnolly anti ... alnee the practk:e it! - loa8eIr ~claal'd Gt"i:UitIa,.ecl'e*,- Mquirecl bra. DoIlIli

P Q

THE ANCHOR­. Thl1rs., Aug.' 29, 1963

Byzantine Club To AffiJ.iate

WASIDNGTON (NC) -The Pittsburgh Byzantine Rite Coun. eilofCatholic Women will be organized formally as an affiliate 01. the National Council of Cath­olic Women during ceremonies next Monday at Uniontown, Pa.

Presiding at the program, which will begin with a Solemn Pontifical Divine Liturgy (Mass), will be Bishop Nicholas T. Elko of the Pittsburgh Byzantine Rite diocese. .

The organization of the Byzan­tine Rite Coundl is an historic event for the NCCW. It is the 116th council to affiliate with the 43-year-old NCCW and the first official Eastern Rite Coun­cil, NCCW headquarters liere' said.

During the program Bishop Elko will install the new council 'officers and committee chairmen. Mrs. Joseph McCarthy of San Francisco, NCCW president, will extend greetings on behaU of the 10 miUion American Catho­lic women which the national federation represents.

Germans· Give $24,500 Center in" Macao

MACAO' (NC) - The Germaa Catholic Bishops' MisereorSo­cial Aid Ftmd ecmstn1cted a new $24,500 vocational training anti tIOcia1 center for this Porill ­gue.e-held territory OIl the Southern Coast of China.

BiJlh.op Paulo Tavares eI. Macao thanked Msgr. Chule. Vath, Misereor's Far East repre­sentative, and the German peo­Christ Downtown ple for the center which will give courses in knitting, plasticLegionaries of Mary Contact Shoppers work, sewing and typing to more than 1011 Chinese girls. It willAt Busy Philadelphia Intersection eventually have a food distribu­tion center.PHILADELPHIA (:M'C) ­ of the Pentecostal sects.

Bishop Tavares said that theChrist COIllesto downtown Phil ­ III their first 10 months of re. center was built to "give a mereadelphia every Saturday morn­ li~1i. contacts with the "maa humane and better future to aning when members of the Catlt.­ on the street," the legionaries re. who will receive vocationalolic Information Center's LegilMl PMt 1,280 conversations with training within its walls." It01. Mary set up their book barrow pauers-b,.-including 789 Catb­will enable "many youths to.earnat one of the city's busieat inter­ ()li~ and 581 flon~Catholies OIl their bread by honest IlDdd~-sections.· varing lIbades of belief and dis­fied. work," he.said. . " be'lief.The LegiOn of Mary, • lay

apostolic group which ~ at Pin' Gool1 WID direet spiritual contact with Women's Council Plans Leu iilan ~ne per cent of tbOIlesouls, usually specializes in tbe they approach have been hostile,work of house to hoWle Yisita­ To Publish Magaz;ne

the legionarie.s state. Much of thetioD. The downtown legionaries, good Will, they feel, is attribu­ WASHINGTON (NC) - Word.however, bring Christ 10 tbe

table » the warm climate of a new general interest magazinemarketplace in their contacts

ecumenism fostered by the late designed especially for Catholicwith Satw:day shoppers and Pope John xxm. women, will begin pUblication iatourists at the corner of Phila. October. delphia's Broad and Cheatnut Questions the legIonaries meet Mrs. Joseph McCarthy, presi­Stceets. range from the Catholic position dent of the National Council of.

011 birth control to the natureThe book barrow, an apoctolie Catholic Women, which will Nb.and yalue of confession. Manyinstrument developed by Irish 100 the new magazine, said ~ inquiries are made regardingCatholic Aetionists, is a portable will replace two former NCCW'devotion to the Blessed Mother.book and pamphlet rack of Cath­ magazines - Monthly Messap

olic literature designed io in­ The legionaries, however, do and Women In Catholic Action.

LEGIONARIES ACTIVE: In downtown Philadelphia, Nora :McFadden, president fi the Catholic Information Center's Legion of Mary group, shows the latest in Catho­lic literature to a visitor at the Legio!t's book barrow at a buy intersection. NO PhotG.

form Catholics and non-Catholics not wait for inquirers to come allke of the Church'. teachinga. to them. Window shoppers and

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Page 10: 08.29.63

'0 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Aug. 29, 1963

CCD CONGRESS IN BOSTON: Left photo; Bishop Connoll~" center, Rev. Maurice Jeffrey, St. John Baptist, Fall River. Right photo; Bishop presiding prelate at the Congress· session on Parent-Educator :program, Gerrard, second left, examines the program with James J{elleher, St. discusses the meeting with Daniel Reed; St. Joseph's, Taunton; l~awrence Joseph's, Taunton; Leonor Luiz, Mt. Carmel, New Bedford; Armand Duffany, St. John's; Attleboro; Augustus Silva, Mt. Carmel, New Bedford; Goulet, St. :Anne's,. New Bedford.. .

N'ews and Films Record LiturSlical Week Attendance Suit to Test ~ Influence Judge ,New Bus Law

Over 13,000 at Philadelphia Daily Sessions. DETROIT (I'«:) - A DetroitNEW YORK (NC) - A judge attorney said the Michigan unit

looked to the· sensational 8(:. ­ The '1963 North American . upon a 1;evitalized education· of ., for sPeaker after speaker. Last of the ·American Civil Liberti~ counts· about sex, appearing in the clergy, whjch will be c~n- . Fall the bishops of the council.. Liturgical Week, just com­ Union will institute a suit withineurr.eht newspaper stories and teredo upon the mystery of Christ 'voted· almost unanimous ap'­... p'leh~d in Philadelphia, broke:, , a month to test theooD.stitution-' . movies in deciding here that an as Cl~lebrated in the liturgy. provaltO a document on. the ality of the state's new fair·all records for attend~nce in18th century novel about the life . From this point on, it was ap-. promotion and reform of Cath.· s.chool bus law.the quarter century of suchof a prostitute should·not be con- ·parE'nt that the second Vatican olic worship, requiring' that , Attorney· Rol~and'O'Hare, who'meet*ngs.sidered obscene. . Cou:ncil was the starting point liturgical revision stress' the . is president of the ACLU Michi­

More than 13,000 persons reg- educative force of the liturgy, gan Unit, disclosed the proposedOne, of the key points in istered to take part in the daily Praye'r that is,·the Mass, the sacraments suit in a statement to the Michi­CC)nt.enue reaching a verdict on the book , Masses and in sessions based on and the Church's public prayer. gan Catholic, Detroit archdio­"Memoirs of a Woman of Plea- the theme, "The Renewal of Throughout the discussions cesan newspaper.BUre," commonly known as. Christian Education." In Delawa e '. r and lectures of the 'Liturgical The announcement came m."Fanny Hill," was whether it· was offensive to contemporary Archbishop John J. Krol of DOVER (NC) ~ Bible reading Week, it was apparent that the wake of an opinion by Michi­lItandards. Justice Arthur G. Philadelphia welcomed the con­ and recitation of the Lord's Christian education is not mere~ . gan Att. Gen. Frank Kelley that Klein of the New York State vention with a ~orceful descrip­ Pra3'er will continue in Dela- ly a matter of books and class­ the bus law, passed last. Spring, Supreme Court commented: ' tion of· the Second Vatican ware public schools if Attoqley rooms and parish schools. As one is a public welfare benefit and

Council's plans for liturgical re- Gen., David Buckson has his way. . speaker put it, the liturgy ill· not related to religious purposes."If the standards of the com.. form. He singled out the coun­ Buckson argued that the U. S. "worship of God and holiness for Kelley said the· law satisfied

mun~ty .are to be gauged by cil's decision to admit the dif. : Supreme Court's decision out- . men; but at the same time and "both the U.S. and the state co~ what it is permitted to read in ferent mother tongues into. the lawing the practiees affects only in· all its parts a teacher." stitutions." '. . its daily newspapers then Fanny ~ass, the sacraments, and the

the states involved in the cases A special feature .of the meet­ O'Hare said h~ had not readHill's experiences contain little . other parts of the liturgy, as ·before the court, Maryland and ing was ·a catechetical exhibit, ··Kelley's opinion but added that more thaI). what. the community well' as the council's insistence

Pennsylvania. sponsored by the Liturgical Con- he doubted there would be any­has already encountered on the front 'pages of many of its news­ 'I P ., H~~ insisted that the' high ference which holds the annual thing in it to, change ACLU's

, COO, ,rayer eourt's deCision did not automat- Liturgical Weeks. The display of determination to challenge theS h papers. law: ' DAR 'ES . SALAAM (NC) teally make similar laws in other ~xcellent teaching materials also

"If the standards are to be·. Tanganyika's' Catholic Bishops atatE$ unconstitutional. revealed the desperate need for, He said his organization's de­measured by what the public has .' have authorized their· education Public schools in this state are renewal and reappraisal., The cision to file. a taxpayer's suit., been permitted to view, in the· , secretai-iatto prepare a cOmmon.' ,eQ\l:ii'ed by lliwto oplm classellcarefully chosen examples were· , against the. bus law was made so-called 'foreign" art' . movies, Cl1ristian !!Chool-opening prayer .. each'day'with reading ofScrip'- ·:few and indicated the ,weakness last. SpJ;'ing when it was passed and, indeed, some of our domes- . with, the Protestant education tural passages and recitation of " '·"of much other catechetical mate- by . the Legislature and had tic products, then it is equally aecretariat., The· Bishops. said the :Lord's Prayer." ' rial which has little· fresh or nothing to do with Kelley'." clear that 'Memoirs' does these they hope that' a prayer which ·new about it but ,the desciip- opinion. standards no violence whatso:. would be acceptable also to Mos- Sel1ator. .to Address tions, "liturgical" or "keryg­ever." lems could be composed. matic." To Lead Pilgrimage

Catholic Veterans AURIEVILLE (NC)-A group WASHINGTON (NC) - Sen. Catholic Increase of Iriquois Indians will lead the

Indian Day Pilgrimage to theKenneth Keating of New York TORONTO (NC)-The Catho­will speak at the annual con­ lic population of metropolitan North American Martyrs shrine vention of the Catholic War Toronto more than doubled in here in New York Sunday.

DIOCESAN DIRECTOR AT CCD: Rev. Joseph L. Powers, chairman and discussion moderator at special ses­sion of Fishers, meets with Diocesan laity between meet­ings. Left to right: Edward Angelo, St. Mary's, New Bed­ford; Father Powers; Mrs. Timothy Neville, St. Joseph's, Taunton; Frank Waring, Sacred Heart, Fall River.

Veterans in Miami Beach, Fla. the last 10 years, rising from Other speakers at the conven­ 192,000 to 457,000, according to

tion, which starts Sunday, in­ a survey by the Toronto Star. In clud,e John Gleason of the U. S. the same period, the metropol­Vet era n s Administration in itan population grew from 1,173,­Was:'J.ington, D. C,; Paul Harvey, 000 to 1,608,000. new:; commentator and colum­nist from Chicago; and Justice Edward T. McCaffrey of the New York State Supreme Court.

Edward F. McElroy of Chi­cago, CWV national commander, will preside at the sessions. Bishop Coleman F. Carroll of Miami will extend greetings at the convention banquet.

S.~e Sons Ordained DUBLIN (NC)-Mrs. Iris Bed­

thi ~Llld Mrs. Maria Sarosi came here from Hungary to see their sons, Fathers Tamas Bedthi and Jozsef Sarosi, ordained priests at Dublin's Jesuit seminary. .

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Page 11: 08.29.63

World Leaders Thank Pope For Message on Test Ban

VATICAN CITY (NC) - Pope Paul VI has been thanked for his message on the signing of the nuclear test ban treaty by President John F. Kennedy, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, British Prime Minister Harold Mac­millan and United Nations General Secretary U Thant. President Kennedy's mes­sage said: "I send my hearty thanks for your most thoughtful and generous message of con­gratulations on the occasion of the signature of the limited test ban treaty. It is a great en­couragement to have this ex­pression of your understanding and support in this most im­portant matter."

Prime Min i s t e r Macmillan said:

"The satisfaction expressed by Your Holiness on the occasion of the signing of the treaty for the prohibition of nuclear experi­ments is an encouragement to me and I am most grateful to Your Holiness for it. We are confident that the treaty signed at Moscow can be a happy pro­mise for the peace of the world."

Share Pope's Hope Premier Khrushchev stated: "I thank you for your message

of good wishes on the occasion of the signing of the treaty for the prohibition of war I ike nuclear experiments, which has paved the way to a solution of the international problems on the principles of peaceful co­existence. After it there should follow other steps for the con­lIOlidation of eo 11 ~ b o'r a ti 0 n

-es' Prelate ServKosher M,eoI

' among nations and for arrivingat a stable peace in the whole world."

The UN Secretary General wrote to Amleto Cardinal Cicog­nani, Papal Secretary of State, asking him to convoy the fol­lowing communication to Pope Paul:

"I was deeply moved by the gracious message which Your Holiness so kindly sent me on the occasion of the signing of the treaty for the prohibition of nuclear experiments. We all share the hope so eloquently ex­pressed by Your Holiness that this may point the way toward a new and true peace in the world."

Back President On Immigration

WASHINGTON (NC) - Sev­enty-two religious and other groups concerned .with immigra­tion have backed President Ken_ nedy's proposal to end the na­tional origins quota system in immigration law.

"We strongly endorse the his­- ~ric step you have taken," the national and local iroups wrote

, to President Kennedy. Elimina­tion of the present quota system

' is the, chief 'part of the Presi­dent'I!, r~conirnendations for chan~~ i~)nlmigration laws: " The' message to the President 'Was disclosed by. Sen..Philip'A. Hart of Michigan on the Seriate

RALEIGH (NC) _ A strictlY,' floo!. Hart is Senate sponsor of kosher- meal was ,served at the a bill containing the President's residence of the Catholic Bishop proposals. of Raleigh here. Five Catholic organizations' Italy. ' - it to overcome completely the

The occasion was a meeting of signed the brief statement. They the steering committee of the are: the Department of Immigra-North Carolina Council on Reli~ tion and Catholic Relief Ser­gion and Race, and the host was 'vices, both sections of the Na­Raleigh's Bishop Vincent S. tional Catholic Welfare Con-Waters. ference; the National Conference

When it came time for lunch, ¢ «::atholic Charities and the the Bishop announced that out of National' Catholic Rural Life' respect for the two Jewish rab- Conference. . h . ' , ' b18 w 0 are committee members,' "'ted k hhe had mVI a os er catererto prepare the food, taking cog­nizance of the fact that not only the food but the dishes in which it would be served had to be kosher for Jewish ritual accep-' tance.

Just before the lunch was llCrved, the ,Bishop invited the Jewish clergymen to explain the signIficance of the Rabbinic laws of Kashrilth. The rabbis thanked Bishop Waters for his sensitivity and consideration. They are' Rabbis William B. Furie of Salis­bury and Abe W. Schoen of Raleiah.

,:Ang.I'I"can Prelat-e's' TL d P"I " ,0 ea. I grlms 'LONDON (NC) -Two Angli­can, ,prelates - Bishop Merv.yn Stockwood of Southwark and Bishop' J. Fison of Salisbury-, will bead 400 pilgrims who will be received in ,audience by Pope, ,Paul VI next April.

A visit to the Orthodox Patri ­arch Athenagoras in Istanbul 18 also planned. The pilgrims are taking part in an internomina­tional pilgrimage to the HolyLa:Dcl.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFoll River-Thurs. Aug, 29,1963 11

, CEREMONIES, FOR THE TAKING OF VOWS: Sisters of St. Joseph taking their vows at St. Theresa's Convent Chapel, Fall River, were, left to right: Sr. Margarite de Sacre Coeur, New Bedford; Sr. Claire Elizabeth, Louisiana' Sr. Victor Marie Somerset· Sr. ,Ste. Julienne, Maine. ' , ' ,

Prove Effectiveness of Church Efforts Negro Prelates Educate Native

'BOLZANO (NC) - The prell-' full awarenes of, their OW;ll dig­ence of' a Negro cardinal and nity aqd responsibilities." Negro archbishops andbishoplI' He,said that the'a~vanceo{the

'at the Ecumenical'Councilis ev- Church had been facilitated by idence of the Church's effective the colonial expansion of' Euro­work in educating' a native cler. . pean 'nations, but added: gy in Africa's new independent ,"The recognition which "the nations, the'head of the Church's missionary Church has received mission organization said here in from the ,new states has enabled

- Gregorio Cardinal Agagianian, accusation of its coexistence Prefect of the Sacred Congrega- with colonialism···

,tion for the Propagation of the "Even before the rise of the' a 0 IC ourna ISts Faith, made this point in the nationalist m'ovements, th e Want News Agency opening address 6f the Cultural Church has taken account of the Congress of the Catholic Univer- BELO HORIZONTE (NC)­sity of Milan held at Mendola Brazilian Catholic 'journalist.s Pas,s near, here. New York Planning gathered here for their first

Speaking on the theme of the 5"1 M' d . ,national meeting called for the' lent, e itation establishment of a new's agency congress, "The Activity of theCh h h 0 ' ' A'"LBAN,Y (NC)-State Educa_under the jurisdiction of the

urc and t e pening of theHistory of New Peoples," Car- ',tion 'Commissioner James E.Al-, dinal Agagianian noted that the, len,;Jr., has, ruled that singing, theme ]:lad been chosen, by Pope - the fourth stanza of "America" Paul VI while he was still ATch- as a public school devotional ex­bisho.p of Milan. er~ise violates the U.S. Supreme

• Local Organization Court's ban on public school' Tl,le three aspects of the" prayer. ,

, Church's vast mission program, 'the Cardinal said, are the follow':' lng:, " ' " . " ..' ,

''To make known the mystery of God, Creator and Father of men.'

"To carry the name of Christ the Redeemer into the world.

"To call individual men to the

SISTERS ~F ST. JOSEPH: During the clothing and profession held at St. Theresa's Cl;apel, Fall RIver, the following participated in the ceremony: Sr. Marie Xavier, Fall RIver;. Sr. Joseph Edouard, Swansea; Sr. Alfred Marie, Fall River; Sr. Ernest Marie; Fall RIver; Sr. Ste. Anne, Swan~

At the same time, however, he 'held' that' there is nothing' to prevehtobservance of' a "mo':' ment of reverent silence'; In pub- ' ',.velopment ,of, social conscience lie schools, provided. school offi- and' promote the' "inevitable cials do not try to influence its basic reforms." content, "We dare not run the risk of

surrender either to right Or toP left," the group asserted.riest 65 Years MONTREAL (NC) - Retired

Auxiliary Bishop Conrad J. Chaumont of Montreal, who ob­served the 22nd anniversary of his episcopal consecration on Aug. 15, will note his 65th year as a priest on Tuesday, Sept. 24. Bishop Chaumont, 88, has been living in retirement for the past two years at Hotel Dieu Hospital.

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12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Aug. 29,1963

Urge's 'Mature Teen-agers To Set Pace for Others

. By Joseph T. McGloin, S.J. Many of you teen-agers seem obsessed with yelling

constantly how mature you are. You demand "more re­sponsibility," so that you can prove to someone - your fellow teen-agers, or the adults, or most probably just your­self - that you're an adult.

be expected to aCt like adults ­High-school debaters hotly that the school crises Bnd theargue the question "Should threat of Communism and all 18 - year - olds v 0 t e? and these things are part of the adult you're pretty convinced by the world, and that this separate, answer they often come up with: ins u 1 ate d civilization called­"If we're old teendom is too tender and im­enough to fight, mature (in an appealing child­we're old like sort of way, of course) to enough to be tortured with such problems vote." just now.

Which is a lot And the teen-ager who is con­of hooey, and cerned with these matters, while just as phoney his contemporaries are having as your claim to their fun preparatory to growingmaturity some­ into adults (which preparationtimes is. may extend well into middle­

At one stage age and beyond), is often re­of his life, the garded as a square.little boy thinks

Waste Best Yearsyou show maturity in knowing how to spit. Somewhat later, he Actually, if you teen-agers FATHER GLASER, S.J. will announce his maturity in throwaway these years, you are some spicy terms he knows wasting the best and most valu­(even though a "damn" in his able period of your lives poten­ 11 Chaplains Get mouth has all the casual charm tially at least. This stuff of "boys ()f a teen-aged girl showing the will be boys," and "Let them Dlismas Awards ldds in the other booths that she have their fun now - they'll inhales when she smokes). grow up soon enough" is so PORTLAND (NC) - The

dean of the American CatholicChildish Actions much undiluted eye-wash. Correctional Chaplains Associa­And you teen-agers often seem You are, for instance, Ameri­ tion heads the list of 11 chaplainato think that you show your cans right now, and, as such, receiving the St. Dismas Awardmaturity by stupid, reckless you should be concerned about at the association's c~mventiondriving, by smoking too much everything that touches your . her,~ in,Oregon this week.and drinking and· necking. In country's welfare. You're stu­

other words,· you're out to show dents, not supposed to be just He is' Father Anthony N. ~ "maturity" by those very marking time in school, not Gla;,er, S.J., now retired after outward signs which prove be­ there only because it is "the 30 ",ears' service as a chaplain yond a doubt that you're still an thing to do," or because this is at Rikers Island, N.Y. The infant. the best place to make social awards, presented for five years

Because it's infantile to drive contacts. or more of service, were given a car recklessly - or to idolize You are supposed to achieve at a luncheon Monday. a car, for that matter, as you so a balance in your life, a sense Other chaplains honored areoften seem to do. It's puerile to of values, a faith and a code of Father Francis Prange, S.l.,9Itloke when you don't really action which rules out whim chaplain' for 20 years at McNeilwant to, just to "prove" your and impulse and immaturity and Island, Wash.; Father Edward ~wing maturity, . especially irresponsibility. And you're not Kowrach, chaplain for 20 yearswhen you'd probably feel and too young for that. at Eastern State Hospital, Medi­look and undoubtedly even smell Need Leadership ca} Lake, w.:ash.;· Father Josephbetter without it. Sen!ie, who served for 25 yearsAnd drinking; of course, can The trouble is that you teen­

at institutions in Illinois; Fatherbe one of the big give-aways agers who read this column will

Edward Dienberg, chaplain atto i m ma tu r i t y, even in be just' the ones who don't needa San Quentin Prison, Calif., fromit, because you're mature enoughtottering 'old guy 'in his vener­ 1948 to 1961; Father Paul Me­able 'forties or ancient fifties. to read at least. You teen-agers,. Cam1, O.P., chaplain at Oregonmoreover, could ~ith some justi ­In the News ins tit uti 0 n s for nine years;fication, resent what I've had toSome years ago when a bunch Father Raymond C. Rolff, chap­say. Not entirely, thou~ - be­of heroic Hungarian teen-agers lain at California Medical Faci­cause if you're bright and ma­were bravely and uriselfishly lity, from 1955 to 1962.ture enough to read, you'rerisking their lives (and often bright and mature enough, too, Also, Father Joseph D'Ago..enough giving their lives) for a to see that many, many teen­ tino, chaplain for five years atnebulous thing they called "free­ agers do fit the above descrip­ the New York State Vocationaldom," American teen-agers' were tion. Institution; Father Francis 1.in the papers too: they were in Not only that, but you'll be Pawlak, chaplain at Woodlawn,water-fights with the police on able to figure that, since they'll N.Y.; Father Alcuin Greenberg,one college campus, bravely probably never be mat u r e O.S.13., U.S. Medical Center,marching on a women's dorm enough to do much serious Sprilgfield, Mo.; and Father R.to conduct a "panty raid" on an­ reading, you, who do read, will Berube, Fort Saskatchewan, Al­ollher. also have to lead. . berta.At a time when an obscure So don't just say, "I'm nots c h 0 0 1 or two were being that way, so the heck with it."bombed in the southern states, No, try this one instead: "I'll try K of C Donationso that a few unimportant Amer­ to set a pace for others, insteadican children and other negli ­ of sitting back complacently.gible Americans seriously Aids Marchers were And, if enough of us· mature endange~ed or injured or killed, teen-agers· really act our age, WASHINGTON· (NC) - Thecollege papers found that their the baby teen-agers will quit Knights of Columbus made most important news items had, thinking they're either typical $25,000 available to the Archdio­to do with Gladys Gluck, the cese of toor cute (and so ,will Ilheir chil ­ Washington provide'Homecoming PatsyQueen, or .dish parents) and grow. up." 10 hostels for participants in theProtozoa, Miss Biology Lab. March on Washington for Jot.

, 'Still Kids' and J'reedom;Responsibility? Teen - agers Scores Opposition

seem to scream their heads off A statement by ArchbishOp for this undefined item until it's To Public Housing Patrick A. O'Boyle of Washing­actually offered them, and then ton says: '

DAYTON (NC) - A Federaldley begin to plead that they're public housing official has chal_ "TJile Board of Directors eI. really still kids and shouldn't lenged.. "rigid and incongruous" the Knights of Columbus at their

opposition to publtlhousing pro­ annual convention in Milwaukee ·grams. appropriated $25,000 to the Arch­Report Rose Drops

Francis X. Servaites, Deputy diocese of Washington flo provideProduction Plans Commissioner of the U. S. Public 10 hostels for participants in the

NEW YORK (NC) - Variety Housing Administration, told March. on Washington. These has reported that producer Billy the seventh annual convention hostels include the gymnasium Rose has decided to forego plans of the National Catholic Social at Georgetown University, the for his Broadway production of Action Conference that there is Catholic. Uiliversity and eigbt the· controversial German play, "no other realistic and practical Catholic parish halls in thecii7 "The Deputy." way" of giving low income fam'­ of Washington.

The. show business weekly ilies decent housing. "The hostels will provide sup­magazine gave no additional de- "One would expect slum land­ per and breakfast for those par­

. tails on Rose's action to· drop lords to oppose public housing, ticipants who because of dis­.tbe play which is an attack on but what is the reason why per­ tance or illness will f'md it dif~ Pope Pius XII, alleging he was fectly nice, people who are just ficult to return to their hom~ indifferent to Nazi persecution as horrified as anyone at the the night of Aug. 28. The hostels of Jews during World War II. slum conditions under which low will he staffect and directed by

Written by Rolf Hochhuth and income families live and are not committees representing the f.irst produced in Berlin, the particularly greedy, stand up and Knights of Columbus, the Catho­play has been 'roundily criticized are counted among those who lie' In~rracial Council, diocesan by Catholics, including the Ger­ oppose and sway public opinion and religious priests anq Broth­man Hierarchy, as a false picture against the program?" Servaitea ers of the Archdioceae eI. Gl ·the late Pope. asked. .' Wasn [ngton... . .

.Decay From Within,

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

Sixteen of twenty-one civilizations which have perished fa the pages of history did not succumb to aUacks from without: they decayed from within. Material prosperity may rava~e both body· and soul by making the body grow quickly old through excessive ease and comfort, and by making the sool serve iwo masters.

Applying this to the Church in the United States, do Wi! not have too much while others have too little? As Catholics we are members of the Mystical Body everywhere in the world: the hunger of India is our hunger; the infra-human degradation of the slums of Latin America is our deadened spirit. The sad fact is that wherever there is economic prosperity the rich get richer and wherever there are vast populations, or soul­explosions, there is growing poverty.

Catholics have a dut,. to aid the poor of the world. To keep the Church spiritu­ally health,. we might well consider the merits of these suggestions: 1. When yoo make contributions to institutions alread,. having millions - to a hospital, a school, a university, a parish hall, or for the construction of as exces­sively expensive Church - ask that a share of that contribution be given to the Holy Father and his Societ,. for the PropagatioD of the Faith. This mal' help to alleviate the hune'er Which, in Asia, is more dangerous than the atomic bomb. 2. When you but' a new ear, new furniture, clothes or records, 01' pa,. taxe. to help build a hundred million dollar Polaris submarine. shoul. you not think of civinc to those ia whom Christ relive. IIi8 poveny?

Regardless of how much we are giving. it J8 still below what the Lord expects of us. It must worr)' us to know that about one­fourth of Santiago's people live in hoveh and tumble-down macks; in one slum there is no water, sewage 01' electricity. We must begin retrenching, cutting back, cutting down, diminishing our wants to be worthy of the Lord who took upon Himself the hUl\fSer. the thirst and the suffering of human hearts.

Two-thirda of the world dees not want to gO to heavetl 011 aD. empt,. stomach, nor can we co there _ a fIlll one day after da'1'. Only a wounded Christ won the world and onb a wounded Church can save it. Ma,. the Spirit inspire ,.0. to walk w..u..r of the Faith to which 70U haTe been called!

. GOD LOVE YOU to A.P.for $200 '"This is in Thanksgivmc tor recovery from a coronary." • "'. to M.K.O. for $20 "I have beell saving my winnings from a Friday night card club." • '" '" ~ R.L.Q. for $4 "The Good' Lord goave me' this money to use for' something wor.thwhile." '" "'. to E.B. for $10 "I promised this to the Missions for a favor received."

DARE TO DISCOVEK YOURSELF! Learn If J'ou. ar.e a member of "The Church of the Poor" or "The Poer Church" J.,. readini our special September-OciGber issue of MISSION. It 700 wish to be put on our mailing list for this bi-monthlJ' 111&:' ­zine, just ask us via: The Society for the Propacatloa of the Faith, 366 Fifth Aycnue. New York 1. New York.

Cut eut thill column, pin 70ur sacrifice te It an.' man It .. aae HOlt :Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, NaUonal Director of the Societ~ for the Propal'atioD of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1. N. Y., or ~our Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND '1'. CONSIDINE, 368 North Main Street. Fall River, M....

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Page 13: 08.29.63

Free Education Goal of Quebec Students' Drive

MONTREAL (NC) "Operation Free Education" has been launched by 11 or­ganizations representing 88,­000 college students attending Catholic and non _ Catholic schools in Quebec Province.

They are conducting a cam­paign of information and nego­tiation in an effort to bring about free education at all levels, including university, as soon as possible.

The Quebec g 0 v ern men t headed by Premier Jean Lesage has announced a long-term pro­gram leading to free education. The student program hopes to hasten enactment of legislation for this purpose.

Fees Increase Of immediate concern are in­

creases in university fees which range from $40 to $100 this year. The student organizations say such an increase will mean much hardship to many and is not compatible with the government plan.

Student organizations coop- " erating in the program are from Laval, Montreal and McGill Universities, the University of Sherbrooke, Classical Colleges of Quebec, Loyola College, Mari­anopolis College, National Stu­dent Press, Sir George Williams University, General Association of Students of Quebec and les Copains de St. Henri.

$3.25 Million School Expansion Highlight

PIDLADELPHIA (NC) - A new $3.25 million high school, named in" honor of the late John Cardinal O'Hara, will open this September in suburban Philadel­phia.

A coinstitutional school with room for 4,000 students, it is part of a multimillion dollar expan­sion program in the Philadelphia archdiocese.

Total enrollment in the Cath­olic elementary and diocesan high schools of the five-county· Philadelphia archdiocese will reach a record 269,754 with the opening of school in September, an increase of 7,068 over last year's enrollment. Of this num­ber, 56,974 students will attend the tuition-free Catholic high schools of the Philadelphia archdiocese.

Use 1300-Year-Old Ritual in Blessing

LATROBE (NC)-A ceremony nearly 13 centuries old will be used when the Rt. Rev. Rembert G. Weakland, O.S.B., is blessed as Coadjutor Archabbot of St. Vincent's Archabbey here in Pennsylvania today.

The blessing which rivals in solemnity the consecration of a bishop, will be imparted by Bishop William G. Connare of Greensburg, Pa., during the of;' fering of a Solesmn Pontifical Mass in the archabbey.

The earliesi form of the abba­tial blessing wlls ordered in the seventh century by St. Theodore of Canterbury. A century later the Pontifical of Egbert of York provided a special ritual for such a ceremony.

Oppose Referendum On Housing Law

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council of San Francisco has opposed ef­forts to obtain a referendum on California's new fair housing law.

The CIC said in a statement that "Californians committed to genuine equal opportunity should not sign any referendum petition to abolish the new state fair housing law."

The Citizens League fur In­dividual Freedom is currently seeking to obtain 300,000 voters' signatures on a referendum pe­tition. If it does 80 before Fri ­day, Sept. 20, enforcement of the fair housing law will be blocked and it will be submittecl to referendum in 1964. - .

Fall River Man Pioneer United StatesMember

.Of Charles de Foucauld Secular Fraternity Visiting Fall River last week was the regional "Responsable'" for a unique organiza­

tion, the Charles de Foucauld Secular Fraternity. He is Leo Callahan, native of Fall River and former member of St. Patrick's parish, now married and the father of two, and teaching history at a New York City private school. The Secular Fraternity is founded on the teachings of Charles de Foucauld, 0 n e - tim e" French army officer and son of a wealthy family who abandoned a gay life to live in the depths of the Sahara desert, seeking to become a witness of Christ to the Arabs whom he considered the most abandoned people on earth. Caught in an episode of the chronic French­Arab warfare in the Sahara, he was killed, and died without making a single persevering convert to his way of 'life.

After his death, however, sev­eral priests went to the Sahara to follow his example and study his teachings. They became the Little Brothers of Jesus, the nu­cleus of an organization now nUlpbering many members and inclUding nuns, brothers and laypeople, married and single.

Large Area Mr. Callahan is "Responsable"

(the fraternity uses the French term) for an area covering New England, the Middle Atlantic States, Washington, D. C. and the Midwest. There are secular fraternities in New York City, Boston, Washington and Chicago.

Purpose of fraternity, says Mr. Callahan, is "to attempt to live the life of the Gospel through the realization in our own lives of the life of Jesus."

Three means are used by mem­bers to achieve this aim: study and meditation on the Scriptures; practice of fraternal love, espe­cially by "being accessible to everyone who might need help"; and the. Review of Life, which is a discussion among members as to how they have ''met Jesus" in others and whether they have embraced or rejected opportu­nities to serve Him in their brothers.

This Review is not a confes­Ilion or "chapter of faults," em­

.phasizes ,Mr. Callahan, but "an attempt to disclose our spiritual lives to each other in such a way that we can help our brothers and help ourselves."

. The fraternity does not accept private members, as do tertiary organizations, but insists that there be at least two to form the nucleus of a group. Only membership requirement is to have the desire to live the life of the Gospel according to one's state. There are no dues, mem:. bership cards or other parapher­nalia of most organizations. Meetings are usually held monthly.

Need of Adoration Although there are no pre­

scribed prayers or devotions for members, it is strongly urged that a daily period be devoted to adoration in the presence of the Blessed Sacrament. In this way members "encounter the person of Jesus in the Sacra­ment."

Other branches of the organ. ization include the Litte Broth­ers and Little Sisters of Jesus. These are priests, brothers and nuns. They live in the midst of people as ''Witnesses to Jesus in the midst of the world and its distractions."

All hold regular jobs but re­turn to community living at night and have their own chapels in their dwellings. They do not attempt to make converts but

Peruvian President Asks Help of God

LIMA (NC)~President Fer­nando Belaunde Terry asserted on assuming office that "only by the immeasurable goodness of God and the understanding of my fellow countrymen" can he succeed.

The new President announced a program stressing public hous­ing and provision of schools for close to one million Peruvian children without' them. "We must channel public and private funds" for the solution of the most urgent IOcial p.roblema," ;Belaunde eaid.

LEO CALLAHAN

their doors are open at any time for those who may call upon them. They aim to give example by their presence rather than by preaching or teaching.

Although the French experi. " ment of "worker priests" has been found unsatisfactory, the. Little Brothers are permitted to continue their similar lives, said Mr. Callahan, because their safe­guards include community liv­ing and there is no secret made of the fact that they are priests or brothers.

There is also a secular insti ­tute affiliated with the Little Brothers and Sisters, said Mr. Callahan. This comprises single people who take the vows of

.chastity, poverty and obedience, but keep their jobs in the world. Unlike the secular fraternity members, secular institute men and women may be alone in a city, but must have regular meetings with their superiors.

Regional "Responsable" for the secular institute is Miss

·Anne Marie de Commaille of New York City. She is superior for seven or eight members scattered throughout the coun­

,try. There is only one Little

Brothers unit in the United · States, consisting of two lay brothers and active in Detroit. Boston and Washington have convents of the Little Sistel'fl. A

Few Banquet Tables· In Red China Today

HONG KONG (NC) - Tra­vellers reaching here from Red China tell of food shortages there.

"A German woman married to a Chinese and living in China for 39 years was finally allowed to leave the country after a four year effort" reported Father James F. Smith, M.M.

On her arrival in Hong Kong, the woman gave an account of her monthly food rations during

· the past year. Her meager diet consisted of one egg, two ounces of meat, two ounces of oil, two ounces of sugar, one-half ounce of butter, 25 pounds of cereal and 10 pounds of vegetable..

famous man affiliated with the organiza.tion, noted Mr. Calla­han, is Jacques Maritain, who

. has lived with a French unit· since the death of his wife.

First in U. S. Mr. Callahan has been in the

fraternity for about four years being a member of the first United States unit. He said that 10 priests of the Brooklyn Dio­cese form a priests' fraternity, and aid the lay groups in giving retreats and days of recollection.

"We have no special apostolic work of our own," said Mr. Cal­lahan, "but we form people for the active apostolate of their own choice. The important thing we teach our members is to seek Jesus and Him only." Motto of the fraternity, as was that of Charles de Foucauld, is "Jesus Caritas."

The New York units issue ." quarterly newsletter and mem­bers also receive a magazine, "Jesus Caritas," from French headquarters of the organization.

Mr. Callahan can be reached' by prospective members at 175

. Claremont Avenue, New York 27, N.Y.

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.THE .ANCHOR­ 13Thurs., Aug. 29, 1963

100,000 at Polish Shrine Despite Red Barriers

BERLIN (NC) - An estimated 100,000 pilgrims traveled to Poland's national Marian shrine at Czesto­chowa for the Feast of the As­sumption despite an organized effort on the part of the com­munist regime to deter them.

Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski, Primate of Poland, who offered the main Mass at the Czesto­chowa shrine of Our Lady Queen of Poland, said in his sermon that some pilgrims suffered their own "way of the cross" to get there.

A crowd of 100,000 is not ab­normal for Czestochowa's shrine - either on the feast of the As­sumption or that of Our Lady of Czestochowa the following week.

It was learned here that the Polish government seized on the pretext of a smallpox outbreak in southwestern Poland to try to block the annual pilgrimage of the feast of the Assumption. Seven smallpox deaths were re­ported within a five - week period, and government func_ tionaries ruled out pilgrimages.

War of Attrition Polish Catholics quickly noted

that there was no restriction on ordinary tourist travel, and in­terpreted the anti - pilgrimage rulings as merely a phase of the communist apparatus' war of at,. trition against the Church.

The outcome' was that instead of traveling as pilgrims in or­ganized groups, Poles went to Czestochowa as individual tour­ists. Police roadblocks were set up at the approaches to the city, and the incoming "tourists" had to show both identity cards alid vaccination cerUficates. It was reported, moreover, that the police turned back some whose documuents were in order.

Cardinal Commends Anglican' Congress . TORONTO NC)-James Car­

dinal McGuigan, Archbishop of Toronto, has commended the re. cent World Anglican Congress" here for its stress on religious unity.

Cardinal McGuigan, in his weekly column in the Toronto Telegram, said the Anglican con­gress emphasized "the impor. tance of unity among Christians."

"This theme is very much in harmony with the intentions and the work of the Second Vatican Council," he said.

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Page 14: 08.29.63

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14 . TtiE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. ~g'. 29, 1963

Urges Labor Take 'Honest Look' at Racial Problem

,

By Msgr. George G. Higgins IDirector, NCWC Social Action Department "Has Success Spoiled Big Labor?", Saturday Evening

Post reporter Harold H. Martin asked in the first of two feature articles on the American labor movement published in the Post last December. Mr. Martin's answer to this question was extremely criti­

The public has been left withcal of the labor movement. the impression that labor's re·"Once lean and hungry," he fusal to endorse the Aug. 28 said, "the unions have grown demonstration was dictated by arrogant and fat. Big Labor is the fear that it might get out of now Big BUSiness, run by or­ hand and alienate the conserva­ganization men. tive wing of the Congress. Bu t member­ Negro Leaders Disappointedship is shrink­ This sori of calculating "pru­ing, and the un· dence" is somewhat out of char­organized still acter for the labor movement rem a i n unor­ and can hardly be·· reconciled ganized • • ." with the past and present will ­That's not fair ingness of unions to fly in the to organized la­ face of public opinion when bor. It puts the their own strictly trade union case against the interests are at stake. unions much Negro leaders are also asking. too strongly. - quite legitimately - when the However, Mr. labor movement is going to Martin's question is a legitimate lower the boom on those unions one. which are still practicing racial

Even some of. labor's most discrimination. loyal supporters are beginning When an employer tries to dis­410 ask this question, with special courage the organization of his reference to race relations and . workers or refuses to engage in eiv~l rights. The reason for this collective bargaining, the labor is that the labor movement ap· movement will go to almost any pears to be somewhat ambiva­ length to bring him to time and, lent in its approach to the prob­ it necessary, will drive him to lem and cannot seem to make up 1:he wall. !its mind how far it really wants Negro leaders are disappointed ­to go in supporting the current that it tends to react 'much len erusade for complete racial vigorously when one of its own equality. affiliates is guilty of practicing

Turning Point racial discrimination. RIB ROAST Some of my friends in the la- Sees Growing Rift

.bor movement may think it odd Some Negro leaders may be that I should be writing about too critical of the labor move­ SHORT CUT-3rd to 6th Ribs this problem in my annual Labor ment. They may not fully appre­ [Sirloin Tip 1st 2 Rib, Ib 77c]Day column. Labor Day is the ciate the complexity of the prob­ La 57c one day of the year on which lems with which truly dedicated they expect to be given a pat labor leaders are confronted in SUPER-RIGHT, FUllV-COOKED on the back not only by their their effc)l'ts to promote the friends but even by their peren­ cause of complete racial equality. nial critics. However, many labor leaders Shank 39C

We are now at a'turning point, have yet to grasp the depth and . Portion LBHAMShowever, in the history of the the passion of the present racial United States and also in the crisis. As a result, there is a history of the American labor growing rift between organized SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY U. S. GOV'T. INSPECTED movement. This is the year of labor and the Negro community. decision for all of us in the field This is thf most serious prob­

"of race relations and civil rights. lem with which the labor move­·On Labor Day, 1963, therefore, ment is' presently confronted. In­

the labor movement, like every stead of going through the usual ,other' organization in American routine of self-congratulations !~~!~~!LBS Isociety, is on the spot. For the on Labor Day, 1963, labor would moment it must expect to be be well-advised to take a self­judged almost exclusively on its critical and ruthlessly honest performance in the field of civil look at this problem, which is Plump Tend.r 39c 37c 11

LBrights and must expect to be largely of its own making. .nd Meaty Lll

!told, even by its friends, that its It can ill afford to get the rep­,record on the iss~a of civil rights utation of being even partially A&P Super Market, Open 'Til 9 P.M. Thursday &: FridaIg has been somewhat disappoint- out of sympathy with the Closea Labor Day, Monday, September 2. 'Iing. Negro's legitimate and very be­ Most A&P Market8 Open Sat., Until 9 P.M. 1

Rights Demonstration lated demand for complete In fairness, of course, it should equality.

be pointed out that the American labor movement has done much

.'P Invest Stravinsky in the past and is doing even more at the present to promote Knight Commander the cause of interracial justice, SANTA FE (NC) - Composernot only within its own ranks, and conductor Igor Stravinskybut in the community at large. was invested Inhere New

Many of its friends feel, how­ Mexico as a Knight Commander ·1ever, that success may have with star in the papal Order ofspoiled Big Labor on the partic­ St. Sylvester.ular issue of civil rights. The im.

The investiture took place inpression is abroad that the labor the Cathedral of St. Francis atmovement is trying to be a little the conclusion of a musical pro­too respectable and has yet to gram within the edifice whichput the issue of racial equality Stravinsky conducted. Applauseat the very top of its agenda. filled the cathedral at the end ofNegro leaders in particular the ceremony. .find it difficult to understand,

for example, why the labor Stravinsky was given the movement refused to endorse papal honor at the request of the Aug. 28 civil rights demon­ the late Archbishop Edwin V. fOR A LIMITED TIM! ONLY ON stration in Washington. Perhaps Byrne of Santa Fe. It was con­ SPECIAL SALI THE THREE POUND ECONOMY SIZI! there is something to be said for ferred by Msgr. George V. Rief­ e htO'CI k 3 1 39labor's decision to sit this one fer, administrator of the arch­ MiidMellow LB out. but, if so, labor hasn't said

EI 9 oc Coffee - Save 20c BAG.

it very convincingly. diocese.

Church Uses Public Red Circle ~~~:~:i:~~~ 3 B~G 1.49 Questions Schqol Cafeteria

(NC)-The cafeteria Bokar CoHee ~~~~~~~~~.3 B~G 1.59HOUMAContinued from Page Six at a local public school will serve

cions, a great step toward true as a temporary church for St. Jane Parker unity. Gregory Barbarigo parish imtil large a-Inch 1 Ib a 0%

(The Bible and Unity, a church is built. Huseman, "Guide" Three days after Archbishop

Aug.-Sept. 1963) John P. Cody, Apostolic Admin­ Apple Pie S~~cE 39c Q. What is a relic? istrator of New Orleans, an­

CHRISTIAN FAMILY MOVEMENT: 1200 couples and 300 chaplains participated in the 13th national meeting at Notre Dame University. Speakers included, from left,' Dr. George N. Shuster, assistant to the president of the university; Msgr. Pietro Pava~ professor at Lateran University, Rome; Msgr. Reynold Hillenbrand, national chaplain. At right are Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Crowley, secretary couple for the CFM national co­<ll"dinating committee. NC Photo.

HE., Attle. nounced formation of the parish, P,lces shown III thl. III guarantNd thl'll Sat., Aug, 31 & effeetlvt at All A&P s'per Marhts IA this communltJ & ,lcloltJ. Tobacc:o Products tlId Items prohibIt'" 1Ir law e..mpt f,oll Pltld StOm, offer.Relics are bodies or parts of the local public school board

'bodies of saints, or objects di­ authorized use of the school and rectly connected with them or turned a set of keys over to with Our Lord. (The Visible Father Francis L Amedee, pas­Church, Sullivan, p. 260) tor.

.... L ....... _ .....

Page 15: 08.29.63

.. ,~

M ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Th~rs. Aug. 29,1963 15

• 1'T"'""

YOUNG LIBRARIANS: Students turn librarians at Bishop Cassidy Sister Mary Joseph, P.M., professional library consultant, explains pro­High School in Taunton as they devote part of Summer to aiding' in cedure to Patricia Medas. Right, girls sort cards and stack books to be enormous task of "organizing library from scratch." Left, from left, processed. From left, Joyce Furtado, Diane Renaud, Sheilah Vickers. Carol Parkinson, Donna Welch, Pamela Smith type catalog cards. Center, Organizing library was Summer project.

Seniors at Bishop Cassidy High Plans to Revise .Clergymen See Fraud in Claims Eager to Start First Full Year Censorship Law Made for Right-to-Wo~k Laws

QUEBEC (NC) - The 50­ WASHINGTON (NC) - A ference, and Rev. Edward F.In Beautiful. New Building year-old film censorship law in Catholic priest and a Methodist Allen, superintendent, Augusta

Quebec is to be overhauled, Pro­ minister charged here that sup- district, M a i n e Methodist With the opening of school in September Bishop Cas­ vincial Secretary Bona Arse­ porters of so-called "right-to- Churches, spoke on an eight­

sidy High in Taunton will begin its first fun school year. nault has announced. At the work" laws are guilty of fraud city radio network beamed from same time he said that Pierre in saying the laws guarantee American University here.This year's senior class will be the first to have spent a Saucier, a director of the Domi­ freedom. The two said the purpose ofcomplete year at the new school which stems from old nican magazine Maintenant, has Msgr. George G. Higgins, di- "right-to-work" laws is to take

St. Mary's High. Two of been named a member of the rector, Social Action Department, away the freedom of manage­be depressed in one of Cassidy'sBishop Cassid;ts outstanding film censorship bureau. National Catholic Welfare Con- ment and labor to negotiate aclassrooms. The architecture, theupcoming seniors are Brenda Films henceforth must be ac­ union shop agreement throughcolor scheme, thli! modern lines cepted intact or rejected en­ Brenda likes to read anything, coilective bargaining.Buckley and Suzanne Fornal. are all conducive to study. This tirely, Arsenault said. Films will but favors history especially. For

Both girls attended St. Mary's school should turn out nothing be rated in adult or child cate­ entertainment she likes biogra­ The new library is describedHigh before going into the new but A students from now on!" gories. phy and has enjoyed recently as "airy, attractive, colorful and- Bishop Cassidy building. Suzanne is working towards a Revisions to the existing law books by and about the Trapp quiet." Quietness is aided, too,Brenda, daughter of Mr. Ralph future as a psychiatric social will be introduced in the Quebec Family Singers. by the unusual feature of waIl-Buckley of 9 East Broadway in worker. Legislature at the next session Suzanne lets her reading cover . to-wall carpeting. Only thingTaunton, has always taken' an Likes to Paint in September. a wide range, but likes romantic lacking, as a matter of fact, is aactive role in school affairs and Favorite subjects for Brenda Arsenault said Saucier's ap­ historical novels. "Flying sau­ sufficiency of books.this year will be co-editor-in­ include English, Spanish and pointment signifies a new policy cers" are another interest with Sister John Elizabeth, princi­chief of Cassidy High's memory because in the future the job Suzanne and she espsecially en.chemistry. English and Spanish pal, notes that the school shouldbook, the Corona. In talking head the list because she has a will be fUll-time for all mem­ joyed reading 'Top Secret" by have some 6,QOO books. To date,about the new school building, flair for languages and finds bers. Experience had shown that Major Donald Kehoe. but 2,000. have been accessioned.Brenda can get very enthusiastic. them easy. "Chemistry," ·says part-time appointments were in­ College is in the future plans A small boost was given the"The architec~ure," she says Brellda, "is a fascinating subject adequate, and part-time censors of Brenda and Suzanne though collection by the addition of a"is beautiful. Nothing seems and one that holds your inter­ did not have the time or interest neithe.r girl has yet decided on few books from the Bishop Cas­dreary." est." to educate themselves in the a college. Both agree, however, sidy Collection, previouslyA high point of this Summer Suzanne finds .English, Amer­ techniques of film censoring. that the interest they already . housed at Coyle High School,came last weekend for Brenda, ican history and French her have in reading will stand them also Taunton, but recently di­when she went to Annapolis for most interesting subjects mostly in good stead during college vided among Stonehill College,Parents' Weekend. Her brother because there .is always a lot of achieved a high scholastic rating. days. Bishop Cassidy High, and CoyleGerard is a plebe at the Naval class participation and she likes Great interest is also shown by Which brings us to Bishop itself.Academy. An uncle, Rev. Walter discussion. However, the real both girls in many other activi. Cassidy's library, where not only

J. Buckley, is pastor of St. Kil ­ "We still need more books,love in Suzanne's life is paint­ ties. During her sophomore year, Brenda and Suzanne, but every­

ian Church, New Bedford. however," stressed Sister Johning. She is never late for art .Brenda was class representative one else in the student body is Elizabeth. She cited as areas inBrenda's the youngest of four. for the mission club, which has frequently to be found.class and is also a student at a need of strengthening science,Another brother is an engineer private art studio in Taunton. as its aim the helping of missions They will be pleasantly sur­ art, music and history.and a sister is a registered nurse, both financially and spiritually. prised come next Wednesday toNational Honor Societyso blue-eyed Brenda will have Brenda has also been active in find that school-spirited fellow

family guidance in any of sev­ Both Brenda and Suzanne are 'the Catholic Students Mission students devoted part of their eral careers when it comes time top students scholastically at Crusade and the Bishop's Relief Summer to getting the libraryto decide what vocation she'd Bishop Cassidy and are proud of Fund. During the coming year in top shape, under direction of like to follow. their membership in the Debra­ Suzanne will serve as secretary Sister Mary Joseph, P.M., a pro_

bant chapter of the NationalSuzanne, daughter of Mr. and of the Catholic Action program fessional library consultant and Mrs. John S. Fornal, is also en­ Honor Soc i e t y. During the at Cassidy High. Sister Mary Charles, S.U.~.C., thusiastic about the new school Sodality Union Bishop Cassidy librarian.coming year SU7Janne will serve building and is happy to be a as vice-president of the society "Organizing a library fromFor the past few years Su­member of the first senior class and Brenda will be in charge of scratch is work and fun-despitezanne has been an active mem­funds as treasurer.to be having a full year at Cas­ the Summer's heat," declare theber of Our Lady, Cause of Oursidy High. Of the building itself The National Honor Society is girls who should know. TheyJoy Sodality at the high school.Suzanne says "It is impossible to made up of students who have' include Carol Parkinson, DonnaNext year she will s~ve as so­

Welch, Pamela Smith, Patriciadality treasurer having been Medas, Joyce Furtado, Dianeelected to that post at the close Renaud and Sheilah Vickers.of the last school year. She will

also act as recording secretary Cutter Numbers for the Queen of Peace Sodality Under direction of the two Union which is a federation of Sisters the Cassidyites have high school sodalities. learned about such matters as

Members of the sodality meet the Dewey Decimal System, Cut­weekly and strive to better their ter Numbers and book cata­oWn spiritual life. They also en­ loging. gage in various activities bene­ficial not only to themselves but

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Like to Read Reading is high on the list of

likes for both girls. "Reading is essential," says Brenda, "if a student expects to get good grades. It's all well and good to know the textbook material, but unless the student brings a good background of literature to the subject at hand, she can't expect to get the most out of it...

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Page 16: 08.29.63

THE ANC(-lr::-- !>iocese of Foil River-Thurs. Aug. 29,196316'

Prominent Modern Authors Discuss Craft of Writing

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy

Maybe the reader feels differently, but the reviewer has a peculiar interest in a book whi<;h concerns writers and the mysteries of their craft. One such is at hand in Writers At Work: The Paris Review Interviews: Second Series (Viking. $6.50). This • epa r t men t has, while basking' on the beach, been having a wonderful time lis­tening to some of the best known writers of our day hold forth OIl their work. Fourteen are beard from in t-hese pages: Boris Paster­Dak, T. S. Eliot, Ernest Heming­way, Marianne Moore, Ralph Elliison, Robert Frost, S. J. Perelman, Law­rence Durrell, Mary McCarthy, Aldous Huxley, Ezra Pound, Henry Miller, Robert Lowell, end Katherine Anne Porter.

A common theme is that these people simply had to write. Some say that they never thought of doing anything else; others that :they did not set out to be writers. But common to all is the idea that really they had no choice in ''Che matter; there was in them a lift or a compulsion to write. Some began very early; thus, Lawrence Durrell has been at it since he was eight years old.

Another common theme is that writing is, as Katherine Porter puts it, a solitary and sedentary trade. Boris Pasternak stresses the writer's need of secrecy and flUiet. Hemingway speaks of writing as private and lonely.

And he adds, "The further you go in writing the more alone you ere * * *You are more alone be­cause that is how you must work and the time to work is shorter ell the time and if you waste it )"ou have comtnitted a sin for which there is no forgiveness." '

'Slush Mail' It is Hemingway, too, who

_ys, ''The telephone and visitors are the work destroyers." And S. 3. Perelman, although expressing gratitude for ideas which some readers have given him, observes tartly, "It keeps the incinerator COing all the time" of "a lot of slush mail." People feel no compunction about breaking in on the writer, for they have no eonception of the concentration I:lequired and the deadly effecl of .nseless interruption.

He has made it a point of st<lP­ping when he knew what was going to happen next, thus guar­anteeing that he could start up without difficulty the following day. Miss Porter speaks of the importance of keeping "at a boil· ing point * * * so that I can get up in the morning with my mind still working where it was yes­terday."

Speeds, Outputs Vary There is a great difference to

be noted in the writing speed of the various authors and the rate of output. Thus, Hemingway kept a chart showing the number of words he had got down on various days, and a casual glance showed such totals as 450, 575, 462, 1250, 512.

Durrell, on the other hand, says that he can turn out ten thousand words in two days, al ­though not consistently. He did one novel in four months, an­other in two months, a third in six weeks.

Hemingway r e w rot e every­thing. Each day's work began with a rewrite of thj! previous day's. He revised the ending of A Farewell to Arms 39 times be­fore - he was satisfied with it. Once again Durrell' stands in striking contrast: he does not go back over anything he has pro­duced, except when writing verse.

Verse he writes in longhand, but his novels on a typewriter. Miss McCarthy, too, does her novels on a typewriter. ,Heming­way always stood when he wrote, and always he began by

using a pencil and writing on' onionskin paper. When the work was going fast and well, he would shift to a typewriter, and the easiest thing for him to turn out was dialogue.

All the writers are constant readers. Several say that reading keeps them going, not in the sense of directly giving them ideas or tutoring, but by firing' the imagination and helping the creative juices to flow.

Study Others Some studied other authors de­

liberately. For example, Ralph Elilson reveals that he studied Hemingway "to learn his sen­tence structure and how to or­ganize a story." And he says that although he had been hunting since he was 11, it was only from reading Hemingway that he learned to lead a bird.

"When he describes something in print, believe him; believe him even when he describes the process of art iri terms of base­ball or boxing; he's been there."

As for Hemingway, when asked which writers had influ­enced him, he listed many, such as Twain, Flaubert, Turgenev, Donne, Maupassant. But he also cited composers and painters.

"I put in painters, or started to, because I learn as much from painters about how to write as from writers * * * I should think what one learns from composers and from the study of harmony and counterpoint would be ob­vious."

Must Be Observer The writer, of course, has to

be an observer. But one wonders how many are as systematic about it as Miss Porter. Her Ship of Fools grew out of a long voy­age from Vera Cruz to Bremer­haven which she m'ade over 30 years ago.

"I don't think I spoke a half. dozen words to anybody. I just sat there and watched-not, de­liberately, though. I kept a diary in the form of a letter to a friend, and after I got home the friend sent it back."

As to the origin of characters in fiction, Huxley says that he bases characters partly on people he knows, since that is inescap- ' able, but the character is always much less complex than an actual person.

Miss McCarthy draws "pretty much from life" in some in­stance, while in others the char­acters are composites. She puts it intriguingly when she says, "What I really do is to take real plums and put them in an imag­inary cake. If you're interested in the cake, you get rather an­noyed with people saying what species the real plum was."

Elusive Secret There are tart comments on

some of their contemporaries. Miss McCarthy says, "I don't like' Salinger, not at all. That last thing isn't a novel * * * It suffers so from this terrible sort of met. ropolitan sentimentality and it's so narcissistic. And to me, also,

NNAA AWARD: Margue­rite Goen, dean of students at Mississippi '-State College for ,:Vomen, will receive to­morrow the 1963 Faculty Award of the National New­man Alumni Association in recognition for outstanding service to the Newman Apos­tolate. NC Photo.

Newsman Turns Lay Missioner

HARTFORD '(NC) - When , feature writer Robert L. Ferreira o~ the Catholic Transcript, arch­diOcesan newspaper, got a rou­tine assignment to interview a visiting bishoI1 here last Spring, he didn't' realize that it w{)uld lead within a few months to an entirely new way of life a long way from Connecticut.

The visiting prelate 'was Bishop Paul L. Hagarty, O.S.B., of Nassau, in the Bahama Islands, British West Indies, who came here to assist the local bishops with confirmations.

Huge Task Talking to Bishop Hagarty,

Ferreira was impressed by the huge task confronting the Bene­dictines in their missionary work in the Bahamas and with the need for lay volunteers to assist the hard pressed priests and Re­ligious.

Back in the Transcript news­room, as he wrote the stol")", he got the idea that perhaps he could help.

This month F,erreira, his wife, Karen, and their two children, Danny, age ! and Erica, 9 months, will fly to the island of Grand Bahama, where they will live in the town of F,reel'0rt. Mrs. Ferreira, a registered nurse. will work at the mission clinic there. Ferreira's assignment is not yet definite, but he ex:pect8' to teach.

40,000 at Lourdes LOURDES (NC) - Some 40,;.

000 pilgrims from all over France took part here in the 90th National Pilgrimage of the F r e n c h led by Archbishop Joseph M. Martin of Rouen. The theme of the pilgrimage was "The Church of Christ, Light of

.,Nations."

it seemed so false, so calculated.'" Her compliment for Simone de Beauvoir is, ''1 think she's odious. A mind, totally bour­geois turned inside out."

You perceive, for anyone in any way involved in reading or writing, the fascination of the book from the skimming of its provocative treasures which is supplied in the foregoing. But even after one has listened to all these praoctitioners of the art, one is not much closer to the heart of its ever elusive secret.

Approves Charter' WASHINGTON (NC) - The

Senate has passed by voice vote a bill to grant a Federal charter to the Catholic War Veterans of the United States. The bill goes to the House.

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Diem's Religion SAIGON (NC) - Vietnam's

Vice-President Nguyen ngoc Tho said in a press conference here that Buddhist leaders had never referred to President Ngo dinh Diem's Catholic religion in dis­cussions with the government representatives.

During the press conference, the N.C.W.C. News Service cor­respondent put the following question:

"In some press reports con­cerning the Buddhist question, emphasis has been placed on the personal religion of the Presi­dent f)f the Republic. Has any such emphasis been placed on

Not Mentioned the President's religion by Bud­dhist leaders?"

No Quanel Vice-President Tho feplled: HI

can affirm that the teligion of the President has never been mentioned by the Buddhist lead­

. ers in any of our contacts."

The inter-ministerial commit­tee is composed of three Cabinet ministers, two non-Christians and one Catholic. The vice-pres­ident is a Buddhist. Spokesmen for the Buqdhist inter-sect c0m­mittee have said repeatedly that they have no quarrel with the Catholic Church.

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Page 17: 08.29.63

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thur· • "f'. '9, 1963 17

We salute the millions of Americans who through the efforts of their labor have given our nation the highest standard of living ever kpown to man ... who have provided the world's most secure defense power •.• the world's greatest system of productivity and fre~ enterprise

To them we owe the perpetuation of. our precious heritage and the protection of our constitutional freedoms.

UNITED LABOR COUNCIL OF GREATER FALL RIVER

AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR and CONGRESS OF INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATIONS

• Amalgamated Clothing Workers of AmeriCloo • State, County, Municipal Employees

• Fire Fighters Association of Fall River, Local No. 1314 • Textile Workers Union of America

• Insurance Workers of America • United Furniture Workers of America, Local No. 154

• International ladies Garment Worken Union • Brotherhood of Railway & Steamship Clerks, Victory Lodge No.2",

• Journeymen Barben • United Rubber Workers, Local No. 261

• Plumbers Union, Local 135 • Sh~t Metal Workers Local No. 501

• Retail Cle.rks, Local No. 1325 • TypographiCal Union, Local No. 161

• National Association ef ....... Carriers-Ironch 5'1

IN MEMORIAM

To Dedicated Leodeu of the Foil Riyel Lobor Moyement

JAMES TANSEY

MARIANO S. IISHOP

WILLIAM R. MEDEIROS

JOHN GOLDEN

JOHN R. MACHADO

JOHN REAGAN

JOSEPH P. DWYER

MANun L. LOPES

JOHN L CAMPOS

Page 18: 08.29.63

18. THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. A~g. 29, 1963 Cite Fraternity, Sorority ~rowth

Doctors, Prayers Aid in Success On Catholic College Campus DETROIT (NC) - "There has national or local level in the

been ~ great expansion on Cath- 1962-63 academic year."

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Eight­ beatification cause.

Of D-eHcate Kidney Transplant olic . ~ampuses of na.ti.onal ~ra- Despite the expansion of na­termtIes and sorontIes smce tional fraternities and sororitiesyear-old Claudia Ballay had a Last May 16 St. Andrew pa­World War II," acco~ding. to a on the Catholic campus, "manyteam of five doctors working- for rishioners arranged for a Mass study. made at the Umversity of big names" in this field are nother inside the operating room, for Claudia and afterwards DetrOIt. represented.and' a team of hundreds praying prayed at Father Seelos' tomb. The study says that "over 10,­for her outside, in homes and Experts Crowd Room 000 students in Catholic colleges E.mmet t nd ~~en:n ~~ge that

churches.. The same day the gravely ill and universities have become maJo: .na ~,ona ra ermtIes and The delicate kidney transplant girl was wheeled into a Charity members of National Interfrater- sorontI~s. attem~t greater ~on­

for Claudia appears to be suc­ Hospital operating room crowded nity Conference fraternities or tacts WIth CatholIc colleges.cessful, for she is walking now with medical experts, including Panhellenic Conference sorori ­for the first time in nearly Ii Dr. Keith Reemstma, associate ties in the past 40 years."year. professor at Tulane University. Interracial CouncilsThomas A. Emmet, dean of

'Even non-Catholics had their In the adjoining operation men.at the university, and W. M ..congregations praying," said room lay the patient from whom Back Rights MarchKeenan, assistant 'dean, made theClaudia's mother, Mrs. O. A. Bal­ a healthy -'kidney had to be re­ study. They state frankly that BOSTON (NC)-The Catholielay, who is the organist and moved because of another med; they are in favor of fraternity Interracial Council of Bostonchoirmaster in St. Andrew par­ ical difficulty. expansion on the Catholic col­ has called on every citizen toi1sh here. Since then Claudia has had FATHER STEAKEM lege campils. The study includes join in the civil rights march inAt that parish, special prayers two more operations, one each to her two kid­ ."only those fraternities which Washington Aug. 28.directed Father remove defectivewere through either nationally or locally referSeelos, Re­ neys, Doctors must keep close "No Catholic can disregardFrancis Xavier a ~~ew Chaplain to themselves as social groups."demptorist priest who died in tab on her and it will .be some the rights and dignity of otherThe study says:

New Orleans of yellow fever in time before 'she can return to Continued from Page One men,"- the council said. "Pope"There were 29 Catholic col­1867. Redemptorists here have school. But she's been home. John., in the encyclical 'Pacem inJames J. Steakem was educated leges and universities that hadbeen working for years for his since July 16. Terris,' clearly points out thisat Providence College and St. national or local social frilte.rnity fact. Besides no American callJohn's Seminary, Brighton. chapters on their campus during ignore the plight of his brotherOrdained on Jan. 30, 1960, by the 1962-1963 academic year." American who has suffered soK Bhhop Connolly, he was as­ Urge greater Contacts much indignity.'"signed to the Immaculate Con­

"There were 11 Catholic col­ The Catholic Interracial Coun­Of ception Parish, North Easton. leges and - universities that al ­ cil of Albany also has called forLevitt argued that the Federal 'rhe effective date of the ap­lowed social sorortties on the a participation in the march.courts do not have jurisdiction in pointment will be Thursday,

the case because "the real plain- Aug. 29, 1963. . tiff in this case is a foreign state, to wit; state of the Vatican City,­Europe." ~Io. -Fairhaven India: "AGood Abode for OurJesus" . The pamphlet allegedly- con· THE POOR CLARES 01 Our Lady 01 Lourdes Convent, lDtained these words, ascribing Parish Honors &he village 01 CHERPU in Southern India, have written: "Athem to the Knights of Columbus &,ood number 01 lay people com. as an oath taken by its members: here to attend Holy Mass. They have~~other of God·'Hang, Burn Heretics' to stand in the road to hear MaSi

'''I do further promise and de­ Rev. Gil Luiz Amaral, a ••• We desire &,reaUy to build a chapel, a &,ood abode lor our Jesus.clare that I will, whenopportu­ native of Aqua do Pau, St. But we cannot expect much fromnity presents, make and wage Michael, Azores, will preach our nei&,hborhood lor our peoplerelentless war, secretly and are very poor .and -the others areth,e sermon at the Solemnopenly, against all heretics, mostly mndus ; .• We need $3,000

Protestants and Masons * * * I Hil~h Mass, Monday morning at lor .a chapel." Their Bishop adds a will neither spare age, sex or 10 o'clock, in St. Mary's Church, note 01 approval and recommenda­condition, and that I will hang, .Fa:lrhaven, in honor 0' "Our tion . • . These heroic Sisters are burn, waste, boil, flay, strangle Lady of the Angels." devoting their lives to India's people

-...... ,. in the lull spirit 01 their wonderluland burn alive those infamous 8ince August, 1930, when- the .~", Hoi, Plllb" s Mmiofl Ifill lounders, St. Franeis 01 Assisi andheretics." statue of Our Lady of the An­

lor ,b, 0,;""., Cb.,cb St. Clare. Maybe you would like teThe oath actually was distrib­ gels was enshrined at the No. help them, a little or a lot • . • AnT

uted in a number of North Caro_ Fai.rhaven Church, the feast of donation will be appreciated and the Sisters and their peoplelina communities during the Our Lady has become a parish will pray lor you as long IS the chapel lasts. India b acountl7 election. But the Knights of feast day. where the message 01 Christ is known to relatively lew-less Columbus moved to expose the . ,]~he 'statue was carved in the than two per cent 01 the population! •.. Yet it Is a deeply oath as they have done in other city of Oporto by the world re­ religious country, drawn to God. With your generous help, " states through the years. knowned Senhor M 0 n t e i l' 0 will one day be truly Christ's abodel

Their presentation of the true BOJ~ges. The purchase of it was facts and threats of legal action made possible by donations trom halted distribution of the pam. Fairhaven, New Bedford, Fall CAN OLDER FOLKS BEdDEALISTS? We think so, even phlets in most cases. River, Bridgewater and Bristol. though today's emphasis is on youth. God bless the latter for

,]~he devotees of the Blessed their generosity in the Peace Corps, Papal Volunteers and other idealistic causes! Of course we cannot forget that wonderfulVirgin honor her on this feast

·young man, the Apostle John, yet he was but one in a band ofin 81. Mary's Parish by receivingChristian Family Movement Aids a dozen! The older ones were just as dedicated. Holy Communion in family g,roups for three days.Solve Vacation Problem-Easy Way

A procession and Benediction LOS ANGELES (NC) - It's Meals were purchased for con­ of the Blessed Sacrament will SOME WAYS FOR OLDER OR YOUNGER APOST~E5

Friday night. Vacation starts sumption on a family basis and staJ~t Monday afternoon at 1 OF TODAY TO HELP:Monday. The kids are so excited so that item was kept down. o'clock. they can scarcely eat supper. o Educate a Sister like SR. MARIA ABRAHAM or SR. SARAH This year the CFM negotiated

"Where'll we go, Dad?" they the same deal and 40 families OOMMEN lor two years. Cost: $150 a year. ask. 'turned out with about 150 chil ­ S.)dality Plans

Dad spears a scallop and fig­ dren. e Belp to educate a seminarian such as PAUL NARIPPARA. GEORGE NIRAVATB. Cost: $100 a year lor six years. ures it'll take the resources of A priest was invited. Mass was Days of Study

Project Apollo to take a family offered each morning. Rosary o Give a STRINGLESS GIFT. It will be used where the HolT vacation. was said in the evening. In be­ 'I'he New England Sodality Father thinks the need is greatest.

Dad has two weeks off-also tween there was swimming, hik­ Secretariate is sponsoring this a mortgage that isn't. The car ing, baseball and camp-type fun. weekend at the Jesuit Retreat C BUILD A CHAPEL or SCHOOL. Cost: $2,000 to $6,000. Wh.. needs a valve job, three of the All in all, it added up to a House, Sunapee, N.H., a three a wonderful MEMORIAL lor a loved one! kids need shoes and the auto­ good, economical week of living day period of discussion and re­ o Send MASS STIPENDS. Often a priest'l onl, daily IUpport matic washer is faltering. in the relaxing, yet stimulating flection on the layman's role in

In the NEAR and MIDDLE EAST. "So, Daddy, where'll we go?" atmosphere of a homogeneous the Mystical Body of Chtist.

the youngsters persist. Christian community. Social action, liturgy and e Give a FOOD PACKAGE to a needy PALESTINE REFUGEB At this point, Dad needs the theology will be the topics of FAMILY. It will help them lor a month. Cost: $10. A

·advice and resourcefulness of the study and discussion. BLANKE'I' lor them costs only $2. Christian F ami 1y Movement, Sudan Jails Priest, Participants will live the full

life of the liturgy. Mr. Kevin C JoIn one 01 our MISSION CLUBS, helpIng orphans, theSouthern California division. Ousts Three Nuns Tripp of New Bedford, a semi­ aged, the training 01 seminarians and Sisters, lepers, IUP­It seems a number of dads plyIng articles lor chapels. Donation: $1 a month whenever

here face the same situation ROME (NC)-The government narian at St. John's Seminary, you can send itl every Summer. But being in the of the Sudan has expelled three Briighton, will direct the liturgi­CFM they had the advantage of more Catholc missionaries, all cal participation. [J Make any ,lit in the name of a lriend or relative It you wisb. numbers. So they got together of them Verona Sisters, who We'll I'ladly Dotily them of your thoughtlulneu.

said on arrival here that aVer.and hired a whole Summer camp, a place called Camp Glen ona Father had also been or­ Se't $20 Million Goal

dered expelled from the Sudan,in the mountains northeast of In New School Drive KINDLY REMEMBER US IN YOUR WILL. OUR LEGAL but was now in jail for refusingSan Diego. TITLE: CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION. ROCKVILLE (NC)It figured out this way. Twen­ to sign a document stating that CENTRE Membership in our society is $1 a year lor a single person; $15

ty families could occupy the he was leaving the country be­ -A. goal of $20 million has been for a family. $20 for a permanent single membership; f100 for cause his work had been com­ set in a dJ;'ive for school con. a permanent family membership. eamp and each have their own pleted. struction funds to be conductedeabin to sleep as many as 12

children-all for $13.50 per cabin The nuns identified the priest this Fall among Catholics in AND IN RETURN

per week. as 29-year-old Father Pierluigi Nassau and Suffolk counties, it If you are a member 01 theOATHOLIC NEAR EAST WEL­Vignocchi, F.S.C.J. They said was announced here. 'ARE ASSOCIATION you share in the Masses offered by H~ that because of his refusal to Bishop Walter P. Kellenberg ,fIoliness, Pope Paul Vi, in the Masses of our President, Oardinal

Number of French sign the document he wa·s fined of Rockville Centre said the Spellman, and in the Masses of all the Bishops and priests en­$14 and sentenced to a month in cam.paign is "the largest single gaged in this work. 15,000 Masses each year are offered for the

Nuns Drops 6,000· jail. Qn finishing his prison project to be attempted by our ijvIng and the dead, and every morning a priest offers Mass in St. Peter'. Basilica in Rome for deceased members! PARIS (NC)-The number of term, the Sisters said, Father diocese."

Sisters in France has dropped Vignocchi is to be taken directly The money will be used to 6,000 in the past four years, ac­ to the a,irport and expelled. finance the building of four ~'l2earSst01issionscording to the Paris Catholic The nuns bring to 113 the Catholic high schools on Long weekly La Croix Dimanche. number of Catholic missionaries Island which will accommodate

The total dropped from 123,736 ousted by the Muslim regime of 9,600 students. This will more in 1959 to 117,760 in 1963, the President Ibrahim Abboud since than double the student capacity paper said. It added that 600 the latter part of 1962. About 50 of the existing Catholic high convents have closed since 1959 Protest~r>' ~;.sionaries have also schools in Nassau and Suffolk in France's 90 dioceses. .been expelled. counties.

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Page 19: 08.29.63

,

Reviewing NCAA Changes In the 1963 Grid Rules

By Jack Kineavy

The abnormal but delightful weather we've enjoyed this past week may prove a premature harbinger of Autumn. Nonetheless, it has served to set the stage for the advent of the 1963 football season which will officially get under., way in schools and colleges in this area next week. Regu­lar sea son interscholastic competition is not scheduled to begin until Saturday, Sept. 26, in Southeastern Mass., and though som e colleges in the East have Sept. 21 con test s carded, m 0 s t don't get under­way until the 1as t Saturday of the month. Ap ro p 0 s the season, we thought we might look at some of the ma­jor rule changes which the NCAA has adopted for 1963. These are substantially the same for Mass. high schools with the exception of the substitution rule and a few other modifica­tions which the Secondary School Principals Association deems advisable. The college changes are few. but the struggle between advocates of limited and unlimited substitution con­tinues to wax strong and again has resulted in 8 compromise which could prove rather com­plex.

The rule appears simple enough. It states "Any number of players may be replaced by either team during an intermis­sion between periods. (This also has been extended to include the period after any score, ed. note). When the game clock' is stopped during 8 period, any number of substitutes may enter the game before the ball is next put in play except:

8. During the interval prior to fourth down and during the interval prior to the down when Team B (the defensive team, ed. note) bas been designated &I Team A, no more than two sub­lltitutes of each ·team may enter before the ball is put in play, whether the clock is running or stopped.

b. During lion excess time-out ,ranted while the clock is run­ning.

e. When the clock is stopped for a reieree's discretionary time-out, no substitutes Jnay eater the games ex-eept as per­mitted ill. a, above."

Complex Rule There is more but at the risk

of having gone into too techni­eal an approach already we'll dispense with it, except to note that with the ostensibly more liberal lubstitution rule itt ef­fect, the number of time outs permitted each team each half has been reduced from five to four.

Understanding of the rule i. facilitated by keeping the status of the clock and the number of the down in mind. With the clock running, no substitutes are permitted on second or third down or on first down if A has retained the ball and established a new series. On fourth down

with the clock running or stopped each team may substi. tute two men. This also applies to a first down situation when a series has ended and a new one begun.

When the clock is stopped, un­limited substitution is allowed, keeping in mind the two excep­tions noted above. Thus, you may expect this season a great many out of bounds plays which are designed to stop the clock and permit a coach the latitude he wants to guide his team. There may be a higher incidence of intentionally incomplete passes for the same reason. Of course, a coach may buy his sub­stitutes into the game by taking a charged time out or five yard penalty for delay in the event he has no free time out remain­ing.

We won't go into the e'Scep­tions for the exception except to define a referee's discretionary time out as one wherein a first down measurement is requested or equipment has become dan­gerous through play in neither which case is substitution al ­lowed except as noted in Section "a". During an excess time out­this is the instance wherein a team has an injured player or players who must be replaced despite the fact that the team has used all its time outs-sim­ilar restrictions are effective.

In' the event the excess time out occurs oil second or third down with the clock running, the team allowed the excess may replace only the injured player(s). The opponents, how­ever, may replace any number. If the situation occurs during the interval prior to fourth down or during the interval when Team B has been designated Team A, each team may replace not more than two players in addition to the injured player(s).

Another major change makes the T quarterback an eligible pass receiver. You may recall the Yale-Princeton game last Fall when the Blue used the un­rehearsed maneuver to beat the Tigers. The foul was detected by T.V. and radio sportscasters who must be acutely aware of players by number but appar­ently all was serene on the field. Anyway, now it's' all legal and the official who took such a roasting for having allowed an ineligible man to score a vital touchdown now can take some measure of solace from the ex post facto rules revision.

And finally, there has been some effort to curtail the vicious assault by men in motion on de­fensive ends and backers up. This new rule prohibits a' man in motion toward the ball when it il snapped to· clip in the so-called permissive zone which is cen­tered on the middle man of the offensive formation and extends four yards laterally and three yards longitudinally in each direction. The change is benefi­cial but unfortunately it doesn't go nearly far enough.

K OF C OUTING: Committee members of Bishop Cas­sidy Council enjoy the surroundings of Our Lady of the Lake Camp at their annual outing. Left to right: Dick Petit, 'chairman; Dave Lopes, warden; Gerard LaLiberte, G.K.; Manuel SilveRtre, P.G.K.

'Monk' Malloy Forsakes Basketball Court to Study

WASHINGTON (NC)-A dec­ade or so ago young Ed (Monk) Malloy began dribbling a basket­ball adeptly and his dad started dreaming of the day his son would play in pro ranks.

Well, young Malloy now is headed for the big league-but not the one the elder Edward A. Malloy envisioned. Come mid­September and young Malloy heads back to the University of Notre Dame, where he was grad_ uated in June, to enroll in the seminary and begin studies for the Holy Cross priesthood.

Dearth of Priests Young Malloy had all the

equipment for the pro basketball ranks, but at Notre Dame, where he was on the varsity for three years, he came to appreciate that the world is more than a large, round ball and there's a dearth of priests and missioners serving its people.

In sweat-drenched, green shirt labeled "Dailey's Restaurant," Malloy talked of such things at the half of a Summer league basketball game. The "Dailey's" were battling "Jake's All Stars." The team names were deceptive, but the players were college and former college athletes staying in shape during the Summer months-fellows like footbaIlers Jon Morris and John Dugan of

Prelates to Attend Newman Convention

LAFAYETTE (NC) - Arch­bishop Paul A. Hallinan of At­lanta, episcopal moderator of the National Newman Club Federa­tion, .will head a list of prelates attending the convention of the National Newman Club Federa­tion here in Louisiana.

Bishop Maurice Schexnayder of Lafayette, past episcopal mod­erator of the NNCF, will be host for the meeting.

Other members of the hier­archy who plan to attend the convention include Archbishop John P. Cody, Apostolic Admin­istrator of New Orleans; Bishop Albert L. Fletcher of Little Rock, Ark.; Bishop Robert E. Tracy of Baton Rouge, La.; Aux­iliary Bishop Joseph B. Brunini of Natchez, Miss.; and Auxiliary Bishop Warren L. Boudreaux of Lafayette, La.

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Malloy disclosed he was just back from a three-month stint with a half dozen other Notre Dame .students serving as ,l~y

missioners in Peru. , He said: "We did a little bit

of everything-teaching, co;tch­ing, helping to build roads and houses, just about anything we could do to help. We had head­quarters in Lima, but went to places all over the country where we were needed."

His compassion was showing when he stressed it's one of tho s e must-be-seen-to-be-be­Heved situations, the vast amount of good a few trained men can accomplish.

He continued: "And those peo­ple are wonderful - simple, kind, eager to learn, so aprecia­tive of things done for them. It's heartbreaking to see them and heartbreaking, too, to real­ize all the help they need from lay missioners, priests, doctors and all sorts of technicians."

Pope John Seminary BOSTON (NC) - The new

seminary for late vocations be­ing established by Richard Car­dinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston, in nearby Weston will be named in memory of Pope John XXIII. The Cardinal said the seminary will be opened in September, 1964. He said a num­ber of applications from men older than the usual semi­narian's age already have been received.

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THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs., Aug. 29, 1963

Racial Prejudice Nation's Gravest Domestic Evil

NEWARK (NC)-Racism was characterized as the na­tion's most serious domestic evil in a Declaration of Con­science issued by religious leaders at the first Greater Newark Conference on Religion and Race.

The declaration was drafted by Catholic, Protestant and Jcwishclergymen and was read to some 400 participants in the conference at Essex Catholic High School by Father Aloysius Welsh, coordinator of interracial justice programs for the Newark archdiocese and one of the prime movers in the conference.

Theme of the first in a planned series of conferences was "In­terracial Justice in Employ­ment." Keynote speakers were New Jersey Gov. Richard J. Hughes and Newark Mayor Hugh J. Addonizio, both Catho­lics. Both emphasized the moral nature of the racial crises but both rejected the "quota system" of employment as a solution to the problem.

'Tragic Facts' In their statement, the reli ­

gious leaders said "confronted as we are with the tragic facts of racial prejudice, discrimination' and segregation enforced by laws or custom in our society, we recognize the underlying racism as our most serious do­mestic evil which we must eli ­minate with all diligence and speed. For this purpose, we ap:' peal to the consciences of all 6f our people and to the American public at large."

"The evil of racism," the state­ment continued "has deep roots: it will not be easily eradicated. The heart of the race question is moral and religious. It con­cerns the rights of human beingll and our attitude towards our fel ­low man."

The statement said "Ameri­cans of all religious persuasion have been slow to recognize that racial discrimination ill an insult to G<ld."

St. Joseph CYO St. Joseph Senior CYO, Fall

River, will bold its first Fan meeting at 7 Thursday night, .Sept. 5. The unit will sponsor a ear wash Saturday, Sept. 7.

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LEGION OF MARY OUTING: Legionaires of Mary and their families enjoy their annual outing at Cathedral Camp. Children of members particpating in waterfront activities are, left to right: Betty and Jim Allen, New Bed­ford; Albert Hamel, New Bedford; Dave Lamb, instructor; lohn Lamb, Taunton; Tom Allen, New Bedford.

Page 20: 08.29.63

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. Aug. 29,1963

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Catholic Schools AnticipateAnother Record Enrollment

WASHINGTON (NC) - Catholic elementary andsecondary schools are expected to enroll about 5,565,000pupils next month, another high mark in an unbroken seriesof enrollment records over two decates, although thereare indications that growth ~rbing the number of childrenin elementary schools, the seeking admiss~on. .

, . W ' ld W This has been largely due topace~etters s.mce or ar,. shortage of teaching Sisters

, II, IS slowmg down and and the increasing difficulty oflevelling off. High schools, how- Catholic parishes in financingever, continue expansion at a salaries of lay teachers and con­rapid pace. Their enrollment struction of additional schoolwent over the million mark for facilities.the first time in 1962. Religious teachers. decreased

By the end of the past school in number last year while theyear,. U.S. Catholic education, number of l-ay teachers con­including colleges and univer- tinued to shoot up as it has forsities, had undergone an ~nroll- several years.ment growth since 1942 of 127.4 There were 125,065 religiousper cent. teachers in 1961 but the total

In 1963, elementary schools dropped to 123;422 in 1962. Onwill enroll an estimated 4,515,000 the other hand the number ofpupils, roughly 30,620 more than lay teachers 'increased fromlast year, and high schools will 62,744 in 1961 to 67,535 in 1962.inc!ease to about 1,050,000, an The expanding role of layestImated 40,870 over 1962. teachers also is shown in figures

These a~e highlights taken for the 20-year span, 1942 tofrom an estImate of the 1963 en- 1962. While religious teachersrollment and an actual count of increased by 43.3 per cent during1962 figures made by the De- that time, lay teachers rose frompar~ment of Education of the a total of 13,389 to 67,535, a gainNatIonal Catholic Welfare Con- of 400 per cent.ference here. In 1962, the NCWC department

By far the largest private said, the United States hadschool system in the world, U.S. 2,502 Catholic secondary schools

. Catholic schools have in recent and 10,633 Catholic elementaryyears faced problems in ab- schools.

8T. JOSEPH, THE WORKER

Pastors and parishioners frommost Catholic churches in down.town Washington also werepresent.

. The Washington archdiocesescheduled extra Masses at fivedowntown -churches at 9 A.M. onthe day. The National Shrine ofthe Immaculate Conception alsoscheduled an additional Mass.

'J'he archdiocese with a $25,000gift from the national board ofdirectors of the Knights of Co­lumbus to help defray expenses,also provided 10 hostels forparticipants unable to return tothe':r own homes tha same day.

Eight parish halls were setaside as were the gymnasiums atGeorgetown University and theCatholic University of America.

Applications for accommoda­tons at these hostels were i>roc­essE'd through a full-time officeset up by the Catholic Interra­cial Council of Washington wellin advance of the demonstration.Open 10 hours a day, it was sit­uated in the social center of SS.Paul and Augustine parish.

Father Gre·ets, EncouragesAmerican Liturgical Week

PHILADIDLPHIA (NC)-Pope "It can be promoted by thePaul VI sent a personal "message studies of the Liturgical Week inof greetings and of encourage- two ways: by attracting men's

, . ment:' to the 1963 North Ameri- minds and hearts to the tres-

e, th ,- - C- -, can Liturgical Week here. sures of Holy Scripture, which_a 0 ICS In IVI His message, addressed to contain the very word of God,

1lI'- h M h Archbishop John J. Krol of· and of the liturgy which com-n.lg ts a rc Philadelphia, host to the con- municates that word and the. . vention, was signed personally saving graces of Christ - thus

Continued from Page One by the Holy Father. contributing to the renewal ofbodies and unions, they also in- "The theme of this year's mes- the whole Church proposed byeluded Matthew Ahmann, exec- sage, 'The Renewal of Christian the council; snd by showingutive director of the National Education,' is both important forth to those separated fromCa,tholic Conference for Inter-. and timelY, and will undoubted- ,this Holy See the beauty of theradal Justice, Chicago. ly serve further to manifest the . Church, bel 0 v e d spouse of

pastoral zeal and apostolic devo- Christ, in her worship of HimIn the march to the memorial, tion of the hierarchy, clergy, and her praise of His Name _

Ca tholic organizations and par- Religious and lay apostles of the $0 that their admiration of herishes were sprinkled among the United States of America, by outward splendor may drawparticipants. their intensive study of its signi- them to examine the beauty

Among the national Catholic ficance and their enthusiastic within. •groups were: the National Cath- . implementation of the resolu- "We encourage all those as-olic Conference for Interracial tions taken," the message said. sembled in Philadelphia duringJustice, the National Liturgical "The unity for which Our this week to open their mindsConference, the National Catha- Blessed Lord prayed, and for and hearts to the action of thelic Social Action Conference, the . which Our predecessor of, be- . Holy Spirit in prayer and-study,Knights of St. Peter ClaveI' and ,loved memory, Pope John XXIII, and to renew their resolutions ofth(~ Alumni Association of the offered his life, seems nearer to serving the liturgy ever moreCatholic University of America. - realization in these days, parti- faithfully, in due submission to

cularly through the work of the the directives of this ApostolicCatholic Interracial Councils Second Vat i can Ecumenical,' See and of their lawful ecclesias-

came from Washington, Balti_ Council. . tic superiors."mo,re." Boston, South Bend, Chi.ca~(o, Rockvil~e Centre, N. Y.,Syracuse, Albany, Northern Vir­giria. Wilmington, Minneapolis,New York and Greensburg,. Pa.

Provide HostelsIn addition, more than 100

priests representing the varioushouses of studies of religiouscommunities found in the cityweI'e pre~ent. Local groups alsoincluded the Young ChristianWorkers, the Knights of St.John and the Third Order of st.Francis.

Church-RelatedColleges ReceiveHouse Support

WASHINGTON (NC)The House firmly supportedthe place of church-relatedcolleges in Federal aid tohigher education when it ap­proved a "bricks and mortar"bill.

By a vote of 287 to 113, theHouse, approved a three-yearprogram to help all accreditedcolleges and universities financenew classrooms, libraries andlaboratories not to be used forsectarian instruction.

The bill provides that collegescan seek either an outright grantfor one-third of the cost of aconstruction project or a 50­year, low-interest loan for upto 75 per cent of cost. Aid re­quests would be channeledthrough special state commis­sions which will assign pri­orities.

Although the chamber has ap­proved in the past a' variety ofaid programs whose recipientsincluded church-related institu­tions, the debate on the ,collegebill marked one of the few timesit has eng;lged in prolonged andlively discussion on the issue.

The measure now goes to theSenate. Majority Leader MikeMansfield of Montana said hethought it has a !'good chance,"

. although the Senate educationsubcommittee has yet to finishwork on its Senate version.

Rejects AmendmentsThe House l' e j e c ted 'two

amendments l' e 1ate d ro theChurch-State question. It turneddown by a voice vote a proposalto insert a clause designed to en­courage a Supreme Court test ofthe constitutionality of aidingeducation in church-related col­leges.

It also voted down, by a non­recorded vote of 136 to 62, amove to confine the bill's as­sistance to public institutions.

The legislation does stipu­late that the Federal funds can­not be used to help buildfacilities to be used for sectarianinstruction, religious worship or"primarily" for a program of aschool or department of divinity.

Canadian PilgrimageSpiritual Adventure

MONTREAL (NC)-A three­week pilgrimage overseas by 20Canadians will be in the natureof an "ecumenical adventure,"according to Father Irenee Beau­bien, S.J., director of the re­cently opened Diocesan Ecumen-ical Center here. .

The Jesuit priest said the pil­grimage, composed of 20 Catho­lic and Protestant clergy andlaity, will not be a mere sight­seeing trip but "a real spiritual,historical and ecumenical adven­ture."

He said the pilgrims will visitplaces associated with the lifeof St. Paul the Apostle, the citieswhere the first seven councilsof the Church were held, andhave an opportunity to meet Or­thodox PatriarCh Athenagoras Iof Constantinople.

Employmentfor 'Negroes

The statement says economicjustice for the Negro is "notlikely to be achieved unless anduntil there is economic prosper":ity for all our citizens."

In this connection it cites whatit calls the "alarmingly high"unemployment rate in the U. S.and calls for efforts to reduce it.

The Social Action Departmentstatement concludes with a"prayer for justice and harmonyin the field of race relations"that asks G1>d to "graciouslygive us the vision to see clearlythe full meaning of Your com­mand to love 'our neighbor as welove ourselves, and grant us thegrace to observe this precept inour daily lives."

20

eyo Backs RightsWINOOSKI PARK (NC) ­

The 12th annual Vermont Cath­olic Youth Organization Con­gress has passed a resolutionsupporting President Kennedy'scivil rights propos9J~

Stress EqualOpportunity

Continued from Page Oneof their individual employermembers" by ·taking a unitedetlind for equal job opportunity.

The statement says employers'''aI'e in a position to do morethan 'almost any other segment

'of the American population to.promote the cause of interracialjustice."

Voluntary OrganizationsGovernment. The Social Ac­

tion Department says there' is"urgent need" for a permanentFederal Fair Employment Prac­tices Committee with wide juris­diction and the power to en­force sanctions. It also recom­mends the establishment of sim­ilar state committees.

In addition the statement callsfor enactment of the youth em­ployment opportunity bill nowpending before Congress.

At the same time, however, itnotes that legislation alonecannot solve the problems ofschool dropouts, "functional il­literates" and other "disadvan­taged" young people.

Primary responsibility for aid­ing such youths to qualify foremployment, it says, rests notwith government agencies butwith voluntary, non-governmen­tal organizations."

Christ Is CenterIn ExplanationOf Catholicism

PHILADELPHIA (NC)­'There are various ways topreHent the Catholic Faith,but to be valid all niust beChl'istocentric, a Paulist semi­nary professor said here.

Addressing a study session atthe 1963 North American Litur­gical Week, Father WilfridDewnn, C.S.P., professor ofdogmatic theology at st. Paul'sCollege, Washington, D.C;, statedth'at Christ must be the center,the focal point, in the proper ex­planation of the Catholic Faith.Christ must be "the heart of themessage," he added.

"We are coming to see," said. Father Dewan, "that we have

for a long time over emphasizedsome purely secondary things inour religion. Indulgences, forexample, got as much time assanctifying grace. And the wholeapproach was too intellectual,roo philosophical.

"Christianity was treated asIf it could be proved like asyllogism, or like the propositionthat two and two make four.We thought of it too much as aseries of truths to be intellectu­ally assented to and digested,"he declared.

Father Dewan maintained thatthe trend today "happily, ismoving to emphasis on the im­portant areas."

'Still Living, Loving'"Christianity is Christ. Christ

is the heart of the message. AndChrist is a person. His personand His work must dominatewhat we believe and what weteach about our religion," hesaid.

"Only when we realize thatChristianity is Christ, the RisenChrist - God in the flesh stillliving and loving and actingamong us - only then doesChristianity become a dynamicthing - something to which wecan give our whole interest,sympathy, and love," he con­tinued.

"Only when we can see howwe can be swept up into' the lifeof God Himself, through Christ,can we begin to understand andshare in the joy of the earlyChristians, for whom Christ wastheir all," the,Paulist asserted.