19
Charities. BISHOP GERRARD 0' Gifts·T otal $627,554 Diocesan Appeal Reflects 10% Increase Over 1960, .Ordinary Most Grateful· A new high of $627,554.92 has been reached in this year's Catholic .Charities Appeal commemorating Bishop Connolly's tenth anniversary as Ordinary of the Diocese.. This figure a gain of $61,187.41. It is an increase of 10 per cent. Bishop Connolly in the.following statement to The Anchor today expressed . the wide programme supported by our his heartfelt gratitude .to all: CatholiCf Charities. May the Good Lord bless and reward "Our Catholic Charities Appeal has all those that help keep us going and once more received cordial endorse- progressing along the road to true ment. There has been generous increase brotherhood founded on friendship as in the 'measure of giving, even when it well as faith. For all are inspired by involved sacrifice. Help has been re- Him Who said: "A.s long as you do ceived from all levels of industry in kindness to one of these least, my the area. But we must ,none the less, . brethren, 'you do it to Me". recognize that the strength of this As dispenser of new resources, I keep year's Appeal comes from the grass- all friends of Catholic Charity in roots, from the thousands that 'have prayerful ,memory, and approach the benefited, in one way or other, from Turn to Page Two BISHOP CONNOLLY -*. i J F!l.!lndl A collection will be taken up in all the Churches of the Dio- cese on Sunday for the Ec- clesiastical Students Fund. FIRST RECEPTION IN THE U.S.: Four members of the Dominican Sisters of the Presentation, St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River, received, the habit of the Order fi'om Bishop Connolly, Tuesday morning in the hospital chapeL Left to right, Sr. Marie Claire of the Infant Jesus (Claudette Salois) ; Sr. Michael Joseph (Mildred Midura) ; St. Catherine of Jesus (Day Elizabeth Chesbro) ; and Sr. Angela Francis of the Cross (Sandra Souza) 0 I June lS Examination For Seminary Candidates The examination for college students who desire to enter the Major Seminary and study for the priesthood for the Diocese will be held Thursday, June 15, at the Convent of the. Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts, Prospect Street, Fall River. The college. . . Major Seminary consists of The matter of the exammatIon, . .' as announced by Rev. Alfred J. .two of PhIlosophy and Gendreau Secretary of the allied subjects - compar- Board of 'Examiners, will cover able to the last two years of subjects usually undertaken dur- college-and four years of The- ing the first two years of the ology. The examination is for college classical course. those who have finished their Those accepted as students for first two years of college in the priesthood for the Diocese either a Minor Seminary or a as a result of the examination and recommendation by their pastor will be assigned by the Most Reverend Bishop to a Major Seminary and will begin their studies in Philosophy in the FalL COlthed If0 I Camp To Add Facility Fori' D@y Campers Rev. William J. McMahon, director of Cathedral Camp and Our Lady of the Lake Day Camp for Girls, an- nounced today that Bishop Con- nolly has directed him to open a day camp for boys of the Dio- cese in conjunction with thai daily life of the overnight Cathedral Camp. Under the direction 9f Father McMahon and a staff of compe- tent men, who have been chosen on the. basis of their ability in the field they direct, their under- standing of children and person- ality, this new operation will open this year. Each department will be head- ed by an expert in his field. Transportation to and from Cathedral Camp will be provided at no extra cost. Buses will ieave 0 ,New, Bedford, Fall River and Taunton every morning .between 8 apd 8:30, to arrive at camp to Page Eighteen Nation's Highest Court Upholds Bay State Sunday Blue Laws Massachusetts authorities today promised rigid enforcement of t·he so-caned Blue Laws which prohibit Sunday in the Commonwealth. The law compliance directive followed four separate decisions by the United States Supreme Court which the constitutionality of laws restricting Sunday sales in 'the Bay State, Maryland and Peimsylvania. The na- tion's top tribunal voted 8-1, upholding the laws which restrict Sunday retail com- mercial activity. The court voted 6-3 in deciding that the Sunday laws can constitutionally be ap- plied to. Orthodox Jews and others whose religion require them to refrafn from work on a day' other than Sunday. Chief Justice 'Earl Warren wrote the decisions in all four cases. Justice William O. Doug- las dissented. 'He was joinej by Justices William J. Brennan Jr. and Potter Stewart as dissenters in 'the case which decided that . the laws can be applied to those whose rel1gion demands rest on , a day other than Sunday. It is now the duty of the police department in every: community in the. Common- wealth to the Sunday sales ban, Attqrney General Edward McCormack 'has de- clarj'ld following the· Supreme Court decisions. Bay State Case The Massachusetts case gtit·ted in Springfield seven years ago when Harold Chern ok, owner of Crown Kosher Supermarket; three customers, and 'Rabbi Moses Scheinkopf brought suit against the city to enjoin it from enforcing the blue laws, claiming they were unconstitu- tional. ' The litigants lost in all Massa- Turn to Page Tliree Rev. JAMES V. MENDES Volpe of Massachusetts will de- liver the chief address and John P. Burke, Waltham will be vale- . dictorian. Reverend Richard H. Sullivan, C.S.C., Ph.D., president of Stone- hill, will confer degrees. In addition to Dr. Maxwell, others to receive honorary de- grees include Governor Volpe; Auxiliary Bishop Thomas J. Riley of Boston; Ralph D: Turn to Page Nineteen " PRICE lOe $4.00 per YOGr Second Clall Mail Privileges' Authori'zod at Fall River, Mall, Anchor of. the Soul, Sure 4nd PAUl. The ANCHOR " iJ'9 Confer On ·25 Diocesan Students Twenty-five seniors from the Fall River Diocese will be among 108 students to receive degrees at 10th annual commencement exercises at Stonehill College, North Easton, this Sunday afternoon. ,Among recipients of honorary degrees will be Dr. Clement C. Maxwell, president (}f Massachusetts State College at Bridgewater. A native' 'of 'l'au'nton, he is chairman of the drive to raise funds for the con- struction of Memorial Catholic High School for girls in that city. Bishop Connolly will preside at commencement ceremonies, L'lcheduled to begin at 1:30 and to be held on the lower campus CIIf the college. Governor John A. Bishop Connolly Sings Fr. 'Mendes Requiem The Most Reverend Bishop celebrated a Pontifical Requiem .Mass Monday morning in Our Lady of the Angels Church for the late Rev. James V. Mendes, .administrator of the parish, who died Thursday, May 25, at the age of 45. Assistant priest was Rt: Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros, Chancellor of the Diocese. Rt. Rev. John A. Silvia and Rt. Rev. Hugh A. Gallagher were deacons of honor. Other officers of the Mass were lRev. Maurice Souza, deacon; Rev. James F. Lyons, subdeacon; Rev. Donald A. Couza and Rev. Robert L. Stanton, acolytes. Rev. Anthony·M. Gomes, thur- ifer; Rev. Agostinho S. book bearer; Rev. Robert S. Kaszynski, candle bearer; Rev. Gilbert J. Simoes, gremiale bear- er; Rev. Thomas E. Morrissey, mitre bearer. Masters of Ceremonies were Rev. John H. Hackett and Rev. Manuel Andrade. Rev. Luis G. Mendonca was eulogist. "It has often been said that Turn to Page Twelve c River; Mass., Thursday, June 1, 1961 Vol. 5, No. 23 © 1961 TIle' Anchor

06.01.61

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enter the Major Seminary and study for the priesthood for the Diocese will be held Thursday, June 15, at the Conventofthe.HolyUnionoftheSacredHearts,Prospect Street, Fall River. The college. BISHOP CONNOLLY CatholiCf Charities. MaytheGoodLordblessandreward Rev.WilliamJ.McMahon, director of CathedralCamp and Our Lady of the Lake Day Camp for Girls, an- ThematteroftheexammatIon, . .' as announced by Rev. Alfred J. The examination for college students who desire to "OurCatholicCharitiesAppealhas

Citation preview

Page 1: 06.01.61

Charities.

BISHOP GERRARD

0'

Gifts·Total $627,554Diocesan Appeal Reflects r··'.---~-c;c-----l

10% Increase Over 1960,.Ordinary Most Grateful·

A new high of $627,554.92 has been reached in this year's Catholic.Charities Appeal commemorating Bishop Connolly's tenth anniversaryas Ordinary of the Diocese.. This figure represe~ts a gain of $61,187.41.It is an increase of 10 per cent. Bishop Connolly in the.following statementto The Anchor today expressed .

the wide programme supported by ourhis heartfelt gratitude .to all: CatholiCf Charities.

May the Good Lord bless and reward"Our Catholic Charities Appeal has all those that help keep us going andonce more received cordial endorse- progressing along the road to truement. There has been generous increase brotherhood founded on friendship asin the 'measure of giving, even when it well as faith. For all are inspired byinvolved sacrifice. Help has been re- Him Who said: "A.s long as you doceived from all levels of industry in kindness to one of these least, mythe area. But we must ,none the less, . brethren, 'you do it to Me".recognize that the strength of this As dispenser of new resources, I keepyear's Appeal comes from the grass- all friends of Catholic Charity inroots, from the thousands that 'have prayerful ,memory, and approach thebenefited, in one way or other, from Turn to Page TwoBISHOP CONNOLLY

-*.iJ

~«;:d&$5(Q1$~9Co:lll F!l.!lndlA collection will be taken up

in all the Churches of the Dio­cese on Sunday for the Ec­clesiastical Students Fund.

FIRST RECEPTION IN THE U.S.: Four members ofthe Dominican Sisters of the Presentation, St. Anne'sHospital, Fall River, received, the habit of the Order fi'omBishop Connolly, Tuesday morning in the hospital chapeLLeft to right, Sr. Marie Claire of the Infant Jesus (ClaudetteSalois) ; Sr. Michael Joseph (Mildred Midura) ; St. Catherineof Jesus (Day Elizabeth Chesbro) ; and Sr. Angela Francisof the Cross (Sandra Souza) 0 I

P~an June lS ExaminationFor Seminary Candidates

The examination for college students who desire toenter the Major Seminary and study for the priesthoodfor the Diocese will be held Thursday, June 15, at theConvent of the. Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts, ProspectStreet, Fall River. The college. . .Major Seminary consists of The matter of the exammatIon,

. . ' as announced by Rev. Alfred J..two y~ars of PhIlosophy and Gendreau Secretary of theallied subjects - compar- Board of 'Examiners, will coverable to the last two years of subjects usually undertaken dur­college-and four years of The- ing the first two years of theology. The examination is for college classical course.those who have finished their Those accepted as students forfirst two years of college in the priesthood for the Dioceseeither a Minor Seminary or a as a result of the examination

and recommendation by theirpastor will be assigned by theMost Reverend Bishop to aMajor Seminary and will begintheir studies in Philosophy inthe FalL

COlthed If0 I CampTo Add FacilityFori' D@y Campers

Rev. William J. McMahon,director of Cathedral Campand Our Lady of the LakeDay Camp for Girls, an­nounced today that Bishop Con­nolly has directed him to opena day camp for boys of the Dio­cese in conjunction with thaidaily life of the overnightCathedral Camp.

Under the direction 9f FatherMcMahon and a staff of compe­tent men, who have been chosenon the. basis of their ability inthe field they direct, their under­standing of children and person­ality, this new operation willopen this year.

Each department will be head­ed by an expert in his field.

Transportation to and fromCathedral Camp will be providedat no extra cost. Buses will ieave 0

,New, Bedford, Fall River andTaunton every morning .between8 apd 8:30, to arrive at camp

T~n to Page Eighteen

Nation's Highest Court UpholdsBay State Sunday Blue Laws

Massachusetts authorities today promised rigid enforcement of t·he so-canedBlue Laws which prohibit Sunday s~les' in the Commonwealth. The law compliancedirective followed four separate decisions by the United States Supreme Court whichup~old the constitutionality of laws restricting Sunday sales in 'the Bay State, Marylandand Peimsylvania. The na­tion's top tribunal voted 8-1,upholding the laws whichrestrict Sunday retail com­mercial activity. The court voted6-3 in deciding that the Sundaylaws can constitutionally be ap­plied to. Orthodox Jews andothers whose religion requirethem to refrafn from work on aday' other than Sunday.

Chief Justice 'Earl Warrenwrote the decisions in all fourcases. Justice William O. Doug­las dissented. 'He was joinej byJustices William J. Brennan Jr.and Potter Stewart as dissentersin 'the case which decided that

. the laws can be applied to thosewhose rel1gion demands rest on ,a day other than Sunday.

It is now the duty of thepolice department in every:community in the. Common­wealth to en~orce the Sundaysales ban, Attqrney GeneralEdward McCormack 'has de­clarj'ld following the· SupremeCourt decisions.

Bay State CaseThe Massachusetts case gtit·ted

in Springfield seven years agowhen Harold Chernok, ownerof Crown Kosher Supermarket;

• three customers, and 'RabbiMoses Scheinkopf brought suitagainst the city to enjoin itfrom enforcing the blue laws,claiming they were unconstitu-tional. '

The litigants lost in all Massa­Turn to Page Tliree

Rev. JAMES V. MENDES

Volpe of Massachusetts will de­liver the chief address and JohnP. Burke, Waltham will be vale- .dictorian.

Reverend Richard H. Sullivan,C.S.C., Ph.D., president of Stone­hill, will confer degrees.

In addition to Dr. Maxwell,others to receive honorary de­grees include Governor Volpe;Auxiliary Bishop Thomas J.Riley of Boston; Ralph D:

Turn to Page Nineteen

"PRICE lOe$4.00 per YOGr

Second Clall Mail Privileges' Authori'zod at Fall River, Mall,

A.~ Anchor of. the Soul, Sure 4nd ~irm-ST. PAUl.

TheANCHOR

"

Stoneh8~~ iJ'9 Confer D®~u-~es

On ·25 Diocesan StudentsTwenty-five seniors from the Fall River Diocese will

be among 108 students to receive degrees at 10th annualcommencement exercises at Stonehill College, North Easton,this Sunday afternoon. ,Among recipients of honorarydegrees will be Dr. ClementC. Maxwell, president (}fMassachusetts State Collegeat Bridgewater. A native' 'of'l'au'nton, he is chairman of thedrive to raise funds for the con­struction of Memorial CatholicHigh School for girls in that city.

Bishop Connolly will presideat commencement ceremonies,L'lcheduled to begin at 1:30 andto be held on the lower campusCIIf the college. Governor John A.

Bishop Connolly SingsFr. 'Mendes Requiem

The Most Reverend Bishop celebrated a PontificalRequiem .Mass Monday morning in Our Lady of the AngelsChurch for the late Rev. James V. Mendes, .administratorof the parish, who died Thursday, May 25, at the age of 45.Assistant priest was Rt:Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros,Chancellor of the Diocese.Rt. Rev. John A. Silvia andRt. Rev. Hugh A. Gallagher weredeacons of honor.

Other officers of the Mass werelRev. Maurice Souza, deacon;Rev. James F. Lyons, subdeacon;Rev. Donald A. Couza and Rev.Robert L. Stanton, acolytes.

Rev. Anthony·M. Gomes, thur­ifer; Rev. Agostinho S. Pache~book bearer; Rev. Robert S.Kaszynski, candle bearer; Rev.Gilbert J. Simoes, gremiale bear­er; Rev. Thomas E. Morrissey,mitre bearer.

Masters of Ceremonies wereRev. John H. Hackett and Rev.Manuel Andrade.

Rev. Luis G. Mendonca waseulogist.

"It has often been said thatTurn to Page Twelve

c

F~II River; Mass., Thursday, June 1, 1961

Vol. 5, No. 23 © 1961 TIle' Anchor

Page 2: 06.01.61

J

. , .

afte<:rGreeD.CreOOi;

--­OoANb.8E.AL·A~I~CORPOR.An:O

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, OS 9--6072MICHAEL J. McMAHON

L1Cenl~ Funeral Oirector ' ., . RegiMered Embalm..-

(. P. HARRINGTON'FUNERAL HOME'

986 Plymol,th AvenueFall River. Mau.

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DANiEl .... HARRINGTONLiconIec.Funerfil- Director

and Registered EmbalmerJEFFREY' E.SULLIVAN

550 Locust m.Fall River, MaSs.

OS 2-2391Rose E. Sullivan

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2,846.50 '1,812.004,602.502,834.75' .4,736:252,775.305,221.50 .5,270.00·.9,213.75.4,130.00,.

2,813.004,112.00

11,700.505,641.001,250.00 j5,282.00 I6,163.502,983.50'3,357.001,834.007,371.361;510.003,251.50

. 6,933.002,210.00

New,; ·:'Bedfordite8"::'list'Activities ",::: "

The Summer calendar ,for" .­New Bedford, Catholic, :Younc ",Adult Organization will includflQ bo~lingbanquet this Satin-darnight Ist··,the Silver Gull, Matta- 'poisett.. Tr.ophielJ will be awald-o ,'.ed by; Normand St. Pierre'-.team . and . individual champioMand 'sii'angenients are in charge'of .RO:~rt St. Pierre,' league .pres'~d~nt. . , .'

The CYAO cultural committeeis spOJ;lsoring plans toatten,cll .Boston Pop's concerts at Sym.­phony Hall and the Melo~.

Tent. '.'Representatives from the New

B.¢ford organization will attenda regional CYAO convention th@weekend -of June 17 and 1&Regional officers will be elected'and. a national organization wiDbe established,' with a natloDaJconvElntion scheduled·for Novem.-, .

TESTIMONIAL: Chatting at testimonial to Brother ber in Buffalo, N. Y.Eudes Hartnett, C.S.C., principal of Coyle High School, . The.New Bedford group~Taunton; are Edmund J. Brennan, master' of ceremonies;' comes new members between tbe

ages of 19 and 29 who are ilingleBrother Ephrem O'Dwyer, provincial of the Holy Cross' 'Catholics. Meetings' are heldBrot!:lers; Bishop Connolly and the guest of honor.' every second Sunday at Kenn~

Center.

Sa~veR~ggrg@,CoUege. fro Confer 'Mass Or«loDegli'~e$ ,OI1'T.l ~Bght from Dic\tese . FRIDAY:-Mass of I Sunday aftei'

Eight girls from the Fall River Diocese will receive Pentecost. IV Class. Green.Bachelor of Arts degrees at the, eleventh annual comm.ence- Mass 'Proper; No Gloria; Sao-ment of Salve Regina College, Monday, June 5. They .are ~ ond Collect SS. Marcellinuflo·

Peter and Erasmus, Bishop,Rosemarie Silvia Bolen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tiargo Martyrs; no Creed; CommonSilvia, 79' Eastern Avenue, ere~d Russell J. McViIVley, D.O., Preface. Tomorrow is the F~North, 'Fall River ;.earmen will preside and present degrees Saturday of the Month.C. D~Mello, daughter of Mr. to 64 graduating seniors. An hon- SATURDAY - Mass of ttr.eand Mrs. John C. DeMello, orary, degree of Doctor 0'£ Laws Blessed Virgin for Saturda~

. will be awarded to the Hon. John IV Class. White. Mass Propei';68. Center "Street, . F~irhaven; E. 'Fogarty, Rhode Island Con- Gloria; no Creed; Preface c1Anne Marie Doolan, ~ughter of gressman, who will deliver the Blessed Virgin.Mr. and Mrs: Edward F. Doolan, commencement address. .SUNDAY, _ II Sunday

,54 Cottage Street, .·Fall River; Bachelor. Degrees-'-'. Pentecost. II Class.,Louise P. Grant,· daughter. O'f Fixty-six stud~nis will receive . Mass Proper; Gloria;. Mr. and Mrs.' William. P. Gran~, ~\-the degree oJ. Bachelor of Arts. . Preface of Trini~y.

312''-Florence Street, Fall. River. .Statements of eligibility .forAl . L' S M' C '-- MONDAY~St. Boniface, Bisto.-.so eonora '. c au<::, teaching will be awarded to 30 &&VJP

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas' ot these students who have also and Martyr. III Class. Red.F. McCabe Sr., 95 Beverly)aree; completed the requirements for Masl\.Proper; Gloria; no CreedGFall River; Marjorie Ann Morin, certificatiOn ,for '.teaching . in' Common Preface. ,daughter of M~.andMrs. George Rhode Island. TUESDAY,-St. Norbert, BislwpC.. Morin, 231-A 'Tickle Road, ,'file Bachelor of Science de-, and Confessor. III Class. White.North Westport; Claire M. Sha!1- gree will' ~ granted .to eight Mass Proper; Gloria;·no Creedlnon, daugp.ter of Mrs. James students 'wile' have 'completed Common Preface. .Shannon, 24 Grinnell Street, Fall stUdies 'in nursing, . . WEDNESDAY-Mass of previolilJRiver; and Mary Moniz Silva, . Governor John A.' Notte, Jr.,' SUIl'day. IV Class. Green. Masldaughter of Mr. and ~s. JoSeph will bring the greetings of the p~~:pe~; NC? Gloria or CreecllI..S. Silva, 262 Division Street, Fall state." . " . Common Preface. ' ,. .Ri-&er. ' In case of inclement 'weather,' THURSDAY- Mass 'of pre~io.

Graduatibn' . cere'htorlies will the exercises will be held m'" S· '.' .... ' 1

b h Id " 't th ' l' k" t'h unday...IV Class.. Green. M~ ,e e a ree 0 c oc on e Rogers High School atiditoirum Prop~r.;· No Gloria 'or Cr~

terrace of the NeWport c'ampus.·· at three-th.I,·rty. I '. ','., C Pr f .His Excellency,' ,The' Most Rev-. , : ·o~o~ e ace. ..' , ;.

·Jo·int Breakfast :---.....----........'·N'CI)ne Gra~d .:K"ight 'Sund'ay,'June 4 is'theda'te fo/" D.'~'-SULLlYAN&.S.OMS" ,.

3,298.00 Bishop ~assidYCoun~il" Swan- , a joint Communion br~akfast for' FUalE LNO,14,653.09 sea .. Knights, ·of 'Columbus, will " Notre Dame parish HolY' Name ...'.,; n RA, ME.'-' ,.:'

,'. 34

,57. 2

23..25 .... ~;geht -!~~~t~eliv:~:i~gas s::'::n

d,. Spoc~ety D:l~mbersd ~nd,alumni ~ , "46,'ioCUST STREff' "./. I

' .. , 6.50 " '- .' rey.o~ High School; ~th Fall.'. 3,064.00.' The unit will hold a,Communion " Rive....· I" 'F*\U:RIVER MASS j'

470100 breakfast Sunday, June 4. at St. " ,. ,,'., ./, " ,..,.: .:' ." John's- Ukrainian ,C a.t hoI i c - ., ·95· .2.3381 .' ..

2;4fh.00 Church, F,all'River. ' . AUBERTIHE v:*rednC. S·~rm.. L1,852.00 110..1 I ., i.co" ivcm, It.

, 3,565.50 . I~ecro ogy' . Fun"ral Home "1,651.25 mE ANCHOR IlSts'~hedeath2,073.00 anniversary dates' of priests .He'", Aubertine Breius"2,149.00 who' 'served the Fall RiveI' OWDer and Director

867.75 Dioiese since its formation ill SpaciOus Parking Area6,~96.00 19M' with the iIltention that

the faithful will give them a , 'wy 2:2957':5,~19.00 prayerful remembrance. 128_ AileD "',' New Bedford1.,150~60 '.

587.50 ,,'. JUNE .."658500" Rev.. Jose po. d'Am!lral, .1949,,. Pastor~ Santo Christo, Fall River•.12,558.50 R' .

8,163.00 ~v. DLOUis J; Terriien, O.P.,2,352.00 1920, ominican Pr ory, Fall.

.' 2,730.00 _River.'. .2,137.50 . JUNE 56,831.00 Rev. Thomas J. McLean, 1954,2,528.25 'Pastor, St. Francis Xavier, lI7­5,660.50 annis.2,480.003,179,001,600.50

. 2,875.00'2,148.101,608.00

. 3,825.753!473.00

THE ANCHOR

,FORTY HOURSDEVOTION

June ~t. 'Tere~'s Convent,Fall River.51. Joseph, Taunton.Hoiy Name, Fall River.Corp~s Christi, Sand-

wich.J~ 11-85. Peter & Paul,

Fall River.LaSalette Shrine, At­

tleboro.St. Mary, Mansfield.Sacred Heart, Nortlh

,Attleboro.June 18-St. Mary, New Bed­

ford.Blessed 'Sacra,ment, Fall

River. .June 2~t. Elizabeth~ Fall

River.Sth. Mary, Norton.

Second Class Postage Paid at Fall. River;Mass. Published every Thursday at 410Highland Avenue. Fan River. Mass.. bythe Catholic Preso' of the Diocese ofFan River. Subserlpiton price bIT mall,postpaid $4.00 per year.

St: Mary, Taunton

2.·Parosh TotQ~S fOi'C~a~iti~s,App~al'.Continued from Page One Holy· Name, New Bedford

f h 'th ' '-< 9,196.00needs 0 t e yea!' WI ,greatel', Mt.· Carmel, New Bedford .

_courage tha~ ~ver before. A . 9,025.00thousand thanks to all, to these St.· Mary, Mansfield 816300that receive as well as those that St. Patrick, Wareham 7371'36make it possible for us to give." , .

Bishop Gerrard, Auxiliary FALL RIVERBishop of, the Diocese, and this St. Mary $9,393.75year's 'Diocesan Chairman, .is- Blessed Sacrament '1,833.00~1te4 the following statement Espirito Santo 2,038.00today to the Anchor: . Holy Naine .. 23,953.37'

. Holy. C'i'oss 889.50"As the 1961 Catholic Chari- Notre Dame 6,141.00

ties Appeal opened, the ,theme Our Lady of the Angels 2,089.25was 'Because He Cared--as the Our Lady of Health. 1,619.50Appeal closed, the theme be-, Holy Rosary 2,291.50came Because They Cared." Immaculte Conception. 6,407.45

''Bishop Connelly's ten years Sacred Heart '13,568.25of devotion' as Ordinary of the St. Anne 4,616.65Diocese has certainly been rec- St. Anthony of Padua 1,686.25

.ognized by all. The .decade of St. Anthony of Desert . 1,389.50devotion as Shepherd has i'eally \ .St. Elizabeth 1,448.70inspired men and women not St. John the Baptist . 3,176.00only to be charitable but to live St. Joseph 4,735.65charity. St. Louis 3,057.00

"This life of love has been the St. Matthew 1,986.50incentive iIi reaching the highest St. Michael 3,569.35total in the history of the Dioc- '51. Patrick ' 6,475.00esan Appeals." St. Roch 2,705.50

'Joseph E. Fernandes, ~ a y SS. Peter .& Paul 6,503.00St. Stanislaus 823.00

chairman, issued the following sf. William 4,378.50 .statement: '

"From the very opening of the Santo Christo . 4,423.511961 Catholic Charities Appeal, NEW BEDIFORD

,the enthusiasm of all to make Holy Name 9,196.00this the most successful was self . Assumption 1,212.30evident. The eagerness and dedi- Holy Rosary 427.00cation of the Clergy, Laity 'and Immaculate' Conception 4,202.25

Mt. Carmel 9,025.00friends 'in demonstrating their·appreciation and loyalty' to our O.L. of Perpetual Help 2,320.60Beloved Bishop has now re- O. L. of Purgatory 832.00w.arded us with ail' ou~standing Sacred Heart . 4,491.85

St. Anne' 2,250.25succ~ss. , St.. Anthony of Padua 5,540.80

"All who 'have contributed so St. Boniface . 324.00generously of their time, rc- St. Casimir '1,013.75sources and prayers mal! well, St. Francis of Assisi _ '1,531.00.rejoice in their accomplishment. St. Hedwig . 825.00'In behalf of the thousands who' St. Hyacinth 1,385.00will benefit by your :sacrifices St. James 14,207.30and"generosity, may I e'~press St. John the Baptist ,. 7,055.75my personal and sincerest St. Josep,h ' 9,303:05thankS. Without the cooperation St. Kilian' 4,242.85and contribution of the press, St. Lawrence ~0,226.76

radio and television stations, our St: Mary 4,538:95 .task would have been consid- St. Theresa' 5,368.00erably more difficult. Surely, NORTH A'lTLEBO~O

they too must know how we Sacred" Heart 4,257.75deeply appreciated their serv- 51. Mary. 13,633.00ices. •

TAUNTON"To our Beloveq Bishop. Holy Family

Connolly, "Because He Cared",. Holy Rosary. .may this be but a token of our Immaculate Conceptloa

love and esteem.with the assur- 'our Lady of Lourdellance that in each succi~ing Sacnd HeartAppeal we will {iot only equal St. Antbony.but exceed tbisyear's ·oultpour- St. Jamesing of Charity, 'BecauS0 We St. Jos~phCare'." . St. ,MaJ."Y. i.

Leading parishe~ are: . St. Paul\ r.·, " . ATTLEBORO

Holy Name, Fall River Holy Ghost. '. $23,953.~7 51. John

St. Lawr~nce, 'New' Bedford' St" JoseRh29,226.76 St:Mary'

51. John the Evangelist, • St. Stephen'Attleboro . '14,653.00' ,St.:'ThereSa

St. 'Jam~" New Bedford '.'TOWNS, . 14,207.30 Acushnet

51. Mary, No. Attleboro . Assonet13,633.00' Buzzards Bay

Sacred Heart, Fall River Centerville .. 13,568.25 Central Village

St. Francis Xavier. Hyannis Chatham. . 12,558.50 East Brew~

St. Thomas More, Somerset . East Falmouth. 11,700.50 Fairhaven.

St. Mary's Cathedral; , St. JosephFall River 9,393.75, St. Mary

St. Joseph, New Bedford Sacred Hearts9,303.05 Falmouth9,213.75 . Hya!lnis. "

,------- -... Mansfield .Mattapoisett

: NantucketNorth'Dighton'North EastonNorth Westpor:tNortonOak BluffsOcean Grove,Orle~ms

OstervilleProvincetownRaynhamSandwich

.Seekonk1Somerset:.. St. John of God

St. Patrick .St. Thomas More

South DartmouthSouth DightonSouth YarmouthSwansea

Our Lady of FatimaSt. Dominic

.' St. Louis of France.Vineyard HavenWarehamWellfleetWest HarwichWestportWoods Hole

Page 3: 06.01.61

MAILING

PRINTING

IN NEW BEDFORDDIAL 3-1431

DONNELLYPAINTIt-J~

SE~VICE

. IN FALL RIVERDIAL 2-1322 or 5-7620

Commercial • IndustrialInstitutional

Painting and Decorating

135 Franklin StreetI:all River OSborne 2-1911

That same day the childrenwere confirmed and receiVedtheir first Holy Communion.

Walter's godfather was ElioCarli, who saved his life in 1955by diving into a canal and fish­ing him out half-dead. Mr. Carli,

'a member of the Italian paramil­itary police known as the Cari-binieri, received a Carnegiemedal for the rescue.

DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAULInvit. young girls (14-23) to labor ..

Chriat's volt vineyard as an Apostle of th.Editions: P~e.., Radio. Movies and feJe,vision. . With th... modorn moans, lh_,,;..ionary Sist." bring Christ's Doctrine10 all, r.gardl... of race, color or _.For information writ. tOl

REV. \ MOTHER SUPERIORSO ST. PAUL'S AV£. BOSTON 30. MAil.

TRI.CITYOFFICE EQUIP.

BUSINESS ANDDUPLICATING MACHINESSecond and Morgan, Sts.

FALL RIVERWY 2-0682 OS' 9-6712

E. J. McGINN, Prop.

Honor PopeVATICAN CITY (NC) - A

group of Venetian industrialistspresented Pope John with a sil­ver and copper' altarpiece tocommemorate· his five years asPatriarch of Venice. .

SHELL "Premium" Heating OilsFa,mous Reading HARD C(,,4!.'· ~"'Dri~

NEW ENGLAND COKE ~4~~ '-0&,DADSON OIL BURNERS. ;::;E{:f . .~-=

24-Hour Oil Burner Service ==SIEU 0 =•• ~ ~\Il ~ 2', ..

Charcoal Briquets ~ V . ~~~

~~~Bag Coal - Charcoal ~/h" , .",",

Moslem Mother In$tructs Chi~d~en

In' Catholicism and I~ CO~\1e[j'W'edVERONA (NC)-Three chil- Bishop Giuseppe Carraro O!

dreri who were instructed in the Verona baptized all three. HeCatholic religion by their Mos-' told the mother after the bap­lem mother have been 'received tism, "You, too, are a Christianinto the Church. . at heart."

The gOdfather to one of themwas a police officer who savedthe child's life six years ago,winning a medal for heroism.

The children, 14-year-oldFranco, 12-year-old Walter and8-year-old Marisa, were raisedwithout any religious training.Their father is an Italian service­man and their mother a Moslemfrom Albarjia.

InstructionWhen the oldest grew inter­

ested in tlie Catholic religion he.rose at 4 every morning to hearMass and study the catechism.He and his mother instructed thechildren and prepared them forbaptism.

_ AMCNOI DI..... fill'" ......-'ftotws. June 1, 1961 3

~~c-~:"',~":::.~*'-~""" ""::"-11";.";.,~. '!'>; ~.

753 Cavol St., fall Rovor

05 5-741~

JOHN E. COX CO.Inc.

Fabricators of

C.ORREtA & SONSONE STOP

SHOPPING Cl:lNTER:

• Television • Furniture• Appliances • Grocer"

184 Allen St•. New 841dfOl'dWYman 7..935.

Dominican RepublicDenies Castro Link

NEW YORK (NC)-The :D0­minican Consul General hasdenied there is any agreementbetween his country and PremierFidel Castro of Cuba.

"I'd like to remind t6.ose whohave suggested the possibility ofa so-called Ciudad Trujillo­Havana axis," Senor Mercadosaid, "that the government of theDotriinican Republic' has not atany moment moved an inchaway from its firm 'positionalongside the 'democratic nations

,in the Western Hemisphere."

Structural Steeland

Mi$~~J~an~oMS IrOIl"l

. .

E(h~<t@~olf Ow-ders,De",[EmphasQ$Of ~W"oms

. NEW YORK (NC)-Stepshave been taken to deempha­size senior high 'school promsin the New York archdiocese.

Msgr. John Paul Haverty,archdiocesan superintendent ofschools, said it was est!matedthat "prom night" cost a studentbetween' $50 and $75. It waspointed ·out that the prom usu­ally was held in"a fashionablehotel, was a formal affair andsometimes was followed by atour. of njghtclubs and parties.

A directive sent to all. highschOOls emphasized: student 90­

. cial activities, such as dances orparties should be held semi-for-

. mally in the schOOl or at nearbychurch premises; reasonable cur­fews should be fixed by schoolauthorities 'after consultationwith parents; adequate parentalsupervision should be provided;expenses should ~ kept to aminimum and the word "prom"should be avoided.

TlHIE NEW ST. PIUS X RECTORY LOCATED ON STATION AVENUE, SOUTH YARMOUTH

Jewish Complaint"People of all religions and

people with no religion;" he wenton, "regard Sunday as a time for .family activity, for visitingfriends and relatives, for late­sleeping, for passive and activeentertainme!1t, 'for dining out andthe like."

The two other cases came fr,omPennsylvania and Massachusetts.Both ·were brought by OrthodoxJews who contended that thestates' blue laws were" unconsti..,tutional as applied to them.

Overturn. Lower C!»urt

. In the Pennsylvania case, fiveretailers in Philadelphia sought

, all injunction against the laws.A three-judge Federal DistrictCourt turned them down. In

. Massachusetts an injunctionwas sought by the Crown Kosher"'Super ,Market ,of Springfield,three of its Orthodox customersand the chief Orthodox rabbi ofthe city.

A three-judge Federal DistrictCourt ruled in their favor~the

only one o.f the four lower courtsto do so--and held the Massa'"ehusetts. blue law unconstitu­tional.

In both cases those attackingthe laws pointed out that, underorthodox Jewish doctrine, theyhad to-close their places of busi-'ness before sundown Friday andremain closed all day Saturday.Unless they can open Sunday,they said, they w!ll be in opera­tion less than five days a weekand be at a tremendous disad­vantage.

'"Right to Regutate.Chief Justice Warren agreed

the laws would hurt OrthodoxJews alid others who celebratedSaturday as the Sabbath. Butsaid this was only an indirect"effect on religion and not a 'pro­hibition on its free exercise.

''The Sunday· law," he said,"simply regulates a secular ac­tivity and, as applied to apel­lants, operates so as to make thepractice of their religious beliefsmore expensive."

"We cannot find a state with­out power to provide a weeklyrespite from all labor," the ChiefJustice said, ."and at the sametime to set one day of the week-apart from the others as a dayof rest, repose, relaxation andtranquility."

.,ls·Gift ListOfQuolitiesIII Hu'sband

CINCINNATI (NC) - 1fthusband hooting some· girls_te good moral characterabove good looks. 'And, ~survey conduct~d here disclosed.the girls are more concernedlliat a prospective husband haathe same religion than that heholds· a steady job.

The poll was conducted byPatricia George, Mar y J 0

Schneider and Margaret Wagner,8Ophomores, and Wardene Myers,

.iIl junior, at Mount St. Joseph~llege here as a project in ~heir

eourse of family.

'll'QB) List

Both the college and "h[~

sehool stUdents questioned putmoral character and the samereligion at the top of their listsof requisites. The high schoolersanswered they would look for,in this order: responsibility; abil­ity 'to get along with others;steady job; neatness; similar in­terests and a sense of humor. Ad.ozen high schoolers rated goodlooks, money and dancing ability!high on the list, but none of theeollege students did.

The pollsters also learned: 0

most girls dat,e because theywant to have a gooq time ratherthan shop for a marriage partner,and that the average age a girlbegins dating is 14.

Hi®tro ~@~D't·~ans Sundar S>@~~SContinued from Page-· One that the purpose of Sunday-

ehusetts courts, but in 1959 a closing statutes had gradual.lYspecial panel of three U.S. changed over the years. Now­justices ruled the laws unco!'\sti- adays, he said their basic pur-

o 4lutional. The city then appealed pose. is to prevent overwork('l) the Supreme Court., and u'iHair competition.

. Cape Cod Ba.n "It is not difficult to discern,"Si. W t y th h he said, "that. as presently

......_ x esC al'ffic °du s °dP- written' and administered, most~pers on ape 0 were or - ...ed in 1959 by Superior Court (blue laws), at least, are.~.f a....d E H d t k secular rather than of a rehglOus,"v ge ugene u ,son 0 eep h l' tel' j'their establishments closed Sun- 0 a acdays pending th~ decision of the 'US. Supreme Court.

Chief Justice Warren made.apoint of saying that the court'WWl not now 'upholding any con";'eeivable Sunday law. If such aatlatute' had the clear purposeOf using "the state's coercivepOWer to aid religion," he saidit would be unconstitutional.

ThEi"' four opinions and the_tfl laws they uphold, make it_tremely unlikely that· anySunday law will ~ struck down.

. Two Basie Issues'l!he four cases considered b,.~ court div~ded, ill the issuesClaey raised, into tw~ groups.. The first case from Maryland,began with the criminal prose­eutiori of seven employes of abighway discount store for sell­ing a can of floor wax and a toyIiJUbmarine on Sunday. The,.were fined $5 each.

The 'second case came fromPennsylvania. A discount houseknown as Two Guys from Har­IIison-Allentown sought an in­junction agaipst enforcement I)f'\he Pennsylvania Blue Law. AGll'ee _ judge Federal DistnetGourt refused the injunction.

Traces HistoryThose challenging the. Mary­

land and Pennsylvania lawsargued that the laws were .90riddled with irrational exemp­tions that th~y denied the equa:Iprotection of the laws under theFourteenth Amendment. For ex..­ample, the laws allowed somemods to be sold but not others.

Chief Justice Warren brushedaside this equal-protection argu­ment. He said the states hadbroad power to classify and«MIld hot ~ said to have noDeason for barring hunting, foeexample, but allowing it if donefa!v organized rod ,and gun clubs.

The Chief Justice traced theIlistory of blue laws back to.12S7, when Henry III of Englandtor:bade the frequenting of mar­klets on Sunday. He agreed that·tlaeir origins wel"e religious.

SeculM Chal'aeterFurther, the opinion noted that

bo~h the Maryland and Pennsyl­vania statutes stili contained suchphrases as "the Lord's day."They track back to the earliestblue laws in the two states, 1649in Maryland and 1682 in Penn­4Y1vania.

But Chief Jl>l&tic~ Warren said

Page 4: 06.01.61

SomersetST; PATRICK

$10Mr at Mrs Edward J.~

Mr & Mrs JohnJ. Pavao.ST. THOMAS MOa,

$251\& & Mrs Albert Moboac*, A'

Friend.$15

Mr & Mi's William E. Shear$10

Mr & Mrs Charles Smi1lb, ... ,& Mrs John Farrissey, Mr & MaWilliam D. Murray, Mr & MaAlbert' Duclos, Mr & J\I&s ~eslaw Ginalski.

Mr & Mrs Chester ~Sullivan the Florist, M~ A.McMahon, Mr &. Mrs ArmenQiGamache, Mr & Mrs Louis Men::> 'des.-

$@M~1ll [t)i@~ionST. PETER

$50Holy Name Society, St.~ -,

Church, Dighton. Mass.Joseph McAlice. Mr & Hm

Joseph Fleck,.Mr & Mrs Harold.MendoZa, Mr' & Mrs ViDeentZe~er, Mr & Mrs Joseph. DeCambra. .'

,Christenson's Flowei' ~'St. Peter's Women's Guild, DI'Rose Borges, Mr & Mrs TbeodcmeBoucher.

So. DartmouthST. ,MARY

$25Mr & Mrs Walter J. aBdMl

.50· BRAND NEWREDUCTIONS'TH·IS WEEK!

Check them, all ... youlll find'hey" help to cut' your. totGifood bill way downl

Come ;11 today; • i see for your­- self' tltat you really DO save

CASH tit A&P" Now' over 600meat and grocery' prIces have

,bee,.,'reduced .... and these In­clude • ••

,.,.'

Orlea_ftsST. JOAN OF ARC, "

$20Frank Kineke ,

RaynhamST. ANN

$10E.dward L. Carnes· :Jr.

Ocean GroyeST. MICHAEL

$10Mr & Mrs Antonio Rodrigues,

Miss Alphonsine Trial.

Osten'iDleOUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION

$25Mr & Mrs Jphn POWe1'S

$10Mr & Mrs William Lewis, Mr

& Mrs Peter. Nese, Mr & MrsAn~one Farzier, Mr & Mrs James'P. Souza, Mr & Mrs Robert.O'Brien. .

WHOlI

.WEEK-END FEATUREI• •• • I

~e~uib1e Spring, First of the I ~l' Crop!

LAMB LEGS4·9~, WHOt.I 5,,7',L8c'legul.... T..... _ OMn._..cIy .

Serve with ,Lamb MINT JlUYGenuine Spring, JIlrst of tM·~1 Crop. Shovtder Chops & Stew Meat

lamb Combination l8 29c'. '

o

i7PLi"D"iHIWAY:::;:"'IIIIIIIti__.......~~'jlJ "

,HOW OVER

600 PRICESOM ~EATi and· CROCERIES

REDUCED I

Mooney, Joseph V. Murphy, Mrs ..­Eliz'aj:>eth McHugh',' - MargaretGarvey.'

In MemoryMoreau.

, -JUMP~lR: A veteran of174 free fall parachute ­jurilpsand '168 militarytroop jumps, 'Fr. (Lt. 'Col.)

, Tho~as E. ,Eaddie, chaplain, - c ' S«!lnc:h;vich'of the lOlst Airborne Divi- OOIllPUS CHRISTIsion, recently competed iR $30the AII-A'meri,can Cup Spoq Bishop Daniel Feehan CouncilParachute Meet. N9 Photo. N',o. 2911, KnWhts of Columbus

.. Bourne, Mass., Charles H. Blais._ $25'

Raymond C.' Sullivan, $10Mrs ,Lo\lise Crowe, Mr & lVIrs

of A\lrelian L. Martin Haley, Patricia C. Thoma,Mr & Mrs Jerry Cahir.

"

$10, 'F. B. Rogers ~ __ Jer Co" Bristol

Jewelry Inc., Hi-Land MachineCo., H. L. Green 'Co..Inc.

~@~I rrtawer$1500

Fall River Herald' 'News, $1000

Anonymous, $969

Catholic Memorial Home Resi­~ 'dents.

4 I THE ANCHO~,­

___....;T;.;.h;.;u;.;.r;;.;s•..:,.,_J:..u;;.;n..;.;e:-...:..1:-,.....:..1961

Special Gnft.sNation(111I,

$100 'Fulton Packing Company.Joseph D. Murphy

$60Simplex Time Recorder Co.

, .$50James J. Wilmot Company

S30John E. Fuyat

$15, What Cheer Foods

$10Dane T Bits Biscuit Co., Tracy

Smith Co.

$50In MeJDOIlJ 01. Be'V. William.

Smith.' '$SS

LaughJ1!N MarketTaunton Co-operat1w Beak

\ $20

Beneficial EioMM go,. ~_~

Ta"nton$100

In Memory of Rev.Smith.

A Frleftd

$500Mason, Furnitur~-Company . .Enterprise Brewing Company

$300White's Family Dining Room

& White Spa Caterers. .Textlle 'Workers Union, of'

America, AFL-'CIO. 'Duro Finishing Corp.

. International Ladies GarmentWorkers No. 178

,Attle!b@lfo ' $250$100 Made-Rite Potato Chip Co.'

Bibeault Pharmacy Inc. _ $200,A Friend ' PresCott JenningsAttleboro Trust Compariy $1'75

$50 Robert A.' Wilcox Co.In Memory of Rt. Rev. John J. . , $150

Shay. Cathedral Men's ClubLeavens Manufacturing Co.'; New. England Poultry Co.Catholic Nurses Guild . ,$125

$35 Lafayette Co-operative Bank.Leach -& Garner Co., Morin's . $100 J

Diners Inc., Mr & Mrs William Precision Thread Company·R. Flynn, Standard Plastics Co. Mr & Mrs Noel GiardInc. International Ladies Garment

$25 Workers' Unioh' District CounciLAttleboro Rotary Club, Wells Dr Morris Fetesten

Manufacturing' Co.. Foster Metal Skelly Detective ServiceProducts Inc., Mr & Mrs Harry' Anderson-Little CompanyJ. Flynn, Flynn's Hardware. ' $75

$20 H. P. Hood & Sons Inc.Attleboro Motor' SaleH ' $70,

$10 Borden & RemingtonThe Knobby Krafters Ine.. ,$50 ()

Sodality of Our Lady-St. John's ~ndreauFurniture, J. N. Gen-Parish, S. M. Stone Jr., DeMayo dreau Inc., Mr & Mrs ThomasTrucking Co. .Hudner, A Frienli, Shelburne

..... h .A I b Manufacturing Corp., Thomas."ort tt e oro Kidd Contractor, Troy Co-opera-

$25 . tive Bank, Everett Motors.Mr & Mrs J. P. Reynolds Simon's Supply" Co. Inc.; Dr

$10 Frank or. Lepreau..Regal FloorMacDonald's, Mobile Homes, Covering, Construction & Gen­

Inc., Dow's, Lyon's Advertising, .eral Laborers No. 6iO,.List Fam-Agency.' lly Foundation.

New Bedford "Mr & Mrs w~~en C. Herrick'$2000

Thepdore Loranger & Sons . $25$300' " Casca~e Drug Company, David

Our Lady's Haven Residents 'J. Friar, Parker Candy Co. Inc.;$250 W. T. Grant Co. Hub Clothing;

Paul Cleary Co. Inc. Dr Robert H. Moe, Maplewood$50 Yarn Mills, Dr Alan G. Simpson,

The Keystone Hillhouse Convalescent. Home,New Bedford Lodge No. 78, Inc. C.. ~. Lynch & Sons. ,

, B.P.O. Elks. ' , LaVOIe s , Jewelers-Optieia,ns,Post Office Pharmacy Mr & Mrs Forrest Knight, F. A.John I. Paulding, Inc. Forest Co., Decor FabriCs of Fall

$~5. River Inc." Carpenters Union No.Macedo Pharmacy 1305, Fall River Building Trades,

$30 Odias Dumont. ' '

The Browne Pharmacy . $20'$25 James Cronan, JoSeph A. &.

, ' Emma' Parks:Dr Arthur Motta. N.E. Theatre

Corp., Watson's Pharmacy, Shu- $15,. ' ,ster & Co. A.uto Parts, ParagOR Tom Ellison Inc.; Elmer C.Travel Agency. Slater, Fall River Paper & .SuP- ,

$20 ply Co., Misses Daylor, Mary E-Dr Clarence- E. Burt, Reca' Cavanaugh, Mrs Kathryn M.

Pharmacy, Schmidt Manufactur- Murphy. , ' ,ing Co., Dr Milton 'T. MacDonald Brewer & Company,' R.G.,Sturtevant & Hook-Builder & Chouinard Funeral Home. '

. Supplies. ' ' $10J Dr Frank L. Collins, Fitton '

.$15Gilt' Edge Textile Mills, Dr' Movers; Dr Alexander E. Rost-

Max Weinshel, Slocum Mill Inc. Jer; Wilbur Cafe, Bedford Mfg.Peitavino Silk Mill Inc., Smith' Co., Bayside Mfg. Co:.. 'Mills Pharmacy. Tick 'Tock Fro~ks, Ess Bee

$10 Mfg. Co., Corky Row Auxiliary,, Dr Carl Persons, Dr K. G~ Yan-, Lafayette Shoe Store, Patenaude

kopolus, NQvick Jewele,rs, Dr Company.,Charles H; Griffen, Worthington ' Picard's Clothes Shop, Pleag-'

, . Ba.kery. ant St. Super Market, Sanitary'Laundry -Inc. ' .

Dr James Radcliffe, Sidney's' ,Department Store, Junior Circie' .' Anna Canuella, Mae Quigley.No. 7l-Daughters of Isabella, Margaret Murphy, Edna P. Mol­Debson Mill Inc., Machinery oney, Mary C. O'Brien.Sales Corp'.. . Mrs Esther Latham,Mr &. Mrs' ,Dr Russell Wood, Michael Tighe' . Francis Doolan, Georgiana Stod­

Catherine Thomas, A Friend, dard, Katherine Griffin & A.Alicia McConville. Fennessey, Annie )V.{oss.

Olyvia M. Sylvia, Annie Con- . Mrs Eugene Cote, Simeon e.way, Ellen A.,. Hurley, John Harrington, Florida Berard,Tripp, Maurice Collins. Elizabeth Ryan, Martha Kearns.

Clara Redcroft, Sarah Foley, Mrs Rose Hurley, Margaret M.Paramount Pharmacy, _ Poulos "Sullivan, Anna M. Dillon, JohnPharmacy, Morris Glaser Co. Hettinger, Mrs Delia GQte1y.

Archie's Motor ~ransport Co., Mrs David Fuller, John, J). Sui-Dr A. B. Stimson, Dr John e. livan, MJ;s. Maurice Daly, JooBullard. Couture, Mrs Mary Arruda.

Mrs Margaret Fitzgibbons, AbelL. Cyr, Dora Dubitsky, HermanRocklin, J. J. Newbury Co., WolfCredit Jewelers, Dr Burton D.Bryan. ' ,

Smith Office Equipment Co..Mell Jewelry Co.; Mrs AliceHennessey, Catherine O'Neill,Mrs Albert Savoie. .

Helena Gaffney, M~ Pe.­reiD, Mft A. S. DeMarteau, MrsMargaret Carabinieri, -DanielCoogan. ,~.o.~ Mra~ B.

Page 5: 06.01.61

5

WY 7-9336Watch for Signs-

THE ANCHOR·Thurs., June 1, 1961

•••C>......¢>~o••"-

• A FAMHI.Y T~IEATi BAIR-BmQ Cll=m:KENS

o RO$~{L~WlNJ~ w;~~AA~1)145 Washington St., Fairhaven I

~ Just off Route 6

t ,t ,While out for :i Drive~ Stop '\t this' Delightful SpotI...~~.~......~

Se®$ ReV~~Mtg~n

IIn Atfl~trM«fi~!iMELBOURNE (NC)-A revo­

lution is under way in the Cath­olic stance before the world andbefore non-Catholic Christians,a priest-journalist told his fellowCatholic journalists here.

Father James Murtagh, firstpresident of Australia's CatholicPress Association, told the asso­ciation's seventh annual conven­-tion that the coming ecumenicalcouncil may set the Church'sseal upon this revolution.

"The Church has entered theAge of Dialogue and the Age of

, Public Relations--dialogue withnon-Catholic Christians and pub­lic relations with the communityat large," he declared.

"I don't ,think it an exaggera­tion to say that .we are on thethreshold of' a revolution inCatholic attitudes and policies inthe Church's confrontation withthe world. The revolution hasalready begun. It may well besigned and sealed and directedat the Second Vatican Counciland will mark the end of the

• Reformation Era."Father Murtagh said, the

change in attitude toward non­Catholic Christians began quietlyin Germany about 30 years agoand spread to other Europeancountries of mixed religion. He

. said it is just beginning inAustralia.

Today it is "inspired by a de­sire for the unity of Christendomin the face of the growing power

, of the empire of the godless," hedeclared.

OPEN fRiDAY 9 A.M. to 8 P.M.

1&1#

So. End Branch Maplewood Branm1649 So. Main St. 111 StaHord Road.

lfi'ederal Deposit Insurance CorporationFederal Reserve System

Total Assets Over- $30,000,000.00

MEMBER

Somerset Branch8~1 County St.

!( .... 5 ..'*b' ;. i

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We' win also include your jnsurance premium in the loan - simplyhave your favorite insurance agent tellus the amount.

Fall River Trust, Low Cost Auto Financing is available atour Main Bank or at any of our convenient neighborhoodbranches.'"

Wi

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:"",~,~;".~

Put Your CAR FINANCI·NGin the Hands of the Fall _iver Trust

FATHER BUTTINO

Dividends On Savings Dep~sits At TheFall River'Trust Are Exempt FromMass. State IncomeTax.

JLikeRural Church JH[~ll'e

'Father Buttino's white ferro­conerete church with a red­tiled roof sits back from theroad, much like a countrychurch in the'rural U.S. Next to'it stands III simple three roomrectory, whose !llain feature isan ope8 porch pro:viding a coolbreeze ' against, the torrid For-'mosan Summers. Across the..

t.ogethel' illl III 1lolidline six cityblocks long, they can show the

'countless idol worshippers that"we Cath'ollcs are no longer justa handful." ,

A DeliciousTreat

~

InsuranceAgency

43 PURCHASE ST.FALL RIVER

REAL ESTATE

POWERS

Made Rite CltiptAsk for TheM Today

NEW YORK (NC)-A U,.S.senator gave the keynote addressand a labor leader was honoredat the ,24th annual Commu-Qionbreakfast of the Association ofCatholic Trade Unionists whichcommemorated the anniversariesof the papal social encyclicals.

U.S. Sen. Eugene McCarthyof Minnesota said that Christians.today are called upon to'maKea "social" as well as a "personal"response to the challenges ofth'eir times.

The Senator, said the timescalled for a new type of "feudal­ism" in which man's life and in­stitutions could be molded intosome manageable form.

Carey' Receives ,Catholic Award

Maryknoll Priest' Entertains 1,500 Fonnosa, ,Cltristian3 for Lunch at Church Openi,ngA Maryknoll Missioner who has been a visitor to the Fall River Diocese made quite

Ml impression on Formosa 'pagans recently when he had 1,500 Christians as luncheong~ests~ as part of th~ festi~ities attending the opening of~is new mission church .in "~ittle.Meadow Heart" village, Talchung. Farmers, laborers, busmessmen .and mountam trIbes-men jostled in line to receive yard is a matching ranch-stylea box lunch (}f rice, fish, rectory for the Formosan Sis-egg and a slice of meat. The ters.'Catholics began arriving Monsignor William F. Kupfer,

" M.M., of Flushing, N.Y., Prefectaround noon, in hired buses; Apostolic of Taichung; blessedtrucks, bicycles, on foot, and one the buildings and gave a shortgroup of a dozen in 1Il wagon talk 'on the significance of thedrawn 'by a small farm tractor. new church here. "Each 'one carried a blue paper Then, as bands struck up thepennant signifying that he had tune, "River Kwai," and ban-

~~:·t;~a~~~~[e~:a~le~~i~a~; ners were unfurled, the C;ltho-Church, and everyone'was wear- lies, including Bishop Frederick

A. Donaghy, Father Buttino'sing a big 1!miIe. old boss in, China, marched

Such a day makes the Catho- through the little town to honorlies of Formosa happy. Blessing the Blessed Mother and to showa new churoh means progress. their happiness to the crowds

, It gives them a chance to hold that lined the road. ,up their heads, throw back-their Father Buttino, at 43, is be-shoulders, and strut down the an Italian.,American firecrackerdirt main street behind their maker in eortland, N.Y., Fatherparish banners, in step with the Ji: was assigned to the Mary-half-dozen parish bands all play- ginni'ng to bald. He has reasoning a different tune. 'they can to have thin hair. The son ofthro'w off the embarrassment knoll Vicariate of Wuchow,that comes from, living among China, after ordination' in 1947.hundreds of thousands of pagans He worked in a small co'untry,who laugh at these "Lord of parish before taking over as pas-Hea~en" Christia~. Gathered tor of the main mission in

Wuchow, the see city of BishopDonaghy. Placed under housearrest' by the Chinese Commu­nists in December 1950, the mis­sioner, suffered long months ofquestioning and harassment be-.fore being expelled .from Chinli'~

Man Without l\\HssionWith the gates of China forc­

ibly shut against him, FatherButtino was a man without 1Il

mission. ,He spent two years asan assistan't in Maryknoll's NewYork Chinatown parish' on MottStreet before being assigned ~

Formosa.Last year he was named to

take over a new misston in ahuge, flat farming area on theFormosa Strait. With his parishin' "Little Meadow Heart" he"inherited" over 500 Catholics. Itnow remains for Father Buttinoto reach the remaining 75,000idol-worshippers in his parish.

'Jl)istinguishe-d l[Jnionist'

Jam~s B. Carey, AFL-CIOvice president and president ofthe International Union of Elec-

. trical, Radio and Machine Work­ers, was presented with the 'asso­ciation's 14th annual Quadrages­imo Anno Medal for his "consis­tent and fruitful application ofChristian social principles in hisvocation as a distinguished'unionist over the past three dec­ades.'~

Commemorating the 70th an­niversary of Pope Leo XIII'sRerum Novarum encyclical andthe 30th anniversary of PopePius Xl's Quadragesimo Anno,some 400 ACTU members at­tended the breakfast in the HotelNew Yorker.

Sets Plans for NewFamily Allowances

QUEBEC, (NC)-Quebec prov­mce will launch a new programof family allowances as an in- '6enti:ve for young people to stayifl school longer.'

Under the program, disclosed'by Premier Jean Lesage in thebudget which he submitted tothe legislature, parents will re­ceive $1(; per month for each ' 'ahild between the ages of 16 and:niB still in schoql.

At present there b tl largeBebool drop-out rate amongehildren 16 or younger in, Que­-OOc, where school attendance facompulsory only up to the age~ 14. The new family allowanceplan was taken here as an indi­cation that the provincial gov­e.nunent ,intends to raise theiCDlt1lpulsory attendance age to Hi,which is the standard age itamost other parts of Canada.

C@ml~ re~Ci:iI IfS(\)11 Stu<il1a~$BeatBfB«:~tn«)n Call.!J$~S'VATICAN CITY (NC) -The

beatification causes of' a Sicilianphysician who became a priestand of an Italian railroad inspec­tor have been introduced intothe Sacred Congregation of Rites.

Father Giacomo Cusmano Pl'liC- ,ticed medicine for several yearsbefore becoming a priest. As apriest ,he continued the charitytoward the poor' that he hadmown as a doctor. He organized1)1I. association called "A ~ite forthe Poor." Out of this three reli:'~ious societies grew: the Sister

, Servants of the Poor, lay broth­em, and the Priest Servants ofthe Poor. He died at Palermo onMarch 14, 1SSS.

Perazzo, a native of NizzallIIonferrato in northern Italy, be­gan working on the railroadwhen 16 years old. During a longC{lreer he showed great care forthe welfare of the railroad work­era. He was a fervent member ofitle Third Order of St. Francisand wrote many popular pam­phlets on 'religious subjects. Hedied at Turin on NOV'. 22, 1911.

Priest r Advises'Union MeetingOver Society ,

CLEVELAND (NC) -Iftoo union and', the Holy.Marne Society m0et on theoome night, "go to the unionmeeting ," a priest advised Cath­~"1: trade unionists here.

Father Vincent J: O'Connell,S.M., of Washington, D.C., urgedtllat workers and employers alli~in their approprIate trade, andpi'ofessional organizations' inorder to exert more influencefur good.

"After you join," continuedFather O'Connel~. an expert inbbor relations, ",study the con­l;1;itution and bylaws of your ap­pi'opriate organization. Attend~ meetings. After you haveproven your sincerity and loyal­ty by your willingness to workfur your' group, try to' improve

\ tl; by exeroising yoU!' personalresponsibility.

"As an unaffiliated person,your influence for good is at themost a passing event in its effecton the general welfare," he said'at a. Mass sponsored by the Asso­datipn of Catholic Trade Union- ,Wts. '

Father O'Connell charged thatmillions of Americans, are ne­glecting their duties and pointedto the 42 million workers whoatiU remain outside unions. .

"Today there are 58 millionorganizable workers in the U. S.,"he said. "Only 16 million are inanions.

"How do the 42 million unor­ganized workers propose to ex­ercise their respomlible economiceiFzenship? What concept· dothey have of the status of theirindustry or profession? Who is(;Z), say what is a fail" day's payfur them? What can these citi­~ns do?

"One thing they can do is joino union. Join a union not to getsomething, but to give some­thing. Join to give Uleir work,loyalty, devotion to buildingetronger, better unions for thegeneral welfare. The answer, tobad unions is not fewer, weaker,CI:i' no unions--but good unions."

Page 6: 06.01.61

Largest Adult C"",, WILMINGTON (NC)-A clale

of 428 men a'nd women, inelocl­ing 331 converts, was confirme4lat the first evening adult C01bofirmation ceremony in the W.mington diocese. AuxiliaryB~op Francis J. Furey of PhilactQh.phia·' officiated in place ~

Bishop Michael W. Hyle of wn..mington, who was ill, It was t':b.tl .largest adult class in the d1o-ocese's history..

Pope Consecrates, MMissionary Bishops

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Fo...teen more intimate tiesbetwee8Pope John, and .mission landewere created when the Pontitlpersonally consecrated 14 mis­sionary bishops in St. PeteFilbasilica here. .

"Your joys and anxieties willbe Ours," he told the 'newbishops. '~In this, way you willfecI and will transmit to 1beChristian communities that •dissoluble bond that God Him-'self has been pleased to plaeein Our hand to gather, We ,..you together, the scattered mem­bers of humanity and make of •peoples one single people."

Of the 14 bishops consecr~three were Chinese, two Indi~

two Italian, and one Amer~Bishop Thomas A. Newman, M.,s..of Phome, Burma, a native' elf

, Waterbury, Conn., one Bur~~one French,' One Irish, t8IleeAfrican.

Cathor1CS ProtestHealth 'Service',Pill Distribution

LONDON (NC) - BJ6.ish CatholicS aJre obj~ro the distribution throu«llthe NatKmal Health Service.of pills which can be used *­birth prevention.

All adult British Catho"have to pay weekly contributiODllfrom their salaries toward therunning of 'the' health 'service

\;, and some are protesting that thIIIImoney is sometimes used for _immoral purpose.

The . 30,OOO-strong CatbolllYoung Men's Society in 'the He­ham and, Newcastle diocese 11Msent a letter of complaint ..Health Minister, Enoch ' PowelLThe society said the provi~

of such pills by a doctor, un_the national health scheme IIIwrong and should not De'enco~aged by a govel'nment' de~ment.' ' I '

No fohnal protest has yet betamade by the Catholic author~here because, it is ,underst~

the. pills may in some circ~

stances 'be used legally.to ~gynecological disordeJ;s" ~Derek, Worlock, se~retary ..William Cardinal Godfrey,'A.re'IiPbishop of Westminster, saiIiit"The dual nature of these ...bas caused a great deal of eoa..fusion. A doctor. may prescrilJethem for the medical reason. :&IiI11 side effect maf be, birth e..­Vol." .

Ask InveSUgati_ .The Health Ministry. ..

asked a team of experts, to in"..tigate the pills'. It' is inquirimc'into the circumstances 'in 'wbie-.the pills may be prescri\:>ed' fN.e-apart from a'nominal cha..of two shillings (28 cents) - ..any patient. Doctors here h~II right to prescribe any avallablildrug they think will' help ..patient and the' 'only way of ....stricting this right is the -cost.

'The ,pills cost about thNedollars for a month's sUPP1¥ GIl20.

The manufacturers have sentdetailsabo~t the pills to 20,001family doctors in Britain. TbeIP'said: "We expected Roman Catb.olics to protest as they opposeall contraceptives, But it is tiJieresponsibility of the doctors ..decide when they are-justified •prescribing the drug which is OIlthe market for its use in tilefemale disorders as well, all •contraceptive."

The Family Planning Assoclllootion] which advocates birth~vention, has been testing Utepills on women volunteers' t.two different parts of Englancll.

Any . official ruling wouJaaffect their wide distr,ibutioafrom the association's 315 clini«wthroughout the country.

~'

MONDAY'-:"St; Boniface, BisII­op Martyr~ The Apostle of .Ger­many is armed in this Mass illhis honor with the Beatitudes,proper armament for any Chris­tian, for any apostle. For we denot !isten'to the preacher of theGospel, rior come to the altar tohear our .compromises' praised,our halting attempts at applica­cation canonized. '

We listen and we come for ex­posure to the absolute, the pure,the totally good, the Word ofGod. W~ are trimmed down soon,enough in life and "by life. Wehave to aim high to attain even II

modest 'level of existence. Andone of the functions of our wor­ship is this exposure to the abso-

j,

lute, this insistence on an aimthat is high. .

guish .of ~p'~ratWn and diyi­sion, communion is by, God'.

"grace rising above what we c:8Jlthe "human' eondition'" to ,knowfor a moment and to try to real­i~ ini a~ su~ceeding mom~nt8the coming oneness of the ban­quet-fulfilment in heaven.

WEDNESDAY - Mass a<'5 _

Sunday. What a marvelous sum­mary of Christian doctrine OIl

the Church in the Epistle's sim­ple statement: "We know thatwe have passed from death tolife, because we love the breth­ren." Apart from the Churchthere is no salvation. Because tobe without, that supernaturallove which proceeds from super­natural life is to be ."apart fromthe Church." To be with it is 00be with, if not in, the Church.The one bishop and the onealtar-banquet table are the out­ward signs. And the meaning~a1

,those signs is, above all, love.

,T U E S DAY St.. Norbert,Bishop" ..Confessor. The Mass ,01.a Confessor Bishop points.to themystery of, man's, cooperatioBwith 'God's grace. Forgive,ness,communion in His, life, the

. promise of eternity-these giftsof God are free, undeserved, un­earned, like the talents in theGospel. Yet somehow He en­ables !-IS to make a truly humancontribution. We can, as· theEpistle says, "please God." Allof this is because we are "inrChrist," And nowhere do werealize this incorporation andunity more clearly than in outcommon prayer. This is especial­ly true in the Mass, where Christ'makes the Scriptures alive in ourhearts through our listening,where we pray and praise know­ing it is Christ who prays andpraises through us, where weoffer and yet it is Jesus' sacrificeand Jesus offers it through 'Wi,where we partake of a fratttrnalmeal which is Christ's Body, ere- \ating a brotherhood fashionedby Christ. '

'acred Heart Month

~cnmOtA.c1h th~ 'lA(u:lt· ,With'th£ ChWt~h I~iBy REV. IlOBERT W.HOADA; Catholic Universit", ;

, . I..

SECOND SUNDAY AFTERPENTECOST. The Gospel givesus a banquet-table where thefood dispensed is' God's lovingJrlercy, If it speaks of His iove

'in terms of human 'jealousy, it isso that we might understand itsstrength and tenacity. The altartable of the Church is the sacra­mental source of that, samemercy. To it all are invited, Gen­tile as well as Jew, the poor, thecrippled, the blind, the lame. Atit all learn the lesson of love,(Epistle). _

Communion is, sharing, com­munion is experiencing the an-

TODAY-CORPUS CHRISTI.This edlo of the Eucharistic fea~tOf Maundy 'Thursd;lY to Easteradds nothing doctrinal to t~

,~a~holic's ~ride~~Uln~ing of t~eholy Meal. However, It does offeran opportunity for a sort of folk- 'festival ot the Blessed Sacrament,

_ for those popular festivities inits honor which the solemnity of,Holy Week would find inc()n­gruous, and for emphasis on suchsecondary aspects of the Euchar­ist as have found expression in.devotion to the Real Presence,

,in Benediction with the BlessedSacrament" and slffh like, But,even in this Mass, the lessonsteach directly about the primaryand essential aspects: the Eu­charist as Food and Sacrifice c4.-the mystical Body. '

'l'OMORROW - Mass as onSunday. It is clear that wh~nJesus teaches us about the futii-

, ity of one blind man's leadinganother He is referringtospir- 'itual blindriess. But even of this.there are different kinds. Thereis the blindness of the mind,without faith, the blindness ofthe man who 'refuses to admitthe supernatural. Here, however.,our. Lord addresses, us about ablindness of the will of man, ofa will th-at will n()t l()ve, The will·that imprisons itself in merelysellish desires and, self-seekingis no less a tragedy in humanlife than the mind that imprisonsitself in the merely material andtangible.

SATURDAY-St. Mary on Sat~urday. There is no better ex­ample of the matchless lovewhich the Gospels present as thesalient Christian characteristicthan our Lady. So the Epistleapplies to her words describingWisdom as a"'gift to the holyeommunity, the chosen people~

And the Gospel, too, speaks ofthe blessedness of those whohear God's word imd keep it. Sheis great not only because of herphysical motherhood,' but alsoand above all because of her "letit be done to me according toyour Word," because of thatfaith which places her preemi.:.nently in the company' of the'children of. Abraham.

. "

--Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. June 1, 1961

@rheANCDOR 'OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OfF FA~L RIVERPublished 'weei<ly by The Catholic Pre,ss of the Diocese of Fall River,

, 0,410 Highland AvenueFall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151

PUBLISHERMost Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., P'hD.

GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGE~

!lev. Daniel F., Shalloo, M.A'. Rev. John P. Driscoll '

MANAGING' EDITORHugh J. Goidellll.

·6

The Real Significance ,The response to this year's Catholic Charities Appeal

, has been overwhelming.It is a great tribute to the Bishop that'so many have

sought to honor him on this tenth anniversary of hisleadership in the Diocese.

It indicates that the hearts of men are still touchedwhen they see devotion and dedication in the service ()fothers. ' .

,The keynote of this year's Appeal was .- in ,referenceto Bishop Connolly's decade of qevotion ,- Because HeCared. ,

Now the Bishop -knows that ,because he has cared,others have joi~ed him in carw,g. ,-

'Even more than an impressive figure, on a balancesheet, that is the significance of the Charities'Appeal.

The American Tragedy,nne of the most disgusting items to be, reported in a

long time was the newspaper account last week ,of a post-prom party to be held in 'a Chicago suburb. ' '

This modest IittJe affair will feature a three-hundredmile train trip in a special train made up 'of eleven aireonditioned passenger cars, two' baggage cars for dancingand two for refreshments, a lounge car with first aidstation, doctor and two nurses, and a contingent ,of thirty­five fathers of the seniors to act as waiters. I. '

As the 'prom' ends just after midnight, the five hundred'seniors will change clothes and embark'()n the' special train,f()r a session of eating and danGing all through the nigh~ to,the So'uthern Illinois University campus. After activitiesthere '- variety show, recreational and sportS programs ­the train will head back to its starting point ~nd arrive athome in the evening. '

And the cost of this affair - only nine thousand donal'Swith each couple spending an additional twenty-five OO1lal'lalong the way.,' " "

, And the purpose ;.,-'why, to keep'the seniors, cmt Ofears and night clubs after the prom.

How fantastic! "What a confession of failure by parents and community'

if bribery must substitute for authority.What inadequacy of training, if parents expect to

be obeyed only by putting on a traveling road show foryoungsters. '

What an education ~ intellectual and moral - if higfaschool seniors will go wild unless provided with a 'sufficient 'distraction to keep them safe, physically and - presumably- morally, at least for that night. '

And underlying it all is the implied threat by theI

students: we had better be entertained, and with somethingof sufficient imagination to tickle our jaded tastes, or elsel

But why brame youngsters? They, are reflecting,'perhaps all too accurately, the attitudes of their elders.

If this disgusting incident typifies the manners andmores of this country, then it is another ch,apter in theAmerican tragedy. '

, Time for Speaking Out.The Freedom Riders who are pushing for integratiofi'

in the South stand 'out as men and women of courage andeonviction. r "

True, they are forcing issues, they are embarra.ssingmany, they'are upsetting consciences, they are dramatizinginjustice before'the world.'

, There are times when no legitimate progress' can aftdwill be made without such tactics.

.It is all very welL to talk of integration taking time,ofthe difficulties dnvolved in changing a whole attitude ofthinking and acting, of reversing the customs of a hundredyears. These are valid aspects of the racial problem in thiscountry. But a beginning must be maqe,and once made itmust be kept moving. . , ,

The discriminatory legislation aimed at Negroes in theSouth is not'law. It is essential to law that a matter be inaccord with· right reason. WhO will say that measuresenacted on the basis 0;£ skin pigmentation are reasonable?

And if it takes Freedom Riders to overthrow' sl1chillegal statutes, then these men are acting wisely and welt

Catholics should be ~n the fore supporting these withencouragement and prayers. It will do little good for theChurch if her adherents wait cautiously until the issue hasbeen. decided and then jump ,on the bandwagon. This is atime for speaking out.

Page 7: 06.01.61

ATTLEBOROOF'

Savings

501 COUNTY ST.NEW BEDfORD

WY 3-1751

~&Tr~£W&W

@~l [(Qt ~~~t'-... Ii\'lIEW ~lOOro[@)

INDUSTRIAL OUU

HEATING OIlS

TIMKEN

OIL BURNERS

Sales & Service

Ttft: ANCHOR-Thurs., June 1, 1961

AustrCii ~ ~a Give~

Private S~h@@i$

AssistoBlceADELAIDE (NC) - The

state minister of educationfor South 'Australia has saidthat his government helpsprivate education in many waYL

Minister of Education BadenPattinson was speaking at adedication ceremony of a newwing of Adelaide's RostrevorCollege, which is, conducted bythe Christian Brothers of Ireland.

He said many teachers in prj.,vate schools have received aUtheir teacher training from thegovetnment, at no expense tothem. He pointed out that thostate government's annual train­ing courses for teachers are opemto teachers from private schoow.

Student Aid

He also pointed out that thestate education department dis­tributes free milk to privat.school students.

Mr. Pattinson said that aD7extension of state aid to privateeducation is Il matter for highgovernmental decision.

ScbolushiJ!)o

Mr. Pattinson said that his de­partment 1end 0 educationalmovies to private scools at =cost.

He pointed out that state scho!­srships are open to students ofCprivate schools, that book allow­

. ances are given to such studentoand that books are supplied toneedy students.

In country dis~icts, govel'il!l­ment buses take children toprivate schools. Where that seMI'­ice is impracticable, he said.

. students attending p 1; I vat.schools may receive a transp~

tatioo. allowance.

INCORPORATED 1931

ASSOCIATION

'f' .

fRANCIS L COLLINS, JR., Treas. ,THOMAS K. COWNS, Sec'y.'

FAU RIVER, MASS.

LOAN

GENERAL (ONTRAOORSand ENGINEERSJAMES H. COLUNS, ~.E.. Pres.

Registered Civn and Struetural EngineerMember National Society Professional Engineem

,I

f. 'L COLLINS &. SONS

First .Federal

3%% on an Savings Accounts

1% Extra on Systematic Bonus Savings

FAIRHAVENLUM~ER

AND

ACADEMY BUILDING

COMPANY

Complete LineBuilding Mciterials

S SPRING ST., FAIRHAVENWYman 3-2611

school and rectory. Repairsplanned in the church: includenew lighting and pews.

, The school, with an enrollment'of I15:'pupils in eight' grades, ialocated on Buffington and ChildStreets. '

Approximately 450 Poll a hCatholic families comprise HolyCross parish, ·which ha.!l, manyactive organizations, includillBP.T.A.; C.Y.O., Rosary Society,Third Order of St.' Francia.Young Men of the Third Order,Militia o~. Mary' Immaculate,Children of Mary, St. HedwigSociety. St. Stanislaus Societyand St. Vincent de Paul. Thepriests belong to the Franciscanprovince of St. Anthony ofPadua, whose headquarterD arcin13altimore.

AN

-_._----

HOLY CROSS CHURCH, FALL"RIVER '

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

..., "Fat"er,K.wi~

Hisilssistant, Rev.. AnselmKwilos, O:F~M.,-Conv. the'n be­came pastor at Holy Cross, and,devoted himself' to paying off'the parish debt and making va­rious renovations on the parishproperties, . reimiining· in ,FallRiver until September, 1960,when' he was assigned' to HolyTrinity", Parish in Montreal,Canada. From the Montrealparish.. Rev'. Vi~cent' Wolski,O.F.M.Cohv., and his assistant.Rev. Joachim Dembeck; O.F.M.Conv. were, in turn, assigned toHoly Cross.

Father Wolski also has con­centrated 'on improving the'parish gr.0!-1nds, the ch,urch"

YOU'LtlBE

TICKLIlDI)

IDEAL LAUNDRYFan River os 8-5671

373 New Bostoft Road

FQ$l1'~rr M@~hetr J@DIfl)~,Ch;~dtr~n

By S,'eckd Act of Congress , , 'CLEVELAND. (NC) -:: A 75- her. sister.,Mrs. Konrad, three

year old woman has arrived here brothers a.~d anot,~er sister :were,from Hungary and joined her orpl).aned ~n NOVI Sad, Yugo­:foster 'children as a' result of slavia. Mrs. Exle, childless, rear­a special act of Congress. ed th~m as her own. However,

. She ,is Mrs. Ida Exle who is she never.l~gally.adollted, them.living with her foster dal;lg!tte~, . 'Walk If I Could'Mrs. Helen Konrad. She finally The 'Nazi' invasion of Yugo-'came to this country through the slavia' split up the family~ andefforts of Mrs. Konrad and Char-, Mrs. Exle settled in Hungary.les Klippel, a foster SOI1 also of, After all legal obstacles were

-/Cleveland. . . . cleared, Klippel wrote his fosterAfter years of frustation, Mr. mother and asked if she would

Klippel wrote to Rep. Michael like to eome to America by planeA Feighan of Ohio: or ship" she replied:

"In a moral sense the simple "I'd ~alk if I could."but holy tie between our accep- Perhaps .because she was' 75ted mother and he~ accepted and no longer able to do muchchildren is· being ViOlated by work, the communist govern­forcible division." ment of Hungary readily per-

Touched by; the appeal, Rep~ mitted Mrs. Exle to leave, .pro­Feighan introd!Jced a b~n de- vided she would Qot return.elaring that Mrs. Exle shall be 'considered to be "the natural ..---.:-.--------1

'mother of Charles Klippel, III 531. 01, u.s. citizen.", It is thought here 14 10

to be the only bill of its ki~d

ever passed by Congress. INTERESTThe story began before World

War It when Mr. Klippel and ON .YOUR,SAVINGS

INVESTED INCATHOUC CHURCH

AND 'HOSPITAl BONDSIn Units of $500 or More

KEENAN '& CLAREY, Inc.MiDneapOlis, Minnesota

for detailed informatiolllwrite to

CHARLES A. MURP.HYRegistered Repll'esentaUvc

145 Pond StreetWinchester, Mass.

PA 9-2696

Asks Ari9~ica,ns Pray" For Council Success

LONDON (NC)-The head ofthe Church of" England has ex­pressed the hope that A!lglicanswill pray for the success of thecoming ecumenical council' dur­ing the novena the Pope has re­quested of Catholics throughoatthe world.

Archbishop Geoffrey Fisher ofeanterbury made the appeal at , '

• his final presidential ad~res8 ato the opening of a convocation of

his ecclesiastical province s·~ondon. The Archbishop' whoshattered precedent by visitingPope John at the Vatiean lastDecember, retired from his pOii:yesterday.

The Anglican Primate of aDEngland said that since his callOIl the Pope, "a good many thingshave been brought to my notice-most of them very helpful andencouraging." Then he referredto Pope John's apostolli: letterof April 11 appealing for •DOvena of prayer for the ~menical council immed1ateQ'preceding Penteco. S Ului a,.(May'21). . \lo- . ..

;" "Di!~[j';minat(i~,'.. Gc@X& Thi~~i .',::.fO!f ~~D1Joohs '\ ''. CINCINNATI (NC)-;-,J'as-.sage of a "diScriminatory"'Federal aid to education biB.

·by Congress may 4trn' outto be "a good thing" for Catholicschools, a prie:st-edu~tor ob-~rved here. ' .'

Msgr. Carl J. Ryan, Clncl.nnatt ..archdiocesan superintendent of8Chools, told the Great~ Cw,ciD­nati Federation of, <;8t,holicParent-Teachers AssociaiiQos: "Itwe ever do get aid, it will be on

·the Federal leveL"" ' .'• , .1'

, . ~®<.e@~~ AA@~~@~[[®

',@~ MD~~o(Q)O'ii®[['"DONALSONVILLE (NC)-A

missionary priest sla in· in this'area by Indians has been remem­'bered 255 years after his ·death.

He was Canadian-born Father.Jean Francois Buisson' de' St.Cosme. He was accompanied on ,'A mission venture in this area.by nine. Frenchmen. The group

i stopped for the night at'an iso-lated spot. on a ban!t of the Mis- .

I 'eissippi, near a village of the, "Ch~timache Indians. I"

The priest's party was: wr­-prised by a roving d:>and of .the'Indians..All 10 of the. whites'were massacred in December."1706.

A bronze marker pr9vided bythe Louisiana Department of.Commerce and Industry recall­ing the' massacre was unveiledhere. The ceremonies were held

, under the auspices of the' New'Orleans chapter, Daughters of· the American Revolution.

H~ly Crt,ss Parish', Fall River, Serves' 4~O.::'·PolU?hFamiLks'withSchool,ManyClub$

By Marion UnswOIrih " ,In, 191G,. when Holy Cross Parish, Fall River, was organi2Jed by the late Bishop

, Feehan, immediate facilities had to be obtain ed to provide for Polish CatholicS in thatsection oftlte city. SS. Peter and Paul parish, situated nearby, offered its parish hall to beused for ,services, and Holy Cross parishion era worshipped at this hall for 11 years. MostReverend Stanislaus :BOna ~rr'~~r-:--'--~,,",,--:-:-~was named the first pastor,and he waS succeeded in 1919by Rev. Andrew Baj andRev. Hugo Dylla, both priests 01the Diocese of Fall River.'

in 1922, the FrancisoaD: FathemOf the Friars Minor, Conventual, ,were invited by the ordinary of

State Aid ' the 'Fall River Diocese to 'takeHe said that state Coriiitttt»- c~arge .of. the Polish parish and

t10ns 'generally prohibit thel'pos- at that time Rev. Peter' Hajna.

'sibility of state aid to p'rivato O.F.M., Conv. was named first, ,I '·'ochools. ' .,1", Franciscan 'pastor. Within the

.' ......C~rrent Federal aid '~r.qp~sals" next two: years, Father Hajna"qv.en though they eX~lud~, ,par- built ate,mporary school and

. ochial and private schop\s"from convent" th~ir benefits, may pr,o~e. to be ' Uoly,'Cross Parish then, be­

"the forerunners of. more favor- tween ,19,24 and 1926, had three'~Qble p~oposals, he' asserte~.",' differeQ-t ,,'Franciscan pastors,' "Sooner or later," he ~,aid,}~I'm Rev. .Sylvester 'Parzych,' Rev.aure we're going to get a ~etter Raymond Ma'rciniec' and Rev.deaL" . "',", Bonaventure Santor. ,. "One consoling thing about the The succeeding .pastor, who

whole, discussion of F,ederal aid was to remain at Holy Cross forond the rights of Catho)jcs,~ he over 20 years, and build theadded, "is that we l)ow hllve an paris.h to its present condition,

·aroused Catholic laity anq. they was, Rev. Raphael Marciniak,,·.do·not,intend to let tbe,.ro.atter O.F.M. Conv:. His first efforts: die."'" '" " went' toward the building of ri

Lay Interest '. parish church."'Even though we lose out·case;. Holy" 'Cross Church was

It Is gratifying to know that such completed and blessed Oct. 23.• large number of our lay:people 1927, and shortly afterwards.

.. 'now are interested in the prob-" Father Marciniak also provided, Jem." , ,,' " ,"a new residence for the Fran- .'," "'Ten years earlier, he said, if ciscan'Sisters of St. Joseph'staff": '''WOuld have been'impossible to . ing the school and renovated the'"find any sizeable number ·of lay ".former convent for use as a

I rectory. lit 1929, the pastor pur- 'people interested and 'capab e chased' a former pubiie schoolenough to discuss the problem building ,"'to provide' room" for'publicly.

more pupils at .Holy Cros~(, On the other hand, it was 'un- SchooL,'"

fortunate, MSgr. Ryan liaid, that In 19'!5,' the'men of the parisha member of the hierarchy wasthe spokesman for the rights of gave their time and effort to theCatholics, in the present instance, erection of ~ parish hall directlyinstead of a layman. ' behind the rectory. The hall is

now used for various parish ac­tivities, s~cials and meetings.

.Father Marciniak, an accomp­

.lished: musician who developedan outstanding choir and orches­tra in his parish, died Aug. 14.1947. ' .

Page 8: 06.01.61

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Anglican B'ishops LaudClasses in Religion "

OTTAWA (NC)-The An~can church bishops in a joiJitpastoral letter asserted "nocountry can hope to survive itthe spiritual principles of theJUdeo-Christian inheritance Menot taught each generation."',

The bishops Said they favoredthe present formula on religio\lllinstruction in Ontario provincepublic schools, and fully sup­ported teaching the Bible in:theschools. '_ The pastoral letter congrat~lated the Ontario Legislature anclthe Department of Education fOl""having introduced religious in-­struction into the schools 1~

years ago and having maintainedit since then." .

'Sis'ter'MooelevaPlans to Reti re

SOTH BEND (NC) - Sista'M. Madeleva, president Gl ~Mary's College for women dNotre Dame, Ind., for the last '}lJyears, has announced she 'wmretire from the administratiolm eQlthe institution in August.

The Holy Cross nun who lSI~ternationally known as an ~u­cator, poetess and lecturer, an.­nounced her retirement at -theannual faculty dinner \ in L&­~ans Hall at the college.

Under her administration, filloenrollment, teaching staff lime!number of buildings at the col­lege have trebled; She has beenactive in the Christian Culture ~

movement, the Sister-Formatiozprogram and also established !il'graduate school of theology fOO"Religious and the laity at tOOcoliege.

Sister Madeleva said after bEll'retirement she wi1:l devote herefforts to the cause of Christiaaeducation and to .the work ~

the SisteN of the Holy Cross.'

First CommunionPONCE {NC) - Mrs. Cristina­

Rodriguez, a resident of a homefor the aged here in Puerto Rico,made her- First Communion ,.

'the age of 100.. 0

Sisters of ,Mercy Pion, ':Garden Party Saturday'

, Sisters of Mercy of the FallRiver area'. will hold, their im-'nual garden party at Mt. st.M~ry's A.c~demy, ~om io to •S.aturday, June 3.' Proceeds willgo towards expensef3 incurred •"building~e academy ,additioethat has been iii use for the p~year. \ :

Varied booths, children's acti­vities, snacks and a' plate mealwill be among featur!*l ,of the

/ day.

, rea.Ol,7~~

99 Rodman st., Near Second St.Fan River attathedral Square

t'e"t

The Friendly S~oreThat Saves You More!

[

MILK,from

,,16 LocalDairy Farms.' "

HONORED IN BURMA: 'On his visit to KhadungArchbishop James R. Knox; Apostolie Del~gate to Burm~and Internuncio to India, receives a silver ceremonial sword,~ighe8t Kachi~ award. NO Photo. : ," . . '

New Women's Council, OGDENSBURG (NC)-Bishop

James J. Navagh 01. Ogdensburg,officiated at the' organizationmeetirig of the Ogdensburg Dioc­esan Council of the', NationalCouncil of Catholie Women.

'·Psychologist Stresses Difference,Between, Education, Schooling'

.BOSTON (NC) - There is III wholesome hOll)e background.", dlfferenc,e between Catholic edu- Even in the' purely religioue

cation.and Ca~holic schooling, a training of the children, parentsPill u 11 S t pnest - psychoJogist ,have the first responsibility, theIltressed here. Paulist said. "

EducaJion. is a larger thing _ "The ,parent should feel quite~an schoolmg and m.ost of the eapab~e of preparing his young­Job belongs to t?e famIly, Father ster for his first confession, first 'George Hagmaler, C.S.P., asso- Communion and Confirmation"ci~te director ~f. the' Paulist I~- Father Hagmaiersaid. "Infacl,stitute for, RelIglous Research 1ft mother and father, rather thaftNew York, told th~ 25th diQc- "the child, might well be' exam­e!J8n congress of the League oI.ined by the' parish clergy reo:.€atholic Women.: garding their competenCe to 'irF. "In blunt terms," said Father struet in these matters"

Hagmaier, "the ,Catholic school ' . ,has too often usurped the obli- Would E_iDe Parell~ga~ion6 which belong first and MaSs and: t~' sacra~entllforemost to the parents. sh9uld also be family' activities

"Parents are all too content to ,and the schools should not "herdleave the religious and moral their youngsters, by classes" totraining of their children to the confesSion and Communion, henuns, Brothers and priests - I!lllid.' ;and' these religious teachers Father Hagmaier remindedseem all too willing to take on' parents that mere "physical pre­IUch responsibilities," he added. sence of their child in a Catho-

"The family circle is the lic classroom" is not "aguaran­child's first and most influential tee of future religious' excel­school, and parents Me the lence."world's most influential teach-ers," he said. "It is in the homet hat lifetime· attitudes areformed, discipline is developed,intellectual curiosities enkin­dled, lasting values are bulit,and religious beliefs and ,motivesare fos,tered. It ill as difficultfor a ,good school'to cOmpensatefor poor family life as it is for amedioCre' school to cancel out Q

-'eise's'Dairy",SWANSEA~OS 4.4601TAUNTON-VA 4..9751

Pirates Ban Club PionsLadies Day~for Nuns

, - PITTSBURGH (NC)-An a­tm- special ,sort of Ladies Dilyhas bee~ planned, for this' Satur­day at, Forbes Field for the base­ball g~e between the Pitts­burgh Pirates and the Philadel­phia Phillies., The guests of the Pirate maa­agement 'will be nuns of thePittsburgh and Greensburg P;L,dioceses. When the manage'mentbroached the idea, Bishops JohnJ. Wright of Pittsburgh and Wil­liam G. Connare of Greensburgwarmly approved it.

Sisters Make R~sary

Of Bow.ling Balls, PinsFRAMINGTON (NC) - The

Bernardine Sisters say they havethe lagest and longest outdoorRosary in North America-and'it is made of bowling balls andpin&-. ,

Mother Mary Tharsilla at. tbeeommunity'. headquarters hereitt Michigan, known locally u

• Rosar~, Glen, designed the Roe­ary. Bowling balls, each weigh-"

,ing 16 pounds, are the 'beads.Bowling pins are \Illed in toecross and joiner. .

demanded plenty of flo~r space,new cabinets and chests needonly a small spot to stand on,yefoffer as much or even moreroom inside. Some storagepieces will fit neatly into awk­ward, frequently wasted partsof a room-a cramped corner; a

• narrow strip between windows,, a jog in a wall.

Many styles of the 60's havenumerous' drawers 'of varioussizes, as well as adjustableshelves. This allows you to put

'.., your possessions in separate com­partments. ,

One can think of many places, and purposes where one of these '• chests 'would be just perfect.

Take, for instance, an unusedcorner. Why not convert it intostorage space w.ith the new Vel'­

,,pon of a corner cupboard'?Look' for one of these jft •

furniture store-you. can find'one to suit any taste, from a for:'mal 18th century Chinese style,'to an informal variety ia pinecarrying out a Colonial theme.The upper half, if open, offers IIfine display space for prized,bibelots, below is storage spacefor dishes, vases, or possiblyfavorite hi-fi records,

The bachelor son in your fam­ily. (or away from home) wouldwelcome a tall wardrobe, slim

- enough to fit into a shallow jogin the wall, but'affording, enoughspace'for him to ,be neatly organ-ized. ' '

Did yoy ever think Of a tan,gUm chest for your kitchen?

'Such a chest w wonderful fOll'kitchen towels, silver, 'table

. lin~n; and if the lower part ismade into Ii cabinet, it's wonder­ful storage space fw' largecasseroles.

;!HE At-~:=HOR~l)iocese ofFal! River-1"hun. JUN,1, 19618

: Dames ,PatronnesselJ: Stevenson's restaurant, North,Dartmouth, will be the scene of'the 36th annual card ,party of:Dames Patronnesses of SacredHeart Home, New Bedford. Theevent is set 'for· 1:30 Wednesday.

,afternoon, June 7, with Mrs.,Normand V. Maranda and Mrs.Gaston DeBrosse in charge ofar,rangements, ,aided by a largecommittee. '

Queen's DaughtersFall River Queen's Daughters

will hold a dinher at' 6 Tuesdaynight, JUlle 6, followed at 8 byan auction. Both will take placeat Bishop Stang Nursery, ThirdStreet, and' proceeds will bene­fit the White Sisters staffing theinstitution. Chairman is Mrs.

,William 'T, Donnelly, aided by'Mrs. Charles E. Brady. Joseph,'McManuswiU serve as auction-eer. I

Modern Chests, Cabinets,Solve'MQu~y Home Storage Problems

By Alice Bough CahillYou've probably heard it' said, "Every room should

nave one high, piece of, furniture," and, this past. year adshave described the new slim cabinets for storage. Of course,a high piece always provides a refreshing contras-t to a:roomful of' low' to' mediumfurniture>. When you con­sider that a tall chest:requires no more space thana low chest, you'll probably real­ize that for anyone short onspace or storage "this is really foryou.

The story ofthe developmentof the chest isinteresting. Itwas originally alarge, box witha hinged. lid.Today when wetalk' about achest for theliving room, achest for the bedroom, OIl' any·room in your house, it's hard to 'believe that this" simple box,which was the forerunner of thethe chests we demand today, was,in the middle ages. the most vital ']?iece of furniture one possessed. '

Because of the instability 01.']!fe, a portable chest was neces­oary. In such a box people kepttheir clothing, linen and bedding.Some .were fortunate ~n havingo desk box fitted with a key ando sloping lid. .

Many people had a bible box.They sometimes had sloping lids,on which the Bible was placedgor reading, but they had nolocks. Bibles were pot private,personal, and secret, and becausealley weren't, they were not kept1!1lIlder lock and .key.

Court Cupboard" From these plain lidded boxes

®1e chest w,as developed. In Eng­land was developed a court cup-,!board, a modification of the chestby means' of0 drawers and doorcrompartments, which gradually'raised the total height and pro-

. duced', finally, the chest' 01.drawers. ', Histol',ically,' the, bureau, Oll'

what most people mean by thatterm, is really a case of drawers.The slant top desk was referredto all a "bureau," because thatword means '''place where workis done." Call it bureau, or chest,of drawers, the genesis of thepiece is to be fQund in the earlychests which originally weremade without' drawers, then withone, then two, and then threedrawers, with a hinged top.'

I suppose the genius who de':'veloped the four-drawer chest

., reasoned, as you and I would­"What a nuisance, always liftingthe top!" Anyhow, a fourthdrawer was added, the topnailed down, and we had a pieceof furniture, occuping th~ sameroom as the lone box-chest, butproviding four times more space.No\y we even,doubie th~ space., Regular chests of drawers

..... were not exclusively bedroompieces, but had entree to drawingroom, dining room, bedroom and

,hall. So we are not introducinga novel idea when 'we use a high

,chest in the living room, for ourancestors used them years ago.

In contrast to the recentlypopular. long, low furniture that

! .

Page 9: 06.01.61

Monday4 and 5

M4 County St.. New BecIforCt

THE ANCHOR- 9Thurs., June 1, 1961

Provincetown CDAAccording to tentative plans

new officers of the CatholicDaughters of Ame!;ica, Province­town, will be installed this Sat­urday, with a Communionbreakfast to follow Sundaymorning. To be seated are Mrs.Mary J. Avellar, grand regent;Mrs. Mary Chapman, vice regent;Mrs. Irene Gracie. monitor; Mrs.Virginia Lewis, prophetess; Mrs.Catherine Cadose, financial sec­retary; Mrs. Alice Cook, histo.rian; Mrs. Florence Kenney.treasurer. Rev. Leo .r. Duart wchaplain of. the unit.

Vincentians to Meet'Fall River Particular Council,

Society of St. Vincent de Paul,will meet at 7:4f Tuesday nidat.lune ·6 at SS. ~ter and PaulChurch, Dover and Snell Streets,rall River, fOl." benediction. Ameeting will follow ia Uaechurch hall at Il)'cloek.

Sea

ONE TO A CUSTOMER

LOBSTERS

39C.b.

S.H.A. AlumnaeSet New Date

The Alumnae Association ofthe Academy of the SacredHearts, Fall River, has changedtheir Corporate Communion Sun­day from June 4 to June 11.

Mass will be celebrated in theConvent Chapel at 9 o'clock byRt. Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros,pastor of St. Michael's Parish,Fall River, and former chaplainof the Association, He will alsobe the guest' speaker at the

-. breakfast which follows theMass.

Mrs. Patricia' Hanson Delaneyand Miss Mary Elizabeth Wilcoxare co-chair'men of the event.Reservation forms have beenmailed to all Alumnae in thearea and replies must be re­ceived by June 10.

UaioD Whal'f-Falrhavea, Ma!l!l,

.:c::. <

SfPJt~~======= MASSACHUSETTS

Thursday, FridaySaturday and

JUNE 1, 2, 3,

WHILE THEY LAST

LtYE LARGE 11•• SlZI

4 DAY SALE HOW ON~STOREWIDE BARGAINS

CEITE

1iae '100,000 membeI-. of Itallall.Catholic' AetioB'. women's sec­tioa w make tihemselves wen­irtformed on the pcoblem.

'* Mlbmitted to ltali_ civilauthorities the principle thatthe Church has the mission au­thority and right to ·educa~ in­dependent of any earthly~.

It a180 told thetle authoritieethat. "any educational and scho­lastic monopoly which obligeethe families physically and mor­ally to send their children tostate IIChools againlt their legi­timate preferences is unfair andunlawful."

•c ; • .' i "., I r :' ' ";. r' ~. lc , 1 \. ~ . .' ~", ",. ,

Offioe II.......

.,~... ,"-eept Wed.

DISPENSING

OPTICIAN

P r.eripiol\tl

....r ETeel-:"Filled

1 No. Ilain St.• Fa] >tt.>er 08 g-0412

ANTOIIS. FEHO, JR.

Retreat LeagueMrs. Emmett P. Almond,

North Dartmouth, will head OurLady of Good Counsel RetreatLeague for the coming season.With her will serve Miss CecileBrais, Attleboro, rec·ording sec­retary; Mrs. James Leith, NewBedford. corresponding secre­tary; Mrs. Joaquim Bernardino,Taunton, treasurer. Vice presi­dents will include Mrs. GeorgeHurley, Fall River; Miss LouiseFinnell, New Bedford; Mrs. MaryNeville, Taunton; Mrs. CecileMajor, Attleboro; Mrs. MarieRLewis, Cape Cod.

. DRY MARCHER: Rain fen briefly during a May Dayfamily Rosary procession in Minneapolis and St. PaUl.Among those braying the- showers in the march to theBasilica of St. Mary was Mrs. Victor John, with daugtterJulia in the stroller. The driest member of the family,Michael Anthony, is protected by mother's eoat. NC Photo.

Italy's Catholic Women Urge StateTo Support Private Education

ROME (NC) - The WomeR'SUniQll. 01. Italian Catholic ActieDhas launched a campaign furstate support of private 8C1loolsin Italy. The union's centralcouncil iMued a statement voic­ing great cn"'"--... · .~,_. "legislation being prepared ..Italy may fail w r0">J2t:. ~ ....Jthe rights of the family and ofthe Church in matters of eduea­tion.

At the same time it denounced"the widespread and undigni­fied press campaign ~inst

Catholic .citizens and Catholicorganizations who demand therecognition of their rights andl"espect for constitutional law."

Church Has RightThe central council urged

. HOTEL ~

ENGlfWOO£!,teis llrtl L'·

Y 'V"'9. Frieftdly holfOitality .......... _'-;ng po"'... gar.... setting. $perts facilities.

MCictI .-.. ChildNft'~ ,w.ygrouml.COd<tail ~. Temp",food. Churches .....rby.$70~ a ..eel< per pe..-ine1..dinA' all meAl". Fwcolor foldey O!." rei-ervatioD,&..rite Fr";"io B. K"IIe7.Owner-Mgr

West Yarmouth 17,CAPE COO, MASS.

'NY 7·9H4

My"" 2921

So. Dos'mo"

JBLUMBER CO.

s..DartMeutI..... Hyoftftia

BARBfR01SPIZZA •PATIO

IOUTE 6, HUTTlESON AVE.Near Foirhaven Drive-In

Matiatll Dtnfters Out' SpeciaJtyfJeniee 0. r....

Senator To SpeakDALLAS (NC)-Sen. Thomas

J. Dodd of Connecticut willspeak at c~encement exer­ci~s of the Utrlversity of Dall..on June 4.

Somerset Women.Somerset Catholic Women's

Club will sponsor its' annualfamily picnic Sunday, June 25 atCathedral Camp. Mrs. Louis Ma­goni is chairman. New club offi­cers, all re-elected for a secondterm, include Mrs. Vincent A.Coady, president; Mrs. RobertProfio, vice president;' Mrs. Jos­eph F. Wilkinson, secretary; Mrs.Robert Michaud, treasurer. Mrs.Raymond Wilding has beennewly elected to the board ofdirectors for • three year term..

stuff we bought for the frontBteps-and then .couldn't find.

All of these things, to tte usedlater, we discovered with a senseof .satisfaction. Let's see, we'llput them in one corner of thegarage-and remember wherethey are!

General Heave-KoAs for the rest-the witch can­

dle left over from Hallowe'enthe diied-tip Christmas wreath,the bag of last fall's campaignbuttons and stickers---,why in theworld had we kept them? Andthis bottle? A sniff told us itwas the remains of last Christ­mas' eggnog.

"Nothing can destroy th~t egg­nog," the Head of the Househas been heard to declare of hisprecious potable. Neither frostnor snow nor something~or­something, resembling the sloganof the U.S. Postal Service.

In spite of pronouncements, 'the eggnog is out. It may be(indeed it is) Martha Washin~­

ton's recipe. Nevertheless, l~out on the side'·porch fromChristmas until May, it is defi­nitely to be ignored.

Further impediment tolitleporch pleasure was a brokenchair: "Couldn't fix it, ma'am.Somebody leaned back 011. it justone 'time. too many."

At the time, we couldn't bearto throw it out. It bad been thechair our .rohnoy bad used (andabused) for years. Times with­out number we had warned theeKhuberant OllIe that he WIll

,breaking tIP the furnitUl'e.At each warning, he would

low~ his growing weight backinto positioIl. Over and overebair had heeD. repaired.. Now ithas had it. Reluetantly we cutit into the piN! with the Christ­mas wrea, the HaBowe'eft eaft­die-for the trasbman.

With a geDe~ heave-ho fromthe side porch 0If its catCh-aUproperties, we prepar-e our sum­mer family "living room."

The three lftOnths upcomingwtll be leisurely, if they go ae"cording to pattern, with manyhappy hoUrs· spent on that sevenby 14 space.

Come and join us during thesesummer evenings?

'Frieste Catholic WomentIonor U.S. Delegates

TRIESTE (NC) - The accom­plishments <Jf U. S. Catholics ill.neviating the sufferings of Tri­este's refugees were praised b,­Maria Parovel" president of theCatholic Women of Trieste, at aleCeption honoring ~ members01. the National Council of Cath­otic Wnmen.

The delegation was headed.MCCW president, Mra. Arthur L.Zepl of Toledo, Ohio, aad MIlI'­teret Mealey <Jf Washington,D. C., NCCW executive director.'Rle delegation visited Triesteafter attending the congress of4Ile World Union of CatholicWomen's Organizations ill. Rome.On behalf of the Catholic women01. Trieste, Miss J;'arovel pre­eented an engraved medal toIrks. Zepf.

III an official welcome to Uteeity, Mayor Franzel noted thatthe people of Italy have not few-80tten "the generous. help givea. . "::M:~tGIClIeOCDol=-C::::H:HKlIClIo!.bF the Amerieaa people to I~.. Ol"der that her eoonomicerisUmipt be overcome." .

'lO Attend ConferenceII a r y Elizabeth <YHearae.

IIIaiIIe Shachoy and Sister'I'Ilerese Anne, faculty advi__,will represent St Mar,.'. HighSchool, Taunton, at a YouthCitizenship Conference at 'I'bftIIUniversity .rune 5 through T.'l'hey will present a report OR

......1 conseiowme. ~~L~fl~~~~~~_! •• ~,l'Ci~N~,t'!,~,IoC.!I,~,I!',c;,~,~,=,,".MNICl~

Cleanup ofSunPorc:h "RevealsHoard of' Mislaid Treasures

By ·Mary Tinley DalyAll of a sudden, and unseasonably late, it's time to

"convert," as the Head of the House'calls our transitionfrom Winter to Summer living. From now until late Sep­tember our living quarters are enlarged by that small butfrequently used seven byW foot space off the livingIIOOm, the side porch. SomeIUmmer-"when we get or­IBnized" - transition will begradual and graceful. In that'Utopian year,the porch will!lave been*aned, paint"':.. and waxedill early April.• 0 use plantswiH have beentransferred to-.eir SummerIlome in thetIower boxes.Dr late Mayprofuse bloomwill greet us when we. are ready.. "convert." Summer furniturewill be refurblshed early andwaiting.

When weather permits use of~ porch, in that future ideal.summer, all we'll have to dowill be sit down, sip lemonadead start enjoying the breezes,_tural ones and tboBe engen­Mred by a talkative family.

Or"IlI')' y ....'ftUs ia not Year 01. Utopia.TIlis is ·lUl ordiftat7 "ear.Up shoots tbe thermometer

after ~ cold Spring. Sudden­... it's time for ~.. rues,Ir'cMtI7 curtains, iced tea, IIUl\~, 'eleetric ta.. Kow tier'-.e porch •••

We've UIIed it _ an outdoor....... place all winter, kept• tIMe or so ef 80ft drinks there.. .. tin of fruit cake. A'Wo •... bulky extras Neb .. M4t­tIonaI table leaYeS and fireplace.wood. .

However, _til we "riewed. that.-e space ia. the clear lightad warm sunshine of a l"te May_ we had DOt realized what• eatch-all it had become. Clltch­Ill' It was a ·shambles, th~• lucrative shambles.

.. Hidden behind ~ glider 1aT.. stepladder :for which theBead of the HoWIe had searched"'everywhere." In one eprner a.-non of paint had been ban­IBbed pending the time we could~ the ladder. Behind theIP8l'e dining table leaves, theextra card table showed up-­too late for the bridge etghtsomejust past, but ready for the next.

There were Ginny's roller*ates: "Oh, yeah, last time Iwore 'em it started to snow so Illtuck 'em there."

Bag in a corner was the de-ice

Page 10: 06.01.61

Ceylonese to CheckClergy Jurisdiction

COLOMBO (NC)-A Ceyloft­He cabinet minister has endorsedprovisions of a proposed' newmarriage law which would lib­eralize grounds' for divorce andalso place certain restrictions onthe jUris~liction of Christianministers.

Home and Cultural AffairsMinister Maithripala Senanayakehas voiced his approval of a rec­ommendation to limit Christianministers to officiating at mar­riages only in the district inwhich either party has' givenDOtice. He alSo indicated sup­port for repeal of the current lawprovision relating to deathbedmarriage under which a minister ,ean officiate without goingthrough the usual legal prelim-maries. , .

The 'marriage law recommen­dations, drafted by' a specialIovernme.nt commission, wouldraise the minimum marriage agefrom 16 to 18 for males an<;l from12 to 16 for females.

11

Mass 'in EnglishAt Convention

CINCINNATI (NC) - Solemn.Pontifical Mass in the Englishlanguage-a unique event inlocal church history-was of­fered here Sunday in St. Peter'.in Chains' cathelral.

Celebrant was Bishop Nicho­186 T. Elko, of the ByzantineGreek Rite diocese of Pittsburgh.The occasion was the 62nd an­nual convention of the OhioState Council, Knights of Co­lumbus.

A group of 36 seminariansfrom the Byzantine CatholicSeminary of SS. Cyril and Meth­odius, Pittsburgh, sang in En­glish and in Old Slavonic dur­ing Bishop Elko's Mass in theCathedral.

Father John Martin, vieechancellor of the ByzantineGreek Rite diocese of Pittsburghexplained the Mass in a simul­taneous commentary. The entireMass was in English except theCanon, which was in Old Sla­vonic. Holy Communion Watl

distributed under both speci'2s­bread and wine-by the BisllOPand three assisting priests.

THE ANCHOR­Thurs., June 1, 1961

Lawrence Welk GetsFranciscan Award

CHASKA (NC) - BandleaderLawrence Welk has been hon­ored by the Conventual Fran­ciscans of Assumption Seminaryhere in Minnesota for his out­standing contribution to whole­some family entertainment.

Mr. Welk was named for theirthird annual Franciscan awardfor portraying in twentieth­century style the attitudes ofthe "Troubadour of St. Franciaof AssisL" Father Junip~

Cummings, O,F.M. Conv., ofAssumption Seminary made thepresentation. ,

Mr. Welk said in a telegramsent to Father Cummings: "Yowdo me and my performers morehonor than we could ever POS­sibly d,.eserve ... St. Francis HIa wonderful and loving patrOl!.of musicians, and I hasten todedicate the music we shallmake this year to this mostdedicated of men on behalf of alimy musical family."

Chapel at RangePOINT MUGU (NC) - A

$500,000 inte~faith chapel, calledthe Chapel of Faith for theSpace Age, was dedicated at thePacific Missile Range headquar­ters here in California. Navr~cretary John B. Connally, J~p.l'ticipated in the dedication ...the'cllapel, which will .eat •

Seeks ShowdownOn Hungary

WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep.Michael A. Feighan of Ohio wallurged the U. S. to seek to havethe Soviet Union comply withthe United Nations' resolutionon Hungary or face expulsiollfrom the UN. '

Rep. Feighan said bringingthis issue to a test in the UNwould disabuse the U, S. of"many of the delusions whichhave been built up about ourvoting strength in the UnitedNations and who the friends e«freedom 'really are."

He introduced a resolution iathe House calling on the U. S.government to raise the either­or test on Hungary in the UN..

Rep. Feighan noted that theUN General Assembly con­demned Soviet aggression againstHungary in· 1956 and ~lled fOl'the withdrawal of "all Ru.ssianmilitary, political and economieelements" from Hungary.

Disdains DecisionHe said the Soviet response

has been "a persistent, ad~mant,

provocative and contemptuou.ldisdain" for the General Assem-bly decision.

Rep, Feighan's resolution pro­posed that the Soviet Union begiven a time limit within '''!:licato comply with the resot,Jtion

- on Hungary. If it did nt.llt, Itwould automatically be exp..lledfrom the UN.

He said confronting the So;Kiet.lwith the Hungary issue i, the \UN would regain initiatil'e ininternational affairs for the lJ. S.

are Joan Neff, Judy Sating andRita Armstrong. From June 26to Aug. 5 they will teach cate­chism, crafts arid recreationalactivities to Navajos at St.­Michael's Franciscan School inArizona. They will receive nosalary.

John T. Rupley, a teachingassistant at Xavier, will join thefaculty of St. George's College,Kingston, Jamaica. The collegeis conducted by the JesuitFathers of the New Englandprovince.

The Mount st, Joseph students

College ,Students to Spend Summer as Lay MissionersCINCINNATI (NC) - An

Xavier Un1versity graduate stu­dent will go to the West Indiesfor two years as a lay mission­ary, and three Mount St. JosephCollege sophomores will spendthe Summer teaching Navajo

. Indians in the U. S. Southwest.

POPE GREE~ NEW AFRICAN BISHOP: His Holiile88 Pope John XXIII gives aeeremonial embrace to Most Rev. Caesar Gatimo, Auxiliary Bishop' ef Niery, Kenya,Africa, one of the 14 new missionary Bishop s consecrated by the Pope in St. Peter's

. Basilica, Vatican City. Of the new BiMteps, three were Chinese, two Indian, two Italian,. .one A.erican, one Burmeee, 0,": French, OIl e Irish, and three African. .

.Psychiatry NewRadio ThemeWEST SPRINGFIELD (NC)-A

Jeries of f<>ur talks on "Religionand Psychiatry" by Father BriceIngelsby, C.P., of Pittsburgh hasbeen scheduled for the Sundaysin June on the "Hour of theCrucified" radio program, pre­duced by the Passionist Fathershere.

Father Ingelsby, an alumnus ofthe Catholic University of Am­erica in Washington, did con­siderable work among patientsat a state hospital in Queens Vil­lage, N,J., and has developed atl

interest in the problems of men­tal health.

Not Cure-Aft"The clergyman is the first to

recognize that religion cannot beprescribed as a 'cure-all' forevery ill," Father Ingelsby said."'Important a6 religion is formental health, it is not meant asa substitute for psychiatry, justas it is not a substitute for den­tistry. No one imagines that abroken leg can be treated byadvising a man to 'pull yourselftogether.' Neither can we sup­pose that an anxiety neurosiswill be cured by a kind of 'pullyourself together' approach. Re­ligion and psychiatry are bothconcerned with helping the sameman. They must understand eachother and respect each other."

The "Hour of the Crucified" illcarried at various times on some500 radio stations throughout thecountry.

Retarded YoungstersReceive Communion

CLEVELAND (NC) - Threeelasses of retarded children,totaling 33 youngsters, receivedFirst Communion here after twoyears or more of training.

The children are the mentallyretarded Who are not acceptedeven in county classes for slow­learners. Classes usually are two01" three hou~s a week.

They were taught by the Sis­-ters of Notre Dame at NotreDame Academy, Ursuline Sistenat St'.· Clare parish, and Sistersof St. Joseph at St. Columbkilleparish. .,Another Clev,eland-areaparish, .St. Ann, hall anJllouncedthat' religion classes for the'l'e­tal'ded,wiU begin·next Fall.

Ask MoratoriumSPRINGFIELD· (NC)~Enact­

ment of a bill to provide a six­year m<>ratorium on capital pun­ishment in Illinois has been pro­posed by Msgr. Daniel M. Cant­well of Chicago, chaplain of theCatholic Council 011. WorkingLife.

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Charge Cuban MilitiaInvaded Churches _

NEW ORLEANS (NC) - Apriest and a Brother belongingto the same order arrived herewith vivid details of persecutionat the hands of militia in Cuba.

The religious, both Italian na-.tionals, declined to give theirnames for fear of reprisals. TheBrother said he was arrested in aroundup of about 200,000 peopleduring the recent invasion' ofCuba.

"Castro ran out of jails," hesaid, "and started using. schoolsand even churches for prisons.The militia broke into the tab­ernacles of the churches, dese­crated the Blessed Sacrament,crushed under foot the conse­crated Hosts, make mockery ofthe Mass and..kept church peoplepritMmers in the houses of God."

Pope Cans SelfPeter in Person

VATICAN (NC) - ''The lowl,.Pope you come to visit is St.Peter in person," His HolineSflP<>pe John XXIII told pilgrimsat his midweek general aud':'ience. ,.

Tbe Pope recalled that st.,Peter, the first pope, was ahumble fisherman and that hehimself came ffom. farmin,folk.

Pope John said that the P88­nge of centuries earthly king­doms have riseR and disap.­peared.

"Only the barque of St. Peterserenely follows its course. St.Peter is always at hi·s post."

Pope John warned the 15,000pilgrims in St. Peter's basilicathat when they hear voices talk­oing of the end of the Churchthey sh<>uld recall that thosewho speak will soon be go·ne.~"The Catholic Church willnever end," he declared.

The Pope said the Church willcontinue its voyage on earth;comforting, encouraging andtouching the minds of men.

Michigan LegislatureVotes Anti-Smut Law'

LANSING (NC)-A bill aime4at restricting wholesale distribu­tors ..01. obscene materials haapassed both houses of the State'legislature, -

Approved on the final day olthe session, the measure is,fashioned after a New York law.n has the usual provisions safe.,guarding against sale of obscenematerials but, in addition, i.written in such a way that onlythose persons who are found tehave six. or more copies of any,obscene material shall be in vi()_lation of the law.

" " "ftlllOftlft.

POPE WALKS AMONG WORKERS: Workingmen from many countries gathered illRome for a program marking the annivers aries of the two great Social Encyclicals..­Rerum Novarum, issued by Pope Leo XIII ill 1891, and Quadragesimo Anno, issued byPope Piue XI in 1931. His Holiness told abou t a third social encyclical he is issuing. NOPhoto.' .

'Pennies to Heaven' Five-Year-Old Tot's Theme Song?Perhaps a little impatient over Uon, tensed someone else at the plate, and, dashing up through

the slowness of liturgical reform, _ltar during the Offertory. the lanctuary before anyonea five-year old girl at Chapelton Glancing down, he saw a little could intervene had left hermission station, Kingston, Ja- .irl. Before he could decide what . 'It tak' rtmaica, recently introduced aa to do with her she turned and penmes on the a ar, ,mg 1-

innovation of her own. ran back to he; seat. etally the opening prayer of theJesuit Father Frank Osborne The missionary later found Mass, "I will go in t<> .the altar ()f

of St. George's College, cele- that the youngster had missed God: to God, the JOy of mybrating Mass at the mission sta- the usher when he passed the youth."

THE ANCHOR­Thurs., June 1, 1961

10

Lawyers DressLike Prelates

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Con­sistorial advocates occupy one ofthe most unusual offices in theChurch held by laymen.

To see them in papal proces­sions one would think that theywere priests or high prelates.They wear cassocks and blackvelvet capes and on certain occa­sions even copes, But the fact isthat only one of the 12 is aD.ordained priest.

The other 11 are outstandinglawyers of Italy who have beenhonored for their service andknowledge. Though" the office isnow really honorary, the origiMof the post of consistorial advo­cate goes back almost 1,400 yearL

For CanonizationIn 598 Pope St. Gregory I cre­

ated seven ecclesiastical defend­ers, Church lawyers empoweredto plead various cases beforethe consistories of cardinals.Even today there are seven ac­tive and five honorary ones.

Today the consistorial advo­eates plead during public consis­tories for the advancement of thebeatification or canonizationcause of some holy person, asthey did on Jan. 16, 1961, whenthey petitioned the Pope to orderthe advancement of the causes ofRedemptorist Bishop John Neu­mann of Philadelphia and ofKateri Tekakwitha, 'the Lily 01.~e Mohawk."

Page 11: 06.01.61

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The World Situation

God Love YouBy Most Rev. FuJtOlt J. Shee., D.D.

-" .' .

Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to theM~ Rev. Fulton J. Sheen" National Director of the Society forthe Propalation of the Faith; 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, NY.,01' TOur Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE,_ North Main Street, Fall River', Mass.

TIle oab wa,. ......te tile -li"le we ....., _ ..IBQ shaft etlU&U,., ill fer CMhollell te foU.w tile «»( •B..,. FMber wae _ia o.at lie ill .. be "'lIra ......eillalb'ahled." GIve to the Viearof CIlrhlt "first,U..t~ "'Gab."Qlye .. tile ~lear of t'JIlrW "prilleipallT,.. .. .eee ,. "0:-elusively." BId in Che Dame of Christ let _ bew ..-..e tItM lII'eaeaUy tIM Catboliet!l 01 the UutW' States c-ivehim on'" 2'1e per year per Catholic. s.-e JI"IIIe 1Ia,. thai allOb.per day lor dog food. .

How do you give to lhe Holy Father? He has' a Society foethat purpose---The Society for the Propagation of the Faiiih. Itexists in every country of the world. You have one iQ your diocese.Believe me, the world situation is serious not because of Com­munism but because of secularism, religious indifference and thegrowing appeal of Oriental mysticism. The answer is not tG beanti-Communistic but to live our Faith in every daily action. Startnow by sending your offerings to The Society for the Propagatiollof the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, New York.

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IV. Here, then, is the world situationfrom the religious point of' view. On theone hand there is a growing reaction against what Is called "reli­gious exclusivism," a denial of the absoluteness of truth and thereduction 01 religion to a psychological self-awakening which ig­nores sin. On the other hand, people believe, as Peter said OIl Pen­tecost: "Salvation is not to be found elseWhere; this alone of aUthe names under heaveD (.Jesus Christ) .has been appointed to menas the One by which we must needs be saved."

I. We are living in a time when the poUtical, economic lIOCialand military ascendancy of the world will pal9l!l from the West tethe EaSt (Africa and Asia).

D. Until DOW, it has been the West which has inflaenoecl &beEast. But even now the. East is beginning to influence the W.:a) by a numerical majority in the UnitedNations; b) by an itching curiosit7 OIl thepan of Western minds for Oriental mysti­.cism, which makes,man the center ofre~ion and. not God and Uis mercifulRedemption.

III. The Church los becoming asmaller pro­portion of the world's population. There are18 million persons born each year in Asiaalone, and yet the number of the faithful inAsia, 1900 years after the Redemption iaonly 14 million.

V. How are we to meet the coming merger of Eastern thoughtwith the declining Christian influence in the Western world?

A) The Church (bishops, priests, teachers) must everywherepreach salvation through Christ the Lord.· Only by stressing anhistorical Person Who is both God and Man can the mere philosoph­.leal systems of the East-West world be overcome. Hearts cannot fallin love with an abstraction; whether it be Nirvana or Tao; they caalove only a 'Person Who is worth loving infinitely and eternall;T.

B) There must be an increased sacrifice of personnel andalms for the millSions in Africa and Asia. In a few decades Catholicswould no long'er be a minority did we but open our palms and giveour bands to the spiritually and physically hungry souls of the East.

C) It is not to be thought that the numerical minorit,- InAofriea and Asia will necessarily continue. Given an increuedlove of the Holy Ghost Who alone makes converts, Africa aMABia could be the fUtUl'e supplien of the Vicar of Christ. WheaIsrael failed, the Faith went to Samaria and the Gentiles; wIleaWeetern civilization breaks up inlo ineffectual ileCts at1d trua­cated spiritualit,-, the Goepel col:i1d paM to Africa and A.. iaiIlcreasinc n1Bllber's.

D) A mane concentrated and equalized miMiODAt1'T eIlfort __be realized. Presently, American. missionaries are rel-ati-..el7 wellprovided for, but missionarietl from other para of the world lifton the barest retIOUl'ces. .

WINS GRANT: BrotherRoger E. Millette, F.I.C.,.science and ma.thematicsteacher· at. Prevost HighSchool, Fall River, will attenda teachers' institute in chem­istry at Notre Dame Uni­versity this Summer, undera grant from the NationalScience Foundation. He hasjust completed a course inreligion and theology at hiscommunity's motherhouse onthe Channel Island of JerSey.

K ofC State CoultCHPlans Annual Dinner

A dinner for put and preeellltofficers of the MaMachuaetwState Council, Knights of Colum­bus, will be Ileld ThllUdey, JUM15 at Armand's BeaCOll Twn.eeRestaul"ltrK, BolIM t, Pr.. ice.ham.

Over 300 He expected flo __tend the event, IPOI:WIOI'eCl b7 &1Mput state olficeN' coJlllllittee,under the chairmaDllhip 01. "..mas P. McLaUflhlia, k.. ...district deputy.

Featut'edwiH M preeentatioa_ rinlJll to outgoiDC t:IistriIKdeputietl and • l\IeIt ., boawwilt M Deputy Supreme XaiIIIlDr.JohRW.~

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Efvec("w ie' Training of Chil.dIncludes Goals, Principles

, By Father John L. :I'homas, S.J.Ass'. Sociolo&'1 Prol.-St. Louis Universlly

"How much freedom should children be permitted inerder to develop as normal, happy children who will retainpleasant memories of childhood? Our friends have fourlittle boys ranging from four to 10 and inaist on giving themoomplete freedom at homeand abroad. The neighborshave tagged them 'the littlemonsters.' Our friends claimkills need freedom or they'll,row up bitter and repressed.We know 'boyswill be boys,'but aren't therelimits?"

Notre Dame HonorsPe~c4,! Corps Leader

NOTRE DAME (NC)-R. Sar­lent Shriver, director of thePeace Corps, will deliver theeommencement address and re­eeive an honorary degree fromthe University of Notre Damenext Sunday.

Father Theodore M, Hesburgh,e.s.c., president of the univer­.aty, revealed that Mr. Shriverwill take the place of UnitedNations Sec. Gen. Dag Hammar­Ikjold as commencement speak­•. He said Mr. Hammarskjoldhad notified him that an officialW.N. mission in Europe wouldprevent his giving the scheduledIIddress.

Mr. Shriver, a member of theadvisory council of Notre Dame'.College of Commerr:e. is a formerpresident of the C~licago Board~ ~P.ll~ll;t~o~ , , . , , . , ,

somewhat too - narrowly cOn­ceived. parent-centered approach.Children were to be seen andnot heard, while not too much .attention was paid to their ch~ng­ing developmental n~s.

But the .contrary shift to, achild - centered approach. wasequally. unbalanced Why shouldrespect for the child and his

o pin ion s needs implY rejection of disci-a b out raising p!!ne, training in self-control, orchildren h a v e awareness of the.rights of others?Ihiftedso fre- Of course, the resultant littlequenUy in the monsters don't develop into biglast 50 years monsters-they just don't growthat I suppose up, for they never learn to con-we shouldn't be trol their emotiom or overcomelIOo surprised if tneir childish self-ceateredbess.',0 m e parents Fortunately, with the excep-remain utterly confused. At tion of a relatively few couplespresent, the weight of opinion is like your friends. the majorityswinging back from the irration- of modern puents recognize thatal interpretation of "permissive- some controls and discipline areDeSS" in vogue 15 or 20 years necessary, at least'for their ownago to what is called the devel- peace of mind.opmental approach Judging from the contempo-

This . attempts- to gear our rary literature in the field, thetl'aining practices tf. the assumed current ideal held up to parentschanging needs of children all is to raise their children as com­they grow through various stag.,.' fortable, understood, satisfied Requiem. Mass., development. individuals:

The training received at each' Parents are urged to "enjoy" Continued hom Pace 0_ltage is supposed to prepare the their children, to be consistent the most eloquent lesson taughtIbUd for the next step--aa ex- yet reasonably flexible in disci- b,. a priest, is that giVeR by_lIent theory, perhaps, if only pUne, and to grant them consid- death," said Rev. Lutz G. Men­we knew more aoout the various erable freedom i~l choosing their donea of Mt. Carmel, New Bed-tt8ges and the training practices life-goals and standards. ford, the eulogist.appropriate to them! This sounds reasonable, con- "The death of Father Mendes

Your letter reminds me of the sidering.that modern cbildreD was indeed. for all of _ a moet...-toon depicting the troubled should' be raised to live iB a eloquent 1e S SOil because itIIlOther who hal taken her little complex, changing. highly or- brought before our eyes the need"monster" to the psychiatrist. ganized society in whicb they for preparedness for death th....Be has evidently just explained must learn how to get along with confirming the doctrine so fre­.. her that the child is insecure, a great. variety of persons and quently preached by him."aad she repliu, "I don't know pressures. He said that "although Fatherwhether he .feels Insecure, but I But a second look at this icieal Mendee built no churches; erec­.n assure you the rest of us do!" reveals that it stresses technique ted no schools-left no mcmu.-

Permissiveness carried too far rather than content, the "bow" ments in his short life, beeallHll)ells chaos in the family _ rather than the "what." To rai. he was never called upon to"apoiled" children and frustrated a child as a comfortable, under- build them - nevertheless the,.rents. stood, satisfied individulll ia not. succe., of the life of a priest •

What your friends seem to in itself, an adequate preparation not m~8ured by what monu­have fixed on in their child rais- for life, even in our afflueni menta he leaves behind, but Rowing practices is the tag end of a society. well he personified Christ in hiltheory, current a generation What life-goals does the child own life."ago, that children would develop have? What values does he cher- In conclusion, the New Bedfordbest if left to their own devises. ish? What basic principles and eulogist reminded all that tL,e

All parents should do was to norms has he acquired to guide death of the 45-year-old FaDremove the conventional re- him in his'adult activities~ River administrator brought aItraints-and stand around to Men are not mice--or con- loss to all. "The Church has lostpick up the pieces. Every child tented cows, either. The utter a priest, his good mother, a son;would know, or would discover permissiveness practiced b¥ your all of us, a good friend. In real­through experience, what was friends may produce little mon- ity-we did not lose, rather, wemost suitable to his peculiar sters; the goal-less, frustration- gained a friend and intercessorneeds, free, comfort-nurturing method in heaven with God,"

Some traces of this theory still so popular today may turn out a Bishop Connolly presided atremain in our educational sys- generation of satisfied, shallow' the Office of the Dead Sundaytem, Not so long ago, I attended little moral eunuchs; but if afternoon. First chanter was Rev.a teachers' conference during training is to prepare children Alfred J. Gendreau and the sec­which a student representative for life, they need to be given ond. was Rev. Arthur C. dosReis.read a report insil,ting that the worthwhile goals to aim at and Father Mendes, son of Mr•.classes in introductory sociology a set of principles enabling Maria Viveiros Mendes and theshould decide what topics they them to "make senee" out of their late Manuel Mendell, was 00r1lwere to study during the course. widening experience. ,ill Fall River on Oct. 21, 1'15.

Most of the teachers pre.ent It's not techniques but content Folowing graduation from B. M.tIound this report very "inter- that really count. C. Durfee High School be COIl-

eeting," until someone suggested Unued his training in the claseieltthat since the introductory stu- Scores Compulsory, at Providence Colle,..dents knew nothing about aoci- S "I" "L He lI\ade hi.s studiec ill phil_ology, their choices could repre- ter. Izatlon aw ophy and theology at st. liar"'.ilent nothing more than pooled WEST HARTFORD (NC) SeminarY,BaltimOre aDd WIllIignorance. Deploring the denial of "a fund- Ol'dained OR NOT. 1"1, 1941 br

This cult of permiuivenus in amental.liberty" to some Conn- the la~ Most ~. Jamea K.child training appeared as a re- ecticut citizens, a priest-lawyer Cassidy.action' to what was perhaPs a urged repeal of the state's 50- In September, l~ he w..

year-old compulsory steriliza- assigned to Immaculate COIlCep­tion law in an address here. tion Parish, New Bedford lIftttl

Father Robert F. Drinan, S,J., Feb. 10, 1960., whetl he WMdean of the Boston College law named administrator of OUrschool, said that since the law Lady of the Angele.providing fOr compulsory steri­lization of individuals with men­tal illness Wall enacted i1\ 1909,"a total: of 544 people have beenrequired by law to be deprivedof one of the mOlt fundamentalprivileges enjoyed by human.beings" He said that 498 01. Ule544 wel'i! women.

Father Drinan, who baa beeRadmitted to law-practice beforethe U. S. SliPrerDe Court, calledit "distressing" that a compul­sory lIterilization HlW exist. notonly in Connectkut but in threeother New England state.­Maine, • New Hampehire' andVermont. He charged that "thealleged scientific background 01.these laws hal been entirely 9:­ploded" and called for their Fe-

~!-, .

Page 12: 06.01.61

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Declares ChurchPO$ition GraveIn HM~~ary

VATICAN CITY (NC) ­L'Osservatore Romano edi­toriaJly has scored reportsof co-existence between theChurch and the communist re­gime in Hungary and has saidthat "a great number" of church­men are in -Hungarian jails.

The front-page editorial, lii­ltialed by Federico Alessandrini,the Vatican City daily's special­ist on Iron' Curtain affairs, saidthat Hungary's "situation re­mains most grave."

"How can the hypocritical ad­ministration in Hungary speakof good I' e I a t ion s betweenChurch and State in that countrywhen every day there is a newdevelopment in their oppressioDagainst Catholics?" the paperasked.

"A great number of church­men-no one knows precise15'how many - are imprisoned,"the editorial said. "No one hubeen able to communicate withthem. since the time of theirarrest, not even theiT' familiell

. 0lI' their lawyers."

Evening Class'esBRUSSELS (NC)-Jozef C~

dinal van Roey, Archbishop OIlMalines, has started eveningceminary classes to permit youngmen with vocations to start theirtraining for the priesthood with­out at once giving up tbeJrearlier careers.

President's 'Visit, CPA ConventionIn Canada 'Auspicious Coincidence'

VANCOUVER (NC) - The iee inaugurated several yeaHCatholic Press Association Gent ago."President Kennedy a telegram Archbishop Johnson said theduring his Canadian visit ~ex- Canadian Catholics have "re­pressing the hope that his visit joiced as brethren" at the growthand its convention will "enhance of the Church in the Unitedcontinental sOlida~ity." States.

Father Albert J. Nevins, M.M., "We believe that much of ih<lCPA president, commented il8 eredit for the amazing physi­the wire it was an "auspicious eal expansion and astonishingcoincidence" that Mt-. Kennedy increase in num·bers must go toshould b4:! making his first state the progressive and dynamicvisit to Canada at the time when press over which you as editol"lthe CPA was holding its first and associates preside," the pI'€­

Canadian convention in 51 years. late declared."The assembled convention

voices ,the prayer that bothevents win enhance continentalsOlidarity," Father NevilUl saidAn a telegram.·

The delegates were welcomedto • the convention as "friendsand benefactors" by CoadjutorMartin M; J ohnSOll O!f Van­couver.

"For man)' years," the Arch­bishop said, "our Catholic presshas been the beneficiary of yourexcellent N.C.W.C. News Serv­ice which has served as a modeland pattern for our own serv-

CPA CONVENTION: At the Catholic Press Association51st annual convention held in Vancouver, B.C., FatherAlbert J. Nevins, M.M., editor of Maryknoll magazine andCPA president, greets Sister Mary Augustine, editor ofMarist Missions magazine. Msgr. Robert G. Peters, editm--

, manager of the Peoria (Ill.) Register looks on. NC Photo.

C - CondemMCIMademoisello Gobe+te ROYllIlI

Magdalena Ro.annCIMating Urge Savage EyeMiller's Beautlfwl 'IoV'fot Savage TriangleMisa Julia Sevon Doodly 84MMhou ScarredMom and Dad Sensuallto (6afoefoootMoon Is Bluo Savage)Haked Night She Shouldo Said .....Nona Sins of Itle IIor9ia.Never on Sunday Smile. of a Summer NIgheNight ,Heaven Fen StellciHa Orchids for Mite Strollon, h

Blandish Third SexOne Summer oi NapplMesThree Forbidden StofteeOscar Wilde Thrill That Kill., ThePari. Night Trials of Olear WIldePassionate Sum_ VtolatedPleasel Mr. Balzac Wasted Uvea and ,..Pot lIouillo (lavON of Pari,) Birth of TwinsPrivate Uves of Way. of Love

Adam and E¥o Women Without No_Private Property '"GUnS and the DGmned. 1MQuestloa of Advhe1y V' .

Unobjectionable for AdultsHe Who Must Die Savage InnOCleMlHome From the HIlI Seven ThievelHoulle of Intria- That Kind of Wam-Hypnotlr e,.., The Angel War. ReelMagician The Big Bank RollMake Mine Mint The Captain's TableMan Who Could ctIeat The Unfaithful.

Death The Young OMMurder, Inc. Third VoiceMusic IIox Kicil This Earlft Ie MIReOdds Against Tomorr_ TL~er BayOne Foot in HeM Tunes of Gkw.yOnce MOffJ With I'eefIng Touch of Larcont'Ikiru Upstairs and Do~Operation ElchmaRlil Why MUll I DIeOur Man Ie KaVOMl Virgin hlandsPouesoors Virgin Spring (priMe "'-Ring of Fir. in the United StatubRue de Pam Wild Strawberrie.Sportaevc Wonderfvl CoUfttfy

Separate ClassificationNever Take Candy from a Stranger (deck with m, oleltatlon of IIIICIII ......dren and, although fre ated without leftsatlonalis m, could have harmfulleffecn UpoR )'oung and uninformed unleu accompanlec:l by per.... Ad_tlalng carriee warning: UNotiae to pareRtel Me c hild willi 1M~unless accompanied by yov.",

Adorable CreaturellAnd God Croated WoManBaby DollBed of Gr_Bed, TheComo Dance with MeDesperale Women, 11MExpreslO Bongofleah I. WeakFrench LiRe, TheFruits of Summ«Game of LoveGordon of EdenI Am a CamelQillicit Interlude'La Rondolo Plallirlotto,. from ,., WlndMlllUane, Jun~~lova GameLovo I, My Profes....Lady Chatterley'. w­Lovor's Rotu..Lovol'l,1he

A-3All hl A Might'. WortAngry HIli.Anna'i SinBig Deal Oft Mad_

StroetCollo9" ConfldontlalCover Girl KillorCranes Are FlyingCrimson KimonoEno of InnoceRceExodusFads of ~Fast and Sexyfever in tho BIoocIFlvo Golden HOYN!'our Fait Gvft.400 BiowlFour SkuHs of JonafhaR

DrakefMoonch Mistreea

B .- Objectionable in Part for AlIIAnd Quiet Plow... Doll Head of a Tyrant Road Rac_Beat Genoration . , Hercules Unchained RookieBeloved Infidel Home Before Doric Room 4Between TIme and liternltr Horrors o~ the Black~m Room at tfle TopBimbo the Great House an tIKI Waterfront SanctuaryBlue Angol Hiroshima, Man Arnow Septe~ber StorMBlood and RO&8fl I, Mobster Sex Kittens Ga To CotlesleBorn Reckless Intent to Kill Sign of the Glodiatol'Bramble Bush Inside the MQfia Solomon and ShebaBreath of Scandal It Started With .... Some Came RunningBucket of Blood It Takel a Thief Some Like It HofButterfield II Jack the Rippel' Sons and Lovo,.Can Can Jazz Boat Squad CarCarryon, Nurso Last Mile Studs Lonig_Circus of Horrors Let's Make love Subway it. the ~Crock in the Mirror LII' Abner Summer PlaceCry for Happy Macumba LoYO Surprise PackageDaddy-O Mania ~ Take a GianI StepDeslro in tho Dust Middle of tho Might Tho Curse of thoEighth Day of the Wodt Missile to the Moon WerewolfElectronic Monstor Millionairess The EntertainerElmer Gant,y Naughty Girl The Marriage Go~Female Never Sa Few The MinQtaurFomale and the i'lesft Of Love and lutt The Right ApproadllEsther and Tho Kine Party Girl Throe Murde,essesFivo Branded Womell Patinum High School Thunder in CarolinaForbidden Fruit Perfect Furlough Two Faces of Dr,. Jek741F,ankenstein's Daughter Pharaoh's Woman Tunnel of loveFrom Hell To EternitY Portrait of A Sinnet' Twa LovelFrom the Terrace Pretty Boy Floyd Virgin SacrificeGangster Story P,ime Time What Price MurderGene Krupa StOf'Y Private' Lives of AcIaM Where the BOYI ANGI Bluos and Eve Where tho Hot W"md BI_Girl in Room HI Psycho Who Was That La~Girls Town Pusher Wicked Ga to HellGreat St. Lou.. a-k 'Queen of Cu.tel" Spaee , Wife for a Night

Robbery Rat Race Wild RiverGoddell of love Rally Round the I'4og. Boy. Wind Across the EverglacieeGa Naked in tho Worfrdl Rebel Breed World of Suzy WofttJGuns, Girls and GanllstO,. Riot In Juvenile p~ Young CaptivesH Man 'Rise and Fa" of ~un9 Jesse JamcllHappy AnnivorlCltY. Legs DiamoMl'

lite Ptlrticufar Covncif 01 51. Yittcent de Paul Societyof the Attleboro Area sponson f.e9ion of Decency Lilt as apublic serWee to readers of The Anchor.

Legion of DecencyA-l ~ 'Unobjectionable f« Genell'a~ Patll'Onage

Absent Mlndod Prof.oSlJCl' Guns of Navarono Tammy Tell Mo Troo "Alamo Invisible Invaders The Magic lIoyBeyond tOO Tlmo earrb Left, Right and~ The Police pog Sto."Big Gambia, Tko Libel 0 The Amazing TransparorntBig Night Little Savage ManBroth of a Bay Mighty Cf'usoc!a:<l The Sand CaotloBernadette of LaurClla Misty The Sword and Il'i- DragoaDavid and Goliath Modern Tlmoa There Woo 1!l CrookooDays of Thrilln and Ole fle" Man

Laughter Passport to Chiao ThirtyDesert Attack Pepe Three Came to KillFabulous World ~ Power Among Mea Tomboy and the <::ha~

Jules Verno Question 7 Town Like AliceFace of Firo Romanoff and Juliot Trouble in the SkyFidelia Serengeti Shall Not COO Twelve Hours' to KilOFlaming Star Story of Mankind TwelvQ to tho Moa:oFa, the First nmo Swan Lake Walk TaUFrontier Uprisina Ten Who Daroo Warrior, SlavQ ~Gallant Hours The Lost World Watm Your StQmGorgo The Lod Dawo Wings of Chanco

A-2 - Unobjectionable fOi" Adults allld AdolescentsAtlantis, «lo I.oet I Aim at tOO Stwa Surrender Hell

Continent Illegal Ten Seconds to IteIIIBattle of tho !ellllla Journey to tho Loaf Citr The CanadiansBridal Path Magnificent SavCCl The Fiercest Hemt·Cage of Evil Mario Octobro The Secret WaysCrazy for Love Miracle The Steel ClawCur50 of the Uftd.. Mountoin Roacl Tho TormentedDevll's Dlsciplo Mummy Time Machineforry to Hong K~ Operation IIottienecli: Trapped III TCIIillll-Four-D Man P,isoner of the Volga Village of the DamnedGeneral Della Aov_ School for Scoundrek Walking TargotHomicidal Secret of the Purple Reef Walk Like a DrCJ90llHoliday For LaVeR SeveR Ways fr_ Su"downWild and the IaftOClNItHome II the Ho... She Domona White Warrior '

Page 13: 06.01.61

Where TheEntire Filma"Can DineEconomically

NEW BEDFORD

WY 2-6216

273 CENTRAL AVE.

BLUE RIBBON

LAUNDRY'.

'. '

Family RestaurantR!. 6 at. Narrows In North Westport

.BISAILLON'S.GArtAGE

·24·Hour Wrecker Service

653 -Washingtoa .Street, FairhavenWYman 4-5058-

......

ARTHUI J. DOUCR

FAll RIVER, MASS.,~-,

4 .

RtANCOS J. DEVI~

363 SECOND ST.

·D:'& .DSales andServke,'. '. "j '. lINe. . ..{ .~

FRIGIDAlRE "_ -itRE~R~~lE~AT~ONA~,nJANCftS .

AR~ C@N~~T,IONING

Honor 200 C'ou'p'lesMarried SO Year s. ~AFAYETTE (NC)-Some2Oftcouples 'who have oeen married50 years or' longer were honoredat the first annual Goldeft 'Ju­bilaria.ns· Day of the Lafayette;La., dlOcese. .

Lafayette's Bishop MauriceSchexnayder led the couples inIII renewal of their marriagevows in St. John the Evangelistcathedral. He told the jubilar­ians: "We are grateful to you~ .for the good example you giveto young couples of our day."

The sermon was 'preached byMsgr. Irving A. DeBlanc, direc­tor of the Family Life Bureau,National Catholic VVel£areCon­ference.

:'!'ositive Aspects,Again, Pope Pius 'XII re~ap­

plied the _same principle to cur­rent conditions when he poip,tedout that "The natural riches ofn region, a country, or a' ~nti­nent, are destined not just forthe economic 'profit of the fewbut for the improvement ofcliv~ing conditions-'-first of all'mate-

~; "14 THE ~NCHOR~DY~~es~;_of_ FafLRiver-Thurs.June·h".~961 ""~' ~G?;~~3~D,:PA~

Chb(~~~i@n "P~,:5fi~i~~@$B@S)i~n:bz &~: F~~~cw TayWV"' Mr & Mrti Ern'est Boulay, lt1rrJ

For Fo~eign :·A;d 'r09rom i~~~~~C::U~io~t:J~cr::r::::'By Msgr~ George G. Higgins Miss An Ford, :Mrs Rita Grif-

Dlreetor, NCWC So'cial AdlOn Department . fin,Mr & Mrs Michael McMahon~'Frank VVard. - .

Within a few weeks, Congress will begin its annual dis- SANTO :CHRISTO .eussion of the United states,foreign aid program. The advent . $10 ''of a new administrati()Idn Washington has brought a num- Juu.· Ramos

. her of important revisions 'in the basic .foreign aid Policy, So•. Yarmouth'and it. is certain that ·the ' I ST. PIUS TENTH

. I . rial but also and· paramount y.. new proposals willengepder moral and spiritual- of- the " $25 -even' m 0 r e Congressional 'groups of human beings who Mr &: Mrs Raphael Altavilla,discussion than usual on this must live by exploitation of the Fruean.Eleetrical .Gompany Ioc..,controversial subject. earth's resources:" " Ann J. Moore.

In his special message on· for- Catholic organizations here ia $12eign aid, submitted to CohgreB;J the United' States havefrequent-

Mras lVLra J~:~Ph P. Sla~

in March, Pres- 11 stressed this ·general ,theme.ident ,Kennedy The statements. of the National Cape Cod Fence Co., MIl' & MnJ. f' Chester' Savery, Mr & Mro Rob-stressed six ma- Catholic Rural Life Con erence. .' . and Connors.jor' points:" 1) and the' Catholic Association .forour moral obli- International P.eaee have been ~'WJIDli'\l~®(Q]

.:' ,.gation to aiq... outstanding iIi this regard. ., OIUU lLA\lIJ>'lY" OlF -.Jli'A'll.'lffi'JA!•.,. those . free , but Similarly, the'Catholic Bishopn' $10 ".'.-.. ,less developed of the United S"ta~es have indi":. 'Mr & Mrs John Raposa, Mr 83

. <.. nations which vidually and collectively ..urged ,'. Mrs John W. Moran. -'D 0 W s. tan d . the promotion of internationalpoised.between'social justice as one of the.prline"· '0' W(wIi'~Ilu(wlNilfl u s,t,aine,d requisites for Jhe establishment. ._ ".r ST.lP'ATR'IlCOC·growt.h a.nd ~""~" of a sound world order. :_ ,t ''!C, ,_ $10·ecqnomic chaos; . " ,', ... Over the yeaJ,"s, there),as.b~n Mr & Mrs Edward Graca, John.

..~) the .necessity to separ.at~ 'our Il growing awareness in govern- H. VValsh..program ,of aid to social ~ri.d ec~' ment circles that the foreign ·aid l:". "'''''tR..''''''''',\1,nOlnic.q.evelopment" fro~:,'~l-. program must'rest'C!l,Il"'ttl'Ol'e. ~"",,,,,,uul9litary assistance," so that ,m~. aid solid foundation than l!l merely ST. !BERNAR~'~may "be seen on its own meritS"; negative anti-communism. Thw . $25 - ,8) the advisability of "special year, 'the emphasis 0Iil the p·osi-..,. McHale. Family: .emphasis on develop~~loanD tive aspects of foreign ald~part " $10 .repayable in dollars," '1. from; the program's roW. In the st. Bernard's VVomen'o Gund.,_ 4) "long-term planning' and Cold ;War-has been indicated .,~_., .,. Mrs Franklin ~rnold, Mr & Mrs

- financing-..-the .. oQl.y. WB,r. ..~ '. .clearly in Pre~id"entKennedy'g _. ~R~AT, BI.G .W~~COME: JO~lal'flgures'a~ .th~ .51~t Benoit Charland, Mr & Mrsmake meamngful and. e<;o~mll:."message ~Congress., ,', . annu~l _conventIon .of the CatholIC Pre88.·As8OCu~tlon In . LY,nwood Hartford, Mrs EmIlco.m~itm~nts"; 5)upif!ed: a~7" It is to be hQped ~t American .' Vancouver, B.C. were the Leavy ~iIi8,~~ left, and .Jack..,., Kleiner, ~ioSS Edith sears.~~~~t~~~~:env~~~~ ·c~~:~:·.~~: Cat~oli,cs willst~ii7 the Admin1&- , Ea~~.:?~.y~ 'old; 6. feet, l~inches.. tall; and :weighll1g 348.... . WGods Holeconfusing aid units; ,6) a "muJU-. ~~~~~:Y.~~:~fis~~p~::S: . po~~~ ·epl~ ~b.~e C~thol~· bachelo~ ~rved. as' ~'supel' ", '. ST. 'JOSEPHlateral approac~-a,progr~.and.amOl:e wide.sp,rEi;8dstudy oftbil' ~ters ..to the Cath9hc ~dltors an~ publIshers: I~ center . . $25 .level of ;commltments deSIgned pronouncements-' c>f: :the' Popes 18 Father:'AlbertJ. NevJ.DS. M.M., editor of Maryknoll ,,' Mr &: Mrs Geoff~~flo encourage and compl~ent aD . imq Bisl!ops". 'OIl, .).i1ternational' Magazi,rie'and president of CoPAN-C' PhotO. . .... $~O . '.in~r~ased ef~ort ey oth.er indl,l9- order, and for. a-.'wider reading "-'. ,I :... ' ,,' ". Dr Tho.mas 0 Toole

~n:~~~~~=£:~~:~li~aeti~~.:~~:. ~~t~~~ca~:~~:~:o:s ::~C:i: . -'__' c tb S~CKGE~iff9Imi.~JT C S'lf. ~~~~ll~~xeIViEL!President said: "There ill nO e9- . . a erme r . n, ohn ar-' $iO4:aping our obligations:. our ,mor- Fortunately, !Amerlc~ gen- fF(W~~. ~O'\?'~~ micha~l,~thony·~erreira. .MIl' ~ Mrs Gaston Surpre'nant,al obligation as Il wiSl! leader erally have accepted forelgDaid . ST•.MARY'S C.A\TlIllIElIJ)R&l1 ST• .A\NN~ Mr & Mrs Ernest Marmaras, Mrend 'good neighbor in the' inter.., pri~rams at .~a~p~ of ~ ~., " $15 $'25 . , & Mrs John Rosario, Mr & Mrsdependent community of, free. an l-c,ommum . gg e. It Miss 'EI~beth Leary. John Latham, 'Mr & Mrs Romeonations'- our econorWc obliga- . ~~wC nl~c~sary .~u:oOk b~y~nld '.' .. $10. August Hebert & Soia Pepin.tions as the wealthiest people in' '. e 0 ar an . ~rasp l~_ e.- John.Taylor; MIl' & Mro Job S'lr• .lJOSl&iP'IHI'f.;J Ida Goulet, Mr & Mrs Alberta world- of largely poor p~ple, hgent!y,: thos~ Chnsban prm~l- Hart, Mrs Mapy Sullivan.-Corls;g. $335. L. Fortin, Mr & Mrs Donaldas a -nation no longer dependent· ples

l",hlCh wIll.help ~ to. aSSIst Row; 'Auxiliary. .', 'Re<1. Joseph P. Lycmo Santos, Mr & Mrs Marcel Bil>-

upon the loans from abroad'that th~ ,ef~s-d~vel?~.nati.o~In de- .. -l5lLESSIElIJ) S.A\C~". $100' sonnette, Mr & Mra Jolu:J. Me-once helped us dev~lop our own ve ?Pl1'.1~ ,-po~abve progr:ams of $10 . Hugh. . -economy-:-"and our political ob-so~lal,and ~cono~ic .be~tt~rmen.t. . BI~~l;h~ Ouellette Mrs Joh,n L$2i

1elllID6VMrs Catherine L. RaymoMA.

ligation!;, as the single'largest L,D"..'n.... O· b..·S ""..... 1TJ)~· fjj"""", ..."" " Blanche .Levesque Atty. Francis Meagbz:i' Mr &; Mro VVilliaJJ:l H. S. Oehrle,counter to the aaverSarie~' of 1I"lJ .... II""U 1"lI .... w ~ (Q/I5i".""1g ,:" 'lI:IlOLY NA:aIm . $15 Mil' & lVIrn Gene Dabrowski, Mr

fre:i~~i:nportant priaciple haa fot W;Om~.A:Stiu!_d~ll'aihi~ '''ri;l& ~r~ JJ::sM. ~~~vall Il[ "Bliss, OJJ CQmpaDf' ~:7o:~~~~i~u~,&M~long been emphasized by Cath- ,ST. LOUIS (NC)-:-_T.wo nuns' $15'" '.... '·,:.~r. 8c'.Mr~· :::n' iou~ Edward Moraux.olic leaders and organizations. came here from Philadelphia to MIl' & Mrs. ~oger S. .Suliivall Rob.erta~s :VarietY.. StorePope Leo XIII, who, issue4 :his .. wit.n~ss ,dedication of a iormer " .. ,. " ',.". $10 .'.... 'famous eQcyclicaIRerum..N~!-, sw~nk . hotel in honor of their . W~iji~~."S. -Lyp~. ',. : ·ST. 'PA:I'aK:K'Sarum J~Il:g before pr~sent.d.~ i:"aan~uit~~ie F'ai;e r hWiil.iam. .. .• NOTBEDADD ',' . . , " .. :.$Z~ .programs of international" aid s., rs,· ..., w 0 plon~. . . ',' '$12 ' ,1II'ial7 K. Kilroy. .

, e' ';e -'d .. . d f sed eered St: Louis 'UniverSity's de-'. ' .' . '.' , '.w re ev r reame ~., ~xpres, . ,Jeannette Rego $!8.the ,prinCiple in clear-cut ·terllUl velopment,'·. $10 . . -~ .. :Pdaw Char_ Nodinewhen he wrote: .: The for~er Melpourne Hotel. Emile J. Amiot, Roeer. x... '. $11' .'

"Whoever ha~ received. ,from purchased by the university from bonte, Rene Moilast. Abbte I... Kilr,oy . "'.the :~ivine bounty a large share a !:,otei cha'in last AuguSt has OUR LADY OF HEALTH .~ & Mrs Wf111alll .~of blessings, whether they be. been converted into a residence. $10 . . . $10 " .external and· corporal or gifts for womeilstuderits of the uni- Maria' .E. S. Costa, Manuel ~ &; :Mrs Gilbert Cyr,Dennisof the mind, has .received. them versity. The nuris, Sisters M.arie Frarik, Antone Pacheco, Phyl.lie J. Sullivan, Mr &: Mrs Louis P.'for the 'purpose of' using them St. Mark. and Charlotte Therese - Souza, 'Manuel Corte." Moore, l\IIr A: MIs. William 'to perfect·his own nature, at the McGrillis, are members' of the Armando Figueira, John Lorge O'Brien, .:Mrs Irene ~Vill~saine time, so that 'he may em- Congregation of St. Joseph and'Augusto Luis,' AlfonsO Oliveira, Mr ok Mn JolmJ.l'amworth.,ploy them;. as the minister -of teach in' Philadelphia.' Father Clara Oliveira & Daughter.God's :providence, for the .ben- Paul C. '.Reinert; S.J., university' • Serafim Machado, August &m­elit of others.'" president, officiated at the dedi- too Jr., William Silvia,J~

cation...' Alvernaz, Antone Barreto. 'Now called Rogen Hall, ~ Maria Cabral, Antone Ferreira .

one time hotel has beeJll remod- Serafim Mac~"JosephSouza.eled to 'accommodate a capacity Lidgo Souza.of 800 students. That's thre0 BOLY ROSARY"times .as many students as too $10Wjhole university had .In 1900 Ernest tit Giammo

, "!hen' Father Rogers' became its mMACULATE CONCBFnO.·18th presidenl When he r~Bigne4 $20 .

. iD 1908 because of poor health" • &.!&G M. MarroDlilthe university.had 1,000 students. $Ifl .

. Today the universi~ bas SOlDQ Andrew It Bond. llIIaDwti II,;8,700 students. ' . 'Estrella.

Page 14: 06.01.61

,.

"

a;

THE ANCHOR­Thurs., .June 1, 1961 ---VataCQn PoperDep~ores RiotsEn A~afbamQ

VATICAN CITY (NC) ­L'Osservatore Romaoo hascalled Alabama's rio t i Jll ~

againtlt desegregation all

outburst of "brutal force full «IIpettiness and selfishness againstan irresistible and just moVe­ment."

Raimondo Manzini, editor ..the Vatican City daily new&­paper, said that despite such out­breaks "the movement for inte­gration and racial equality ~tween blacks and whites groWllland spreads in the United Staieflwith determined and unst~

pable vigor."The editorial said that 41 m&­

lion Catholics in the UnitedStates are united with inembe.laof other Christian faiths in ad­vancing toward an equalit\v~'which has its roots and its~antee in the Gospel alone,"

It concluded by citing the ~ample 'of His Holiness Pope JobDXXIII who 'on Pentecost conse­crated 14 missionary bishOJlll''from Africa, Asia, Europe aDdAmerica.

lFLEASE REMEMBER GOD AND HIS MISSIONS lIN· IrOUIELAST WILL AN]])) TESTAMENT.

~'12.ear~tOlissfi~D2lS~" Irl<ANCO$ CA~DINAIL £9lEl!.ILMAN, Pvosi&1="

l.¥Je:;jr• .!Ionoytl 'iT. nl7€:). ~'8 $t;e'V$o:xl ell eOCl:::Jc:rn@~G'" ie:

~A'B'Ifa©UC ~~At'1 ~M'tl' W~/!'IfA~E A$§C~OAnW3 ,480 Lit~e~t@1la Aro. elf <%~~ £i. Now'V@rQ( p,lNI. Y.

FATHER -DA:MlIIEN, mE LEPERThe proposal to place a statue o( FATHER DAMlEN !n ,t'btI

Capitol Building ill Washington r~mlnds us that our missIon.­aries are still caring for lepers, You can help by joining OU!'DAMIEN LEPER CLUB. The dues are a prayer a day, $1.81>!l month. r

STIPENDSThe olferin4r you make to the Priest who celebrates Mass fOf

)'our IntentioD Is. foil' our missionaries,· prllctically their onlflIDeaWl of suPPOrt. The Masses yOlll request are offered IlIrompt..,., In Dlisslon chapels in the Neall' and Middle East. We can alsearrange for GREGORIAN MASSES, Mass eaeh day for 30 da3Jl)withM m.~rrup"on.

WHICH REMINDS Us,A splendid way to teach the meaning of vocations Is to have

the cliildren in a particular class "adopt" al seminarian or Silt­ter-ln-training. The seminarian will write tothe class occasionally, telling about bis stu­diea and his work. The class will pride them~selves in. the fact that they are helping toeducate "their own" Priest or Sister. RightIlOW PETER MINISCI and ANTHONY FON­SO, who are studying for the priesthood atthe GREEK' PONTIFICAL COLLEGE inROME need sponsors. So too, PAUL MAN:A­KKATT and KURIAKOSE CHERUVALLY at ST. JOSEPH'SSEMINARY in ALWAYE, INOlA. The cost of educating each01 these is .only $100 a year, & little more than 25e a day. Totrain a Sister for two years costs ~300, These Sisters-in-train­lng in INOlA need sponsors: SISTER CYRIL and SISTER AN­NUNCIATA, of the SISTERS OF THE DESTITUTE in AL­WAYE' and SISTER MONICA and SISTER BASIL of theADORATION SISTERS in KORATTY. It costs so little to obtainso muehl-when you help to educate a Priest 01' Sister. wuaVOll help? We need your help desperately. Write to us.,

ACHILD SHALL, LEADThis 8&01')', we think, is too jJQO(l:te keep to ourselves. Last

tall the JOUDgstera a& H.amaarraen ElemenArJ School, a publ..st "" 'sehoon ilear,AlbaDY, N.Y., heard abo~

,,~ .~ ~'J,. Thalm, II little girl in Vietnam.'V \I' Thahn needed food, e1othing, an.~ ~. mediei~e-flO the youngsters a& Ha~..

(II 0 (raell decided te "adopt" her. 0 ...~ ::s elass eoDleeted aDd sold old newspa-G'" fA pel'S te II junk dealer: IIOme of the+ + girls made lICK holders and dooora-

tiODS whieb sold for $14; the sildllgrade begaD to publish and sell aschool newspaper. TIle resultT As 01

'JlZt HrL PaIhtr's Missiotr AI4 March, the youngsters at HamagraelWJ had raiselll the $180 needed to support

for Iht Orimkl/ CJmrrh Thabn for ODe year, plus $45 moreto spOnsor her for a second year. Not mae penny, incidentally.Qilme from the childreo's parents 011' from "weekly allowances."• • • The question is, who gainelll more fa:ODl the experiment,tile children at Hamagrael or Thahn? We can think of no betterway &0 teach childrelll in this eOll1ntry that there are mlllioMof people In the world who are colell, hungry and sick ••. Per­bliPS, come faU, Sisters and lay teachers' In parochial schoolswill use the same technique to help our PALESTINIAN REFU­GEES, &be pOOl' unfortunates who are subsisting in exile. W«lean support a FAMILY of REFUGEES for $10 a month, $120II :rear • • , What better way to teach youngsters the meani~

III the corporal works of mercy? .•. CLIP, TmS COLUMN anclwrite to lIS. We'll be delightelll tel make the arrangements for

'"'

?,RESENTPLACQUE' TO BISHOP: At the goldenjubilee of St. Anthony of the Desert Church. F~ll River•.Paul K. Handy of the Lebaneee consulate. Boston. presentsa pIacque to Bishop Connolly while ChOl' Bishop Joseph Eidlooks on approvingly. .,

Bishop Reads Lettel'From Rome cit Rite

During the ceremony com­memorating the 50th anniver­sary. of ,the I foun~ing of St.Anthony C1f the Desert Parish,Fall Rlver, and the dedication 01.the .new catechetical~socialcen';'ter, Bishop Connolly. read a let­ter from Amleto G. Cardinal,Cicognani that conveyed wordsO!f felicitations. and 11 specialApostolic Blessing from PopeJohn, XXIII to all present and

. all who participated in the affair.CardinalCicognani, 'formerly

Apostolic Delegate to the UnitedStates and now secretary of theSacred Congregation for the Ori­ental Church, congratulated thepastor and parishioners on theiCompletion of the new catechet­ical-social center named in honO!'of Father Sharbel.ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA.FA£L RIVER? A planning meeting for a par­ish observance of the feast ofm. Jl.nthony will be held at 7:36Monday night, June Ii Wi theparish hall by the iCouncil fJlCatholic Women.ST. KILIAN,NEW BEDFORD

New CYO officers includeNancy Oliver, .president; Ray­mond Costa" vice president;Richard Levesque, treasure....loan Vieira, secretary. Bowlingleague officers are Charles Bar­ton, Jr., president; Michael Kob­za, treasurer; Francine Filipek,secretary.

ReconsecrationLISBON (NC) -Manuel e.­

dinal Goncalves Cerejeira, Patri­8ll'ch of Lisbon, l'el1ewed tIMoonsecration of. Portugal to theSaCl'ed Heart of. Jesus and tiieImmaculate Heart of Mary at 1mou~oor Mass here...

$IRALD L

Me'NALLY.GEN;EItAL CONTRACTOR~.~ MMN ~ rrA,1i I!'1SWR

m~G3~

. '

"YOUR BA.NKH

o

SLADE'S FERRY TRUST COGISOMIRSE'I'. MASS. - Nat to Stop & Shop

• • .'~ yow participotiofl ift thepowth of a new BanlOOg mstitutioft

• COMMERCIAl and SAYINGS SERVICE• MORTGAGEs. - A4IfO CIRd ~ANCE IlOANS

Ac:couftts lnewed Wp lo $+0,000MeMber~ D.pod IMwanc. eo. '

lilavoid J. Regan, Presideld

",T. ANNE'S,FALL RIVER

Teen-age dances will be heldin the school auditorium from7:30 to 10:30 tomorrow night,and from 6:30 to 8:30 Saturdaynight. '

SS. PETER AND PAUL,.FALL RIVER'The Women's. Club' will hold

a meeting, at 8 Mond·ay night,June 5, featured by a' squared~ncing demonstration by JamesH. Sullivan, Jr. Mrs. JamesWalmsley is chairman, aided byMrs. James H. Sullivan, Jr.

The unit plans a dinner andpenny sale at 6:30 Thursdaynight, June 8 with Mrs. JamesWholey and Mrs Raymond Doo­ley in charge of the dinner andMrs. Roger Duge and Mrs. Stan­ley Janick arranging the sale.All activities are in the churchhall.ST. DoMINIC,SWANSEA

Annual corporate Communi9ftof the Women's Guild will takeplace at 9 o'clock Mass this Sun-'day. \". .

lMMACULA~ CONCEPftOM.FALL RivER'

The annual installation ban­quet of the Women's Guild isset for 6:30. Wednesday night,June 7 at White's restaurant.Guild members will entertainand tickets, which must be pur­chased by Sunday, June 4, are.available from Mrs. DoloresCangello, president, or, Mrs.Henry Gillet, Mrs. (korge:Char-'bonneau. and Mrs. Joseph,Car­valho registrars in charge oibanquet arrangements.

. 0

ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISINEW BEDFORD

Atty. Julia A. Joyce will speakat the annual communion break­fast of the Women's Guild,plan­ned to follow 9:30 Mass thisSunday morning and to be heldat M and K restaurant.

New guild officet'S includeMrs. Marcel J. Ledoux, presidentMrs. Peter Blair, vice 'president; ,Mrs. Libero Busnengo, record­ing secretary; Mrs. Anthony P.Cardullo, treasurer; Mrs. JosephGalipeau, corresponding seCI'e­tary.HOLY NAME,NEW BEDFORD

New officers for the Women'­Guild will be installed at adinner meeting set tor 6:30 MOB­day night, june 26 ill the periShhall. To be seated are Mrs. Wil­liam Carter, junior president;Mrs. Albert Frates, vice presi­dent; Mrs. Joseph Powers, treae­urer; Miss Frances McCartb¥.,secretary. In charge of reserva­tions is Mrs. Elmer Paul. '!'beuni¢ wID' hold corporate Com­muDicmat 9 o'clock Mus SUD­day morning, June 36, followedby coffee, also in the halL

SANTO CHRISM,'FALL RIVEa -

Sunday, June 141 18 the date setby the Council. of Catholic Wo­men :fo!o a musical, "Ole Vaud­eville." Mr& Mabel Oliver ..ctirectolt. .

InstaUation Ceientonies, .

The Parish ParadeIST. ROCH,FALL RIVER

The Council 01. Catholic Womenwill close its season Monday;night, June 5, with 'a dinnermeeting at Copicut Lodge. Dane-:­ing school students will enter­tain. Plans will be made for amystery ride in August· and aSeptember fashion show.

Members are' requested 10meet at 6:30 Monday night infront C1f St. Roch's School, inorder to leave for the dinner illa body.

ST. MARY'S,MANSFIELD

The Catholic Women's Clubwill'have as officers for the com­ing year' Mrs. Helen GalliPeau,president; Miss Rose Vassanelli,vice president; Mrs. Mary JaneGreen, recording secretary; Mrs.Vera McCauley, correspondingsecretary; Mrs. Helen Fales,treasurer.

HOLY TRINrrV,WEST HARWICH

Summer activities 01. tileLadies' Association of the SacredHearts will include a July car­nival and an August auction.New officers include Mrs. FrankB. Sanborn, president; Mrs.Roger Nunes Jr.; vice president;Mrs. Pierre F. Lavedan, secre- I

tary; Mrs. John F. DonIa,..treasurer.

ST. MATHIEU,FALL RIVER'

The Women's Guild will holdinstallation ceremonies at White'srestaurant Sunda'y evening, June4. A smorgasbord at 6:30 'willprecede the installation. Mrs. CoCamille Whitehead and Mrs.Philias M. Garant are'in chargeof arrangements..

OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEl..SEEKONK

The Women's Guild plans aCommunion breakfast this Sun­day at The Woodcrest, TauntonAvenue, Seekonk. A guest speak­er will be featured. Fail plan­ning includes the formation Of abowling league.

NOTRE DAME,FALL RIVER

June activities for the Councilof Catholic Women will includea roller skating party tomorrownight, and a ham and bean sup­per and parcel post sale in theparish hall Saturday night.

ST. JEAN BAPTISTE,FALL RIVER .

Mrs. Thomas Tache heads t'heCouncil of Catholic Women fOl'the sixth :term, aided by Mrs. A!­fred Berube, vice president; Mrs.Oscar Phenix, secretary; MI'8.·Roland Lafleur, treasurer. '

NOTRE DAME,FALL RIVER

Notre Dame Council will holda ham and bean supper from 6to 8 Saturday night in the schoolhall.

ST. ANTHON~FALL RIVER

Parishioners will celebrate'the patronal feast of 1lhe parish'from June 12 through 1"1 with avaried program including re­ligious observances, processi~.

concerts, auctions and bazaanr.Manuel Domingos is, generalchairman, aided by Frank B.Silvia, bazaar chQil'-man.

ST. LAWRENCE,NEW BEDFORD

. The Parish Couptes' Club wBlhold its annual meeting Wednes­day night, June 'f at WbtteflIrestaurant. ReservatioDII JDUlMibe made by today. New officeswill be elected under 1he dl­rection of III nominating c0m­

mittee heai,ied by Mr. and -.Donald SciscentJo.

. S. PIUS XSOUTH YABM(){JftI

Food sales wW be eonduetedby the Women's Guild fbe !a8tSaturda"s of JUne, July andAugust Itt Erwm!'s~Y;armouth Shopping Plaza. MIs.Earle Claf'Jro m iD eh~ Gi8ll"rangemenb. 'i'!he unlit w.iU.~n rummage We lZ1 9 this Sa$>.Uil"-de.y in the~ hun.~tions cholilUl be brought to thehai1 hy 'Ilomo:m.w. MM. JamesQul:rk~b~oi~~j{:cl;.

Page 15: 06.01.61

,. ,

Ec]~gti'towlS

ST. EILIZABlETR$5@

Elizabeth Guild

porothy COX

Home madeCANDIES' .

CHOCOLATES ,

150 Varieties

ROUTE 6 near

Fairhaven Auto Theatre

FAIRHAVEN, MASS.

st.

Specta€tst8 tnSpeci",l Floral Arrangementa

• ,Funerals «l Corsagese Weddings • Hospital

2082 Robeson 59.Fall River 055-7804

8rewstet'DmKACULATE CONCE~

$25Mr & Mrs J. Murray Booth

$20Mr Edwin Lopes, Mr & M'l8

George Lane, Mrs Esther John­son, Miss Mary I. Medeiros, Al"ePackage Store, Roland Authiell'l,Alfred Hall. .

$15Mr & Mrs Frank C. Mello, M!'

& Mrs Ernest Campos, GeorgeT. Silva, Depot Corner ServiceStation IIle., Mr & Mrs JohnO'Neil.. ,

Mr & Mrs Theodore Henley,Miss Teresa Brown, Miss PatriciaBrown.

$25. Miss Jean Britcher, EnS'WOrih

Fisher, Alfred Doyle, Corrinete, Beauty Shop, Connor.'s Market.

Mr & Mrs Donald Berube,Harborside Liquor.

, - '$10 ,J. Axel Hoglund, J:ohn F. Ma­

deiros, Mrs Mary ~Paul ,& MiSlLaura Paul, Irene B.Henly, Wil­liam . P. Silva, Miss WinifredGolding, Edgartown Cafe.

Joseph C. Mell~, Mrs Issac:Norton, Memory of, Edmund.Richards, Memory of SuzanneE. Mercier, William Wilcox.

John Bauer, Albert K. Sylvia. Jr. Arthur' Metell, Mrs OliveJackson, George Willoughby.

Miss Mildred Mercier, ManuelJ, Santos, M. V.Co-op Dairy.Norton &, Easterbrook _Inc., Eu­gene Belisle.

Joseph White, Manuel ThomasFreeman Willoughby, HerbertMercier Sr., Edgartown DrugCo.

Colonial Inn, Manuel L. Cor­Jr..eia,Williaxn Brown, Gertrudo

C. Hartney, Manuel Nunes GoUl-:lart, Mrs Philip J. Norton.

A Friend.

L -E M • E U X'PWM81NG & ,HEATING, INC.'I~' for DomeO¢iC

I~"~Of! Burners SerYi!oD

WY 5-16312283 ACUSHNIET AVi.

NEw BEDFORD

Gordon- B., Ruggles, M~Ruggles.

ST. JOHN THE B~ST$100

A Friend, Joseph A.Perry$25

r...siga 01 Qvalit-, •••

formerly Motor Sales Company­

PORO DeALERS FOR ova 38 YEARS

1344-86' Purchase St. New Bedford, ~af!:S'

COME, IN SEE and DRIVE

THE 161_ FORDS, . .

.,.... Worfd'. Most Beautifully. Proportioned Cci....,,at

ASHLEY· F'ORDSALES

*'~ *. No. E~ * It Bridgawater,'*~~ '* PkmwiSbaM 'tIM new BloCkton East-~ng ptam

MtO Y&r OR ... SfOH IN N!W BeDfORD

$15Albert Simmons

.. $10 -Mr & Mrs W.alter Adams, Heleo

Bettencourt, Mary Bettencourt,Mr & Mrs Manuel Cabral, Mr &

.. :Mrs Raymond Cabral. 'Mrs Mary Correia, Mr ~ Mrs

Camillo Costa, Mr & Mrs'.AntoneMello, Arthemisia Perreira, Mr,& Mrs Joseph Rodriques, MrsAngelina Vargas.

Miss Gloria Alcobia,ST. JOSlElP'lllI

, ,$700.Rt. Rev. Louis E. PrevoSt

$25In remembrance of Pierre Dy­

fault, A Friend. ', $20_

Mr & Mrs Lucien Bernique$10

Fran.k ~. Alb~rt Grenier, Mr& Mrs Alphonse Dube, Mr &

, Mrs Hormidas Trial, Mr & MrsArthur Barrette, Mr & Mrs Wai:

. ,.ter Baillargeon" Mr &. MrsArthur L. Gaudreau.

Mr & Mrs. Edward Rose, ·Mr& Mrs Adelard DUbe, Mr & Mrs,Jo~eph Dufresne;' Mr & MrsHenry Paradis~

Mr & Mrs Rene Breault, 'Mr <!ItMrs Wilfrid Jette, Mr & Mrs\ndre Benoit. '

'-- ST. KILIAN$20

Mr 8£ Mrs Raymond Mahoney.$10

Anonymous, Mr & Mrs Theo­dore Pawelczyk, Mr & MrnJam~s Crowley, Rosalina Mello,Mr & Mrs Edward Metcalf, Mr &

. Mrs' John Silva..ST. LAWRENCE

$110Anonyplous

- :$20Mr & Mrs Thomas Bancroft

, $12.50Mr & Mrs Wilfred Demern

$10. Mr & Mrs Edward T. Pina, Mr ' "",,;=============91& Mrs Joseph M. DeRigge.

ST. TlI:IlIERESA\'Sdo

Mr ok Mrs Zephyp Paquin'OUll LADY OF ASSUMPTi!OW

$10'Agnes L. Thomas, Mr & Mrs

Jack Enos, Mr & Mrs SamuelBarboza, Joseph Tavares.

Mr.& Mrs Leo Duarte, AntoneM. Britto, Kilda Filkins, MaryBritto; Luey Cohen.

Dorothy Almeida, David Fer­nandes, Evelyn B. Gimette, Joha.,D. Hawkins,' Frank ~race.

~~: OUll ~lI.DitNl~~

IMc3 HmplGIIo. lllIoaSl'-JEl~Cll' flI'lIlll'naoo Units. .Ei\fBoleMLoW 000& helMmB. Burneli' ~fI:aalI oM mll<D ollU!l.~

StanIe, Oit COes 1ftC.·480 Mt. PIeuaD4 S~

Me.. Becltf)lhi WI I-1M

NEW ENGLANDCLAMB A IC ,.

Every Sunday - $2.95,including - A liw Lobstw

Ttl!

CASA BLANCA·Coggshall Bridge, Fairhaven

MIEN 17 - 25

'JlO~N l'HIENEW"Society @f Bro~hell"$ ofOl!JlIl"Ladyo~Providlence

-For information wri.te to:FATHER MASTER

St. Joseph ~he WorkerNovitiate

Warwick Neck, R. \I.

1C - :ocese of Fall River-Thurs. June 1, 1961

Ud~-J~ lDo$;} Ch~rrn~® ~~it~~W1d~T@W@W@ ~@trinAmru®[fB~«lt- '

By_ Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer; n.D..,/ ' Bishop of Reno .

, Slowly the Big Grin fades away. Begi~ning at the.eorner of a toothy mouth, not surprisingly reIlliniscent of

, the fate Teddy Rooseveit at San Juan Hill, the outliil~~become indistinct, blurred. Now it is almost gone, and whatis left is no more a grin but .speak . the same language, ota grimace of disillusionment. even remember their common·We had not thought it would roots.,be so;' Latin America, so we·' ' The Big Broth~r of the North'!fondly believed, was', ours for has never deigned, to .consider'centur-ies yet to come, Safely in . the Latin American as a Chris-·the pocket to tian in any serious sense. He hasdo with as we looked at him, in amusement orliked; ana it is disgust, as sunk in superstition,unplea~ant -.for besotted in' his degen,erateus to realize Catholicism, a fair subject forthat the.game is the most rabid ,and insulting, ·ofjust about over. , our evan~elicalsand barjo-play-The joke" for ing missioners. "what it is worth, He has never paused 'to assess - lPJIUSONER: Alberto Mul-is on us. the value of th,e Latin's spiritual )~rl fo,:, years Catholic youth

Long ago we culture simply because· it i:J leader of· anti-Communistereated for our- ,_ something so foreign to his own student '., organizatio~. iiiselves the im-. as to be stranger than outright ~ .age of the Big heathenism. 'J' Cuba; has been: seized byBrother of the North" bluff, It has never occurred to him· Castro's secret police. NCgenial, ! 'goodhearted, always to question the superiority ot'·, Photo'.ready to help, the little black- his own puritanism as compared,',eyed people out of their. difficul- with the other's spiritual syn- _,;:·ties; provide~, of course, that drome. Is not white indisputably ..they saw what was good for ,better than black? I

them' and were willing to make Spanish Cruelty Lie; -(....~e:- Bedfordthe neces'Sary minor adjustments I . ., .~ wfor our' benefit.' Then, opportunelyJina ques- " I IllOLY NAME

After all, it was only a matter tion of color, there is .the peren-· $150' .of a few contracts here and .nial·Black Legend. Few devices St. Vincent de Paul Society 01.th ' '1 ti H in all the history of propaganda Holy Name Parish., •

ere, III 01 or. n, co ee or have. been more effective- than'eopper, gold or l1ananas., $10 .

this: the enduring lie of Spanish .John KogUt, Paul ,Manning.Into Communist Arms cruelty as contrasted with Anglo-' I-r'ene Meade.

And 'in return. look ~f tho ,Saxon sweetness and lig,ht.splendid opportunities we, oHered 'JIlW:RolrACUJ]LA\T$E

10CONCElI"TIOOii

them: our political SYiHelJl.<.I • F,air-minded scholarship hasmake them look like. genuine set out to demolish it a thousand Jose ,Silvia, Gordo~ yieira,democracies; our 'culture ex- ,times over, but its fabric still Francisco Penha< ' .ported w1:J,olesaie to replace their stands in th!! minds Of most North OUR lLA\DY OlF R'lrll'. CARMEli.hopelessly antiquated civiliza- Americans and its teaching still . $25tion; our business knowhow to perme.ates th,e textbooks of our Mr & Mrs CharleD Frates

schools. $"0supplant their tedious economic '"Not so blatantly as yesterday, M & Mr Arthur Hendricm

inefficiency;-our alert puritan- pe_rhaps, yet with'innuendo suf- ,r~. s $10 'ism to take over from theirlackadaisical Catholicism~ ficient to harden the core' of Mr _,& Mrs' James BorgeB,

It wa§ the best of a).l .. possible prejudice. So that our missi~ ·Children of Mary Sodality, Wil­arrangements. And why Latin to Latin America' has been inter- liam Costa, Cove View Clam

Preted as a crusade, to rewrite St d M Le Mr n.. 'I\J7_Americans, to a· man, should not an, ae mos, ~ .LIW<l>

· be eternally grateful f()r this history, to root out an evil, to John Martins, Mr ok Mrs Laur8ll1exercise a demon. S'lpriceless boon, this most. admir- 1 va. .

able of 'exchanges. puzzles and Our Attitude. QUR lLA\DiY OlF'PERPETUAL: annoys us. All this has crystallized into· lI:IlEA\lL'Jl'il["

It offends our sense of'the fit- an attitude, unspoken yet pow- . " $25, .'. ness of th·ings. Surely there is erful, that regards the Latin aa -Francis P. Grenn M.D."· revealed here an abyss of man's really' a sub-human who must SACRED HEA.RTinsensitivity ,to the better things be, humanized according to our-- $10of life which defies our candid pattern. . Mrs Rose Giammateo, Mr •analysis_ . When he has ·shown . willing- , Mrs Raynold Cabral, Mr & MN

Just think, in 50 years we have 'ness to comply, we have patted _ Albert, Au~ette, Mr & Mrs AD-· brought them from the gloom of him on the head like a good tone Asqumo.the 18th century to the clear child and praised his dawning ST. ANNE'Slight of the 20th! And in pay- enlightenment; when· he has $10 - .ment for our, benevolence they balked, we have 'expressed ~ur' ,~ Armine Fournt«stone our ambassadors,' drive grief and shock, as preliminary ST. ANTHONYout our businessmen, and. cast to more useful action. $10 .themselves into the anns. of the Is all this of yesterday a recital. . Mr Be Mrs Emilien Marcou:Communist ene~y. , of the sins "0,£ the 19th century, Mr ok Mrs Isaie Marcoux

Traces Causes the age of Joel Poinsett and ST. RANC:U:S OF ABSISIWhat has gone awry,? Too William McKinley? 'What hurts $Hi.

many things, obviously, for 'all is that, it remains the dominant • Be Mra Anthony Arnuul.d:i[to be dealt with in this exigu- of our thinking on Latin Amer-ST. RYACINTR 'ous space, but sOme so clamorous ica even at this eleventh hour. $25as to shout in our ears. Answer lis Simple Jameo 'Sylvie,. In the first place, and without In the long process of leanlin" ST. JAMESapology for stressing ,the jejune. .. a ....it is the Reformation which is to 'nothing we have forgotten very .....,

little of our prejudice. 'We have Mr Be MPc Walter~blame; the creation of tha,t great $" '. taught much of I:.atin America

chasm in the spirit of modern to despise its own, heritage Mr &; Mra Joseph Cblebusman whereby Christians no, without persuading it,llo enthuse ' Mr & Mrs Pietro ,Battistel!l.~onger understand eac~ other, or over our profered 'alternative. Mr & Mrs James C. Mul'iphy,.MIls

Prelate to 'Ordain We have set ourselves up asthe paladins of anti-colonialism

Convert in Shrmne while practicing in effect a cul-WASHINGTON (NC)-A con- tural and spiritual colonialism

vert from Judaism is among a mqre galling than the brokengroup of religious order men yoke of Spain.who are being ordained .Satur- And ~ow we wonder whyday in·the Shrine of the Immac- Communism poses so immediateuate Conception by Aukiliary a threat. south of, the border.Bishop Philip M. Hannan of Might not the answer be as sim­Washington. I pIe as saying that between two

He is Father Nicholas J. Rid~ ,would-be, saviors, the up~ooteddell, O.C.D., a' native o~· New ,Latin may prefer ihe one whichYork City, who became a con- has not yet insulted him?

, vert to Catholicism in 1948 while ,He' is wr,ong, but he has hisservihg -in the Navy. He attended reasons.'the ScRool of St. Philip Neri, for.delal'ed yocations, in Boston fornine months. His father became·a Catholic in 1956. His motheris deceased.·

Father Riddell will offer hisfirst Mass on June 4 in St. Eliz­abeth's church, New York, wbichis in the area where he grew up.The preacher at the ordinationMass will be' Father ArthurKlyber, C.SS:n.. ')f St. Alphon­sus Ligouri chu,rch St. Louis. &is also a CJl'., ,r't from Judaism.

'.

Page 16: 06.01.61

()

BENEFIT FOR NAZARETH: Proceeds of May Ballof Leon Caravan No. 122, New Bedford, will benefitNazareth Hall in Fall River. Left to right, Mr. and Mrs.Conrad N. Desmarais and Mr. and Mrs. Normand L. Rivet,co-chairmen. ')

,-

17

I u-KE BeING HELPFULl"mAD OF "'E~P\.ESSTME WAY I, WAS eEFORE

WE REH'!ED nils'<NHEEl CHAIR FROM

TOUHEY'SPHARMACY

No. DightonST. JOSEPH'S

$20Mr, & Mrs Roger Turner

Mattapoisett. S'I\ ANTHONY

$10:Mr & Mrs Oliver LaFranefJ

$isl\IIrs D. D. Brault

Mansfie~dST. MARY .

$10MT & Mrs John Maloney, M'r

& Mrs Ernest Marcotte, .DIIrtMHelen Richards.

$25Dr. Benjamin Kepnes

$10 _Mr & Mrs Loius J. Catanitl,

Mr & Mrs Oscar Larame, Mr &Mrs Allen McDonald, Dr RobectThrope, R. B. Corcoran Co.

John' Gonsalves. Mr & ~Lawrence Marsland, Dr & Mr!;Donald Snyder, Hyannis PhQtbmacy, Liggett's Drug Store.

Mrs Lydia Peters.

~JClfinisS'l' F~ANCIS XAvlEn

$SMHonorable and Mrs. Joseph a

Kennedy.$100

Louis D. Ricci$50 0

Bishop Wm. Tyler GenerlilAssembly, Fourth Degree, K C!:1CC. '

1ft!J~mouthST. PATRIC~

, $10Howard Johnson, Ellsworth

Nightingale, Raymond Dufomr..

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., June 1, 1961

Jewish Groups GiveXavier Scholarships

CINCINNATI (NC)-The Cin­cinnati Jewish Vocational Ser¥-­ic:e will provide $4,250 for twe

.graduate fellowships in pSYc~ogy 'at Xavier University here Dl ,the coming school year.

Leonard OSeils, Jewish Voea­tionaI Service consultant, wiDsupervise a workshop trainiDCprogram for the recipients of t.befellowships in a IT. S.-sponsorecipilot project for the vocatiolllli

/' rehabilitation of the mentallrand physically handicapped. '

Walter

WellfleetLADY OF LOURDES

$25

ST. MARY'S$122

Mr & Mrs Geo. Agostini

OUR

A Friend

The KEYSTONE:Warehouse Salesroom

New and UsedOFFICE EQUIPMENT

We show a large assortment of usedand new desks, chairs, filing cab·inets, tables, etc., in wood and steel.Also metal storage cabinets, safes,shelving lockers, etc.

"QI'lOS' James

near Union- . : WY 3-2783

, - NewBedforc-

~ SACRED HEART SCHOOLhi.. SHARON, MASSACHUSms

". A RESIDENT SCHOOL FOR BOYS...... Grammar grades 4-5-6-7-8". 11t! BROTHERS OF TtIE SACRED NEART ~

~.""'''''''A'''''''''''''''''''

202 ROCK STREEr

fALL RIVER, MASS.

~"""'."'''''''TT''''Y~., CAMP SACRED HEART ~~ SHARON, MASSACHUSEnS . ~~ Spacious Fireproof Sleeping Qu~ ~-'". For Boys 7 to 14 years old _ ~~ Six week-season: July 2 to August 13". Register for 2, or 4, or, 6 weelrs...... Free Tutoring if desired,..- THE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART

$10Nickerson Funeral Home, Mr

& Mrs Lawrence ROse.

FairhavenST. JOSEP~

$30Joseph H. McKenzie

$25Raymond Barbero,

Silvia.$20

Mr & Mrs James R. WalkerS10

Joseph B. Sullivan, FrederickJ. Franklin, Denis D. Brault,George Henry Tripp, Edward M.Silva.

George N. Gagnon, Albert J.,Volpe, Hugo Frediani, WilliamB. Barron, Edyth Rankin.

ST. JOSEPH$25·

Mrs ·Yvonne Hamel$10,

Norman Poissant, Albert Four­nier, Conseil Jeanne d'Arc No.263, Oscar Desrosiers, Felix Des-marais. /

Albert Raymond, Alfred Rose,James Martin, Oscar Courcy, ,MrsLucille Martin, Mr & Mrs Wil­liam Bowie.

$25Mr & Mrs William Lovell

. $10Mr & Mrs Raymond ,Croke,

Mr & Mrs Joseph Lewis, Mr &Mrs Robert McCracken.

.... :t,II' _' _

PRINTERS

AuxiliCH'Y PlCIRIsBOSTONOCEANPORT, N. J•PAWTUCKET, R. l

Main Office and PlantlOWEll, MASS.

Telephone loweRGl8-6333 dnd GL 7-7500

SULLIVAN BROS.

NO JOB TOO BIG'

NONE TOO SMALL

$11John Andrade

ST. JQHN$100

Mr & Mrs Raymond F. Brennan

$13Joseph S. Medeiros

$12Vasco Pires

Attleb,oroHOLY GHOST,

$25Luigi Pinacoli

, $20In memory of Fr. McNulty

$10Edwin Nunes, Lucien' April,

Mr & Mrs Howard Cruff.

DONAT BOISVERTINSURANCE AGENCY~ Kinds Of Insvrance

86 WILLlAM S'l'REET

MEW BEDFORD. MAss.DIAL WY 1-51saPenonaf Service

$10st. Anthony's Women's Club,

Cape Cod Quality Store, AugustAlmeida' Florence Almeida,

.' John Ar~ujo Jr.John P Cabral, Manuel P.

Cabral, Antone Correia, JesseCosta, Joseph J. Costa.

Mary I. Costa, David Couto,Mary Emerald, Servulo ~. Fer-,reira, Thomas Ferreira.

John C. Frias, Lawrence Gou­laI'd, Richard Hirtle, Paul LaceyArthur Lawrence., John Leighton, Francisa LewisPatrick W. Lewis, Frank S.Ma~ks Jr., Arthur W. Marshall

East Fa~mouth Jack Marshall, Ji'rank T. Mc-ST. ANTHONY Nally, Charles Medeiros, Joh,n

$50 0 Medeiros Jr, Manuel C. Medel-Herminio & Alvaro Lopes, ras. ./ .

Moonakis River Nursery Alfred . Flora B. DeMello, Manuel S.M. Soares, Antone B. C~to Jr. 'DeMello, Eugene MQniz, Gilberi

$35 Moniz, _Theophilus Moniz. .John Cordeiro, Lawrence Pet- Anthony Oliver, Louis Perry,

ers. ' Rosalie Pimental, Jasper Puck-$30 .! ett, Joseph Rabesa.

Jean's Bakery, Edward T. Justino Simoes, Mary G. Si-Mello, Manuel & Eva Lopes, mons, William K. Soares, WalterManuel S. White Jr. Stone, George D. Sylvia.

' , $25 Mrs Jesse B9telho, Joseph P.Edmund Lopes, Adolph Bishop, Cabral Jr., Manuel R. Costa,

JQseph Lewis, Frank Lima, GiI- Patricia Couto, Emily E~ereldbert, Pacheco, Robert B. PachecoSt. Anthony's Club of Falmouth. Manuel Fernandez, John F.

Fresh Pond Holy' Ghost Soc- Ferreira Jr., Frank T. Medeiros,iety, Crystal Fuel Oil Co., Mr Frederick De· MellQ, Antonio.& Mrs George J. DeMello, Paul- Mendoza.ino Rodriques, Richard Cory. Ernest MQtta, Antone Oliver

. $20 Jr., John B. Pacheco, ManuelPatrick Bishop, George Cabral, Peters, John Silvia Jr.

Alfred Flora' & Son, Arthur S. The Reine Family, RobertMello, ottola De Mello. Roderick, Alice Serrano, JoJm

Manuel F. Rapoza, Frank V~lerio. 'Souza Jr., Sylvester Tavares &Son, Gilbert Tavares, Frank M.Teixeira.

Joseph Teixeira, John F. Sou­za, Manuel Corey, Adlein Moniz,John Pena.

$15In memory of Mary Bonita'

by her son William, Francis'Barrett, Joseph Bishop, ErnestP. Cabral, Lawrence S. Costa.

Joseph G. Ferreira, FrankFiguerido, Joaquim E:iguerido,Joseph .Figuerido, Joseph A.Martin.

Rodney De Mello, ManuelNetto, Daniel L. Pacheco, JamesPine, Frank Rego.

John L. Tavares, Manuel S.White, Smokey's Dairy Bar,Richard Geggatt, Scoba Rhodes& Fainily, Frank Simmons, FredS. Travers

Lucy Santiago & Daughter,Holy Ghost Soeiet¥ (Women'sGroup) ,

Buzzard,s BayST. MARGARET

$30 'Bishop Daniel Feehan Council,

No. 2911 of Bourne.$10

Mr &: Mrs Thomas Dunbury,Wallace Auto Service, RobertiElectric Co., Buzzards Bay The­ater, Mr& Mrs 'curtis Frye, Bas­nengo Hardware Inc. '

David Fannin, Mr & Mrs wit­liam Gregg, Arthur D. Kemp,A Friend.

reaux.Edmond Courcy, Lucien Courey

Albert Cournoyer, Charles DonatCyr, George Cyr.

Rene Dagenais, AlphonsineDeChamplain Family, WilfridDesalliers, Armand DesautelS,

, Irene Gaouette.Normand Gaouette, Ri~hard

Guillemette, Normand Hamel,Edward Hayes, Therese Lafrance

Laurent Larivee, Maurice La­rocque, Arthur Lavoie, LinaLebrun, Ludger Lenney.

Irving L'Esperance, RogerLevesque, Elias Martin, Ray­mond Nevitt, Clive Olson.·. Raymond PelIe'tier, Ella Plas~,

Blanche Richard, Charles Roch­eleau,' Norman Ross.

Adele & Lorraine Tremblay,Germaine Turcotte.'

ST. PA.Ul[,$10 ,

lVlr & Mrs Manuel Braga, Mil­dred Braga, Edward Corr Sr..Mr &,Mrs Roland Menard. ,

OUR LADJl OF LOURDES$103

O. L. of L.-St.: Vincent de'Paul Conference.

$25Henry A. Alves Jr.; D.M.D.,O. L~ of L.-CYO Unit.

$10Joseph Silva, Alice B. ,Alves,

James Gonsalves, James P. Sil­via, Raymond Emond.

Alfred E. Terra, Manuel S.Thadeio.

SACRED HEART$10

Edward J. Dion, Mr & MrsLeni Palazesi, William Meehan,Fred Miles, Mrs Veronica Bolduc.Mr & Mrs Clarence Brady.

Because He Cared . . .1TauntQnST. MARY'S

$100Harold Sheehan

$50 0

Rev. Gerald T. ShoveltonGeorge HarringtonRichard BentleyElizabeth Thrasher

$40Edward T. & Grace E. O'Keet!e 0

$25Daniel A. J. Doyle,. Dr Joseph

A. Nates, Margaret Coleman, DrWilliam Dawson, Dr B. EdwinZawacki.Cynthia O'Brien, Mary O'BrieB

Catherine Winston$2@

Mary Fountain, Harold'H. Gal­ligan, Mr & Mrs Charles Lin­coln Sr., Mr & Mrs FranciaNorton.

SUMary E. & Josephine So Mc­

Namar~, Dennis Sullivan, Stan­ley Tokarz, Joseph Cote, ThomasFitzpatrick, Lillian Theroux.

$12John Grant

$10Adeline Cote,. George E. Dion

Robert Dion, Mrs Daniel A.' J.Doyle, Mr & Mrs Walter Fitz­gerald.

Janne & Jimmy Gallagher,Kathleen Hogan, Mrs RobertLeonard, Mr & Mrs Andrew Mc­Breen, Mr & Mrs Francis P.McCabe.

Robert McClellan, William F.McGowan, Robert McGuire"Marjorie Magee, Eileen R. Mar­tin.

Alice Mattos, Antone Mattos,Harold Mosher, Audrey Mattos,Anna V. O'Keefe.

Joseps Orsi, Ralph O'Sullivan,Thomas Quinn, Catherine &:Anne Scanlon, Mr & Mrs Man­uel P. Silvia.

Richard Scanlon, Mrs Fred­erick Tripp, Harold _Wilber.

Margaret Andrade, Mrs Wil­son Angell, Alexander Bury, Dr

, Walter Campbell, John J. Cam­pion.'Dora Carey, Anne Can-oIl,

Grace Clinton, James F. Cole,Edward Corr.

Kathleen Corrigan, Mr & MrsStephen Crosby, Joseph DooleyMrs John J. Doyle, Dr EdmundFitzgerald.

Henry Foley, David Fuller,Tho'mas Granfield, Winifred 'Laughlin, Janet McKenna. "

Elizabeth McKenna, OwenMcKenna, Mary Maloney, Geo.Gegan, John Mulholland.

Mary Mulholland, BarbaraO'Brien, John O'Connell, PatrickO'Donnell, Mrs Daniel Perry. .

Catherine Rayment, Mrs RalphReckard, George Sanford, Mr &Mrs Walter Skwarlo, Harold T.Sheehan, Mrs Margaret Toomey&: Evelyn Toomey

Mrs Mary Dowd, Mrs AugustaFlanagan, Pauline Flynn, JohnGonzales, Mrs John Lawson.

May Lovell, Mr ,& Mrs JohnO'Hearne, Mr & Mrs WalterParker, Q-eorge Spiro, Edward·Tokarz, Clara Silvia.,

James Burns,'Ernest W. Daw­son, Charles E. 'Flaherty, JuliaA. Galligan, Charles Lincoln Jr.

Peggy Mullins, Catherine &:Elizabeth O'Connor,' Mrs JohnO'Hearne, John O'HearM; JaB.'Powers.

Dr John E. Regan, Mary Wall,James Ward, John Medar, Louis.Raposa.

HOLY FAMILY\ $25

Walter Starvish$10

Ernest 'Andrews, GertrudeCamara, Correia Family, JohnT. Martin, Mrs 'Blanche Picard._.IMMACULATE CONCEPTION

$50Immaculate Conception Wo­

men's Guild.$lG

Mr & Mrs Desmond Bagge, Dr& Mrs Richard Cooke, Mr & MrsRoland Desrosiers, Mrs MaryMcKenna & Grace O'Brien,Anonymous.

ST. ,JACQUES$1,000

m Memory 01. Reov. WUl1amSmith. '

$100, Rev. Aadre P. Jussaume

$50III l\('E!IDOI'Y 01. Rev. Williem

Smith.

•.Joseph B. Anctu, Joseph W.AncW, Hormisdaus Carbonneau,Raymond Cal'reaux, Wilfrid.car-

Page 17: 06.01.61

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Thus, at present there is com­bat over the comparative wortllof American schools and Euro­pean s~ools. The advocates of·the European system. as super­ior contend that it makes, thechild work harder and get bet­ter ·results. Defenders of theAmerican system regard theEuropean as somehow inhu.manand indict it as undemocratic.

That there are differeaces,Mr.'oMayer's report establishes.For example, the Europeanprincipal, in contrast to hi6American counterpart, alwaysdoes some teaching. "In Amer­ica nearly 10 per cent of, thestaff is engaged full time in 'su- .pervision.' "

"New York City employs morepeople in educational super­vision than all of France; NewYork State and its school dist­ricts taken together employ'more administrators than all ofWestern Europe.)' > '

But when one has read whatMr. Mayer has to say, the one:'justifiable conclusion would . WIN l'ROP1HLn:ES: The Al Williams awards for indi-seem to be that there are much ' ' , ,the same differences' within the vidual effort' in the St. John the ~aptist parish bowlingEuropean system as within the league, New Bedford, are presented by Mrs. Williams toAmerican; that not all schools in co-champions Manuel Cardoza, left, and John Silvia, whileeither place adhere to the same F th L' Cd' . h . ttl k~tandard; and that excellence a. er UlZ ar oza, patIs '-aSSIS, an, 00 son.

. ~~~h.de.ficiency c~n be found in Nc;Jme Cathol ic Leader Top Woma~, .' So, too, with Mr. Mayer's .

lengthy analysis of-the reign of In Reiigious, and. Civic Activitiesprogressivism in' American edu- . NEW YORK (NC) -'- Mrs. Al- returned from the 50th anI..cation. On balance his judgment bert R. Spillman of Hempstead, ve"sary convention of the Worldon this would have to be inter.:.. N.Y., a leader in national and. Union of Catholic Women's 01'­preted as adverse. worldwide affairs o.f Catholic ganizations in Rome, where she

Yet; looking into the historical women, has been named the out- was reelected vice-presidentdevelopment of progressivism, he standing woman of 1960 in reli-' general and member of the ex­discovers conditions which ap- gious and civic activities. ecutive board. She attended thepeared ,to call for something of ,She was cited in one of 14 convention as a' delegate of'the sort. Its excesses and follies .' awards made by the editors of NCCW. _he as.sails almost 'savagely, .anil· '''Who's Who.~f American Wom- Wife of ProfessorespeCIally does he rap ·its rIgid, _an". for achievements in profes- Mrs. Spilhrian is a member ofpretentious, and absurd dogma~ sional, .social and cultural fields. the executive committee of thetism. '

Its worst disservice, acco'rding Mrs. Spijlman, former vice- .. Nati~nal Catholic Communityto him, was its supe~stition of president of the National Coun- SerVIce a~d of the board ofscien.tism ("proving," for' in,_ cil 9f Catholic Women, recently g.ove~nors of the USO. Sh.e is. ac-

tIve In a number of orgamzationsstance, that it is physi910g ically C h die cOcvoted to work in th~ social,.impossible for a' child to' read at, era . amp Ifbefore the a,ge of"six and a half we are and .c~ild'ren's fields.

, .Continued ~from Page One Sh' th 'f f Albthe while children of three were .at9 'o'clock, and will leave 'camp , e IS e WI e' 0 ert R.in 'fact, lear,ning to read).. .,' "Spillman, professor of education

. at 4 o'Clock in the afternoon. at City College of New York.Again, it is a common thing All day campers 'must bring

to del' ide the innumerable their lunches and will hav.e milkcourses in .education which stu- served to 'them at lunch time.dents ill Cteachers' colleges and, . All' the facilities of the oldestother teacher-training institu- ca:mping facility in the Diocesetions have to take. These are will be available to the dayscored as' a mere mumbo jumbo' ,campers.

. of methodology. Mr. Mayeragrees that there is warrant for'such objections. But he insistSthat, if potential teachers do notget enough of subject matter tobe taught, neither. do they getenoughp'reparation in' 'provedand, effective techniques. 11ft'

other words, the methodologycourses are assailed for not do­ing nearly enough to communi:"cate methods.

T~acher training ,gets someattention in this book, but per­haps not enough, since Mr.Mayer argues that excellence in,teaching is indispensable andall too rare. Indeed, the ohief of,~he faults which he alleges inAmerican education and in con­crete classroom performance isthe ineptitude, if not stupidiry,of too much attempted teaching.

Mr. Mayer occasiolllllly writesstodgily, and possibly only theexpert can riddle what he istalking about at ,certain points.On the other hand,' his book ispacked with pungent comment.In' four words, fcOr example, hecan put a finger on 'a 'major ob­stacle to learning-"teachellStalk too mueh." . , .

THE ANCHO~--"-Dioceseof F,~ River-Thurl; June 1,19"J8Mayer. Writes AppraisalOf American Education.

By Rt. Rev. Magr. John S.' KennedyMartin Mayer is a bright, inquisitive, and industri()'(J~

~ungman who has. already written bulky and opinionatedbooks on Wall Street and the advertising business. Now, in:!'he Schools (Harper Bros. 'N.Y.C., $4.95), he undertakes60 disclose the performancefa the American classroom.Like the rest of us, he haabeen aware of a roaring con­C:r-oversy about the value of Am-

,liH'ican education. \ "The' 'criticshouts that theIJehools are lazylHld the educat­on; are fools;'rH1 e educatorIIh <. u t s backtlhat the criticsON reactiona­l'.i.eS 'and theireriticisms areignorant .... In , ,' ..tiheir desire. to ".,.,;.~X;:~.,score debatmg ,;~~,l't~oints, however, .the controversialists repidlyii'ise . above the vulgar questionof what is actually happeningin our schools." He decided to'lfind out. . ,.

He spent 30 months in obser­vation, reading, and even a bitIlllf ,teaching (a desperate .re­~urse, that). He examinedschools all over the country andsome in Europe-mostly inFrance, Engfand, and Scan!li­lI1avia. He conducted interviews,tread . dozens of books, took!reams of notes. , .

The' book' which resulted isdivided 'into three parts: Thefir,st sketches the ,culture' 9fwhich American schools are an~xpress.ion, and skims the his­tory of 'education in the UnitedStates: The second is a, more ort.e s s systematic account of.American public school educ~­

tion from kindergarte!l throughhigh school. The third lists andcomments on what the authoreonsiders "the most immediate,.-cal issues in American educa- .twn:" . ,

Although many of the 4~7'

pages are' devoted to a detailedand sometimes difficult discus­sion of technical matters, a spe­ciality of the book is the inclu­sion of scores of vignettes.

In these, Mr. Mayer reportswhat he saw and heard in thisela'ssroom, that administrator's'office, etc. Often he merely re­ports, deadpan, yet it is obviouswhether or not he approves the~as and attitudes which areeo~veyed by the people' he .is~'ting.. '"

'. Ignores Human BeingBefore taking up some of his

II.'lndings, one' should note. tha~be :nowhere evidences profoundl'eflection on the sUbje'ct of edu­Gation-the human being. He·cIo6s not ask, much less does he

'"'t . answer, such crucial atld con..:trolling questions as the follow...lng. What is a human beir;lg1­Wijat is his nature? What is hisdestiny? ,

True, he approves toe notionof :education for citizenship. Hesays, "W"illynilly, all schoolsmust work from the basis ofEmile Durkheim's rather grimdefinition 'Education consists of .a methodical socialization of the

'. young generation.''' But this issaid merely in passing: elemen-,tary terms are not defined. .

Here is a critical flaw in'tIhebook. Differences in fundamen-.tal philosophy account for crit­ical differences in the orienta­tion of schools, the curriculum,the treatment of the pupils.

Mr. Mayer does see that ex­periments with animals cannot,be taken as full and -infallibleguides to educational techniques,

cwhere children are concerned.'But bis reason for objecting to'mechanical transfer. of findings,about the former to the teach-,ing of the latter is not that there'is a substantial difference 00-',tlween the two, but rather t1hat,aU factors' in eXileriments withanimals can be controlled, 'whereas such is not the case'where children are involved.

. Over-SupervisedMr. Mayer cannot be said to

be a fierce partisan. Although!be holds strong convictions andean betray asperity in criticism,he seeks to be fair.

Page 18: 06.01.61

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COLLEGE HONORS WAR HERO: Richard Oardinal Cushing dedicated the newsports area which Boston College has named in honor of Cmdr. John .J. Shea, V.S.N.."Scholar, Athlete and Patriot,H killed in, World War II. At the' unveiling of the dedica­tory plaque, are, left to right, Father Michael J.Walsh, S.J., president of Boston College;Jo~n J. Shea, son of the hero; Capt. C. A. Karaberis, U.S.N'1I eommander of theUSSWasp, and Cardinal Cushing. NC Photo. '

, -

S~~on Hall Faculty, Weighs' ,Futur, 'of Basketball.In the wake of the current ter building, part of the multi- "OUr young people will not be

eoneg~"basketball scand~ one' million dollar expansion program depriVed' 'of the benefits of ath­cath~~e school weighed~e,~ut- at the' lIchool's Jamaiea, N.Y.. letie'eompetition because of pa&i, "\1ft cd,: the sport whiltL~~other campus, was opened.' abuses, '1 Father. Flynn said.opened·an elaborate' gymnasium Two former St. John's players .---'~---------..

build,in,. ~ormer players of both l\fich~eJ.Parenti and William J: fAV·E MONEY ON''sehOOls have been involVed in ChrYstal, bpth of Brooklyn,N.Y., J ",the scandals. ", " have'been involved in the scan- YO"'U''R'

Msgr, J0!In J. Dougherty, pres- dals. They played at the. school . "OilHEAD' ident of Seton Hall University. 'for three years, ending in 194'7.

South' Orange; N.J.• operated by, . " ' ./1 wy " ,',the ·Newarkarchdiocese, said the ' ,," ,1,000 Capac~ .4iiI>", ,ttl. ....'future otbasketball at the sehool' The student. athletic cen~rwill.)1&: 1-6591k being studied a~· a, reSult of be ~,edic~ed by Bishop Bryan J.'the'seand~. , ";', . McEntegart of Brooklyn on,June

Two Seton Hall players,.Art ,11. The. building's gymnasiumHicks and Hank Gunter, have .has an overall seating capacity,been implicated in the point- of 8,000 and can seat 6,000 forshaving efforts of gamblers to athletie events. The building alsocontrol games. l\fsgr. Dougherty is equipped with a swimming,said the two players were sus- pool, an auxiliary, gym, a, 494­pended. from the sehool OIl seat theater and, other facilities. 'Mareh 1', the day after they Father John A. Flynn,'C.M.,were taken to the Distrid university president, said in­AttC>mey's office, iB New ,York volvement of the two former stu­101' questioning. He said ,~two' ckmts in the basketball scandalllwere dismissed from. the' sehool clouded the otherwise' joYOUSon April 12. oe<:asioIl 01. the gym opening.

Re~an RemalDsA eomm.ttee of five priests,

headed by Father Edward Flem­in& u,ni:versity exeeutive viee­president, is studying the basket­loall situation at the sehool, Meg!'.Dougherty said. The committeemeets weekly, but has reachedIllO cleclsion thus, far. It is ex­pected that Richie Regan, formerSeton Hall basketball star whowas in his first year as varsitycoach when the scandals broke,will be retained at the school.

At St. John's University, eon­ducted by the VincentlallFath~rs. 'a' student athletic cen-

Set Ho~y Fami~y'

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Serrans ElectNew officers of the Fan River

Serra Club include Bernard F.Sullivan, president; Dr. EugeneF. Sullivan, vice president; CyrilJ. Marcille, second vice presi­dent; Lewis R. Morley, secre~Francis J. Devine. treasurer.

School~yBase~allT:our~ey'Gets Underway Next Week

, By Jack Kineavy , 'The beginnin., of the end of the 1961 scholastic sports

program is at h8Q.d. Only~ hardy have survived the coldwet weather that for want of a better word is called Spring.League champions and runnersup in eight' team circuitsqUh~ifhY' for ~~TbOUnltheey OI'd this' year is' 5-2 and hiBW IC 18 s~n""n=u !. earned-run-average a'lowly 1.92.Headmasters AssocIation. 'Definitely the hard luck teamThere are three elasses Of iii post season play has been thecompetition. Bristol County en- Crimson of New Bedford. Char­tries, Fairhaven and Durfee, will ley Luchetti's talent-laden 196000 in A' Narry 'club lost shortstop Joe Sylvia onrep r a'lJ e n _ the eve of its first round gametatives - and with Somerville and, at that,who they may nearly pulled it out. This yearbe by the end the Crimson have another fineof play today is ball club but the mound staffanybody's guess lacks depth as a result of Skip_ are entered Martinez' arm injury. Look forin B and the wet weather, Charley.Cap e 'schools Absent from the Tourney ros-constitute the ter this year after many years ofarea's C delega- participation Is Wareham High.tion. New Bed- The Blue, in a building year,ford, sporting a finished weU.down i~ the Oldsparkling 11-0 record, will draw Colony standmgs, High ,waterdown one of the independent mark for the Capeway schoolberths in A. came in 1958 when they went to

The pairings in Classes A and the. finals before bowing toB have been standardized ac- South Boston and Ray Flynn,cording to leagues. The Bristol now of Providence College, ClemCounty champion, presumably Spillane who handled those

. Fairhaven, will meet the Bay clubs has since relocated in Ash­State's sec'Ond place club, yet to land, Mass.be determined. Tied for first in And so we approach the startthat loop are Natick and Welles- of the 1961 Tourney. Post seasonley Durfee High one game off baseball play doesn't begin tothe' pace with o'ne to go, has ' approximate ,the hoo'p-da thatclinched BCL's second Tourney attends the Te<:h Tourney but toberth. ' the participant~ it is equally

Case Holy Family and Som- vital. We extend our best to theerset ~re still in Contention in area's competing teams in theirNarry. The Ca,dinals dissolved tiUe quest.the three way tie for first byedging Prevost, 5-1, on ·Monday.The half game lead, however,was erased by the winner of theHoly Family-Somerset clash onthe Holiday. G,oing 'into today's The annual Communion Break-f · 1 d th to ti i.- fast of Holy Family High Schoolma roun, en, n p eex s.., Alumni A~""""iation will be held

with the third dub just one ...,,"'-game out. - Sunday, June 11, at Kennedy

Toul'lKl)' Oppoaeots Center, New Bedford. It willWhatever the final disposition follow' 9 o'clock Mass at St.'

of the standings, the Narry Lawrence Church where the al­titlist has drawn Hingham in the umi will receive Communicm inopening round. The South Shore a hody.school finished second to Silver Featured speaker-'will be'Rev.Lake in Old Coloro'. The Laken John P. Driscoll of SS. Pe,ter andwent to the quarterfinals last Paul Churdl, Fall River. Sehol­year, disposing, of Somerset in arship and ,athletic awards, winthe initial round before being ,be presented according to aD an­eliminated' by Coach AI Trem- nouncement made by Atty. Mau­blay's fine Prevost nine. riee F. Downey,: general cbaiJ-..T~ is no fonnat for ClaSl ,man. , "

C teams. Selections and pnirings ' ',I.'he annual meeting, of the: Gr­

are made by the, ·Tourney eom. ga~tion wUl be helti· FrJday,mittee and these are scheduled. ,June 9, at Holy Family, .B,ighto be llJUlClqftced. today. All. gamee ,~Se.hool ~nd a ,memorial M,ass,forup to the finals will be played on ' deceased members will be saidfields lIIlutUally agreed upon by at St. Lawrence Church at 8rival coaches. 'Playulg sites for Saturday 'morning, June' 10;':the championsJiip round will, be ' Speetal Notice " .?~termmed by· TOurney authOr- . Special recognition win beIlles who also will assign \1m- given the anniversary classes ofpires throughout the competition, 1911, 1938 'and 1951. The 'class of

.Historically, area telUM have 1936 will have a reunion Supperdistinguished th~lvesag~ and dance Saturday, June 10 atthe State's best. The apex came the Silver Gull in Mattapoisettin 1957 when Durfee, under while the class of 1951 will con­Coach Luke UrbaD, took A bon- duet a simllar affair the sameors, then went 011 to defeat evening at' Stevenson's North~pringfield Trade for the S~te Dartmouth. ' .'. .ti~e. Meanwhile, CI'OSS - river Robert B. DUrant, D.D.S., btne18bbol' Somerset went au the chairman 01. the clsa 01. 1986way in Class B, defeating former eelebration and George E: But­State ehampion ~Uford, en route.. ler, alumni PftSident, 14 in charge

Back in 1955 when there Weft 01 'the class of 1951 event.only two classifieations and the Reservations may; be made byTourney was sponsored by the mail to Box 36, New DeMontS.poriswriters Association, Moo- ell' by contacting classre~SlgnOJ' Prevost High, under the aUveaguidance of Coach Nick Olivier, •rode to the Small Schools title Sto h·'11on the strong pitching arm of ne IRoland Sorel. .The big right- Continued kom Pa«e Ouehander pitched au three games Tedesch1, preSident of Tedeschi'sthat year aided no little by tho Supermarkets; and Wayne, E.inclement weather that gave him Clark, president of the Homea breather between starts. . National Bank of Brockton.

Gallant Effort, Graduates from the DioceseIn one of the most gallant eI· ue Edward Coogan Jr., AttIe­

forts turned in by an area team, boro Falls; and Daniel Leary Jr..the 1959 Coyle Warriors, coached Donald,Magee, WilJiam Michaud,by Jim. Burns, came within an Pauline Nadeau, Janine Patry,inning of upsetting Belmont's Albert Roy, and Kenneth Silvia,fabulous Wilbur Wood in the A COS.C., all of Fall River.final. Wood subseqently was From New Bedford are Jamessigned by the Red Sox for a sub- Crosson Jr., Leo.Denault, Paulinestantial bonus and is now with Lapre, Frederick l'iJcLoughlin Jr..Winston-Salem in the Class J) Francis Shurtleff and John Wil­Carolina League where his reo- son.

Also William Buckley. andDavid Moriarty, North Attleboro;Mary Ellen Hankins, NorthEaston; John R. Brassard, AlfredFraga. Philip Perra, TimothyTaylor, Sheila Ann Tetlow, andArmand Yelle, Taunton; JamesTomagini, Wueham; RochelleSimmons. West Falmouth.

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CYO~ HoldS) third Diocesan Conventio'n' in Fall River

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