20
,- Cl .1,'" REV. MR. BEAUDOIN, M.S. REV. MR. BERGERON, M.S. REV. MR. JEFFREY, M.S. REV. MR. GAGNON, M.S. REV. MIt. GARON, M.S. REV. MR. LAVOIE, M.S. The CHOR Fall River, Mass., Thursday, March 26, 1964 HICE tOe Vol. 8, No. 13 © 1964 The Anchor $4.00 per Year \ .' It. NewAMAHead to Speak At Stonehill College The fourth annual President's Dinner in honor of the President of Stonehill College, Very Rev. Richard H. Sul- , livan, C.S.C. will be held on Thursday, Apri116, in North Easton. The special guest for the annual event, ,which is sponsored by the college Cen- " tury Club, will be Dr. Nor- man A, Welch, President-elect of the American Medical Asso- eiation, Arrangements are being planned by a committee headed by Philip Hemingway of New Bedford and Joseph Fernandes of Norton. Master of Ceremonies will be James R. Lawton, Regis. trar of Motor Vehicles. The Century Club was found- ed in 1956 by prominent citizens I of 80utheastern Massachusetts to ( ( Turn to Page Seventeen Cape Tip Parish Open House Set For April 5 An Open House at St. Peter the Apostle Parish, Provincetown, has been ar- ranged for Sunday, April 5, from 3 to 5 in the afternoon by the men of the Parish. Object of the Open House is to give both Catholic and Non-Catholics the opportunity to tour the Church, Pre-Primary ScOOol and Parish grounds. ' All will be able to examine at leisure the confessionals, new altar, choir loft, sacred vessels, vestments, missal and other ob- jects of interest. The Sisters will open the Pre- Turn to Page Seventeen Investitu re The Chancery Office an- nounced today that the investi. ture of the newly appointed 11 Domestic Prelates will take place at 8 on Tuesday night. April 21 in St. Mary's Cathe- Ordain Six La Salettes On Saturday, April 4 Bishop Connolly will ordain six La Salette missionaries to the priesthood at 9 Satur- day morning, April 4, in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River. To be ordained priests for service ,as Missionaries of ,Our Lady of La Salette are Rev. Mr. Normand Beaudoin, M.S., Berlin, N.H.; Rev. Mr. Paul E. Bergeron, M.S., Springfield; Rev. Mr. Rene L. Gagnon, , M.S., Berlin, N.H.; Rev. Mr. Robert M.S., Man-' -Island Couples chester; 'Rev. Mr. Donald _Jeffrey, M.S., Berlin, N.H.; -Hel·p, Victims Rev. Mr. Richard Lavoie; West Warwick, R.I. Of Tragedy The Christian F ami 1 y Movement group' of Sf. Au- gustine's Parish, Vineyard Haven, has completed a suc- cessful clothing drive to aid earthquake vic tim s of the Azores' Island of St. George. Half a ton of clothing was collected and boxed by seven couples and these were assisted in their work of charity 1;>y the Rogers Trucking Service which arranged for delivery of the packed clothing from the island parish to New Bedford where a campaign has been under way to help the victims who lost homes and possesions in the tragedy. Assisting in the drive were Mr. and Mrs. Francis Metell, Mr. and Mrs, George Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Paiva, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Thifault, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gonsalves, Mr. and, Mrs. George Anthony, and Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Kurth. I Holy Saturday Holy Saturday is a fast day but not a day of abstinence. Meat may be eaten at the main meal by all between the ages of 21 and 59. Persons under 21 and over 59 may eat meat as often as theY desire. Easter ,Victory Rev. Mr. Beaudoin is the son of Mr. and, Mrs. Henry Beau- doin, 125 Shepard Street, Ber-' lin, N. H. He attended St. Jo- seph parish school in Berlin; La Salette Semihary High School, Enfield, N. H.; La Salette Sem- inary College, East Brewster, Mass.; La Salette Scholasticate, Attleboro, and Catholic Univer- sity of AmE-rica, Washington, He made his First Profession July 2, 1957 and Perpetual Pro- fession Sept. 19, 1960. Special interests include library work and athletics, A native of Springfield, Rev. Liturgy for Holy Week· Model of Participation' By Rev. John R. FoIster st. Anthony Church-New Bedford Explanations and instructions, running commentltries, eoncrete and simple methods of participation, ceremonies facing the people, reponses, hymns, injections of personal ' intentions and prayers, etc. oh what changes! The results of the Vatican Council seem to have disturbed not a few with the sudden swell of '''new'' rites. Yet this is not true. All of the supposedly new rites have been with us for al- ('(II Am The 'Resurrection" Read the record. A few days before His death on the Cross, Christ made one of the boldest of His many bold claims: "I am the Resur- rection." These words were said publicly. words were spoken in the presence of a 4-day old corpse. Tooay, - Easter' Sunday - after almost 20 cen- turies, He proves it. His claim . An eye witness and close friend recorded them: "I - John - went ,to the tomb with Peter, and am witness'to the truth of this announce- ment." , Christ is risen. This is Resurrection'day. This is the greatest victory ever recorded in the annals of history. Its the first and only time the world still makes the headlines. wili be given such a proof to back Come with me to the tomb. up the claims of any person'. God's public relations officer is al- Now you can rec-all His words: "I am ready there. He has the statement the Resurrection." for immediate release to the en- He claimed to be the Son of God. tire world: "You come here He gathered a handful of faithful looking for Jesus of Nazareth followers. Who was crucified. He said He had to go to Jerusalem He has risen. to be mocked, scourged He would He is not here. rise again on the third day! Behold the place where they laid And now everything turned out just Him." as He said, This statement is an exact and faith- There' is no doubt about the fact full quote from the angel to three that He was crucified. ladies called Mary Magdalene, There is equally no doubt He has Mary the mother of James and risen. j·:r. Bergeron is the son of Mr. Apollinai,r,} Bergeron and the late Mrs. Bergeron, 25 Talcott Street. elementary studies _' in St. Thomas Aquinas parish' school, he c0J:.ltiriued hi,S educa- tion at La Salette High. School in Enfield, the college in East Brewster, the Novitiate at Cen- ter Harbor, N. H. and- the Scho- lasticate at Attleboro. He made First profession July Z, 195-8 and Perpetual Profession Sept, 19, 1961. Rev. Mr. Gagnon, M.S. Rev. Mr. Gagnon is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Rene Gagnon, 83 Green Street, Berlin N. H.- He graduated from St. Joseph par- ish school and attended Notre Dame High School for one year. Completing his secondary edu- Turn to Page Four most a decade. It was in 1955- nine years ago!-that Pope Piu. XII ordered in clear terms cer- tain restorations--not changes as such - in the Holy Week - Ser- vices. - Yet, some nine years later, certain "new rites" still 8uprise? The so-called "new rites" are only an extention throughout the rest of the year of wha,t ill Turn to Page Six Dioc'esan Priest In 20,000 Mile Mission Tour (NO)- Catholic Church leaders in several Latin A mer i can countries are attempting to meet their "very drastic prob- lems" by uniting their resources. Dioceses in several countries-- rather than working indepen-- dently - unite in raising finan- cial support, promoting voca- .. tions and "more realistically" distributing available personnel, Father James A. Clark said here. Father Clark, Fall River Dio- cesan priest serving as assistant director of the Latin American Bureau of the National Catholic Welfare Conference, and re- rai.- Salome. MSGR. HAMEL Turn to Page Two Turn to Page Seventeen

03.26.64

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Easter ,Victory Explanations and instructions, running commentltries, eoncrete and simple methods of participation, ceremonies facing the people, reponses, hymns, injections of personal ' intentions and prayers, etc. oh what changes! The results of the Vatican Council seem to have disturbed not a few with the sudden swell of '''new'' rites. Yet this is not Investitu re ~EW-ORLEANS (NO)­ Catholic Church leaders in several Latin A mer i can countries are attempting to DR.NORMAN~WELCH \ .' It.

Citation preview

Page 1: 03.26.64

,-Cl

.1,'" .~

REV. MR. BEAUDOIN, M.S. REV. MR. BERGERON, M.S. REV. MR. JEFFREY, M.S. REV. MR. GAGNON, M.S. REV. MIt. GARON, M.S. REV. MR. LAVOIE, M.S.

The CHOR

Fall River, Mass., Thursday, March 26, 1964

HICE tOeVol. 8, No. 13 © 1964 The Anchor $4.00 per Year

\ .' It. NewAMAHead to Speak

At Stonehill College The fourth annual President's Dinner in honor of the

President of Stonehill College, Very Rev. Richard H. Sul- , livan, C.S.C. will be held on Thursday, Apri116, in North Easton. The special guest for the annual event, ,which is sponsored by the college Cen­

"tury Club, will be Dr. Nor­man A, Welch, President-elect of the American Medical Asso­eiation, Arrangements are being planned by a committee headed by Philip Hemingway of New Bedford and Joseph Fernandes of Norton. Master of Ceremonies will be James R. Lawton, Regis. trar of Motor Vehicles.

The Century Club was found­ed in 1956 by prominent citizens~

I of 80utheastern Massachusetts to ( ( Turn to Page Seventeen

Cape Tip Parish Open House Set For April 5

An Open House at St. Peter the Apostle Parish, Provincetown, has been ar­ranged for Sunday, April 5, from 3 to 5 in the afternoon by the men of the Parish. Object of the Open House is to give both Catholic and Non-Catholics the opportunity to tour the Church, Pre-Primary ScOOol and Parish grounds. '

All will be able to examine at leisure the confessionals, new altar, choir loft, sacred vessels, vestments, missal and other ob­jects of interest.

The Sisters will open the Pre­Turn to Page Seventeen

Investitu re The Chancery Office an­

nounced today that the investi. ture of the newly appointed 11 Domestic Prelates will take place at 8 on Tuesday night. April 21 in St. Mary's Cathe­

DR.NORMAN~WELCH

Ordain Six La Salettes On Saturday, April 4

Bishop Connolly will ordain six La Salette missionaries to the priesthood at 9 Satur­day morning, April 4, in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River. To be ordained priests for service ,as Missionaries of ,Our Lady of La Salette are Rev. Mr. Normand Beaudoin, M.S., Berlin, N.H.; Rev. Mr. Paul E. Bergeron, M.S., Springfield; Rev. Mr. Rene L. Gagnon,

, M.S., Berlin, N.H.; Rev. Mr. Robert Garon~ M.S., Man-'-Island Couples chester; 'Rev. Mr. Donald

_Jeffrey, M.S., Berlin, N.H.;-Hel·p, Victims Rev. Mr. Richard Lavoie; West Warwick, R.I.Of Tragedy

The Christian F ami 1y Movement group'of Sf. Au­gustine's Parish, Vineyard Haven, has completed a suc­cessful clothing drive to aid earthquake vic tim s of the Azores' Island of St. George.

Half a ton of clothing was collected and boxed by seven couples and these were assisted in their work of charity 1;>y the Rogers Trucking Service which arranged for delivery of the packed clothing from the island parish to New Bedford where a campaign has been under way to help the victims who lost homes and possesions in the tragedy.

Assisting in the drive were Mr. and Mrs. Francis Metell, Mr. and Mrs, George Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Paiva, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Thifault, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gonsalves, Mr. and, Mrs. George Anthony, and Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Kurth. I

Holy Saturday Holy Saturday is a fast day

but not a day of abstinence. Meat may be eaten at the main meal by all between the ages of 21 and 59. Persons under 21 and over 59 may eat meat as often as theY desire.

Easter ,Victory

Rev. Mr. Beaudoin is the son of Mr. and, Mrs. Henry Beau­doin, 125 Shepard Street, Ber-' lin, N. H. He attended St. Jo­seph parish school in Berlin; La Salette Semihary High School, Enfield, N. H.; La Salette Sem­inary College, East Brewster, Mass.; La Salette Scholasticate, Attleboro, and Catholic Univer­sity of AmE-rica, Washington,

He made his First Profession July 2, 1957 and Perpetual Pro­fession Sept. 19, 1960. Special interests include library work and athletics,

A native of Springfield, Rev.

Liturgy for Holy Week· Model of Participation'

By Rev. John R. FoIster st. Anthony Church-New Bedford

Explanations and instructions, running commentltries, eoncrete and simple methods of participation, ceremonies facing the people, reponses, hymns, injections of personal ' intentions and prayers, etc. oh what changes! The results of the Vatican Council seem to have disturbed not a few with the sudden swell of

'''new'' rites. Yet this is not true. All of the supposedly new rites have been with us for al ­

('(II Am The 'Resurrection" Read the record. A few days before His death

on the Cross, Christ made one of the boldest of His many bold claims: "I am the Resur­rection."

These words were said publicly. Th~se words were spoken in the presence of a

4-day old corpse. Tooay, - Easter' Sunday - after almost 20 cen­

turies, He proves it. His claim

. An eye witness and close friend recorded them: "I - John - went ,to the tomb with Peter, and am witness'to the truth of this announce­ment." ,

Christ is risen. This is Resurrection'day. This is the greatest victory ever recorded in

the annals of history. Its the first and only time the world

still makes the headlines. wili be given such a proof to back Come with me to the tomb. up the claims of any person'. God's public relations officer is al ­ Now you can rec-all His words: "I am

ready there. He has the statement the Resurrection." for immediate release to the en­ He claimed to be the Son of God. tire world: "You come here He gathered a handful of faithful looking for Jesus of Nazareth followers. Who was crucified. He said He had to go to Jerusalem

He has risen. to be mocked, scourged He would He is not here. rise again on the third day! Behold the place where they laid And now everything turned out just

Him." as He said, This statement is an exact and faith­ There' is no doubt about the fact

full quote from the angel to three that He was crucified. ladies called Mary Magdalene, There is equally no doubt He has Mary the mother of James and risen.

j·:r. Bergeron is the son of Mr. Apollinai,r,} Bergeron and the late Mrs. Bergeron, 25 Talcott Street. Af~r elementary studies _' in St. Thomas Aquinas parish' school, he c0J:.ltiriued hi,S educa­tion at La Salette High. School in Enfield, the college in East Brewster, the Novitiate at Cen­ter Harbor, N. H. and- the Scho­lasticate at Attleboro.

He made First profession July Z, 195-8 and Perpetual Profession Sept, 19, 1961.

Rev. Mr. Gagnon, M.S. Rev. Mr. Gagnon is the son of

Mr. and Mrs. Rene Gagnon, 83 Green Street, Berlin N. H.- He graduated from St. Joseph par­ish school and attended Notre Dame High School for one year. Completing his secondary edu-

Turn to Page Four

most a decade. It was in 1955­nine years ago!-that Pope Piu. XII ordered in clear terms cer­tain restorations--not changes as such - in the Holy Week -Ser­vices. -

Yet, some nine years later, certain "new rites" still 8uprise? The so-called "new rites" are only an extention throughout the rest of the year of wha,t ill

Turn to Page Six

Dioc'esan Priest In 20,000 Mile Mission Tour ~EW-ORLEANS (NO)­

Catholic Church leaders in several Latin A mer i can countries are attempting to meet their "very drastic prob­lems" by uniting their resources.

Dioceses in several countries-­rather than working indepen-­dently - unite in raising finan­cial support, promoting voca­ .. tions and "more realistically" distributing available personnel, Father James A. Clark said here.

Father Clark, Fall River Dio­cesan priest serving as assistant director of the Latin American Bureau of the National Catholic Welfare Conference, and re­

rai.- Salome. MSGR. HAMEL ~ Turn to Page Two Turn to Page Seventeen

Page 2: 03.26.64

•• 2

..

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., March 26, 19M

Mass Ordo FRIDAY-Good Friday. I Cl~S!.

Black and Violet. Solemn Liturgical Service: Lesson:; and Passion, Solemn Petition!; and Collects, Adoration of thl! Cross, Communion.

SATURDAY-Holy Saturday. l[ Class. Violet and White. ThEl Blessing of the New Fire, andl the Paschal Candle, Lessons, Litany with Blessing of thE: Font and Renewal of Baptis-· mal Promises. Mass Proper:; Gloria; no Creed; Preface;; Communicantes and Han<: igitur of Easter.

SUNDAY-Easter Sunday, The, Resurrection of Our Lord. Jesus Christ, the Solemnity· of Solemnities. I Class: White" Mass Proper; Gloria; se­quence; Preface; Communi­cantes and Hanc igitur oj' Easter (also each day during the Octave).

MONDAY-Easter Monday. I Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Sequence; Creed; Pref_ ace, etc. of Easter.

TUESDAY-Easter Tuesday. I Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Sequence; Creed; Pref_ ace, etc. of Easter.

WEDNESDAY-Easter Wednes­day. I Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Sequence; Creed; Preface, etc. of Easter.

THURSDAY - Easter Thursday. I Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Sequence; Creed; Pref­ace, etc. of Easter. Votive Mass in honor of Jesus Christ, the Eternal High Priest. not permitted.

Necrology MAR. Z.,

Rev. James W. Conlin, 1918, Pastor, St. Patrick, Somerset.

MAR.·Z8 Rt. Rev. Edward J. Moriarty,

1951; Pastor, St. Patrick, Fall River.

Rev. Alfred J. Levesque, 1960, Pastor, St. James, Taunton.

MAR. Z9 Rev. James H. Carr, S.T.L.,

1923, Assistant, St. Patrick, Fall River.

MAR. 30 Rev. Aime Barre, 1963, on sick

leave, Fall River. MAR. 31

Rt. Rev. George C. Maxwell, 1953, Pastor, SS. Peter & Paul, Fall River.

APR. 1 Rev. George A. Lewin, 1958,

Pastor, St. Mary, Hebronville. APR. Z

Rev. Adolph Banack, O.F.M. Conv., 1961, Pastor, Our Lady of Perpetual Help, New Bedford.

FORTY HOURS DEVOTION

Mar. 29-St. Boniface, New Bedford.

St. Peter, Dighton. Apr. ~Our Lady of the Im_

macu~ate Conception, Fall River.

St. James, Taunton Apr. 12-8t. Paul, Taunton.

St. John the Baptist, Fall River.

Apr.I9-0ur Lady of the Holy Rosary, New Bed_ ford.

St. Michael, Ocean Grove.

THE AReHOI Second Class Postage Paid It FaJl Rive"

Man. Published every Thursday It 410

~,c~r: p~::~u:# t~~11 Dr;:~:~ ~s~allb~l~ SubscriptlOll price by 1111" postpaid $4.00 Der yea,.

"JOYFUL ASSURANCE IN EVERY HUMAN HEART"

Easter Victory

('~l Am The Resurrection"

Ordains Former Kamikaze Pilot

PADUA (NC) - A former Japanese kamikaze pilot ha. been ordained a priest here • Italy. He is Father Louis Matsuo, one of 10 new priests ordained by Bishop Girolamo Bortigno.. • OF.M. Cap., of Padua.

Father Matsue, 38, who ~ ceived the name Louis when he entered the Franciscan ords, was born Takaiuki Matsuo • Arita, near Nagasaki, Japan.

"He entered the Imperial Jap­anese Air Force when he was II and joined the kamikazes, whose job was to crash their planes into enemy ships. The war ended before Father Matsuo's tura came.

Legion of Decency The following films are to be

added to the lists in their re­ • spective classifications:

Unobjectionable for General Patronage-Fall of the Romaa Empire.

Unobjectionable for Adul18 and Adolescents - The Secret Door; The World of Henry Ori­Continued from Page One·' You can review the battle as it starts with the ent (Observation: This serio­

But ..,hat does it matter to men and women In sword swinging Peter in the Garden of Olives, comic film has definite humaa1964? proceeds through the High Commissioner's

values, but because of a maritalThe same as it has mattered to people of every verdict: "I find no fault In this man," through infidelity on which its theme

country and every age and every culture the Crucifixion details. He really had no is resolved, it is rated for ado1­

through these long centuries since it happened. chance. ecents, with reservations).

All His followers since that time have insisted Whether He claims Himself as King or not, He Unobjectionable for Adult&­the Resurrection marks a crowning Victory is sure to be nailed to the Cross.

The Third Secret. over an equally great defeat at the dawn of As we watch the soldiers gamble for His robe, creation. and throw a lance into His side, we must Objectionable in Pari for All ­ •

Almighty God created a man and a woman. They agree that He is hardly the One who will Night Must Fall (Objection: • defied Him. _. restore the world to its original dignity. its treatment of a psychotic killer

They wanted to leave Him out of His world. The editorial on Good Friday could very well this film unnecessarily concen­They wanted to run the world alone. have been: trates on the erotic details of

sadism).God defeated thtm on the spot, completely and "A Man who claimed to be the Son of God was totally. crucified .this afternoon, for conspiracy and

Forevermore, they would live in abject and daily treason against the Roman Emperor. A guard recognition that their revolt had ended in was placed at His tomb to protect it against AUBERTINE abysmal failure. possible violence from a handful of followers.

Death and darkness would be the legacy for The safety measure was deemed unnecessary Funeral Home Inc. them and their children. by Pilate who had served the death decree, Helen Aubertine Brough

Only a Divine Leader could reorganize a battle and refused to worry about the guard detail." Brian J. Aubertine campaign. And now its Easter Sunday. William H. Aubertine

If man was to have a chance, he would have Read the record. Spacious Parking Areato 'have a most unique Leader: one equal to Come to the tomb.

God in power. Christ is risen. WY 2-2957 We believe He is our Christ, Son of God, born He is not here, 129 Allen St. New Bedford

of the Virgin Mary. It is His victory oVE!P th\! original "erdict of On Good Griday, in His death, He conquered death and darkness that we are celeQrating

the depths of hate, the legions of evil, the today. great armies of sin in all its human forms. The empty tomb will fill the empty Paradise. BROOKLAWN

It was a terrific struggle. It had to overcome The Risen Christ will raise the dignity of fallen FUNERAL HOME, INC.the defeat which had left its battle scar on Adam.

every soul. The curse: "Thou shall die the death" ;ill be R. Marcel Roy - G. Lorraine R01 Roger lIFranCti The Easter Victory now leaves its joyful as- replaced by "I am the Resurrection."

surance in every human heart. Adam's defeat was Mr.. everyman's fall. FUNERAL DIRECTORS Everyone is so familiar with the order of battle. Christ's victory b Mr. everyman'. badge of 15 Irvington Ct. It was one-sided. glory.

WY 7-7830A Man alone against the entire Roman Empire, "1 am the Resurrection.". New Bedfordthe ruling clergy and civil authorities of an By Rt. Rev. H. A. Hamel-Fall River

occupied military country, the entire world. • Publisher Says S·enate Passage Of Rights Bill Is Imperative you...

NASHVILLE (NC) - Passage said both Negroes and white. by the U. S. Senate of the civil have joined in furthering the rights bill, already approved by interracial cause of the Catholic the House, is imperative to the Church. He denied there has can serve Christ nation's interracial justice cause, been a breakdown in communi­Ralph McGill, publisher and col­ cations between the two races as a•••umnist of the Atlanta (Ga.) in the cause, but acknowledged Constitution asserted here. there is insufficient interfaith

As keynote speaker at the communications. Middle Tennessee Conference on Religion and Race at Vanderbilt, McGill said 'ill possible influ­ moo.moo. NORTON ence should be exerted to bring about passage of the measure. MEMORIAL"I believe in property rights," receive training inhe said in discussing the "most FUNERAL HOME ·various fields such as:important" public accommoda­tions section of the measure, 19 CLAPP ST., NORTON TEACHING IACCOUNTING"but I don't see how a licensed Tel. AT 5-4402 or ED 9-2783public business can call itself MISSIONS SOCIAL WORK

Serving All Faiths in the door to say who can come private and have someone stand TRADES WRITING in. Is that what we mean by a private right? And even if it is, I think it's necessary for our For further Information, write to:DOLAN welfare, our children and towns BROTHER JOSEPH PIETROSANTE, C.S.C. to get past this." ST. JOSEPH RETREAT HO~SEFuneral HomeMcGill said the Bill's fair em. VALATIE. NEW ~ORK .. .ployment practices sec t ion 123 Broadwayshould not be abandoned, al ­though such practices virtually BROTHERS 00 OF HOLY CROSSTAUNTONare in effect now.

Msgr. Thomas P. Duffy, pastor VA 4·5000 of Christ the King parish here,

Page 3: 03.26.64

3 lSeminarians Take College Along With Lay Students

WASHINGTON (NC) - When a young man studies for the priesthood in the Winona, Minn., diocese, he can eount on spending four years at St. Mary's College, a liberal arts college operated by the Christian Brothers. He may

live in a separate residence The "Winona plan" was ini­hall, but he shares all his tiated in 1947 by Archbishop academic classes with lay Leo Binz when Apostolic admin­students, and attends meet- istrator of the See, and was con­ings and lectures and plays tinued by Bishop Edward Fitz­sports with them. gerald when he became bishop

T his arrangement, unique of Winona in 1949. There are among American Catholic sem- now two residence halls with inaries, is described by Auxil- room for 96 diocesan semina­ary Bishop George H. Speltz of rians, 10 priests and a number Winona in an article in the .of nuns. February bulletin of the Na- After completing their four tional Catholic Educational As- years of undergraduate studies sociation, just published here. . at Winona, the seminarians con-

The "Winona plan" cuts across tinue with four years of theo­the practice of splitting the logical studies elsewhere. undergraduate studies of sem­inarians between "minor" and Squires To Mark"major" seminaries and of maintaining these institutions in 6th Anniversarya protected environment.

"The liber,al arts curriculum Bishop Feehan Circle of the of St. Mary's College offers a Columbian Squires, sponsored completely adequate opportuni­ by the Fall River Council of ty for educating the seminarian the Knights of Columbus, will in the humanities and philoso­ observe its sixth anniversary on phy," Bishop Speltz writes. Pentecost Sunday, Ma:- 17, with

At the same time, he contin­ a program at Council Headquar_ ues, small dioceses, like Winona, ters, 209 Franklin Street, Fall would have found it "very dif­ River. ficult, if not i~possible" to The Squires, open to Catholic maintain a separate faculty on young men from 13 to 17, elect the college level to train their their own officers, conduct their own priest candidates. own meetings and handle their

Only College own financial matters as well. St. Mary's, with an enroll ­ The anniversary program will

ment of only 1,200 students, is include the reception and inves­believed to be the only college titure of new candidates, a buf­in the country where semina­ fet lunch, and a recreation pro­roillns receive their undergradu­ gram. ate training in a college for lay­ Chief Squire John Carvalho men not run by diocesan priests. Jr. invites those interested in

The experiment has been so joining the Squires to secure an successful that the Pathers of application form at Knight the Sacred Hearts from Fair­ headquarters. haven have opened a residence There will be no meeting to­for their seminarians on campus day for Squires but there will and the Christian Brothers have be a complete program next established a scholasticate there. week with plans being made

"The assoCiation with the col­ for the cake sale at Newberry's lege students in the classroom, Store on Saturday, April 11. at meetings and in intramural sports helps (seminary) students PortugaI Makesto mature," Bishop Speltz writes. "'It gives them a more realistic appreciation of the hard facts of Liturgy Change life: that success in the World . LISBON (NC) - The Church demands ability, hard work, and in' Portugal has adopted a many sacrifices, and is attended gradual approach in introducingwith much uncertainty and in­ changes in public worship in security. line with the liturgical constitu­

"This offsets somewhat the tion of the ecumenical counciltendency to complacency to and Pope Paul VI's Jan. 25 in­which seminarians living in a struction on it. protected and separated envi­ The initial change is that ronment are subject." priests now turn around to face

Mature Quckly the congregation at the EpistleBishop Speltz notes that and Gospel, and read them to

friendships have grown up the people in Portuguese instead among seminarians and lay stu­ of Latin. The rest of the Mass dents that are continued later remains in Latin. when both are working in the Virtually all parish churches diocese. in Lisbon and in the bigger cities

Furthermore, he says, semi­ have had daily evening Masses narians seem to mature more for some years. Congregationalquickly at St. Mary's College participation has been the rule than they would if they took at all Masses except sung ones. their first two years of under­ Baptisms, marriages and fun­graduate work at a minor sem­ erals have been in the verna­inary "where the high school cular for some time as well. mentality tends to prevail."

Fatima Anniversary NO JOB TOO BIGFATIMA (NC) - Augustin

Cardinal Bea, S.J., will preside NONE TOO SMALL Tuesday, May 12 at the 47th anniversary of the first appari­tion at Fatima. He will dedicate SULLIVAN BROS. a chapel to St. Stephan built by Hungarian Catholics in honor of PRINTERS Jozsef Cardinal Mindszenty, Pri ­mate of Hungary. Main Office and Plant

LOWELL, MASS. 01852BARDAHL Telephone Lowell

458-6333 and 457-7500MAKES YOUR Auxiliary Plants

At New Car Dealers CAR RUN BEnER

BOSTON and Service'Stations OCEANPORT, N. J.

Everywhere PAWTUCKET, R. I.

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., March 26, 1964

Condemn Use Of Pep Pills By Athletes

VATICAN CITY (NC) The use of pep pills by ath­letes "must be condemned not only from the viewpoint of Catholic morality, but also from the viewpoint of sport," a Vatican official declared here.

Archbishop Pietro Palazzini, Secretary of the Sacred Congre­gation of the Council, spoke in an article in the Vatican City wee k I y, L'Osservatore della Domenica. One of the duties of the Congregation of the Council is to see to the observance of the precepts of Christian life.

Archbishop Palazzini's com­ments were made as the Italian sporting world was awaiting a ruling by the Italian Soccer As­sociation dealing with five players of a Bologno team who had been charged with taking pep pills in a recent champion­ship game.

The Archbishop said the use of stimulants "is a fraud and a deception." He added that it 'of­fends against the virtue of pru­dence "more or less gravely ac­cording to the behavior of those responsible and to the amount of harm done to other sportsmen who may have been fraudulently deprived of victory."

Wisconsin April 7 Democratic presidential primary election.

The papers simultaneously ran an article by a Wisconsin theologian who concluded that a citizen cannot vote for a per­son who campaigns on a plat­form of segregation without be­coming a cooperator in the moral evil of segregation.

Three of the papers also ran a stinging editorial 'charging that Gov. Wallace's presence in the state last week meant that "moral evil is invading Wiscon­sin." .

The segregationist Governor called the <.ditorial "interesting," denied he is a racist and sug­gested that Catholics should not let their clergy tell them how to vote.

Protestant Criticism He also ran into Protestant

criticism in Oshkosh, Wis., when he spoke to the local Ministerial Association at the Emmanuel United Church of Christ.

A spokesman for the ministers, Rev. Jack LeMar, pastor of

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Later, the Governor told news­men that Protestant clergymen should "stay in their own part of the country and take care of their own problems."

Wallace is facing Gov. John Reynolds in the primary. Reyn­olds filed to prevent Wallace from capturing by default the state delegates to the Democratic nominating convention. Wallace is asking people to show their opposition to the civil rights bill pending in the U. S. Senate by voting for him.

N.E. CATHOLIC BOYS' TOURNEY: Paul Despres, left, and Charles Levesque, members of the two-men de­bating team of St. Anthony's High School, New Bedford, were undefeated at N.E. Tourney held in Fitchburg. Charles Levesque won the best negative speaker trophy.

Wisconsin's Catholic Newspapers Attack Wallace's Candidacy

MILWAUKEE (NC)-Wiscon­ Bethany United Church of sin's five Catholic newspapers Christ, told him after hostile have launched a vigorous assault questioning by the 17 ministers on the candidacy of Alabama present: "We don't like your Gov. George C. Wallace in the position' on segregation."

Page 4: 03.26.64

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 26, 1964

Youth Has IFundamental Potentiality lFor Sanctity

By Joseph T" McGloin, S.J. There are some words which make us tremble if we

allow them to penetrate our consciousness-like "atom bomb," for instance. There's one word, tho, that frightens us only because we don't let it penetrate our consciousness "sanctity." Now don't rush

is one who says the Morningoff before your conscious­Offering and lives it. He·s one

ness gets penetrated - this who isn't just trying' to be piousword is worth examining. when he says, "I offer all my First of a]1 recall something prayers works, joys and suffer­you've been told in Scripture: ings 'of this day, in union with "This is ..the will thp. Holy Sacrifice of the of God, your J'lI:ass * * *" .sanctification." But he's one who says this If it's the will prayer, offers this pleasure, this of God-even suffering, and this job to God as though it also he encounters each one. seems revolting This is a saint. And unless - you'd l:>etter they're running him for canoni­look into it. zation, miracles have no essential I. 'xt in order, connection with him or his sanc­wash a few of tity at all. the phoney ideas Of Every Variety about sanctity With a concept of sanctity like out of your this, you'll begin to understand mind. Maybe you've read the why there are saints--even the wrong books on the subject-as canonized types-of every vari ­all of us have at one time or ety and from every walk of life. other. Maybe you've come to There are some saints who think that sanctity has some es­ were far from being intellectual st=ntial connection with extra­ giants, all the way ·from Peter ordinary things like miracles and Philip and most Of the other and such. Apostles, to a Joseph of Cuper­

Definition of Saint tino (who could fly much better than he could study) and theMaybe you define a saint as Cure of Ars (who was a greatsomeone who floats around in confessor but a very poor spec­mid air during his pray~rs, or ulative theologian).one who spends all his free time

There were innocent saintsflogging or at least starving like Stanislaus, and then therehimself. were the field-reversers like- Now all the above items could Magdalene and Dismas and Au­have some elements of truth in gustine. There were some saintsthem. There were saints whom

delicate constitution such asGod made the agents of His mir­The Little Flower, and thereacles. There were some with ex­were giants like John de Bre­ceptional gifts of prayer, shown beuf and the soldier Ignatius.to be such by obvious miracu­

There were great preacherslous happenings.. There were like Dominic, and then theresaints who did some pretty were the quiet preachers-by­heavy penances. And some of example like Joseph. Therethem were innocent all their were religious saints like St.lives, some were geniuses, some Gabriel and St. Thomas Aquinaswere religious. and then there were doctors likeBut notice the ('onstant repe­St. Luke, lawyers like Thomastition of the word "some." None More, thieves like Dismas,of these items is essential to nurses like Margaret of Cortona,sanctity. So what is essential and, yes, even wanderers liketo it? Benedict Joseph Labre, the pa­

Sense of Values tron saint of hoboes. If you scratch the surface of a 'As Little Children'

saint, you'll find, first of all, that So don't shy away from thehe's one who has Ii good honest

fact and the challenge that "This sense of values. He knows the is the will of God, your sancti.things which count and those fication." Learn what sanctitywhich don't, and he acts on this really is and not what the ~rowdknowledge. in the bleachers imagines it toHe has enough sense to real­ be. .

ize that a man is incredibly Above all, if you're thinkingstupid if he exchanges the eter.

clearly at all, you'll understandnal pleasures to be had in God's that youth has a better crack at company for the childish little real sanctity than anyone else,pleasures of this life. because youth has the fundamen­A saint is a person who under­ tal potentialities required for it:stands perfectly well that the energy, enthusiasm, idealism,only purpose he has in life is to courage and honesty, dissatis­use this life to get to God. While faction with mediocrity, love ofothers compromise and waste the challenge, no fear of conse­their time on intermediate goals, quences.the saint bends everything to This, in fact, is what '::hristthe only actual purpose of cre­ was talking about when He said,

ation there is, God. "Unless you become as littleHe knows that the only thing children, you shall not enter thethat counts is how well he comes kingdom of heaven." You haveto know, love and serve God to use youthful characteristicsin this lif~ so as to get to Him like these, no matter how oldin eternity. And he's willing to you are, or you're too woundbend everything to that effort. out to get to God.

Does God's Will Get inside a saint and you'll

discover a person who tries to do God's will as perfectly as possible at every moment. You'll BLUE RIBBONfind someone who doesn't serve God only in words and wishful thinking, but one who serves Him LAUNDRY consistently and in fact. You'll see in him a person who (like 273 CENTRAL AVE.Peter) doesn't despair at his own faults (like Judas), but who has enough sense to know WY 2-6216 that the grp.atest virtues are hope and trust in God. NEW BEDFORDA saint, you'll discover if you take the trouble to find it out,

Ordinations Continued from Pag/! One

cation at La Salette High, En­field,he pursued college studies at East Brewster and made his Novitiate at Center Harbor. He studied philosophy and theology at the Scholasticate in Attleboro.

Rev. Mr. Gagnon has a sister in the Religious life, Sister Claudette Mary, Order of the Presentation of Mary.

Rev. Mr. Garon, M.S. A native of Manchester, N. H.,

Rev. Mr. Garon is the son of Mrs. Enedine Garon, 6853 Hur­teau (V. Emard) Montreal 20, P.Q., Canada, and the late Mr. Garon. He attended St. Augus­tin Farochial School in Man­chester. He began his La Salette training at the high school in

,Enfield, pursued college studies'GOOD NEIGHBOR AWARD': The annual GO<,>d . at East Brewster and made his

Neighbor 'Award of the Isaac M. Wise Temple, Cincinnati, , Novitiate at Center Harbor be­was presented to Archbishop Karl J. Alter of Cincinnati ,fore completing his studies in

philosophy and theology at thefor his "struggle against anti·Semitism" and his "forth­Scholasticate in Attleboro.right work for good wilL" Left to right: Rabbi Albert A. Rev. Mr. Garon made First

Goldman, the Archbishop, and Rabbi Samuel WohL NC Profession July 2, 1957 and Per­Photo. petual Profession Sept. 19, 1961.

He has special interest in art, anthropology and athletics.

Rev. Mr. :Jeffrey, M.S. Photog.raphy and collecting

Baltimore Prelate Hails Enactment Of Public Accommodations Law historical photos of the La

Salette Congregation are among bishop Lawrence J. Shehan of eral Assembly in Annapolis.

BALTIMORE (NC) - Arch­ before its passage by the Gen­the special interests of Rev. Mr. Jeffrey, son of Mrs. JosephBaltimore has hailed enactment Shortly before the bill's enact­(Lemieux) Jeffrey, 34 Ottawaof a statewide public accommo­ ment, joint Catholic-Protestant­Street, Berlin, and the late Mr.dations law "will remove much Jewish endorsement was voiced Jeffrey. After studies at St.of the cause of the racial dis­ 'in a telegram to Gov. J. Millard

. Regis Academy and Notre Dameturbances which have afflicted Tawes, with Archbishop Shehan High School, Berlin, he com­our own state in recent years." the Catholic signer. pleted his high school educationThe Archbishop and other re­ The Catholic Review, Balti ­ at La Salette in Enfield. Heligious leaders backed the bill more archdiocesan newspaper, received his college education

also supported the legislation a,t East Brewster and made hisPrelate Urges Open editorially. Novitiate at Center HarborOccupancy Program before stUdies in philosophy andThe new measure extends to

TUSCON (NC)-Bishop Fran_ all 23 Maryland counties and the theology at the Scholasticate. cis J. Green has called on Cath­ city of Baltimore a 1963 public He made his First Profession olics to support a campaign to accommodations. act which had July 2, ·1957 .and Perpetual

Profession Sept. 19, 1960. end racial discrimination here applied to only 11 counties and in Arizona. the city. Rev. Mr. Lavoie, M.S.

In a letter read in all churches, Rev. Mr. Lavoie is the son ofExempts Bars he advocated an open occupancy Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Lavoie,It forbids the management ofprogram. The laity was asked 16 Walker Street, St. John thehotels, motels and restaurants toto pledge voluntarily: to wel­ Baptist Parish, West Warwick,refuse service on the basis ofcome new neighbors in the com­ R. I. After graduation from

"race, creed, color or nationalmunity regardless of race, creed Msgr. Vincent Parochial Schoolorigin." Complaints of discrim­or national origin; support he began his studies for theination are to be taken to theot3ers seeking an integrated priesthood at the seminary highMaryland Interracial Ct-mmis­society; work to prevent dis­ school in Enfield, continuing atsion which can carry a case tocrimination; and decline to sell the college and Novitiate and court if it cannot settle it byhomes or move to another completing his preparation atmediation. Violations are pun­dwelling to escape racial inte. the Scholasticate.ishable by a fine of up to $300gration in the event of panic He made his First Professionfor each offe'1se.selling. July 2, 1957 and Perpetual

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Page 5: 03.26.64

5 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. Mar. 26, 1964Catholic Population Rise Prelate Stresses Responsibility Shows Lack of Priests

The Bishops of the United States share a common con­ Of .Policemen and Firemen cern over the fact that the number of diocesan priests today is alarmingly below requirements. There is in the MIAMI (NC)-Policemen and represent the state in carrying

firemen must be missionaries out the responsibilities placedU.S. today one diocesan priest, actively engaged in the for good, members of the Great­ by Almighty God upon thedirect care of souls, for every er Miami Guild of Catholic state," he said.people living within the boun­1,200 Catholics. It is possible, Police and Firemen were tolddaries of the parish to which he "Yours is a very honorable,by the Bishop of Miami.by adding the total of both is appointed. He takes the sacra­ respected and responsible workIdiocesan and reI i g i 0 U S ments to the sick, baptizes chil ­ Several hundred members of mainly because of whom youpriests, to reach a figure of one dren, hears confessions, teaches, the guild attended Pontifical represent, the government of_ priest for every 757 Catholics, instruct converts. He may also Low Mass offered by Bishop this country," he said. but this is an incorrect conclu­ have the supervision of the C01eman F. Carroll in the Ca­

"Yours is a difficult work,sion. parish school. thedral here in observance of fraught with temptatioWl per­From 1960 to 1963 there wes an Although his objectives are of Ihe guild's first anniversary. haps to a greater degree thanincrease of 4,346,063 Catholics, the spirit, he must cope with In his sermon, Bishop Carroll any other. By your example youincluding converts and baptized the everyday contingencies of told police and firemen that Can do a tremendous goodinfants. During this same period life. Social and economic condi­ they have a "tremendous reo among your fellow men. All ofthere were 2,504 diocesan priests tions are key considerations since sponsibility both to God and to you, in a special way, need theordained. he must adapt his approach to CAUSE: Just five years man." grace and help of AlmightyA check of the necrology the people and community which after her death at 18 from "In protecting mankind TOU God." ­show9 that 2,076 diocesan priests he serves. bone cancer, the beatifica­died during these years. When There -is the problem of inte­ tion cause of Montserratwe break. these figures down gration today, and his job is to further we find the following: assist in the absolute banishment ("Montse") Grases, a Span­626 diocesan priests ordained per of all protracted animosities ish teenager who gave her­ CORFU: Towards Christian Unity?year from 1960 to 1963 and 519 which, unhappily enough, still self to a life of sanctity has diocegan priests died per year exist here and there. CORFU, all lalalld off &b. GOalt of Greece, wu famed fabegun. NC Photo. during that same time. Specialization in the care of le.eD' al the plao. Ulnses wal eJltertalDed. Not 10lIl' al'O a

Increase souls has already demanded, in modem traveler ltopped there, dieEstablish Family practically every diocese, a Greek Orthodo]l; Patriareh of eoa­We gained 107 diocesan priests greater number of diocesan .tantlllople .•• The Cathollo Bishop. per year and the Catholic popu­ Planning Centerpriests than were needed 15 Bishop Var1halitis, was at the air­lation increase averaged 1,086,­ ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC)years ago. They are much more port to meet him. Said the OrthodoJt 516 per year during this period. - The Diocese of Rockvilledeeply involved in community Patriarch: "Let's not look at theDiocesan priests today total Centre is launching a "Familypropeets and civic affairs. The past except to weep. Let's look at34,465 and the Catholic popula­ Planning Information Center"ecumenical movement has en­ the future and work for unity." •••tion 43,851,538. Although this to give married couples infor­couraged them to meet with Bishop Varthalitis is hopeful Ulat,number of priests may look suf­ mation about "the morally ac­ministers and rabbis to discuss In Ule yeai'S ahead, Catholics andficient, we must substract about ceptable use of the rhythm sys­problems of Christianity. They Orthodox In CORFU will work more 2,400 diocesan priests who are tem."are to form Catholic laymen to closely tog-ether as Christians should engaged in administration, such Bishop Walter P. Kellenbergbring Christ to the factories and Th, Hol'Y P"lh"'s Mission Aid • • , Bishop Varthalitis' problem.as secretaries to the bishops or said the new facility will beoffices. lor Ih, 0";"'1111 Ch",eh however, Is that his Cat h e d r a 1chancellors. established as a pilot project.The Catholic population will church, bombed durin, World War 11, Is still in ruins. So, too.Statistics further show that 1£ it proves successful othercertainly increase sharply and Ia thc Catholic schOGI and Ule rectol·Y. On Sunday the Bishop there are 22,075 religious priests centers will be establishedthe Church will be obliged to offen Mass In Ul" cemetery chapel-and this chapel accom­in the U.S. today. But to add thi9 through this New York diocese.keep pace with this contingency. modates only 50 peeple ••• To rebuild the Cathedral will cost number to the 34,465 diocesan The center will be staffed by only $10.000. Will Y08 helpT. Our Catholics In CORFU can'tpriests and conclude that we priests and doctors on a volun­

have 56,539 priests or an average Norwich to B.uild I'ln much money, but they wiD contubute the labor ..• Tileteer basis. The priests will pro­ fresh air of unity Ia blowin... CORFU. rour .ift, lar•• _of one priest for every 757 Cath­ vide information about Church

• lics would be misleading. Regional Schools small, will help It alonr.doctrine - on moral aspects ofNORWICH (NC) - The Dio­Different Work family planning while the doc­cese of Norwich will build five MARY, OUR MOTHER Someone might suggest that tor will counsel on medical as­new Catholic high schools in the

the Church split the work of di­ pects of the rhythm system.next five years, Bishop Vincent rect care of souls evenly be­ J. Hines has announced. tween the diocesan and religi­ The construction will round ous priests. But this would be out a program of secondary edu_impractical since the religious cation expansion that began lastpriests are bound to the rule of year with the opening of twotheir order and usually trained diocesan high schools. The fivefor special work in the Church. new schools will bring the num­They have taken on some parish ber of diocesan high schools towork over and above their pri ­ eight.mary work. Bishop Hines said the new

From cold statistics, we can schools will be so locatedeasily see an apparent impending throughout this Connecticut dio­surge in Catholic population and cese that every Catholic boy andconclude that vocations to the girl in the diocese wishing t~diocesan priesthood are in­ enter a Catholic high school willcreasing only half as fast as the be able to do so. Catholic population.

It would be akin to burying our heads in the sand if we were to shunt aside this realization.

Many Areas Let us look at the many areas

open to the diocesan priest to­day. The work may be anything that the bishop appoints him to

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THE }'LOWER SHOW. When we visit It each 'Year we remem­'er the Bible texts about nature. Nature's resurrection Is a. ':aster all Its own . . . The morning mall, which brings your ;TRINGLESS GIFTS, heips plant new seeds in our Near East '1lsslons. These seeds blossom Into chapels and convents, medi­al care for those in pain. bread lor the hungry . • . Is there

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SHAKESPEARE SPOKE of the praise nature &ives to Godt "Tongues in trees, books in the running brooks, sennons I. stones and good In everythln&"." ••. The praise God receives when the priest offers Mass Is all 01 this and more •.. Why not ask a missIonary priest to offer Mass lor your Inteutlon! Th. offerlnl' you make will support him lor at least one day.

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Page 6: 03.26.64

.6 THE ANCt/0R-Dincese of Foil River-T~l!rs._Mpr.,26,J964

Holy Week Holy Week is the center and heart of the Ohurch Year. It is not simply a rejoicing over past events, nor a

recalling of these events to mind. It is a re-living of the salvation-filled events of Christ. What happened in the Head n'ow happens in the Members.

The great experience of Christ was His passage, His passover from death to life, from suffering to glory, from the cross to the resurrection. This is the paschal mystery. It is the mystery that is l~ver lived and re-lived in the Church at all times of the ye'ar but in a more intense man­ner during Holy Week.

The divine plan of God, hidden from all eternity but manifested in the fullness of time and realized in Christ, is to form of all men a holy nation, a kingly people. It is to make all "one man in Christ Jesus."

The divine plan for man's redemption underlies Holy Week. We are ~conciled to God through Christ. And for Christ Himself the way was one of the cross. Christ

, effected our redemption through suffering and death. And if this is true of the Vine it must be true in the members. All are called on to follow His example, to share His experi­ence.

St. Peter tells us, "ChriBt also suffered for us, leaving you an example that you should follow in His' steps."

I We cannot live the same life as Christ nor in the same set of circumstances. But we can live the Christ-life, we can die to sin and to our lower natures, we can rise to a newness of lief, we live for God in Christ, we can live a resurrected 'life, a life in which the brightness of God's glory shines over the darkness of the world and the flesh and the devil with all his works and pomps.

. It is not simply imitating the virtues of Christ. It is a deeper thing than that. It is a putting on of Christ, it is reproducing, as .far as we are able with God's grace, His experience, His suffering, His death, His burial, His resurrection, His glory. .

Christianity is an event, it is something that happened in Christ, something that continues to happen, something that must happen in us. It is dyiI1g with Christ in the waters of baptisnf, it is rising in newness of life with Christ, it is feeding upon the Body and Blood of Christ.

By His experience, Christ conquered sin and death, and rose to glory and victory. By our entering into His experience especially during Holy Week, we relive in our­selves the Members, what happened in Christ, the Head. And His· victory becomes ours, for as we share in His dying we share too in His resurrection.

A Matter of Taste The account of the final days and the death of the

talented Irish writer, Brendan Behan, make sad reading. While he was alive, the priess delighted in describing in detail his monumental drinking bouts. He had only to open his mouth in some new piece of buffoonery to capture headlines. And -then he died, God rest him. And the very things that endeared him so to the press were related ~y them in their true light - as embarrassments, as the antICS of a boy-man, more charitably passed over in silence.

It is unfortunate that there are still elements of the public press that consider worthy of first page headlines and pictures the scandalous goings-on of movie stars, the gossip-column items of figures in the entert~inment and artistic world. '

, And these very papers, who feature on page one the hardly news-worthy story of the wearisome travels of a couple of movie stars, write serious editorials decrying the weakening of moral standards among the young. They fear for the country and the world when college students carryon in hotels and invadl~ the cities of Florida in search of "booze and broads." , They would do better to ask themselves what con­tribution they are making to the welfare of those same young persons. .

No one is advocating the suppression of the news or the gagging of the press. Sometimes it is only a matter of taste - or the lack of it.

@rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev. James l.. Connolly, D.O., PhD.

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

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh .1. GoldeI'

C"fhnou.q.h thE. W E.E.k With thE. Chu.nch . .

By REV. ROBERT W. HOVDA, Catholic University

TODAY -Maundy Thursday. in symbol the total gift the Cathedral churches this morn- Father offers us in Chr1st and in ing celebrate the Mass of the our Faith. Chrism, blessing oils for Easter The Church, we must remem­baptisms and for sacramental ber, is the world now-no little

- use in aU the parishes of the 'enclave-and the light of that , diocese throughout the year. But Christ candle, in wh~ch we hear

the great liturgy today is ,: the - all the lessons of old, illumines Mass of the Lord's Supper "on everything, absolutely every­the night when he was being be- thing. There isn't a, corner -left trayed" (First Reading), with that sin can have for itself. How the "Maundy" or washing of the it helps us understand that we feet following the sermon. . . are not partly dOd's and partly

The "new commandment? of satan's" but wholly. His sinners love is the message both of the - though we are! And the baptis' ­Lord's Supper itself,as common mal rebirth, with the same mes­and fraternal sacrificial meal, sage in its full churchl)- and and of the washing, symbolic of . social aspect. And the Eucharist reverence and care for one an- of resurrection.· . . other and the humility proper " Next' year we' shall probably to· Christian bishops and priests. : be hearing and participating in

The insistence of the Church these lessons, prayers, acclama­on one Mass today, with excep- tions, hymns, in our mother tions only in case of necessity, . tongue. But e'ven for now this shows the ideal of the whole night's renewal of our baptismal Christian community, clergy and -promises and its whole course of people together, celebrating one promise and of hope should give Eucharist around one altar. As vigor to the Church. The morn­sacrament and s y m b 0 I, the ing Mass, for those who cannot Mass should show the unity and assist at the Vigil, is full of the love of which it is the sign. same exultation, the same proc-

TOMORROW _ Good Friday. lamation of the new leaven of The liturgy today is not a ser- light and life. vice of mourning over past EASTER MONDAY. T his events but a celebration of the week of Masses whose texts Cross as sign of victory. The have been chosen with special final reading of the Passion is regard to the newly baptized preceded by two lessons which begins (Entrance Hymn) with link the Cross, first, with Is- "a land that flows with milk and rael's trust in God's redemptive honey." Heaven, of course, but purpose, and secon'd, with the also the Church as sacrament of Passover. heaven. The First Reading ex-

Following the proclamation of poses the preaching of the es­of the Word, which has priority sential good news and thE; Gos­according to litl!"gical norms, pel brings us immediately to our the ancient "bidding prayers" confrontation with Christ in the invite Chl"istians to make their eucharistic breaking of bread. intentions as universal as the Lord's. The Council's Constitu- EASTER TUESDAY. Again tion on Sacred Liturgy directs the Entrance Hymn (as well as that a form of these intercessory Gradual, Offertory and Com­prayers be a part of the re- munion) is baptismal: "They formed Mass, afte" the sermon. have drunk deep of the watet"

Readings and prayers are fol. that Wisdom provided.;' And in lowed by two actiC'ns: the ven- the Collect the '>'hole Church eration of the Cross and the re- prays that our lives may be in

keepirig _with that sacrament ofception of Holy Communion. Food, the fruit of a tree, sig- Faith. Both readings impress on

nified our sin. Food, the fruit our minds the central message of the tree of the Cross, our sal. of salvation: that one of us and

one of God has risen from thevation. HOLY SATURDAY. A day of dead.

silence and of waiting, without EASTER WEDNESDAY. "You liturgy. We prepare for the cli- disowned the holy," teaches the max of the Church's common First Reading. Yet thE' Holy has prayer in the midnight Vigil of not disowned us, but invites us light and baptismal rebirth and into His kingdom (Entrance the Mass of Resurrection. Hymn) and seats us at a ban-

EASTER DAY. Light and life, quet (Collect, Gospel, Offertory, the twin Gospel themes and ac- Secret). Food is one of the com­complishments of the Saviour, momist symbols of the kingdom overwhelm us in this holy night. in Scripture and in the Liturgy.

, For the -first Mass of Easter con- Perhaps because as food all eludes the midnigh'; Vigil which, creatures are spiritualized, made more than any single service of . part of man, made part of him tbe year, teaches and expresses, whom God has IPlIde holy.

Holy Week Continued from Page One

normally to be done during Ho~ Week.

Papal and episcopal directives h a v e bee n uncompromising. Scholars and experts have urged and explained. Still we ask how • • * how * *. how.

Just as Pope Pius' 1955 direc­tives opened the way for further reforms, so the great Pope's in­structions point the way to the level of participation that should normally characterise all truly Catholic rites.

Renewal Directives The instructions of the Con­

gregation of Rites, the supreme authority in things liturgical, not only changed ceremonies' but gave many concrete directions as to how all were to participate. A quick glance at the directives gives us the impression that we are reading some pious com­mentary or a meditation-book. No! This is an official directive - the establishment of law ­the imposing of basic, normal, minimal standards!

The decree does not speak only of rubrics. As a mater of fact, it points out countless times tha,t worship is not a succession of rubrics. Worship is to be a

'liturgy: an action in which " everyone takes his rightful place -everyone.

But this will not happen auto­, matically. We have been too long

lulled in t 0 disinterestedness. · Fourteen paragraphs are there­

fore needed to establish the in­struction, explanation, commen­

.taries, both for clergy and for · laity.

"Let the sacred ministers and the other lesser servel'lS, be they clergy or laity - especially jf ·they are children - be infol''"'1ed

- with diligence concerning the functions they are to fulfill * * • Let the faithful also * * * be

· diligently instructed so as to un­derstand * * * that with devo­tion they may participate both in mind and heart 'in this celebra­

· tion." Holy Thursday

Participation is the normal thing. The responses of the Mass (according to decrees of 1955, 1958, 1963, 1964) are streng­thEmed with the people's hymns for the solemn entry, the Com­munion, and the Procession. Communion is nearly a fore­gone conclusion. Each can watch solemnly at the Repository un­til midnight (after that the decorations are lessened and there are no official or solemn

'periods of adoration - it's now Good Friday).

Good Friday Here too participation is nor­

mal. The lessons and' Passion are to be listened to with devo­tion. All have part in the Solemn Prayers - not by 'simply adding "Amen" to the priest's prayer ~ but by forming personal inten­tions and prayer· during the brief - but long enough ~ kneeling period after the an­nounced i n ten t ion of each prayer.

Each person displays and exer­cised _his own resolved love for Christ by coming himself to adore the offered Christ on a bloodsoaked cross and then by receiving this same even-liviD' Christ in Communion.

HolY Saturday Here too, participation is of

the utmost importance. The realisation that we are all other Christs takes visible form when the layman holds in his hands the fire that comes from Him ~ the living Candle; his joy is alsa enlivened as he shares the joy of this night during the Easter Hymn (Exulted); the Baptismal promises become somehow sa much more real as with candle in hand each one repeats from the heart intelligently and res­olutely the first vows of a Christian.

The sharing' of the light and Tur~ to Page SeveD

.....

Page 7: 03.26.64

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., March 26, 1964Newark ArchdioGes,lqft:":GuiJd

'Helps ITeetlsl Kick Habjt Jewish Rescue NEWARK (NC)-A nig)lt school for youngsters trying Effort Theme-. .to "kick" the narcotics habit has been inaugurated by the

Mount Carmel Guild, social agency of the Newark arch~ Of N'ew Playdiocese. The school is designed to qualify high school drop-NEW YORK (NC)-East­outs for a state equivalency .

diploma. It is being con- spoons or charred auto radiator West productions, a new pro­caps (they could have been used ducing organization, has pur­ducted two nights a week to cook heroin), a peculiar

chased stage rights to a book with the volunteer services smell." . that tells of the late Pope .tohnof eight teachers from nearby There are even more basic XXIII's actions to save 5,000Seton Hall University as part things to look for: "Signs in Jews from nazi persecutionof the guild's psychological and their classwork, a sudden drop during World War II.counseling program. in marks for no apparent reason.

The book is "Caution to theFather Joseph B. DiPeri, co- Sudden loss of appetite, objects Winds," autobiography of in­ordinator of the guild's narco- missing from the home (the nar­dustrialistand diplomat Ira Hir­tics programs, said it is part. of cotics user needs money to feed ehmann, who was a special rep­the therapy used to help addicts his habit and almost always resentative' of President Roose­overcome the drug habit. "Be- winds up stealing it)." velt at the time.cause an addict is generally a The problem always returns to

According to Hirschmann,person with very low self esteem . the youth's family. "We find," Pope John - then Angelo Car­anything that can be done' to Dr. Lombardi pointed out, "that dinal Roncalli, Apostolic Dele­raise his opinion of himself is very often the first time a YOUUl gate to Turkey - was instru­therapy." tries narcotics is before a party

From All Levels or dance. He feels insecure in mental in the rescue in 1944 of some 5,000 Hungarian Jews fromBoys in the program, he noted, . his interpersonal relationship. the naziSo. Hirschmann has statedare those "who feel getting a He needs a lift." that many of them now live inhigh st:hool diploma is impossible Such insecurity, he said, most

for them. When you show them often results from a home situa­ the settlement near Tel Aviv, Israel.It is not an impossibility it will tion in which something is

help them. The more things you lacking in the normal relation­ -Cardinal Roncalli's superior at the time of the incident wascan show them are possible, the ship.

closer they come to realizing that' "In the majority of cases," he Pope Pius XII. "The Deputy,," a play by German author Rolfbeing cured of addiction is pos- reported, "the father figure is

sible too." missing for some reason - be­ Hochhuth s h a r ply criticizing :. For some youngsters, he said, cause of death, or separation or Pope Pius for alleged indiffer­"'1t's the first time they've en- because the fathEm is weak in ence to the plight of Jews, is joyed school." comparison to the mother, and currently running on Broadway.

SAHALE STICK: When Bishop Remi Joseph De ltoo, newly appointed head of the Diocese of Victoria On Van­couver Island, British Columbia, was received ceremoniously by the Indians there, he was presented with a new Sahale Stick which they made in token of their having preserved the Faith from the days of the early missionaries. NC Photo

Dr. Donald N. Lombardi, Seton the boy doesn't have a chance Hall University psychologist, to identify with his father. The emphasized it is important for sense of belonging and identity Like Magic Wand teachers and parents to be fami- that he doesn't get at home, J{EJTOIe1ff... liar with signs of addiction. It he gets through the intrigue and is no~ only from deprived areas 'we-ness' of the junkie culture." Missioner in British Columbia Solved iiSEaster .. and underprivileged homes that Language Problem With 'Stick'the youthful addict springs, he

• • The ultimate eternal tn_phPredicts Increasestressed. SIDNEY (NC) - When a pio­ stick - an idea he picked up of !if. ovw cIeathIWatch for Signs In Laity Activity neer Catholic missioner among . from the old square ruler withHe ticked off some things the Indians in these parts was its markings.LITTLE ROCK (NC) - Ateachers and parents could watch struck with a knotty problemPaulist said here within thefor: "Odd-shaped cigarette butts more than 130 years ago, he 'Oldest, Most Modern'(they could be reef~rs); bent next three years there will be,

considerably more activity with­ solved his dilemma with' a stick. He cut a good sized stick from

Office in Washington in the Caitholic Church. The Indians called it the the forest. On it he carved 40 Father William Greenspun, Sahale Stick - the stick from horizontal bars, representing the

To Unify Sodalities C.S.P., national coordinator of above. It is still revered highly' 40 centuries before the coming WASHINGTON (NC) - The the CCD's Apostolate of Good today. of Christ. Working upward, he

cut 33 heavy dots and a cross,goal of the new national sodality Will, told a Confraternity of It happened back in the 1830s. denoting Christ's years on earth;office in Washington is to Christian Doctrine meeting that

Bishop Joseph Signay of Quebec, then came 18 bars and 39 dots,strengthen and unify sodalities by 1967 "the opportunities for whose jurisdiction then extended to denote 18 centuries and 39all over the United States. work in this field are going to across Canada to the Pacific years after the coming of Christ.The man in charge of the be so much greater" that "it will Ocean, dispatched two priests aswork is Louis K. Hogan, newly be tragic if the laity is not missioners to the Indians _ And with this stick, Father

appointed executive secretary of ready." Fathers Francis Blanchet and Blanchet was able to teach about the National Federation of So­ The program of the Apostol­ Modeste Demers. He assigned the creation of the world, the dalities of Our ~ady. ate of Good Will, Father Green­ them the territory west of the promise of the Redeemer, His

"There are about 18,000 sodal­ spun explained, inclUdes prayer Rockies from northern Califor- birth and death. As the Indian mes in the United States, some religious understanding, t h ~ nia to the "Glacial Sea" _ the chiefs mastered the lessons, theyof which are very active," Hogan parish catechumenate, social and vast areas known today as Ore_ were sent back to their tribes, Peare and loysaid. "Many, however, have been civic witness and Christian gon, Washington, British Colum- each with a Sahale Stick to teachexisting without contact with unity. Up until 1939, it was bia, the Yukon Territory and their people. Father Blanchet .t Eastertitfe one another and even without known as the Apostolate to Alaska. made visits to the various vil ­knowledge of one another. Our Non Catholics, he said. lages, questioned the people and aim is to assist them to develop First problem faced by the learned how well the chiefs had a strength and unity among missioners was one of communi- instructed. themselves by bringing them in Plan to Use English cation, so they applied, them­contact with one another and selves to studying the native' Father Philip Shanley, archi­ The exchanging information." In Tenebrae Service languages. They found this lIn- vist of the Victoria diocese, whoi

practicable because of the m~ny has done considerable research glish will be used throughout dialects and settled for Chinook, about the Sahale Stick, wrote:

DAVENPORT (NC) - En­ Old Red Bank Holy Week Fall River Savings Bankthe West Coast trade jargon "Sahale Sticks illu'strate the'Tenebrae services opening the

Continued from Page Six' final three days of Holy Week 'which most Indians understood. kery.matic approach to teaching'religion, the oldest means used FALL RIVER

heat of the Pascal Cand·le must this year in Sacred Heart cathe­Father D"emers had little dif- in this part of the world andbecome th.e sharing of grace for dral here.

ficulty mastering Chinook, but yet the most modem - so new SOMERSET . one who is informed. During Tenebrae, which means Father Blanchet lacked lin.guis- that ma'ny Catholics' haven'tWhat an education this week darkness, psalms and Scripture tic agility and his difficuities be- heard of it."can give. The best modern visual passages are sung. As the cere­ gan to mount.aids and do-it-yourself programs mony progresses, candles are are pale in comparison to 'the extinguished until the church is In the Winter of 1838.§9,early Church's normal teaching darkened except for a single . Father Blanchet hit on the idea methods. How much paler are candle which represents Christ. of teaching Christianity with a our lives if this year again Christ passes without our personal en­volvement, our personal parti ­cipation.

"Oh, it would be so nice if • ••" Dear, dear ••• it'. the· lawl

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LA SALETTE PILGRIMAGE TO EUROPE

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L

Page 8: 03.26.64

.. 8.' .. l:H.E ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 26, 1964

Widespread G1ratitude Evident As Ancient Rites Restored

By Mary Tinley Daly From our house to yours go aU good wishes for a .

most happy Easter. Also from our house to yours go answers to some Easter-related questions and comments from read­ers on previous Easter columns. To begin on the light ~ide, several people have asked for

With the supple fresh palmsHThe Shortest Easter Poem~' ill. place, the new ~oly Watermentioned a year or so ago" for use in emergencies--there Is

one written by the Head of a .feeling of being ever closer the House. We would venture tCl' to the Church and to her say it is perhaps the shortest Founder. poem ever pub- ' 'Bow To' Jished on the Back to the question.and­iSUbject,just two answer depar.tment on Easter­w 0 r d s: "Lent related: Went." If you ......... For the "egg tree," use k now 0 f a a fine needle to prick holes fore shorter, 1e t' s and aft of .raw eggs. Peck away hear it. (We at the hole with the fine needle don't say better until hole is sufficiently large poem!) Now, in to blow the yolk and white out answer to the of the egg. Don't' use an ice homemakers pick. That's what made them who wrote in break. After blowing out the protest of the contents, eggs are ready to color unfavorable reaction at, ou!'. and hang by ribbons on a cen­house to the Holy Thursday. terpiece of greenery or Spring dinner of herbs, iamb, unleav·, .blossoms. Gilding· some of the ened bread, real liturgical feast. eggs gives a pretty effect and for this special day. adding liturgical symbols makes

"We find such a diriner not them more appropriate for the only symbolic 'and meaningful" . day. but delicious!" wrote a lady WhCl' ........ A new glaze for your has served it to her family for' Easter ham can be made by several years. "It's one we look: blending 1 cup ginger' ale, 1 forward to from year to year." cup orange juice, lh cup brown

"Perhaps," she suggested quitE' sugar, 1 tablespoon each ginger realistically, "You didn't d(), and washed, grated orange peeL your housework sufficiently tel, Simmer uncovered until glaze is make it look pretty and tastE' thick. Brush ham several times good?'" .',. with this, after ham has been

The lady was right. On thE, 'skiD11ed d\ll~ing·. its browning next go-round, we tried harder' period of 25-30 minutes. and realized that our mistakE' ........ The colored hard boiled had been with a heavy hand Oil, eggs can be used for several the bitter herbs, plus a piece ai' daYiS-egg salad, creamed eggs, lamb that was not e~actly thEt etc. ~ if they are returned butcher's delight. to a carton and put in the re-

From another reader about frigerator after being "found" he~ Holy Thursday dinner ac., by the children and "rolled" for cording to the old custom: a reasonable length of time.

"Some Jewish friende of ourfl Don't leave them unrefrigerated dropped in while we were hav., overnight. ing our dinner on Holy Thurs., Once more, HAPPYEASTERl day and you should have seen. their surprise to see that WEt were eating the sort of lood the:y' Plan To Build? eat on holidays. They seemed: not only surprised, but pleased: See Us that we were carrying on thE! Aboutold tradition, adding our own. New Testament interpretation.. Low Cost FinancingEcumenism? I think so."

Gratitude to Pope Pius XU for restoring ancient Easter rite!1 WAREHAM seems to be widespread and i!l certainly evident on the part oj: SAVINGS BANKhomemakers who writ.- to thill Wareham Falmouthcolumn:

CY 5·3800 .KI 8·3000"It is so good to take t!le wholEl family to Mass on GpodFriday" --.--- ­and to receive Holy Communion, Following along the service with. the books provided. by' ou!' The church seems ro bring the Pas·, sion closer to our children than BRIDAL .,the long 'three hours' we used to have." RENTAL· SHO~

Again we say Amen. Also t<l the Easter Vigil in church Qe·. We Invite You,r Inquiries ginning at midnight with thE! We Have EVERYTHING. For blessing of the Paschal candle, The BRWE And .Her P~RTYthe fire and the water. Watchinl:

232 DARTMO!JTH STREETthe church light up with candlell held by parishioners, lighted Bedford - WY 2-0787

;~from one to another after beinit started with the Paschal candlE! is a' moving experience. WE! only wish it were po'ssible t() TAKE T1ME ,O.~Tearry into our homes a bit o:t that ·flame,literally.' We 'can, ' For Person~llnventof,y symbolically, of c,?urse.

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CAPPING CEREMONY: Bishop Connolly officiates at capping ceremony for students at St. Anne's Hospital School of Nursing, Fall River. In rear, Sister Madeleine Clemence, school director, aids student.

African'Miss'ion For College Girls

MONTREAL (NC) - Four girl students at Catholic col­leges here will spend their Sum­mer vacations setting up a· li ­brary at Rosary College, a see­ondary school run by the Ameri­can Maryknoll Sisters in Tang­anyika.

The project is planned under auspices of the International Students' Co-operative here. It started when four men, univer­sity students, returned from Tanganyika where they worked as teachers and construction workers last Summer, and told of the need for a library at Rosary College.

Rosary College for girls is l0­cated on the shores of Lake Vic­toria. Ninety-six per cent of the .students are native Africa.ns~ the rest Europeans.

Seek Funds

The girl students attend Marl- . anopolis, .Marie-Anne, Regina Assumpta and Jesu Marie Col­leges here. They became inter­ested in the project for next Summer and 25 applied to go 110 Africa.

An intensive course about Tanganyika, including langul,lge and customs, was started. The original 25 applicants has been reduced to 10, but only four will be selected to make the trip.

The students are campaigning for $5,000 to finance the trip. They now have $1,000, .but are hopeful since last year's project was financed in the usual way - canvassing business firms and friends.

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Page 9: 03.26.64

fSaYSJ\' Motbe,r~in-Law Problem .Demands- ') Pati~nce and Tact

.. , . ·By John J. Kane, Ph. D. , " "r have been married j~st over 10 years. While r love my husband and feel certain that he loves me his mother always comes first. His parents try to run odr life. They call almost every Sunday to see that we attend church. r asked my husband to take lIle Christmas shopping but he refused; yet he later took ltis mother. If r act like his mother I am nagging. His mother :Is cold toward me, even though I try to be nicp to her, Shouldn't ,a husband pre­

, fer his wife to his mother?" ,

The unusual aspect of the Jl)roblem ,yo u present" Helen, ill that it has lasted over' 10 years. If condi­tions are exact­ly as you de­ecribe them, I wonder why you tolerated the situation. Of course, • wife must take precedence

. over a husband's mother. In fact, a ~ife ~ust take precedence over all others with her' httsba:n:d. This is the very nature of mar­

,riage. ' Whenever in-law" problems

occur in marriage, there ;is .a ,tendency to place the entire , blame upon the in-laws., In, the

folklore of. American life, In- ' . h.ws are almost invariably de­

picted as' evil iIicarnate. Tilts is obviOUSly far from the truth." , After 10 years of married lite a must indeed be annoying~ have in-laws check on your church attendance almost' every Sunday. But I wonder if this is really the reason for the plione eatl?

Mothers-in-law are frequently lonely people. They have reared their children, who have mar­ried and left home. They iind time hanging heavily on their bands. Like all human beings they want attention and affec-' tion. .

Since your mother-in-Iaw's husband is still living, one is eompelled to wonder about the relationship with her own' hus­band. Are they compil.tible? 1)()es he neglect her? In her 'unhappi­ness is she reaching out to her lIOn as a surrogate husband? I fear this may be at, the root of the problem.

A great deal has been written about the so-called silver cord which binds a son to his mother. Somewhere along the line, us­ually during adolescence, a son must break this cord. The ma­ture mother expects this; indeed, welcomes it.

But even though logically she knows that it must occur, emo­tionally it is a wrench. It can be eased if the older woman end her husband realize toot they ar~ returning to a type of life simila:o- to that which they bad before their children were born.

Perhaps it would be prudent to discuss this matter with your husband at some length. You have a chance to observe the re­lationship between your mother­in-law and father-in-law.

If you feel they do not get along well together, if there is some problem which seems to separate them, perhaps the son's attitude shOUld be called to it. He may be able to ,talk it over with his father and: persuade bim to pay more attention to'hiB wife.

Your mother-in-law's coldness toward you can be understood even though you cannot accept it. If me .. really lonely and is .eeking from her son the c0m­panionship she' should get from her husband, you obviously seem to stand ia her wrr.

Tl1e Sunday phone eaDs mea­Uoned ...... _ ...... AId­

tating. It is as though your mother-in-law we redealing with two ~hildren who cannot fend for themselves. Perhaps the best way to handle these calls is to anticipate them by calling her and asking if she and her hus­band have gone to church yet.

If they still beat you to the phone, you may sweetly inquire after you have told them you attended Mass whether or not they did. She mry then get the message.

- ittle Hope of Solution At the risk of sounding harsh,

it may be easier for your hus­band to refuse to take you shop_ ping than to refuse to take his nlother. You are really much closer to him and he may count more upon your understanding than upon his mother's under­standing. Obviously, he was wrong if he counted on this but you will have to take it inU; ac­count.

If you were married one or two years, my advice would be to have a showdown with your husband over the issue. But why did you allow this sort of behavior to continue for such a long period of time without any vigorous complaint?

In other words, you: permitted ,a pattern of life to' be estab­lish~d and nOW, deeply annoyed by It, you would like to alter it: Frankly, I have little hope that you can do much about it.

Unless this problem is much more severe than you seem to in­dicate, I would be prepared to tolerate it as far as possible. If, on the other hand, this prefer­ence of your husband for his mother seems to run more deep­

'ly, to interefere with many Dther aspects of your lives and the

,rearing of 'your .children I would seriously consider ;'sy~ chiatric attention. .

There probably n.ever has been a. wife in the world who at some time or other did not believe h~r husband seemed to prefer hIS mother to her, if he had a mother living. In human rela­tions.hips such petty annoyances are JUst a'bout bound to occur.

So long as your married life is otherwise happy you can be grateful that your" problem is n~t severe. Time, at any rate, WIll clear up this problem for you. In the meantime, patience and tact are probably your best weapons.

. HO~~R TEACHERS OF NURSES: At Georgetown UmversIty s Confere~ce on Excellence in Nursirigtwo former members of Its School of Nursing faculty were honored. The University's 175th Anniversary Medal of Honor was awar~ed to. S~ster Angela Maris, S.C.N., left, and Mary Catherme WIsler of Pasadena, Calif. NC Photo.

Name Catholic College

Heads to Commission TRENTON (NC) - Heads of

two Catholic colleges are on an eight-member commission in charge of distributing Federal funds for construction purposes to state and private. colleges in New Jersey.

. Newark's Auxiliary Bishop John J. Dougherty of Seton Hall University and Sister Hilde­garde Marie of the College of St. Elizabeth, Convent Station, aremem'bers of'the' State De­partm!:mt of. EqucatioJ;l',s Advi;. sory Counell ot CQllege Presi­dents, which has been given the task by Gov. Richard J.Hughes of distributing $6 million in aid annually for the next three years.

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'11iE ANCHOR- ,9 Thurs.! ~!lrch 2~, 1964 .

S,jsters ' Conduct N1ew Workshop..

ROCKAWAY PARK (Ncf­Si~teen nuns from six Anglican, Greek Orthodox and Byzantine Rite communities were guests at an ecumenical workshop on vocations conducted by the Sis­ters of St. Joseph at Stella Marls High School in this New York community.

'At the close of the day-long event a representative of each community expressed apprecia­

; tion to th,e Josephite nuns. An­glican Sister Constance Margaret gave thanks "for the manifest -appreciation of true Christian love and charity which holds sacred the things Religioul1 share in common, rather than concen­trating on the things that have divided them."

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Page 10: 03.26.64

• •

10 IliE AM..:MUK-

Thurs.. March 26, 1964

Florida Educator Scores Cutbacks In Lower Grades

ST. AUGUSTINE (NC)­The St. Augustine Diocese will open nine new grade schools, a new high school and add rooms to ten other schools to. accommodate 5,000 new pupils next year.

Fat her Mortimer Danaher, school board c h air man, in making the announcement, criti_ cized moves in other parts of the countrY to cut back Catholic s·chooling.

"Our forefathers built our Catholic schools out of sacrifices much. greater proportionately than those asked of us today," said Father Danaher. The dio­cese's elementary and secondary schools enroll about 28,000 pu­pils.

Creates Problems "The Catholic people of today

have continued to build grade and high schools and will so continue if they have courage­ous and farseeing leadership," he declared.

He said dropping grades in Catholic schools," "creates more problems than it solves" and that the Confraternity of· Christian Doctrine "is all right as an ac­cessory and a help to the Catho­lic school (but) as a substitute for Catholic education, it would lead to disaster." Chapel Dedication Attracts

Father Danaher called it "too bad" that. "our non-Catholic' WASHINGTON (NC) - Nu­ 1961, to' defray the estimated neigh~rs" do not permit Catho- .merous pilgrimages are coming' $325,000 cost. The c0llection lics parents to share in the bene- . here for the dedication Sunday, realized $565,000. fits of .their taxes. "We hope that . May 3" of the chapel of Our Lady Whatever remains above the soon they will see the light," he of Czestochowa in the National cost of the completed chapel commented. . Shrine of the Immaculate Con- will be applied to the cost of

"Meanwhile, if we lack a gym- ception. installing the mosaic dome over nasium here and there, if here It is already known that 600 t· ) main altar ~. .. shrine. and there We lack some audio- students are coming from Chi. Liturgical Feastvisual aid, if some of our class- cago by train; that eight buses rooms are somewhat. over- will bring pilgrims from St. Archbishop John J. Krol of crowded, we shall appeal again Adalbert's parish in Philadel­ Philadelphia will dedicate the to our faithful Catholic people phia: and that groups are com­ chapel and offer a Low Pontifi ­with full confidence that they ing from Pennsylvania, New cal Mass at the 3 P.M. ceremony will come to our aid," he said. York, New Jersey and other on May 3, in the presence of

"Our schools are not perfect. states. Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle But they are good. Even on non. Interior decoration of the of Washington and other bishops. religious subjects, they are equal chapel is being pressed, and will Bishop Stanislauf' V. Bona 'of'

DEDICATION ATTRACTS PILGRIMS: At the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, Washington, D.C.,Father John Murphy, assistant director, and Professor Peter Recker arrange mosaic pictures of· the patron saints of Poland for installation in the ceiling of the shrine's chapel of Our Lady of Czestochowa. Numerous pilgrimages are planned for its dedication on May. 3. NC Photo.

to the public schools. In some be completely finished in time Green· Bay, Wis., will preach cases, they are better. We are . for the dedication. A work now the sermon. The altar of the not the only ones. who have in progress i.~ the installation of chapel will be consecrated by troubles running a school sys- colorful mosaics which will de- Auxiliary Bishop :Henry T . tem," he observed. pict 20 of Poland's national . Klonowski of Scranton, Pa., in

Reminder to Wealthy saints in the ceiling of the a private ceremony earlier in "Our wealthy Catholic peo- chapel. the day.

pIe," he said, should direct a Dedication of the chapel cli ­ ;May 3 is a date of special larger share of their money to .. maxes a nationwide appeal con­ significance among Polish peo-Catholic parochial schools and ducted among Polish-Americans. high schools. Construction of the chapel was

"Let them never make the begun two years ago. A collec­mistake of supporting only the tion was taken up in Polish par­ FAIRHAVENschools for the few. By that sin ishes across the country in fell many a former Catholic . LUMBER country." • •

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Pastor to -,Drop Two Grades

MILWAUKEE (NC) - The West Allis pastor who announced he would close the first four grades of his parochial school now says he will close only the first and second

Father Oscar Winninghoff, pastor of St. Aloysius parish, .an­nounced the step after he con­ferred with Msgr. Edmund J. Goebel, Milwaukee archdiocesan superintendent of schools.

Father Winninghoff said he will drop' the two grades at the start of the 1965 school year.

The pripst proposed last month that the West Allis-West Milwaukee public school board build a 24-room school building. on parish property which would enroll half of the 1,154 pupils in the parish school. The board re­pected the proposal.

He then said he would close the first four grades, putting some 600 pupils in area public schools. But the new announce­ment means that only half that ~

number will be sent to public schools.

Montfort Pilgrimages Montfort Fathers will sponsor

pilgrimages this Summer to Marian Shrines of Europe and to the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Mexico. Rev. Robert Curley, S.M.M. will lead the European tour, leaving New York July 14; and Rev. Thomas Graham, S.M.M. will be in charge of the Mexican trip, leav-· ing New York July 18. Informa­tion is available. from Rev. Francis Tomai, S.M.M., 4() South Saxon Avenue, Bay Shore, N. y~

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Page 11: 03.26.64

__

11 Prelates Oppose Bill Restricting Negro Rights

CAPE TOWN (NC) South Africa's Bishops have condemned a bill that will further restrict Negro resi­dence and employment in this nation' - which the government is seeking to push through Par­liament - as an "invasion of pri ­mary human rights."

The Bishops statement was issued less than a month after their reaffirmation of their op­position to the government's policy of apartheid, or strict racial segregation. In a Feb.. 27 statement, the Bishops said that justice should be done· to all persons and groups and that charity should animate all rela­tionships.

In their statement on the bill, the Bishops declared:

"The Conference of Catholic Bishops of South Africa deeply regrets that the government has judged it opportune to proceed with the Bantu Laws Amend­ment Bill of 1964.

'Deadweight Restrictions' "Although the bill contains

some provisions to the benefit of the Africans, e.g. the protec­tion given to Africans against malpractices and permission for re-entry to prescribed areas, the bill as a whole is an invasion of primary human rights, and the minor concessions it contains are deprived of real value by the deadweight restrictions un d e r which they are buried.

"The effect of the bill would be to ~eprive seven million Afri ­can citizens of the strict right to residence, movement and em­ployment outside of Bantu areas, viz. in four-fifths of the entire republic. It would strip the Afri ­can of his basic freedoms in the country of his birth, making him dependent upon the permission of a permit to explain his pre­sence anywhere and at any time outside of the 'Bantu home­lands.' "

Mark Anniversary Of Beatif ication

EMMITSBURG (NC) - St. Joseph's College stJldents here observed St. Patrick's Day as the first anniversary of the beatifi ­cation of Mother Elizabeth Seton, foundress of the Sisters of Charity in this country whose grave is on the college grounds.

"An evening Mass and an illus-

TAUNTON LEGIONNAIRES AT ACIES: Members of the Praesidium of the Legion ·of Mary from St. Mary's Parish, Taunton, meet with Bishop Connolly foHowingi;he annual Acies at St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River. Left to right: Rev. Gerald' Schovelton, spiritual director; Mrs. John J. Keating, Bishop Connolly, and John J. Keating.

•Editor of Pilot Sees Ecum·enism In Early Dawn WASHINGTON (NC) ­ "It isn't strange that from mon understanding?" Msgr.

Protestantism has come the best Lally asked.The chasms dividing Christ­research to an understanding of. ian churches are closing

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., March 26, 1964

Negro Catholics Untapped Source Of Priests

CHICAGO (NC) - The million U.S. Negro Catholics are an untapped sourCe of future priests, according to a Chicago curate who says there is "great need for a substantial increase" in colored priests.

Father Daniel J. Mallette, a·s­sistant pastor of St. Agatha church here, writes in the cur. rent issue of the Serran maga. zine, publication of Serra Inter­national, an organization of lay­men who encourage religious vocations.

Father Mallette indicates that a major obstacle to conversion of Negroes is that the Cathlic Church is 94 per cent white, a fact. which he says tends to contraodict explanations about the catholicity of the faith.

Acording to Father Mallette, there are now 131 U. S. Negro priests, with only 65 Negro seminarians studying in the na­tion's 203 major seminaries, monasteries and houses of study.

The priest, who serves .in a predominantly Negro parish, writes that one reason for a lack of vocation consciousness among priests in colored parishes is a lack of time.

"Too often in the struggle to win converts while keeping an aged and outmoded physical

.plant solvent, the parish priest in a Negro community has little time for such long-range projects as vocation development.

"Serra Clubs and all Catholics interested in vocations can help greatly with vocation days, sponsorship of seminarians with accompanying tutoring and guid_ ance where necessary-and, the biggest jolr-rooting out racial intolerance among whites."

the Scriptures,'! he said. "Prot­slowly, the Women's Nation:­ estant scholars have begun to al Democratic Club has been look at the Scriptures to see told. what the Word of God means

Msgr. Francis :1. Lally, editor among men," he noted. "Isn't itof the Pilot, Boston archdiocesan extraordinary that it is on theweekly, declared ecumenism is

now in the' early dawn. "It is Word of God that Catholics and a kind of dawn or moment before Protestants' are finding in these the dawn when night· has not days a common ground and com- May the Joy and Promise of Easterceased and day has not begun," Msgr. Lally asserted. "A time of confusion and yet a time when uplift your Spirit and gladdenDONAT BOISVERTwe know that things will cer­

your hearttainly be brighter as time goes INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.. trated lecture by Father John'. on," he continued. W. Parks on the beatification ceremony highlighted the ob­servance.

The girls' college is conducted by the Sisters of Charity.

College Development Program $6 Million

HELENA (N C) - Carroll College has announced a $6 mil­lion development and expansion program projected over a 15­year period.

Announced by Bishop Ray­mond G. Hunthausen of Helena and by Father Anthony M. Brown, president of the college, the first aim of the program will be to construct an administra­tion-classroom building and a physical education building for the Montana College.

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12 THE ANCHOR-,Dioc.~~e of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 26, 1964

,'I, I

National, Unemployment ,No~', '1 ,Econiomic Problem

By Msgr. George G. Higgins The widely publicized Seminar on Poverty in the Midst

Of Plenty held' at Geor!retown University several weeks ago repeatedly raised the following crucial question;' "In looking for a solution to the problem of poverty in the midst of plenty, should we persenal involvement on the eoncentrate 0 n economic part of '\11 our people in the na­growth or expansion (with tional campaign against poverty a corresponding increase in -will be read i context and

will be kept in proper perspec­personal income), or should we tive.,rather concentrate or. 'providing

'a Tarlety of " Prerequisite: Work SpeCialized re­ The Social Action Depart­medial services ment's Statement on Poverty

,f () r particular was concerned not only with re­:categories ' of medial <;ervices for the unem­the poor......e. g., ployed and the unemployable,

'dropouts,' the but also - and perhaps even aged, the handi­ more importantly-with the un_

.eapped,' the left ­ derlying economic cause of pov. , behinds' in our erty. 'many ghost The statement pointed O'lt, for COADJUTOR A B BOT:

example, that if WP. are to help, towns, and ~e Fr. Andrew Garber, O.S.B., the poor to help themselves, we disctimination." victims of raCial

must "above aU be concerned 35, native of Glassport, Pa., This question, which can be about work. Avoiding job dis- has been elected Coadjutor

framed,' of course, in many dif­ , crimination is but one step. It' Abbot of St. Benedict's 'Ab­, 'ferent way's, is as old as the 'hms, is equally vital to be StH'e that bey,Benet'Lake, Wis. He"but, surprisingly enough, "we work is available and that the

"takes over the, adm~ni,stra­:'have' never squarely faced Ult to ! poor· are ,educated and trained "ltinthe United States; Even, 'in ,to do useful work." tive duties from Abbot Rich­'the 'so-called ,Great Depression To make sure, that work' is ard Felix, O.S.B.I 741 founder

-'Of the' early '30s, we taUlted available for all those who, are 'of the abbey, who will retire. "about it, off and' on, ,but we ,able anli willing, 'to work is ob­ ,NC Photo. ' , really didn't resolve it or, for viously a whale of a big chal­:'that matter, didn't even serious­ lenge and one 'tlult, since the ,end's,- try' to do so;, : , 'of the Great Depression, we 'Radio' Broadcast

Fundamental Solution, . have never ,really ,tackled with We , anything like complete success, ,'Of Prize' Pla'y,'" were content,' iIi the':~Os,

except in periods of war:'.. we Mve been, for the trlost , The Catholic Theater GUIld.of"part,' ever since, to settle for Even today, 30 years after the New Bedford, Inc. will present , something less than a fund~men­ Great Depression our national at 8:30 Sunday night over Radio

, tal solution, to the problem of rate of unemployment is still Station WNBH, Nancy Ryan'sdangerously high~onsiderablypoverty. prize winning script "Why Me?"This is not' to suggest, of higher, by the way, than that of -an Easter drama. course, that there is any easy the other major industrial coun­

Christopher Best wiH, d'lrect .. air self-evident answer to the tries of the world.

the production.perennial question of wheN' to Need Basic ReformS Winners of the guild's annual

'put the major emphasis in our This, it seems to me, is our radio script writing contest will'efforts to solve the critical prob_ No. 1 economic problem at the receive their prizes at WNBHlem of widespread poverty in present time, and unless and un­ during the broadcast. Top prizes'the wealthiest nation tn'recorded ,ta it is faced up, to realisl;ically, from 35 entries received from\history. " , I can see no real hope of our , area Catholic High SchOOls were",tt is - becoming increasingly ,solving the problem of poverty, won by:, ," obvious, 'however, that IUlis : no matter whllt we Q.o ,for the Nancy 'Ryan; Bishop Stang

'4uestion cannot be avoided in­ poor in tenns o,~ remedial S;er­ , High School; first' prize '$25.00definitely. Unless it is faced up ,vices, and no matter how. hard for script "Why Me?" ,to very" realistically, we rnay we try to retrain the unemploy­ Normand P. Meny; Saint An.'be 'a'ble to eliminate' the prob­ ed or to help them, mother thony High School; second prize;lem of poverty on a piecemeal ways, to help themselves. $15.00 for script "The Lillies."basis, but we will not succeed in In summary" then, my answer Kathleen O'Donnell; Bishopeliminating its basic causes. to the question whicl' was posed Stang High School; third prize;

The foregoing comments may at the beginning of this column $10.00 for script "The Bradleysuggest that the writer is beg-' is that, in developing, our anti ­ Resurrection." ging the question of priorities­ poverty program, we'ought to that he has already de'cided, ar­ put major emphasis on basic bitrarily, that the major empha­ economic reforms not to the sis in our current campaign neglect or the exclusion of social against poverty ought to be on reform and additional remedial basic and possibl:" even rad:lcal services for the poor, but as the reforms in our economic systo~m. necessary prerequisites for their This is a fair summary of the l"ng-range effectiveness. writer's point of view-but only To be more explicit, and to .p to a point. bring this discussion down to

,statement on Poverty earth, '! think that .while the " I am all in favor of remedial Administmtion has made: a :: services for the various Clilte­ remarkably good start in its ':: go.ries of impoverished AnK!l'i­ current campaign against pov­.': cans referred to above. The ur­ erty, it is still fighting a ser'es " «ent need for such specialbed 01 more or less uncoordinated "aervices tor' the unemplo~{ed skirmishe:o and has vet to de­:,:: and for those who belong to the clare all-out war against tbe ',. 8O-clllled 'hard core of . unElJll. real enemy, whose name is :':. ployables was emphasized v,eJ7 unemployment. ;, forcefully in the recent policy :; statement on PoverW isllued by " the Social Action Department of :' the National Catholic Welfare ., Conference. ~, As Director of the Social Ac­::'. tIon Department, I hope lind ", pray, naturally, that this policy :~ Itatement will help, at' least in ,', 80me small measure, to develop :: greater public support for such BA~QUElS,:' aervices in the fields of health, ':( education, vocational training :. and social welfare, TESTIMONIALS­:':' Ot:t the other hand, I also hope '.; that the Social Action Depart­ FASHION SHOWS::', .ent's vigorous emphasis on the " Deed for such remeC'.al -ervices ~' tor specific groups of im);)8'Yer­ :.'•. Wled .Amerian~c' its oaral­ WV....n 9-6te4 ~':. ~Dh" ea the .need f~

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

What mystery is hidden behind the scars worn by the RIsen Christ? They were not wounds, for His Body was glorious in His Resurrection. As a Captain who fought a great fight may wear ribbons as a token of his victory, so Our Lord wore His scars. But what have the scars to do with us? Amy Carmichael answered it well: .

"No wound? No scar? Yet as the Master shall the servant be, And pierced are the feet that follow Me; But thine are whole: can he have followed far Who has not wound, nor scar?"

Are we like Christ In our novenas, our petitions, our searchln~ for new devotions, our pietistic practices, If all of these are n~

related to our neighbor, to his service, to his salvation? Did not OUr Lord say: "For their sakes, do I sanetify .'Myself"? Was not p'aul willing to become accused just to save his brethren, the Jews? The scars In the Hands and Feet and Side of Our Savior 'would not be there' if He did not love men unto death. Did not His Heavenly Father allow Him to be edged out of the world onto, the Cross"?

You Catholic laity are comfortable; we Catholic priests are popular. It is hard for the comfortable to feel sympathy with the distressed; it is hard for the popular to be one with the unpopular in, the slums, the 'sick beds and the leper colonies. Where' are our scars? It is not a religious act which makes a Christian layman a priest, but' a participation in the suffering of Christ in the day-to;.day life' of this world. Our parish. is a ghetto if it is insensitive to a straw hut in Rwanda; our priesthood is not a victimhood if we are not

,worried about the hunger of our brother priests in Latin America and elsewhere! Woe to us who leave our altars and our Communion rails with handsunscarred and white! Thanks to your priests 'and laity for scarring your hands with a sacrifice in Christ's Name for our poor Church.

GOD LOVE YOU to :t'Irs. D;B. for $2 "My poandtather «ave me these silver dOllars when I was '.little I'irl. I have' treasured them since, but gladly give them up to the Missions." ••• to F .J.H. for $50 "This otterin&' is for the intention of the Boly Death for me and my wife. I am 81 years old .nd my wife Is 75."· •• to Mr. and Mrs. L.H. lor $100 "On our twenty-fifth wedding aniversary I was going to buy IDJ' wife • new diamond. She aid she would be satisfied with the old one if we would send this to the Missions."'··· to 'T.B.L. for $750 "Crops m North Dakota were ,ood last year, and I can share with the Holy Father."

Give a WORLDMISSION ROSARY to each member of your family for Easter. Blessed by Bishop Sheen, each decade is a dif­ferent color, representing the five continents where missionaries are laboring to bring Christ to the pagans. SeJ).d your request and an offering of $2 to: The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10001.

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THE ANCHOR­ 13Science Fairs, Sports .Cro~d Thurs., March 26, 1964

Calendar at Diocesan Highs will be available at all schools. Students from Mt. St. Mary's

will sing today and tomorrow at St. Mary's t::athedral and will

As Easter Vacation Nears Science fairs are the big news at Dioces'an highs this also participate in the Easter

week. Sacred Hearts, Fall River, announces Patricia Des­ Vigil Service. . mond as first place winner in the senior division. She will At Holy Family Sister Mary

Charles Francis, principal, andbe the school's delegate at the Massachusetts State Fair SiSter Marie Celester, grammarshowing her project on the school principal, are preparingwe didn't think they'd do Itbiological effects of deter­ to attend the National Catholiebetter themselves. Varsity and

gents. Following Pat carne Educational Association conven_JV cheerleaders won first place tion iIi Atlantic City Monday,Joan Paul and Mary Con­ in their divisions of the Diocesan March 30 through Friday, Aprilnolly. First in the junior divi­ cheerleading contest held at Fall

sion was Andrea Trzcinski; sec· River CYO headquarters. Rah! 3. ond, Laura Conrad; third, Kath­ Second place went to Jesus­ Also on March 30, the Holy

Fa,mily Glee Club will entertainleen Clark. Mary Academy... the Women's Guild of HolyAt Dominican Academy; also In the volley,oall 'world, Mt.

Fall River, Jeannine' Albernaz St. Mary's has defeated DA, Name parish in New Bedford. is high place winner with her Taunton and Fairhaven high, Sister Mary Thecla is director. project on the effects of cigar­ while hoopsters at Jesus-Mary At St. An~ony High, students

have received a visit fromette smoke in ciliary mucus Academy in Fall River defeated transport. Seventy girls entered Villa Augustina Academy in Mother Mary Basile, superior the senior and junior divisions Goffstown, N. H. on both var­ general of the Hol-' Cross Sisters. of the DA fair and other win­ sity and JV levels. The religious is superior of 2,200 ners were Jeannine Baraby; Sisters in New England schools.And at North Dartmouth's -And 'at St. Anthony's the CoinValerie Stinton, Carol Regan Bishop Stang, Paul Matheson , aDd stamp Club has namedand Claudette Couturier, for the has been named a member ofsenior group; and Diane Boyer, Henry Duval president; Richardthe ~lass A tourney team forMarie Beland and Judy Furtado, Picard, vice-president; Alfl'ed Cbasketball. And faculty over­for the juniors. Galipeau, treasurer; Andre Car.powered seniors at Stang 87-50

Prevost High, Fall River, re­ rier, secretary. Are dues paid illin a special basketball gameports Arthur Desrosiel'8 and rare coins?with proceeds going for a schol_ Robert Potvin tying for first ,A series of vocation lectuTe\Iarship. Intramural champ atplace in the senior division sci. at Sacred Hearts Academy in

CHESS CLUB: Even though it's Spring and a baseball: beckons, chess has its fans. Members of Feehan High's, Chess Club are, from left, Daniel Sullivan, St. Mary's par­ish, North Attleboro; Joseph Hughes, advisor;' Michael Molitor, St. Mary's, Norton.

Stang is s~nior room 404, with enee fair; with Maurice Levesque freshman room 104 holding hon.in second place and Gordon ors as junior intramural winner. Editor Normand Meny saw Bienvenue in third. Roger Bou­ Newly elected :freshman voca_ the' results of his efforts this chard was junior division win­ tion club officers at Prevost are. month at St. Anthony High as ner. Donald Lafleur, chairman; the school memory books were

Some 160 exhibits comprised Roger Blanchard, secretary; Ger­ distributed. Also helping were the Mt. St. Mary science fair, ald Lemay, treasurer. Constance S a u v e , Suzanne open to the public for two days. Also at Prevost Marc Mancini Hamel and Diane Girouard,In the senior section there were has received a $2,000 scholar­ staff aides. 11 first awards, 20 second ship to Providence College. Ac­ Latin and English are sharingawards, 19 third and 10 merit tive in campu~ organizations, honors (and homework time)citations. First honor winners he is debate club president, for students at Fall River's SHA were Lynne Chrupcala, Cynthia sodality vice-prefect and a year_ right now. Various aspects of Erdmann, Jeanne Fewkes, Kath­ book staff member. Roman life are the subject ofleen Fitzgerald, Karen Lowney, Scholarships are in the news Latin research papers, whileDiane Martineau, Elsie Pelton, at Mt. St. Mary too, with Flor­ English students are writingNoreen Pingley, Anne Richard, ence Lemaire being awarded a about selected ·American andMary Ann Souza and Julie $1400 grant from St. Joseph's English authors, with each paperU!'ban. College, West Hartford. Daugh. devoted "to the life and per­

First junior honors, with an ter of Mrs. Beatrice Lemaire, sonality of a famous writer infreshmen participating, went to Florence is student council vice_ order to discover the inspiringGeraldine Bliss, Patricia Mer­ president an"d a consistent high­ forces in his works."ola, Patricia Selleck, Sandra est honor student. She plans to Also in the spotlight is Fran­Thiboutot and Diane Viera, major in foreign languages in cis Thompson's "Hound of Heav­Eleven of the senior first honor college. en," and in connection. with itswinners and all the junior win. study, a display of sketches byMore ScholarshipSners will exhibit at the regional former students has been postedAt Holy Family in New Bed­science fair in April, in addi­ on the senior bulletin board attion to three second honor win­ ford Mary Alice Monfils has SHA. won a partial scholarship toners from the senior division. Baseball and track, sure signsTufts and Susan Sweeney and

Debate News of Spring, are important a'tMary Ellen Crowley are win­ Bishop Feehan, with the boys'Varsity debaters at Taun. ners of the United Nations baseball season due to openton's Bishop Cassidy High are Scholarship Exam. Monday, April 6. Also at Feehan,looking forward to three Cas­ Cassidy High, a member school school winners of the Elks' essaysidy-Coyle debates. Cassidy neg_ of the Mass. Assn. of Student contest on President Kennedyatives will meet Coyle affirma­ Councils, will be represented at

tives Friday, April 10 before are Suzanne Fortin, junior, andthe annual convention in Ann Sears, senior.the Coyle student body; and Springfield Friday and Satur­

And at Mt. St. Mary seniorsCassidy affir;natives will debate day, April 3 and 4, by Ann Car­Jo-Anne Baily, Eileen CarreiroCoyle negatives Friday, May 1 bonneau, Joan O'Hearne, and

at Cassidy. and Susan McGreavy are semi­Nancy Tinkham as voting dele­finalists in the Rhode IslandAt St. Anthony's School hall gates and by Charlene Phillipe,

in Taunton, Cassidy affirmatives State Scholarship Competition.Rosemary Gflllagher and Nancy Winners in the National Mathand Coyle negatives will debate Fornal as observers. They will Contest for the Fall Riverbefore the Diocesan Council of hear an address by Sen. Edward

Catholic Women at their meet­ M. Kennedy.ing Sunday, April 12. At Jesus-Mary, Diane Dube, a R. A. WILCOX CO. And Prevost's debate team Is senior, has been named Student shaping up, pridefully reports of the Month by the Student OFFICE FURNITUREthe Maple Leaf. "Facing a council. Choice was based on In Slock for Immediate Deliverycharming deficit ot: one win, helpfulness, reliability, cheer­ • DESKS • CHAIRSthree losses" before im encoun­ fulness and responsibility. Diane FILING CABINETSter with Dartmouth; High, the 50unds like a nice gal to have

• FIRE FILES • SAFES score of 136 points: vs. Dart­Prevost team emerged with a around.

Also at JeSUS-Mary, the third FOLDING TABLES mouth's 82. At. the end of the issue of the new school paper, AND CHAIRSday's debating, the Prevost Jem, will be distributed today.record has risen frori.l one win, .R. A.WILCOX CO. For the forrth issue, the presentthree losses to five wins, three editors will supervise, letting 22 BEDFORD STREETlosses. "Pretty good for one day's the upcoming staff for next year FALL RIVER - OS 5-7838speaking, hey!'~ says the Maple "do all the work."Leaf. ;

Meanwhile Henry Pelletier and Paul Despres of St. An­thony's High in New Bedford NEnjoy your Ham for Easter'" traveled to New York City last Saturday for a tournament, ENJOY while Charles Levesque and Antone Andrade were in Fitch. burg the same day for the Cath­ LOBS.TER olic Boys' Tournament. Still the same day, the nOVice' team was LATERin Lynn for a Novi¢e Tourna­ment. Travel, travel! * * -Maclean's Sea, Foods. Top Cheerleaders

We'd give a cheer' for AttIe­ UNION WHA'RF, FAIRHAVENboro'a' Bishop Feehan high, Ii

Fall River has induded talk. on vocation in general andschool are Ann Doran, Cheryl marriage. Four junior Sist(;!rsGrail and Cecilia Polka: Their

. from the Holy Union Novitiateentries will now go to national judging. will conclude the series by de­

scribing convent life. They' are"An Evening in Rome" iB Sister Virginia Emmanuel, Sis­theme for the junior. prom be­ ter Eugene Olga, Sister Kennething planned at Prevost. It'll be' Agnes and Sister Bernardineheld in May at White's restau­ Marie.rant and is under direction of There's a television star at S\,Normand Dube, junior class' Anthony's Righ. She's prettypresident. Yvette Robida, who appeared on Gordon Bienvenue is earning the nationally televised Patty

plaudits at Prevost High for his Duke Show when she won 8 work in a contest· conducted for "Patty Duke Honorary Cousin­participants in a' special science contest. Also part of her prize course at Emmanuel College. was a World's Fair trip."Each participant was assigned Yvette's an honor muden1 to one of five laboratory exper. "and has a charming personal­iments and in closing was asked, ity," say admiring school ch~a. to submit la'b reports. Gordon's She has been accepted for col. was judged best of the cardiac . lege, where she will majorfunction lab summaries. As a in French. She's also been of­result he attended an awards fered a job impersonatingbanquet in Boston~ Mickey Mouse by station WTEV.

A Diocesan retreat for' girls In this capacity she'll appear at is planned for next. month and v~rious functions as the popular all high school students aJ'e rodent. urged to attend. Information Happy Easter to all'!

~. ,-m~fitlJe

T he glorious message of The Master's

Miracle illuminates brightly for all mankind

the path to life peaceful and everlasting.

May you and yours be fittingly blessed

with the Joy and Peace of Easter.

"Easter G ·"reetmgs

SAVINGSitizensBANK'" DO,WNTOWN fALL RIVER

Page 14: 03.26.64

_14 THE ANCHqR-Di,pcese of Fall Riv.er--Thurs. Mar. 26,1964..:r;fiW<ll!lMl~';tii~~~lt't ..!, • 1111!._~lll!III!II.!i!.!iE!I!I!iil!II!IIIIII"1111r The P~lrish Parade ft. MARY, IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, FAIRHAVEN NEW BEDFORD

Players will be divided Into ParishioLers will hold a mus-Expert, Mediocre and AV4arage i<:al variet~ sho~ at 8. Satur~ay at a Spring whist party planned mght, AprIl 11 m KeIth JUDlor for 7 Saturday night, April 11 high sc~ool aud!torium. Pro­at Oxford School auditorium, ceeds WIll benefit the church Fairhaven, under sponsorship of redecoration fund. ~he Al.legro <the Association of the Sacred Glee Club of Fall RIver Will be Hearts. Players will re~eive featured, according to annoupce­prizes and an attendance award ment made by. Mrs. ~eresa will also be given. Home-made Tanguay ~d MISS MarIe Ma­~freshments will be selrved. chado, chaIrmen. Proceeds will benefit the parish OUR LADY OF ANGELS. building fund and it is an- FALL RIVER Ilounced that tickets will be Parents of Boy Scouts and available at the door. Cubs of the parish will sponsor SACRED HEART. a whist party at 7:30 Saturday NORTH ATTLEBORt night, April 18 in the parish hall.

Refreshments will be served. The Holy Name Society y'outh Msgr. Anthony Gomes heads

eommittee is sPonsoring a father- a nominating committee for the son night Wednesday, April 1 Council of Catholic Women. A in rdecognition of the junior slate of officers will be pre­CYO basketball team and its sented at a meeting at 7:30 Wed_ coach, assistants, and helpers. nesday night, April 1 at the par­The program will feature a sup· ish hall. per at Sandy's restaurant, Plain. The unit announces a whist ville. Deadline for tickets is party for Saturday, May 10, also'

. Sunday, March 29. Supper will at the hall. Mrs. Irene Furtado, be served at 6:30, followed by a chairman, requestS that prizes program with. Joseph Bonneau be brought to the next meeting. as toastmaster and Joseph The following will serve as Hugres, Bishop Feehan High officers for' toe' Feast of - Our School basketball coach, as Lady of the Angels that is lUest speaker. scheduled for Aug. 12.16: Antone

Vigil will be kept at the Altar Michaels, president; John J. of Repose all night tonight by Souza, vice - president; Mrs. various parish groups. Mary B. Silvia, recording secre-

Dr. Joseph Kerrins will ad- tary; Mrs. Mary E. Velozo, cor­dress fathers and sons of the responding secretary; Manuel A. parish on the proper attitude Faria, treasurer. . towards sex at 2 Sunday aJEter­

BLESSED' SACRAMENT.IlOOn, April 5 in ~ paris}> hall. 'FALL Rr'ER

8'\". ANTHONY OF PADUA.. Mrs. Bertha Dutilly heads FALL RIVER officers of the Council of Cath­

The Council of Catholic Women olic Women. Serving with her plan mother-daugghter Com­ are Mrs. Constance Hamel, vice­a alUnion breakfast Sunday, :May president; . Miss Lorraine Crot-· 10. Mrs. Lee Correira heac!s a eau, secretary; Mrs. Barbara. nominating e ommittee which LeBoeuf, treasurer. will propose a slate of new A .June cake sale will bene-' officers at tbo- unit's .April fit the' parochial school gradu­meeting , ating class and next regular

meeting of the unit is set for IT. .10&1'1. Wednesday, April 15 ATTLEBORO ST. WILLIAM.

The Women's Guild will ba~ FALL RIVER as their principal speaker at New Women's Guild officers their next meeting, Wedne!lday will be elected at a meetingApril 1, Dr. Robert HoI:land Wednesday, April 8. Miss Grace Whose topic will be Medicare. Flanagan and Mrs. Frank Krau­Guests will' be welcome and zyk comprise the nominating eoHee and dessert will follow. committee.

/

BEATIFICATION URGED Father Titus Brandsma, O. Carm, a Dutch journalist murdered by the nazis during World War II, may be de­clared "Venerable" if the' Sacred Congregation of Rites votes favorably on his cause for beatification, now being. considered. He was spiritual director of the Catholic Jour­nalists Society in Holland. This sketch was made by a fellow prisoner at Dachau, Germany, in 1942. NC Photo.

HOLY REDEEMER, CHATHAM

The Association of the Sact'~-d

Hearts will hold a closet clear­ance and miscellaneous sale in the church basement on Tues­day from 10 in the morning to two in the afternoon.

Mrs. Edward Zibrat and Mrs.' Gilbert Surette, co-chairmen, . have announced that donations­may be left at the church Mon­day afternoon or evening,

·ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISt. NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies League announces' Its annual dance for Saturday, April 4 at Allendale Country club. Mrs. Chester Ciborowski is chairman. SS. PETER AND PAUL, FALL RIVER

Cub Scout activities will in­clude a kite derby and charter ceremonies Sunday, April 5. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, NORTH EASTON

Women of the Parish will sponsor a "Breath of Spring" Fashion Show in the Parish Center on Sunday, April 12, at 4:30 P.M. Dress, millinery and footwear fashions will be shown by professional models.

Co-Cnairmen Miss Marguer­ite Carter and Mrs. Daniel Cos­grove announce also that the show . will include a buffet, served under the direction of. Mrs. Francis Sweet, and Mrs. Paul Sullivan will provide vocal entertainment. Mrs. Carl Hanson is in charge of tickets. NOTRE DAME, FALL RIVER'

Miss Gertrude St. Laurent, spiritual chairman of the Coun­eil of Catholic Women, an­nounces that members will par­ticipate in adoration at the Altar of Repose from 5 to 7 Good Fri ­day morning. A regular coun­cil meeting will take place at 7:45 Monday night, March 30 in Jesus-Mary Academy auditori ­um. In charge are Mrs. Oscar Dube and Mrs. Emilien Gelinas. A novelty hat show will' be fea­tured and members are urged to bring their own creations.

The parish Holy Name Society will hold a past presidents' din­ner Wednesday night, April 1 in Prevost High School audi1o­riuIa

.. Headquarters for

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Page 15: 03.26.64

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riv&r-Thurs. Mar. 26, 1964 15

The Junior League of Fall River

Proudly. Presents

NANCY HALLAS COLORATURA SOPRANO

Assisted by Arpad Sandor at the Piano <.-

THURSDAY EVENING-APRIL: 2, 1964· .". .' . -

DURFEE THEATRE -FALL RIVER, MASS~

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This Message is Sponsored By The Following Indiyiduals and Business Concerns in Greater Fall Riyer:

Ann Dale Products, Inc. _ International Ladies R. A. McWhirr Compan"y Brady Electric Supply Co. Garment Workers Union - Plymouth Printing Co., Inc. Cascade Drug Co. MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc. Sobiloff Brothers Enterprise Brewing Co. Mason Furniture Showrooms Sterling Beverages, Inc. Gold Medal Bread Textile Workers Globe Manufacturing Co. Gerald E. McNally, Contractor Union of America. AFL-CIO Hutchinson Oil Co. George R. Montie, Plumber Yellow Cab Company

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Page 16: 03.26.64

'.l

16 THE ANCHOILl)klcese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 26, 1964 Says Pope John Clearly Opposed Racijal Bias

Bishop Elder Camara Tries To Elimincute Brazil Slums

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy A fire always causes local excitement; seldom does

one become international news! In Rio I saw a fire in the rare second category. It was deliberately set, enthusiasti ­cally watched, and publicized far beyond Brazil: I read of it later, for example, in 'rime magazine. Its purpose was the destruction of a favela. That is the apparently un­translatable name given the hill ­side shanty towns in which thousands of the poor are quar­tered. This fav. ela was being burned because its inhabitants had all been moved to 'I new housing devel­opment. The ene principally responsible for the shift was Bishop E 1 del." Camara, .auxiliary to the arch­ishop. The bishop is a passionate believer in going to the poor and lifting them up. He refuses either to ignore them or to take their plight for granted. The· latter is an easy and common attitude.

Rio is one of the most beau­tiful cities in the world, enchant. ingly beautiful as viewed, in the brilliant sunlight, from the top of Sugar Loaf or from the base of the heroic statue of the Saviour on Corcovado. The hide­ousness of the favelas cannot be seen from either height, nor.is it particularly noticeable as one speeds about the city, renowned for its frantic traffic. .

Huddle of Shelters To realize how vilE" are these

suppurating sores, one has to go to them deliberately and jook at them squarely, something which none of one's new acquaintances is anxious t" have one do. Driv­ing through them is impossible; they have no streets.

In the favelas are concentrated people from rural areas, per. haps from other states, who have come to the city to make a liv­il-L and thev suppose, to im­prove themselves. The men work mostly or. the new construction, of which there is a frenzied plenty, and the women become domestics.

The shanties arp. built of wood taken, one is told, from l~on­

struction sites. Each is ram­shacklr and all are a cicose, higgledy - piggledy agglomera­tion, a huge huddle of the merest shelters.

Church Leadership At infrequep" "''lls in the

filthy, stag!>€ y" is a public faucet, ,. ~,er SUI>ply and the only utility. These teem­ing instant sJ,ums are worse t.han the Arab refuge!' camps in the Middle East, or at least those I. have seen.

Bishop Elder Camara is bent on their elimination. He seems to think that, in a country' 90 per cent Catholic, the Church must exercise leadership in this and kindred matters. He also seems to think that one must do something more than cond(~mn

and forbid dancing as imm~lral.

He wants these people housed like human beings.

. He is accused of being contro­versial, an extremist, a sh':lw­man, this last presumably be­cause he uses extraordinary means, such as television shows, to call attention to the lot of the poor, to rouse consciences, and to raise money for proj'ects benefiting them.

Famous for Churches

and active. Nothing has been done yet. about a particularly dreadful favela called Cantagal_ 10, or cockcrow, a name deminis­cent of a certain biting episode in the Gospel.

Brazil is deservedly famous for churches both old and new. There are gems of baroque church architecture in, for ex­ample, Duro Preto, capital of the mining state of Minas Gerais during the Portugues colonial period. Duro Preto is in the mountains, and although even today it numbers only some 30,000 people, it is dotted with churches which must, in many instances, be termed glorious. .

One goes up and down the narrow , winding, cobblestone

. streets, lined with houses of the colonial period and still charged with the atmC\sphere of those remote and picturesque days and every so often comes upon a church delightful as to exterior and splendid as to interior. Gold leaf, crysta1,s bronze mag­nificent carved wood-all blend in beauty.

Brasilia Entirely New

It is somewhat disconcerting, however, to see, cheek-by-jowl wit:. exquisite old wooden stat ­ues of St. John the Baptist and St. Joseph, an insipid and tawdry plaster statue (with glass eyes!) of St. Therese of Lisieux.

Just as notable as these price­less treasures of the past are some' of the churches in the 1 dically new style of our own age. Those that I saw are the work of the renowned architect Oscar Niemeyer, a Brazilian of German parentage. Niemeyer, as everyone knows, is responsi­ble for the fresh-minted national capital city, Brasilia, and his churches have something in common with Br:\silia.

Brasilia is a radical venture, a city entirely new, established in what a decade ago was wil­derness, in an effort to catapult Brazil into the future and also to draw the people from the coastal strip into the empty but potentially rich interior.

Poor ~t:aintenance

The first effect of this archi­tecture is stunning, It is bold and thrusting. Many of the individ­ual units are, and will always be, superb. But there is a cer­tain monotony to the whole, and a note of artificiality, or one might say un-humanness, to the city as a city.

In the town of Pampulha is another Niemeyer church which was much in the news in recent years, The decoratior is by Can­dido Portinari, and for some

.t' :"le the bishop refused to allow the church to be dedicated. His refusal was rumored to be be­cause of Portinari's work on ex­terior and interior, but it may have been because, back in the '40's, Portinari was said to sport a jeweled hammer and sickle as a lapel ornament.

This church, insofar as the work of architect and artist is concerned, is of the first rank. But what has the Church done with the church?The altar is grotesquely inappropriate. And in the baptistry is nothing but a !lickly dusty palm plant. Where, then, do they baptize? In the sanctuary is a small table

HUNTINGTON (NC)­At least 10 citations from Pope John XXIII's encycli­cal Pacem in Terris can be used to demonstrate the docu­ment's condemnation of !;acial discrimination, a social action leader has written.

Father John F. Cronin, S:S., assistant director of the Social Act ion Department, National Catholic Welfare Con~erence,

offers the analysis in an article on Pope John's attitude on race relations in the Our Sunday· Visitor newspaper.

Delegate to Lecture JAMAICA (NC) - Archbish­

op Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delegate in the United States, will lecture on "The Work of the Vatican Diplomatic Corps," at St. John's University here on Long Island tomorrow.

"The mind of Pope John is clear; men are equal in dignity and racial discrimination violates their natural rights," he asserts after quoting passages on human rights, international relations, social protections and legal safe_ guards to political rights.

Father Cronin exam,ines the questil"'l of timing to explain the approach of the Church to racial matters'recentlY.

Timin~ Important "When complex social changes

are in.' 01ved," he writes, "the question of timing becomes im­portant. One of the American Archbishops quietly and firmly desegregated the schools of his archdiocese in 1946 and was widely acclaimed for his hero­ism.'

"The same Archbishop, now a Cardinal, in 1963 took a number of far-reaching steps in the civil rights field, yet his actions were

hardly noticed by the press. What would have seemed revo­lutionary five years ago is commonplace today."

Fat her Cronin continues: "But these steps are common. place only because quiet pres­sure and persistent education made people ready to accept leadership. Because the Church was trying, in an undramatic way, to aid the Negro during the l'<1st century, it can now move forward rapidly in the struggle for full equality and the com­plete ~·ec(}gnition of his rights.

"Our Bishops first chose to give the Negro his due within the Church itself. When the time was ripe, they faced the broader problem of his position within civil society. As with Pope Pius XII and the Jews, they had to decide when to act quietly and when to speak in tones of thunder."

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The good name of the r;nurch holding a cheap basin, a bottle will not go into entire eclipse of water, and the appointmentll anwng the poor so long as he, hr the sacrament's administra­and those like him, are .boot tion.

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Page 17: 03.26.64

• • • •

THE ANCHOR­ 17 Thurs., March 26, 1964

Diocesan Nurses Set Scholarship

Members of the Scholarship Committee of the Fall River Diocesan Council of Catholic Nurses have completed plans fQr this year's scholarship.

Mrs. Mae Fitzgerald, R.N. of Fall River, president of the Di­ocesan Council; Collotta Rob­inson, R.N. of Attleboro, presi­dent of the Area Council; and Winifred McKeon, R.N. of Taun­ton, of the Scholarship Commit­tee met with Mrs. Franci:;; P. McCabe of Taunton, chairman, and all plans were arranged.

Applications for the Mary. E. . McCabe Scholarship Fund may be obtained from members of the local Guilds of the Diocesan Council.

Gifts to the Fund are being received in memory of the late Harriet Hart and the late Eliz­abeth Griffin. Donors will be in_ scribed in a memorial book.

Pope Paul Names, Two Educators As Bishops

WASHINGTON (NC) Pope Paul VI has named two Auxiliaries to Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle of Wash­ington. .

Msgr. William J. McDonald, rector of the Catholic University of America here, has been named Titular Bishop of Aguae Regiae. and Auxiliary Bishop of Washington.

. Msgr.. John S. Spence, pastor of the Church of the Sacred Heart here and Director of Edu­cation in the Archdiocese 'of Washington, has been named Titular Bishop of Aggersel and Auxiliary Bishop of Washington.

. The appointments were' an­'nounced here by Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Del­egate in United States.

Bishop-elect ::'iJ:cDonald w~

born in Mooncoin, County Kil­kenny, Ireland, June 17, 1904, the son of Patrick L. and Bridget (Foskin) McDonald, both of ECUMENICAL DIALOGUE ON VOCATIONS: Sixteen nuns from six Protestant, The annual beach party forwhom are deceased. He attended the benefit of the ScholarshipGreek Orthodox and Greek Uniate committees were guests of the Sisters of St. Joseph Clogga National (Elementary) Fund will be held this year atSchoOl in Mooncoin; Mt. Sion at an ecumenical workshop on vocations in Rockaway Park, N.Y. Shown during the Offer­ Marshfield on July 18.C h r is t ian Brothers' (High) tory procession, led by Brother Lawrence Olecksiak, S.M.~ of Chaminade High School, Other members of the com­School, Waterford; St. Kieran's Mineola, are Sister Irene Agatha, Greek Orthodox, Yonkers; Sister Seraphine, Greek Uni­ mittee are: Gertrude Davis, R.N.College and St. Kieran's Semi­ ate, Bridgeport; and Sister Mary Kevin, novice of the Sisters of St. Joseph. NC Photo. of- Fall River, and Alice Le­nary, Kilkenny. He was or­ Blanc, R.N, of New Bedford.dained to the priesthood in St. Mary's Cathedral, Kilkenny, Dr. N. A. Welch at Stonehill June 10, 1928, by Bishop James Continued from Page One Leominster, Marbloro and Met­Roche of Roos, Ireland. lend support to Stonehill Col­ ropolitan State Hospitals. He is

Msgr. McDonald, following lege as a growing young insti ­ past president of the Massachu­parish and education work in tution in this area and to focus setts Medical Service, a director California, returned to Catholic attention upon the academic and of the Massachusetts HospitalUniversity as a professor of phil ­ physical development of the Service, assistant treasurer of the osophy, and was Director of college. Massachusetts Medical Society,Studies for Ecclesiastical Schools Comprising nearly 400 mem­ and has served as Delegate to and vice rector before becoming bers, the club originated the the World Medical Association rector. He was made a domestic annual President Dinner in 1961 in 1959 at Montreal, 1960 at West prelate in 1948. to pay honor to the col1~ge Berlin, 1961 at Rio de Janeira,

Bishop-elect Spence was born through its President and each 1962 at New Delhi, 1963 at New May 1, 1909, the son of John year has brought a renowned York, and will again be a dele­Selby and Katherine Genevieve special guest to the area. gate in the June 1964 meeting(Hartman) Spenc.e, both of Dr. Welch, who will be in­ in Helsinki. He' also holds an whom are deceased. He attended stalled as 118th president of the honorary degree from North­St. Pius and Corpus Christi ele­ American Medical Association in eastern Universiity. mentary school and Loyola High San Francisco in June, was ori ­ Special guests who have spo­School and Loyola College in his ginally a native of BrOckton. ken at the annual President'snative Baltimore, and made his The now internationally-known Dinner include His Eminencestudies for the priesthood at St. Boston physician, graduated Richard Cardinal Cushing ofMary's Seminary, Baltimore, from Brockton High School and Boston, Representative Josephand the North American College Tufts College Medical School, W. Martin and Senator Edwardin Rome. He was ordained at the where he later served on the M. Kennedy.

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North American College on De­ faculty.cember 5, 1933, by Francesco In private practice since 1928, Cardinal Machetti-Selvaggiani. Dr. Welch also serves as consul­

tant in medicine to Carney,Fr. Clark

Continued from Page One P-Town Parish gional director in the eastern Continued from Page One United States for the Papal Vol­ Primary School and display ex­unteers for Latin America, was amples of the students' work. interviewed here after a 20,000­ Organist Jerome Dale will offer mile tour of Latin America. interludes of traditional litur­

The pastoral, or master plan, gical music. as it is called, is in operation The women of the parish will principally in Chile, Panama and serve refreshments. Brazil. Rev. Leo J. Duart, pastor of

Many of the administrative St. Peter's feels that the Openphases of the pastoral plan are House will be an excellent ex­handled by laymen, Father Clark ample of the desire of both Popesaid. The lay apostolate in Chile, John and Pope Paul to foster he noted, is "very advanced." better relations with Non-Catho­

In New Orleans with Father lics and to give C".thuiics a Clark was Father Michael Lies deepf'r. unt:kt'standing of their of Chicago, regional director for own Faith.

-p A V LA in th.e Midwestern states.

At present, said Father Lies, there are 281 Papal Volunteers from 71 dioceses in the United States serving in Latin America. It is estimated, he said, that 100 lay volunteers should be sent down annually.

Right now, he added, there are requests from the Latin America hierarchy for 300 or 400 additional volunteers.

5,000 Rosaries PROVIDENCE (NC) - Pierre

Jutras, 87, has furnished an es­timated 5,000 rosaries for the missions in his spare time since 1951. He repairs rosaries which are collected by several reli ­gious communities here and also makes them from discarded handbags, jewelry and other items.

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'8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 26, 1964

DIOC~SAN BASKETBALL CHAMPS AND RUNNERUPS: Sacred Heurt CYO quintet defeated Our Lady of the Assumption team of New Bedford to win the Diocesan championship. Left members of the Sacred Heart ~~al'ir,-"Jront: P. Torpey, P. Viveiros, and K. Fitzgerald; rear: R.

Sees )~pproval of Declarations on Religious Liberty and Jews

Torpey, K. Szelag, and B. Fitzgerald. The New Bedford team, front: M. Roderique, L. Pina, J. Lopes, and J. Viera; rear, D. Comceicao, K. Cruz, P. Gomes and W. Gomes. Ken Fitzgerald was high scorer with 63 points in the three games..

PITTSBURGH (NC).- Bishop John J. Wrigh< predicted here the Second Vatican Council will approve declarations ori re­ligious liberty anr relations with the Jews.

In the annual lecture series. ,ponsored by the St. Thomas More Society and the Catholic Physicians Guild, the Bishop of Pittsburgh said he would be

Prelate, Shriver Receive Medals

B A L TIM 0 R E (NC) - An Episcopal bishop and the direc­tor of the Peace Corps were among recipients of Loyola Col­

.>lege's Andrew White Medal here yesterday.

In a ceremony marking the Jesuit college's annual celebra­tion of Maryland Day, medals were bestowed on the Right Rev. Noble C. Powell, retired Episco­pal Bishop of Baltimore; R. Sar­gent Shriver, Peace C"rps di­dector and President Johns:m's special assistant on poverty; Gen. Henry C. Evans, retired major general of the Maryland National Guard; and Henry P. Irr, business executive.

The medal is named for Father Andrew White, S.J., chaplain who accompanied Lord Balti ­more's founding expedition to Maryland which landed March 25, 1634, and offered the first Mass on Maryland soil.

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"much surprised if the chapter on religious liberty ran into serious worry or fatal trouble."

He said the chapter on rela­tions with the Jews might en­counter "pro forma opposition from bishops obliged to go back -to dioceses situated in countries rulea .by Arab dictators," but he anticipated no basic disagree­ment on what he described as a "solidly and clearly theological statement without political over­tones of any kind." He com. mented that he saw "no likeli,.. hood it would be defeated."

Bishop Wright said despite some published reports neither chapter encountered "shenani­gans" and that both had been as warmly received' by the council

Educators to Meet In Atlantic City

WASHINGTON (NC) - Near­ly 12,000 educators and adminis­trators are expected in Atlantic City for the 61st annual meeting of the National Catholic Educa­tional Association from March 31 to April 3. They will hear a variety of ranking churchmen, Federal officials and fellow edu­cators discuss the theme "Cath­olic Educational and National Needs."

In addition,' delegates will in­spect the association's largest exhibit of educational products.

Fathers as by informed public opinion.

"Nothing could be more false than the reports that these chap­ters were subject to undermin­ing," the Bishop stated. "The reason they were not voted is because they had not been dis­cussed, and the reason they were not discussed is the reason given not by critics of the coun­cil, but by the best informed and most passionate partisan of

Still 'Young Man' SAGINAW (NC) - Joseph S.

Popecki, 70, knows how to fill an elective office. In 1913 he was elected treasurer of the St. Joseph Young Men's Society here. Today, a half century later, he holds the same post - has never missed a monthly meeting.

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both reports, namely Augustin Cardinal Bea: there was not time."

Bishop Wright said both chap­ters are "obviously among the

Favor Prayers HANCOCK (NC) - Voters of

the Hancock School District here in New Hampshire passed a resolution calling upon the Han­cock public school board "to al ­low voluntary prayers of school children and their leaders in the school building previous to each day's session."

most urgently awaited questions of the next session and will be among the first treated."

The Bishop explained that he did not consider himself free to quote details of the chapter on the Jews, since its contents have not yet been made public.

He concerned himself princi­pally with the chapters on reli ­gious liberty, quoting from the text published by its relator, Bishop Emile De Smedt of Bruges, Belgium, and empha­sizing that its focus was on the nature and rights of personal. conscience.

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Page 19: 03.26.64

• •

Document on Communism Reveals Serious Danger

WASHINGTON (NC)-Today's deluge of news from SO many places leads Americans to forget "the seriousness of the communist danger," a new publication of Congress says. The jolting reminder follows hard on the heels of an­other Congressional docu­ment, a supplemental report of Soviet Russian violations of treaties entered into since 1917 It comes not long after the 30th' anniversary of United States recognition of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.

"We must face the fact that many more people dream of world conquest today than did in th days of Caesar Genghis

e 'sKhan, Nepoleon - or even ta­" t

r

lin, the new documen says. 40 Milllon Members.

"These people are organized in the World Communist Move­ment, with affiliated communist parties in over 90 nations. Khrushchev claims a formal membership of 40 million per­sons in the international conspir­atorial organization. Many, many more millions are fellow travel­ers, sympathizers, and collabo­rators with the movement."

The document is Volume III of "World Communist Movement," which eve n t u a 11 y will trace ehronogically "s i g n i fie ant events in the development of world communism from 1818 to 1957."

The stepped up pace of this activity is reflected in the periods covered by the various volumes. Volume I embraces 1818-1945; Volume II, 1946-1950, and Volume III, 1951-1953. It is stated that "additional volumes" will cover the years 1953-57.

Facts Easily Forgotten The chronology is being pre­red in the Library of Congress

'-- f:r use of the House of Repre­-·~'dves Committee on Un-

American Activities. Rep. Edwin IE. Willis of Louisiana, chairman

. lof the committee, says "what ,f"l' the communists h a v e bee n

ying and doing for the past 100 sa .

College Anniversary DUBUQUE (NC) - The 125th

founding anniversary of Loras College here will be celebrated with a three-day program from May 11 to 13. The college grew out of St. Raphael's Seminary founded hr-e in 1839 by Bishop Mathias Loras. Dubuque's first spiritual leader for. whom the college is named.

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years _ must be readily avan­able to our leaders and policy­makers, both in and out of gov­ernment."

"Today, people are deluged with so much new about so many developments in so m.any parts of the world that VItal facts, eve.n of the recent past, are ea~ilY fo~gotten.. .'

Today s headlInes dIm the memory not only of" those of last year, but even of those ofla t k d 1 t th" the s wee an as mon ,. ts t He addscongressman pom ou. that the chronological study seeks t& "drive home * * * the seriousness of the communist danger."

The Senate Committee on the Judiciary recently had brought up to date a study of "Soviet Political Agreements and Re­suIts." The study was first made in 1955, and was updated in 1959. Now a supplement has been issued.

Violates Treaties The supplement says the

study has developed that Soviet Russia has also violated treaties

. with the Chinese communists, "demonstrating thereby the ex­tent to which political expe­diency determines the durability of the pledged Soviet word."

In connection with the 30th anniversary of the U.S. - USSR treaty of recognition, marked last November, attention was drawn to three basic things this country hoped to gain thereby.

These were that the Soviet gov~rnm~nt wo~d settle $628 million m CzarIst debts to the U.S.; that Mosco~ wo~ld ~ut ~n en.d to commUnIst agItatIon In

this country for the ~verthrow of the. U.S. gove~nm~nt, and t~at A~erlcans workIng In the SOVIet Umon would be protected fr?m unreasonoble charges of spyIngand that they would be allowed religious freedom. •

None of these aims has beell realized.

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THE ANCHOR- 19 Thurs., March 26, 1964

Tablet Selects John Thompfon

BROOKLYN (NC) - Pau' Silas Creighton University star. has been chosen the basketbal" player-of-the-year by the Tab· let, Brooklyn diocesan news­paper. DePaul's Ray Meyer an( Villanova's Jack Kraft wert' named coaches-of-the-year.

In the paper's 12th annua: Catholic college All-Americar team Sila6 joined Nick Werk­man, Seton Hall; John Thomp­son, Providence College; Wally Jones, Villanova, and Fred Crawford, St. Bonaventure.

The small college first team selections were Richie Tarrant, St. Michael's, Winooski Park. Vt.; Ralph Telken, Rockhurst. Kansas City, Mo.; Steve Warner. Assumption, Worcester; George Hill, Bellarmine, Louisville anr: Jim Heavey, St. Mary of the -or Plains, Dodge City, Kan.

High School Choir At World's Fair

DUBUQUE (NC)-The senior choir of Wahlert High School here has been invited to pre­sent a concert in the Vatican Pavilion at the 1964-1965 New ____ York World's Fair, Father Je!.-~ - ­aId Blackburn, ~n-;:r-the school's musir:department, has announced.

The 75-voict,.,hoir is the only high school gr~p in the nation 'to receive sudan invitation, hi! said. The ~rop performs works encOmpassInf the entire history

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Page 20: 03.26.64

20 JHEANCHO~-.Dioce.seof. Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 26,1964

EDUCATORS MEET: Teachers from all parts of Diocese assemble at Bishop Feehan High School in Attleboro for Spring meeting of New England unit of National Catholic Educational Association. Left, Rev. -Wayne Benton, Sacred Heart Academy, Worcester, who demonstrated .audio-lingual approach to. Latin; Sister M. Edward, R.S.M., St. Xavier's, ~.~ ~ '. -

Jewish '-t.,ngress Opposes Prayer Amendmlnt

NEW YORK ',NC) - The American Jewislt Congress

r has strongly oJposed con-I gressional effo~ts to enact .. ~ iLconstihltinT',,1 ..llendment per­

mitting prayer and Bible read­ing in public schools.

The AJC's national governing council said in a resolution that a "one-man crusade" by Rep. Frank J. Becker of New York on behalf of the amendment was "the most serious challenge to the integrity of the Bill of Rights in American history."

Becker has been spearheading efforts to win passage of the amendment in the House. He is sponsor of a discharge petition to take the proposal out of the Judiciary Committee and bring it to a vote on the floor. The petition currently has more than 160 of the required 218 signa­tures by congressmen.

Vigorous Opposition In the Se'1ate, 11 senators

Joined in sponsoring a proposed constitutional amendment to permit states to enact "any law with respect to religion," ex­cept for one "establishing" a particular church or infringing on religious freedom. The American Jewish Congress res­olution did not refer to devel­opments in the Senate, but in­stead focused on the House and Becker's campaign.

The Jewish group said Beck­er's efforts were aimed at upset­ting the U. S. Supreme Court's rulings of 1962 and 1963 against prayer and Bible reading in public schools.

It called for vigorous opposi­tion to any tampering with the constitutional guarantee of reli ­gious freedom and separation of Church and State.

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Providence; Leo A. Robert, Springfield, who spoke on data processing in secondary schOols; Rev. Patrick -J ..O'Nei1l~' Diocesan _Superintendent of Schools. Rigl!t;.~rQt~~:r_ CtI~ist<?phe~~ F.S.C., -~t.: :M:ary. -High, Worcester;

. Sister Mary Urban, Feehan principal; Rev'. Richard J. Carelli, Sacred Heart Academy, Worcester, NCEA vice-chairman. . '

Sees Freedom .of Conscience Declaration Cardinal Cushing

CAMBRIDGE (NC)-A clear_ cut declaration ensuring all men's right to -l'reedom of con­science is "the biggest contribu­tion that United States Bishops can make at the Vatican council," according to Richard Cardinal Cushing.

In the sixth of a series of talks at New England Protestant churches, the Cardinal issued a ringing appeal for Christian unity.

"Let· no one expect physical unity among Christians in our time," he said. "But there is another kind of unity that we

New Kitchen Feeds Hong Kong Hungry

HONG KONG (NC) - A $16,000 new food kitchen provid­ing free hot meals five days a week for 500 undernourished children-as a starter-has been officially opened here at Star of the Sea, the Maryknoll Fathers' compound at Chaiwan, a wind­swept resettlement area round­ing one end of Hong Kong Island. . . Funds and equipment for the kitchen were donated by the American people through the United States Far East Refugee Program.

Its door was officially un­locked by Pauline MacGuire, program director in Hong Kong of Catholic Relief Services-Na_ tional Catholic Welfare Confer­ence. Its gleaming giant rice steamers and cookers were blessed by Msgr. Joseph Roman_ iello, Hong Kong Director for the relip.f agency.

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICE!

Exp-ects Vatican Council Stand can expect, the unity of love. For many years, he said, the Let us so,,' the seeds of love and · layman "was al' right to take a understanding among one an­ collection and run beano gamesother. when they were legal and sell

"The Church always needs · chances on the pastor's hat, but reform," he. told his audience. · he had no part in the structure

Besides a declaration on free­ of the Church." dom of conscience, Cardinal In a lighter vein, he told of Cushing outlined several other his own difficulties at the Coun"; accomplishments he hopes may cil, particularly his difficulty be expected from the council: with Latin. "Even the Russian

A clarification of Christian observers were better off. than doctrine in "simple, understand. I was," he said. "They had in­able language." terpreters." Because all ad-

An updating of pastoral life - dresses had to be given in Latin, to meet the needs of our time. he added, "For once in my life I

An increa . use of the laity. kept my mouth shut."

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Plan Public Hearings On Shared-Time

CHICAGO (NC)-The Church<­Federation of Greater Chicago /will hold public hearings on a proposed high school level five. year experiment in "shared_

· time" education.

_ The Rev. Robert L. Bond, pres. / · ident of the federation, said ~­- organizations "general P'Ubli~ · dialogue" on the issue will begin

some time after March 29.

He said he- hopes it will in­clude presentation by Catholics, Protestants, Jews and persons of no religious affiliation. He said the Church Federation has not taken a stand on shared­time.