19
FATHER O'NEILL REV. MR. EFREM L. MUSNGI in 1955, he completed a year of novitiate at Center Harbor, N. H.. then was assigned to the La Salette major seminary in Attle-- boro. Rev. Mr. Musngi will join 26 La Salette Fathers and Brothers in the Philippine missions fol- lowing his ordination and a brief refresher' course in philosophy at the University of,Santo Tomas. The community·staffs an ele- mentary school, six high schools" a college and six parishes in tho Isabela province. Sunday, June 25 he will pafb ticipate in a departure ceremony at La Salette Minor seminary. Enfield, N. H. La Salette Fatherl;) from New Hampshire and Springfield also assigned to thft Philippines, will also be honor. i!t the - J Tomas, Manila, until he joined the La Salette community m 1954. Arriving in the United State. Aid Calm FATHER MOORE The Chancery Office today announced the transfers of two assistants and the appointment to area 'positions of two other priests of the Diocese. Rev. Cornelius J. O'Neill 9 assistant at St. Joseph's, Church, Taunton, for the past fifteen montns, becomes as- addition, 'the Most Reverend sistant at St. Augustine's Bish(}p has appointed, Rev. Church, Vineyard Haven. Francis L. Mahoney, assistant at Rev. John F. Moore, assist- St. Margaret's Church, Buzzard8 ant at Holy Name Church, Fall Bay, to be Cape Cod Area Direc- River, since February, 1960, is tor of the Boy Scouts. Rev. John transferred to S1. Joseph's <> W. Pegnam, assistant at st.. Church, Taunton. Turn to Page Eighteen Chancery Announces New Assignments Ordai,n Attleboro LaSalette In Philippin'es on Aug. 14 Rev. Mr. Efren L. Musngi, seminarian at La Saletto Seminary, Attleboro, will be the first missionary of Our Lady of La Salette to be ordained in the Orient. Leaving the United States Monday, June 26, he will be ordained ia - his home parish of Santiago, Isabela, Philippines 'Friday, Aug. 14. Ordaining prelate will be Bishop Teodulfo Domingo of Tuguegarao. Rev. Mr. Musgni, son (}f Mr. Avelino T. Musgni and Albina Lapuz of Santiago, was educated in the Philippines and attended the minor seminary of Tugue- garao and the Central Seminary of the University of Santo BISHOP AND HOST: Bishop John A. Choi of Pusan, Korea with his host. Rev.. Felix S. Childs, Sacred HeaPl; parish, Fall River, High Schools Grant .636 DC Agency Tops in ForeigOl Aid .WASHINGTON (NC) More than one-third of the total spent in foreign aid by U. S. voluntary relief groups during the last half of 1960 was spent by the U. S. Catholic relief agency. Catholic Relief Services-Na- tional Catholic Welfare Confer- ence spents $55,511,997 for for- eign relief be,tween July 1 and December 31, 1960. During the same six months the total spent' in foreign relief by 56 U. S. voluntary agenc\c:s was $147,562,180. These figures are contained in a report made public here by the Advisory Committee on Volun- tary Foreign Aid of the Interna- tional Cooperation Administra- tion. Following ,Catholic Relief Services in the amount spent was CARE with a total of $25,971,352. The other three agencie:t among the- .top five are: : Church. Wotld Service (Prot- estant), $20,479,456; American Jewish Joint Distribution Com- mittee, $14,327,590: and Lutheran World Relief, $6,317,328. Six hundred and thirty-six seniors will graduate from 10 high schools of the Diocese at ceremonies Sunday, June 11 and Monday, June 12. They include 234 boys and 402 girls. Largest clas's will graduate fro,m Coyle High School, Taunton, which will confer diplomas on 127 boys. Following is Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River, with 86 girls. Eight schools will hold graduations on Sunday, with Coyle and Sacred Hearts Academy in Fall River scheduling" cere- - lllonies Monday. Dominican Academy and Mt., St. Mary's, both Fall River, will hold graduations at 2 Sunday afternoon. Bishop Connolly will preside at St. Mary's Cathedral for Mt. St. -Mary girls and Rev. John Cronin will speak. Mt. St. Mary's class day is scheduled for a tomorrow' - afternoon in the academy auditorium. Carolyn J. Howarth, valedictorian, will graduate maxima cum laude and summa cum laude graduates are Mary Christensen, Joan Majkut and Sylvia Ann Laure- anno. Diane Perry, salutatorian, will be among seniors graduating cum laude. Auxiliary Bishop Gerrard will preside at Dominican' Academy ceremonies, to be held in the school building. He will present diplomas to 57 girls. Rev. John R. FoIster will be commencement speaker. The academy class day was held yesterday. Highest Turn to Page Thirteen 8, 1961 But keep'them private and keep them small."_ Thi,s kind of reasoning, Msgr. Kelly asserted,. "is secularism at its best and totalitarianism at its worst." "Latter day pagans," he con- , tlnued, "reject absolutely the Tum to Page Eighteen grown up about these saints. The calendar issued last July reduced the feast of St. Patrick from the old rank of "double" to that of a third class feast. Thus in most places, since March 17 always falls within Lent, the feast of St. Patrick is n(}w su- perceded by the Lenten Mass of the day. But in Ireland, because he is the national patron, and in local dioceses or churches where he is the patron, St. Patrick's Day is a first class feast. Old biographies of St. P·atrick abOund in marvelous deeds which are purely mythical. But historians know a great deal ab(}ut him, not only from rec- ords handed down by his fol- lowers, but from his own ac;. count. So there has been no serious suggestion th'at St. Turn to 'Page Thirteen PRICE IOc $4.00 por Year Second Clau Mail Privileges, Authorized at Fpll River. Mass. An Anohor of the Soul, !Jure aM F'irm--ST. PAUL The 'ANCHOR Sa'}f$ Mess Sounds W@U"01ang . To MIAMI (NC) - Cuba Would not be in a "mess" today if its people had lheeded Christian teachings be.. fore Castro took over the na- tion, according to Bishop Cole- man F. Carroll of Miami. The Bishop told the State Convention of the - Knights 0 of €olumbus that during the years preceding Fidel Castro's rise to power "nearly one-half of the people were said to profess no . 1'eligion and only a fr\lction of people went to Mass regu- hu'ly." . "Had Cuba lived according to the teachings of Christ and cd Pago EltIhtcm Current speculation concern- ing the future devotional status' of such long-venerated Christian Iheroes as St. Batrick and St. €hristopher apparently stems !from the legends' that have St.Chris·topher's Rank . WASHINGTON (NC) - Church authorities in Rome have denied reports that St. Christopher might be eliminated from lists of the saints. Officials of the Sacred Congregation of Rites also labeled as false and baseless rumors that the Holy See plans to downgrade the feast of St. Patrick. Speculative reports concerning the status of' various early saints have been published sporadically in'a num_ beT of countries ever since the HOly See revealed in April fuat it ·considers "St. Philomena" fic- titious. Actually, nobody ever !beard of "St; Philomena" until the beginrling of the last century, when remains found in a Roman catacomb were assumed to be those of a person of that name, Qnd were acclaimed as the relics 01 an early Christian martyr. 'Religion ys. Secularism Heart Con'troversy ,- NEW YORK (NC) - The.present conflict over Federal aid to education is essentially one between religious minded people and secularists, a priest warned here. Msgr. George 'A.. Kelly, director of the Family Life Bureau of the New York archdiocese, said a new concept of the public school is in vogue today and its proponents' goal is the secu- larizatiQn of American culture.- He told the annual Commu- nion breakf-ast of employ,es of tihe New York Central Railroad that "evangelists" of this con- cept say "the major right of edu- T? B cation belongs to the State." Visits Fall ·,River, ' Seeks He said they reason as fol- lows: "If we are to have a uni- For p. eople - of _ w'nd 'of Morn:ng fied country, the malleable .., minds of our young citizens 'B p' t" MG must be molded by. the State. y a rICla cowan - Good citizenship requires a gov- "In America you ask: How can I make my body thin? In Korea, the ask: How ernment monopoly of education. can I make my body fat? In America you wake 'in the morning and a'sk: How can I make Anything other than full accept- my life more enjoyable today? In Korea th e people 'wake and ask: How can I stay alive &nce of this creed brings divi- today?" In these words Bishop John A. Choi of Pu'san, Korea, who visited'Sacred Heart sion and is un-American. Have Il'eligious schools, if you must. - parish, Fall River, this week ',,"; """) to appeal for aid for his i people, contrasted life in the· United States with life in the Land of the Morning Calm. Short and slim, a third genera- tion Catholic, the Kor;ean native apologized for his hesitant Eng- lish. "If I had known that I would bec(}me a Bishop, I would have studied more English - , we have so many languages' to learn: Japanese, KOFa. ean, Latin-" First Bish(}p of the newly- created vicariate (}f Pusan, the prelate has be'en in the United States since April.' He WIll travel -throughout the -country until mid-september, appealing for his country's 'tWo great· needS' mission personnel and ':fUnds: Prefacing his sermons with ails apology fur his pronunciati(}n. Bishop Chol carefully an 'il'1ml to I"ap Eighkela FaU River, Mass., 'Thursdayu June !Vol. 5, No. 24 © 1961 The Anchor , \

06.08.61

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. WASHINGTON (NC) - ChurchauthoritiesinRome have denied reports that St. Christopher might be TheChanceryOfficetodayannouncedthetransfers of Philippines, will also be honor. Yorkarchdiocese,saidanew conceptofthepublicschool is in vogue today and its proponents'goalisthesecu- the La Salette community m .WASHINGTON (NC) More than one-third of the totalspentinforeignaidby U. S.voluntaryreliefgroups today?"InthesewordsBishopJohnA.ChoiofPu'san,Korea,whovisited'SacredHeart ~B ~ PagoEltIhtcm T? , \ i

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Page 1: 06.08.61

FATHER O'NEILL

REV. MR. EFREM L. MUSNGI

in 1955, he completed a year ofnovitiate at Center Harbor, N. H..then was assigned to the LaSalette major seminary in Attle-­boro.

Rev. Mr. Musngi will join 26La Salette Fathers and Brothersin the Philippine missions fol­lowing his ordination and a briefrefresher' course in philosophyat the University of,Santo Tomas.The community·staffs an ele­mentary school, six high schools"a college and six parishes in thoIsabela province.

Sunday, June 25 he will pafbticipate in a departure ceremonyat La Salette Minor seminary.Enfield, N. H. La Salette Fatherl;)from New Hampshire andSpringfield also assigned to thftPhilippines, will also be honor.i!t the cel'emo~

- J

Tomas, Manila, until he joinedthe La Salette community m1954.

Arriving in the United State.

AidCalm

FATHER MOORE

The Chancery Office today announced the transfers oftwo assistants and the appointment to area 'positions oftwo other priests of the Diocese. Rev. Cornelius J. O'Neill9

assistant at St. Joseph's, Church, Taunton, for the pastfifteen montns, becomes as- I~' addition, 'the Most Reverendsistant at St. Augustine's Bish(}p has appointed, Rev.Church, Vineyard Haven. Francis L. Mahoney, assistant atRev. John F. Moore, assist- St. Margaret's Church, Buzzard8ant at Holy Name Church, Fall Bay, to be Cape Cod Area Direc­River, since February, 1960, is tor of the Boy Scouts. Rev. Johntransferred to S1. Joseph's <> W. Pegnam, assistant at st..Church, Taunton. Turn to Page Eighteen

Chancery AnnouncesNew Assignments

Ordai,n Attleboro LaSaletteIn Philippin'es on Aug. 14

Rev. Mr. Efren L. Musngi, seminarian at La SalettoSeminary, Attleboro, will be the first missionary of OurLady of La Salette to be ordained in the Orient. Leavingthe United States Monday, June 26, he will be ordained ia

- his home parish of Santiago,Isabela, Philippines 'Friday,Aug. 14. Ordaining prelatewill be Bishop TeodulfoDomingo of Tuguegarao.

Rev. Mr. Musgni, son (}f Mr.Avelino T. Musgni and AlbinaLapuz of Santiago, was educatedin the Philippines and attendedthe minor seminary of Tugue­garao and the Central Seminaryof the University of Santo

BISHOP AND HOST: Bishop John A. Choi of Pusan,Korea with his host. Rev.. Felix S. Childs, Sacred HeaPl;parish, Fall River,

High Schools Grantip~omasto.636

Catho~DC AgencyTops in ForeigOlRelne~ Aid.WASHINGTON (NC)

More than one-third of thetotal spent in foreign aid byU. S. voluntary relief groupsduring the last half of 1960 wasspent by the U. S. Catholic reliefagency.

Catholic Relief Services-Na­tional Catholic Welfare Confer­ence spents $55,511,997 for for­eign relief be,tween July 1 andDecember 31, 1960.

During the same six monthsthe total spent' in foreign reliefby 56 U. S. voluntary agenc\c:swas $147,562,180.

These figures are contained ina report made public here by theAdvisory Committee on Volun­tary Foreign Aid of the Interna­tional Cooperation Administra­tion.

Following ,Catholic ReliefServices in the amount spent wasCARE with a total of $25,971,352.The other three agencie:t amongthe- .top five are:: Church. Wotld Service (Prot­estant), $20,479,456; AmericanJewish Joint Distribution Com­mittee, $14,327,590: and LutheranWorld Relief, $6,317,328.

Six hundred and thirty-six seniors will graduate from 10 high schools of the Dioceseat ceremonies Sunday, June 11 and Monday, June 12. They include 234 boys and 402girls. Largest clas's will graduate fro,m Coyle High School, Taunton, which will conferdiplomas on 127 boys. Following is Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River, with 86 girls. Eightschools will hold graduationson Sunday, with Coyle andSacred Hearts Academy inFall River scheduling" cere- ­lllonies Monday.

Dominican Academy and Mt.,St. Mary's, both Fall River, willhold graduations at 2 Sundayafternoon. Bishop Connolly willpreside at St. Mary's Cathedralfor Mt. St. -Mary girls and Rev.John Cronin will speak. Mt. St.Mary's class day is scheduled fora tomorrow' -afternoon in theacademy auditorium. Carolyn J.Howarth, valedictorian, willgraduate maxima cum laude andsumma cum laude graduates areMary ~nn Christensen, JoanMajkut and Sylvia Ann Laure­anno. Diane Perry, salutatorian,will be among seniors graduatingcum laude.

Auxiliary Bishop Gerrard willpreside at Dominican' Academyceremonies, to be held in theschool building. He will presentdiplomas to 57 girls. Rev. John R.FoIster will be commencementspeaker. The academy class daywas held yesterday. Highest

Turn to Page Thirteen

8, 1961

But keep'them private and keepthem small."_

Thi,s kind of reasoning, Msgr.Kelly asserted,. "is secularism atits best and totalitarianism at itsworst."

"Latter day pagans," he con- ,tlnued, "reject absolutely the

Tum to Page Eighteen

grown up about these saints.The calendar issued last July

reduced the feast of St. Patrickfrom the old rank of "double"to that of a third class feast.Thus in most places, since March17 always falls within Lent, thefeast of St. Patrick is n(}w su­perceded by the Lenten Mass ofthe day. But in Ireland, becausehe is the national patron, and inlocal dioceses or churches wherehe is the patron, St. Patrick'sDay is a first class feast.

Old biographies of St. P·atrickabOund in marvelous deedswhich are purely mythical. Buthistorians know a great dealab(}ut him, not only from rec­ords handed down by his fol­lowers, but from his own ac;.count. So there has been noserious suggestion th'at St.

Turn to 'Page Thirteen

PRICE IOc$4.00 por Year

Second Clau Mail Privileges, Authorized at Fpll River. Mass.

An Anohor of the Soul, !Jure aM F'irm--ST. PAUL

The'ANCHOR

Sa'}f$ CU~«1Jrm MessSounds W@U"01ang .To Ch(]'h~~®01J©1om

M I A M I (NC) - CubaWould not be in a "mess"today if its people hadlheeded Christian teachings be..fore Castro took over the na­tion, according to Bishop Cole­man F. Carroll of Miami.

The Bishop told the StateConvention of the -Knights 0 of€olumbus that during the yearspreceding Fidel Castro's rise topower "nearly one-half of thepeople were said to profess no .1'eligion and only a fr\lction of~ people went to Mass regu­hu'ly." .

"Had Cuba lived according tothe teachings of Christ and cd

~B ~ Pago EltIhtcm

Current speculation concern­ing the future devotional status'of such long-venerated ChristianIheroes as St. Batrick and St.€hristopher apparently stems!from the legends' that have

St.Chris·topher's RankD~ma.nds Explanation~

. WASHINGTON (NC) - Church authorities in Romehave denied reports that St. Christopher might beeliminated from lists of the saints. Officials of the SacredCongregation of Rites also labeled as false and baselessrumors that the Holy Seeplans to downgrade the feastof St. Patrick. Speculativereports concerning the statusof'various early saints have beenpublished sporadically in'a num_beT of countries ever since theHOly See revealed in April fuatit ·considers "St. Philomena" fic­titious. Actually, nobody ever!beard of "St; Philomena" untilthe beginrling of the last century,when remains found in a Romancatacomb were assumed to bethose of a person of that name,Qnd were acclaimed as the relics01 an early Christian martyr.

'Religion ys. SecularismHeart o~ Con'troversy ,-

NEW YORK (NC) - The.present conflict over Federalaid to education is essentially one between religious mindedpeople and secularists, a priest warned here. Msgr. George'A.. Kelly, director of the Family Life Bureau of the NewYork archdiocese, said a newconcept of the public schoolis in vogue today and itsproponents' goal is the secu­larizatiQn of American culture.-

He told the annual Commu­nion breakf-ast of employ,es oftihe New York Central Railroadthat "evangelists" of this con-cept say "the major right of edu- T? Bcation belongs to the State." J.~oreanishQp:Visits Fall ·,River, 'Seeks

He said they reason as fol-

lows: "If we are to have a uni- For p.eople -of _w'nd 'of Morn:ngfied country, the malleable ..,minds of our young citizens 'B p' t" M Gmust be molded by. the State. y a rICla cowan -Good citizenship requires a gov- "In America you ask: How can I make my body thin? In Korea, the ~ople ask: Howernment monopoly of education. can I make my body fat? In America you wake 'in the morning and a'sk: How can I makeAnything other than full accept- my life more enjoyable today? In Korea th e people 'wake and ask: How can I stay alive&nce of this creed brings divi- today?" In these words Bishop John A. Choi of Pu'san, Korea, who visited'Sacred Heartsion and is un-American. HaveIl'eligious schools, if you must. - parish, Fall River, this week ',,"; """)

to appeal for aid for his i

people, contrasted life in the·United States with life inthe Land of the Morning Calm.

Short and slim, a third genera­tion Catholic, the Kor;ean nativeapologized for his hesitant Eng­lish. "If I had known that Iwould bec(}me a Bishop, I wouldhave studied more English -

, we have so many languages' tolearn: Chinese~ Japanese, KOFa.ean, Latin-"

First Bish(}p of the newly­created vicariate (}f Pusan, theprelate has be'en in the UnitedStates since April.' He WIll travel-throughout the -country untilmid-september, appealing forhis country's 'tWo great· needS'mission personnel and ':fUnds:

Prefacing his sermons with ailsapology fur his pronunciati(}n.Bishop Chol carefully rea~ an

'il'1ml to I"ap Eighkela

FaU River, Mass., 'Thursdayu June

!Vol. 5, No. 24 © 1961 The Anchor

, \

Page 2: 06.08.61

•• J •• ;

Main Office and Plant_. • • .' '.1<

LOW~LL, MASS.;.! ~TelephoneLowell ' .'.1 .

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·PITTSBURGH (NC)-A Cath..olie evidence guild is being reac­tivated in the Diocese of Pitts­burgh. . .

-Known as the Catholic Cam..paigners fQr Christ, it will seekto spread Catholic truths throughthe medium of street preaching,~ .similar guild functioned inPittsburgh for a short· time. m1942. . ", ,Frank Sheed, author and pub- 'Iisher who has been active inCatholic evidence guild work iJlAustralia, England and NewYork, is conducting a cou'rse f~the Pittsburgh preachers. BoUlpriests and lay people will bea,ctive In the apostolate. .

i;' I'each Aglfe~ume~t

"hl- Lalb~r' Di~pute.' BELLEVILLE (NC) - Work

'has been resumed on the Na­tional Shrine. of Our Lady ~

.. Grace following an agree~~Jlll!

reached by the Shrine's directora~d the local union which pic~

. :eted it. . ..·The pickets were removed

lifter a meeting between Father'Edwin J. Guild, O.M.I., shrinedireCtor, and Norman' C. El1io~business agent of Local 309, In­ternational Brotherhood of Elec­trical Workers.

.... The local announced that an"equitable solution" had beeDreached "in recognition of pr~eiples involved."

The dispute over constructiOftof the multimillion-dollar shrinestarted when Local 309 protestedelectrical work done at the shrine,by' an Oblate Brother. The..shrlnei~ :being built on the 'grounds of'the' Oblates of Mary Immaculate~eminary on the outskirts ofBelleville. .

· Father Guild said his und~standing of the "equitable" solta­t~oil. is that owners of properlydedicated to work and prayerand members of a religious orderhave a recognized rigp.t to per­form work that is within theacompetence.

Phone OS 2-4t62Phone OS 2·7452

.. .Register .Now!,.I;' -. . , . ' .

2 to 4. p.rn,.~ by appointment before June 19I • . , - -'

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siQn is establishe<;l in the ·city'sofficial Council on Human, Rela-'tions. The five-IJ1ember divisionwill ,~nv~stigate llharges of, dis-crimination. .

Though Negroes' are the prin-'eipal beneficiaries of, the 'lawi'it'also prohibits discrimination onthe basis of religious ',belief, 130- .cestry ornationa" origin.', .... ',

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. STATUE BLESSING: Rev. Edmond L. Dickinson;curate at Sacred Heart parish, North Attleboro, assistedby altar boy Rene. Hebert, blesses new statue' of BlessedMother on grounds of convent of the Religious of .the HolyUnion of. the Sacred Hearts. Community staffs the' parish'School. . '.' . -, ,

Prelate .Suppor~sST. LOUIS (NC)':"- The St.

Louis· Board of .Aldermen . hasad~pted by a' 2,0 to 4 vote a' law

'making it illegal to discrimimiteagainst Negroes-:..:.30 per cent Ofthe population-;jnpublic places.. Th~ m~asure; whoSe main'~~pact will 'be on restaurants and9ther pu~).ic ,e~ting placeS; hadtQe support· of Joseph Cardinal~itter, Archbishop ~f .St. Louis,and Msgr, ,Jolin W. Miller, chair,.'man of the St."LouisFai~.Em­pIoymen.,t:praetieres Commission.' .

Waddell &. Reed. Inc;:'. Principal Underwriten

For Appointment at your homeCall or Write' I

ANTONE G., QUINTAl95 .Maryland St;. Now Bedford

WYman 5-2938'Pros eetus on Re uesf

:" .

'NecrologyTHE ANenOR lists the death

anniversary' . dates of priestswho served' the Fall RiverDiocese since its fonnatioD in-1904 with' the intention thatthe faithful will give them' aprayerful ·remembrance.

JUNE 9Rev. Timothy .1:. Calnen, 1945,

Pastor, St.· Joseph, Woods Hole.JUNE 10

Rev. William H. Curley, 1915,, Pastor, 55. Peter & Paul, Fall

River. . '

OFFICIAL

Spanish A~d, .-1.1\1:APRID.(NC)-5panish Catli":

olies have' 'cOn~buted money-for 1,506 ,scholarships to· traint native priests'in missions underr the"jutis'diction of the Sacred,. ~~ngregation 'f-or the Propaga"1 tion of the' Faith. ,-'

. '-

Diocese of Fall River

·..ra..~Bishop of Fall River<:::::.J '.

Mass Ordo

FORTY HOURSiDEVOTION,'

Clergy Transfersl' . ,'. . ..

• Rev. Cornelius J. O'Neill, assistant at St. Joseph's Church,Taunton, . to St. Augustine's Church, Vineyard Haven, asassistant. . . '

. Rev. John F. Moore, assist,ant ~t Holy, Name Church,fall River, to, St. Joseph's Church, Taunton, as assistant. ,

_ Clergy. AppointmentsRev. Francis L. Mahoney, assistant at St. Margaret's

.Church, B&zzilrdsBay, to become Director of the Boy Scoutsfor tlhe Cape Cod. Area. c ' .'

,Rev.. JohIi W. Pegniun, assistant at St. Francis Xavier'Church, Hyannis, to become Director' of the Catholic' YouthOrganizati()l1 for the Cflpe Cod Area.

All transfers and appoint~entseffective Monday, Jun~ 12.

June 11-5~. ,Peter. &; Paul,Fall River.

LaSalette Shrine. 4t­Uebora.

St. Mary, Mansfield.Sacred. Heart, North

. A~tleboro. ,.rune 18-St. Mary, New Bed-

ford.' '.Blessed Sacrament, Fan

River.' .June 25-8t. Elizabeth;· Fall

River;'. ... st:. Mary, Norton:', '. - .'

July..2-0u'r Lady of' Purga­, tory, New Bedford.St. Francis Xavier, Hy-

annis. ' .Holy Trinity, West,lI91'­

wich.

\ .GEORGE·M.MONTtE_Plumbing - Heating

THE ANcH<.'fa ~er 35 YearsSecond Class Postage Paid nt Fall River. of Satisfied Service

MaSs, Published every Thursday at 410 806 NO.' MAIN STREEJ . '.Highland' Avenue, Fall River. Maas.. bythe Catholic. PreIS of the Diocese of. F II .. .Fall River. Subscripiton Orice lw _0. . a River O,S 5-7497postpaid $4.00 per yeat. '" . . <. , '- ---'

2 'fHE A'NCHO~-Dioceseof Fall Riv.er-Thurs. June 8, 1961- - ". ": . . ',' ". " '. ',';'.,,:'.:>

.=============::::::E~\

St. Paul AU'clhldBo«:e$e !P1~U'l)rmBB1g

To .Cc.olrdii1afre lay Al,;{[h?n~n®$· ST. PAUL (NC)-A laymen's Helping establish the commit,:

committee will be established tee, with the approval of AIch­here to coordinate lay missionary bishop .-William O. Brady, is theand other international activi- Association for International De­ties of the St. Paul·archdiocese.' velopment (AID), lay missionary

v, Members of the committee-wlll group' with headquarters inbe drawn from such organiza- Paterson, N. J. ~

tions as the Young Christian' Training CenterWorkers.a.nd ~erra Int~rnational.· AID founder Gerald Mische· The un~~ .w111 r~rult laymen, said here that .plans call 'for themterest~d, In servmg. overseas establishment eventually of anand . .wIll also help mtroduce archdiocesan training ,'center to .f?relg~ .stude~ts and other for- provide orientation . for volun­~Ign .vlsltors moo U. S. co~un-, teers for Latin American and theIty life. Peace ..Corps.

Mr. Mische stressed that it is, important for Catholics: to 'show

FRIDAY---Most Sacred Reart, of: their interest in !locial. reform. inJesus. I Class. White. -Mass: the emerging nations' of' the

'Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface the world..of Sacred Heart. "Social reform throughoui the'

SATURDAY - St. Margaret,. world is coming"-with or with­Queen and Widow. III Class. 'out us," he said. "The only' social

· White. Mass Proper; Gloria;: reform being presented in manyno Creed; Common Preface. " -countries' is Marxist." .

SUNI!Ay.- III 'Sunday ,After, . "'We aren't proselytizing,"·· he, Pentecost. II Class. Green. said. "Our only aim is to show'

Mass Proper; Glo~ia; Creed; that 'the Church is a force inPreface of Trinity. . \! • social rj!form. This. is a job:

MONDAY:St. John o,f San' specifically for laymen."· Facundo, Confessor. III Class. Some 40 AID volunteers are~ White. Mass Proper; Gloria; now serving overseas while an­. Second Collect- S8. Basilides' other 20 are worki'iJ:g' in ' 'theand Companions, Martyrs; no', United States. They hold such

,' Creed: Common Preface. jobs as agricultural and tech";'l'UESDAY - St. Anthony Qf nical'>~dvisors. and'ecoriomis~· ~adua, Confessor and Doctor . credit· 'union directors and' for-.

of the Church. III Class. White. eigD student advisors. -Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed;Common Preface. L' •. f D"

WEDNESDAY-St. Basll,Bish- eglon,o ... ecencyop, Confessor and Doctor of The following filmS are ·to,be"'"

. . the Church. III Class. White. added. to the 'lists in their re­Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; spective classifications:,Common Preface. Morally unobjectionable for

'l'HURSDAY--":'Mass of previous genera! patronage-LadieS Man;. Sunday: IV Class. Green. Mass: 8nowWhite' and the'Seven"Proper; No·Gloria; Second Col- Stooges. ' '.,leet SS. Vitus and Companions, ' Morally. ,un,objectionable for

.' Martyrs; nei Creed; Common' -adults and adolescents --:.. The'Preface. Bridge; Time Bom~. J ,.. ,

Morally 'unobjectionable foradults-Eve' Wants to Sleep.

Morally object41nable in partfor' all-A Matter of MoralS;.Objection: This film; developed·against a background of confusedmoral values, .tends to condone'

, murder -in plot· solution. MostDangerous Man Alive. Objection:Indecent 'costUming andhighiy.:'sugge~iye situations. I', '

/ /'.'

Page 3: 06.08.61

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Parish Is ThemeOf-Third MeetingOn Convert WOlfk

NEW YORK (NC) ­Mobilizing the parish forconvert work will be thesubject of the third NationalConference on Cor,vert Work tobe' held June 27 to 29 at St.Joseph's Seminary, Yonkers.

The three-day program will besponsored by the .Paulist Insti­tute for Religious Research andNew York Confraternity ·ofChristian Doctrine.

Father John J. Keating, C.S.P.,director of the Paulist Institutepointed out that some 75 millionAmericans are without churchaffiliation. The majority of thesepeople, he noted, are basicallyreligious and many of them areseeking religious identity. Theconference will explore methodsof approach and Instruction.

Msgr. Charles M. Walsh, NewYork director of the Confrater­nity, said 200 priests are ex­pected to attend. He added' thatthe conference is attractingpriests not only from the NewYork metropolitan area but fromall over the country.

The conference will be gearedto two levels, Father· Keatingsaid, one for priests already en­gaged in convert work and theother for those just entering thefield. Panels and discussions willbe l)eld on such topics as mobil;­izing a parish, methods of re­cruiting, 'methods of instruction,'

THE ANCHOR- 3Thurs., June 8, '96'

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KNIGHTS OF ALTAR: Invested as Grand Knights inKnights of Altar Society at Sacred Heart Church, NorthAttleboro are, left to right, Donald Ouellette, also recipientof honor pin, Eugene Couturier alid Richard LeCompte. Inall, 12 members of the altar boys' organization receivedadvancement pins.

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Churches. Council Asks SchoolsTeach Appreciation of Religion

BALTIMORE ~NC) - The children respect and apprecla­Maryland Council of Churches tion for the contributions of reli­has urged that public schools gion to life need not be incon­teach children "respect and ap- sistent with legal requirementspredation for the contributions and is in the public interest."of religion to life." . "The council pretends to no

The council said it would be wisdom as to educational meth­"a matter of grave import" if ods but it believes this is not· ­the public schools were to be beyond the capabilities of the"silent as to the pertinence of administrators 'and teachers 10moral and 'spiritual values to our our public schools" it said.American life and institutions, ,or as to the role of religious or­ganizations in' the establishmentan'd preservation of thosevalues."

The study was undertaken asa result of recent court contro­versies over Bible reading inBaltimore public schools. Thepractice has' been upheld bySuperior Court. .

The council said sectarianteaching in public schools wouldbe "in ,obvious viCllation" of the

. Constitution, as well as "unjus­tifiable" in a religiously plural­istic socie,ty.

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Offer Summ<erSchool Se~si@n

For the seventh year, Summerschool courses will be offered atMt. St. Mary's Academy, FallRiver, .on the elementary al1dhigh school levels.

Sister M. Carmela, principal,announces that classes will beheld from 8:45 to 12 every morn­ing from Monday,' June 26through Friday, Aug. 4. Subjectswill be offered for double periodsof one and one-half hours and itwill' be possible for students toenroll in one or'two courses. '

Elementary subiects will in­clude English, arithmetic, reme­dial and developmental reading.All high school SUbjects, includ­ing commercial courses, will be

, offered.Pft-High Sehool Courses

In addition, pre-high school·eourses in mathematics, English,French, typing and reading will

. be 01\ the Summer "schedule.Higll. school courses will- include:in.tro<iuctor,. and remedial' sub-jects. " .

Instructors will be .Sisters ofMercy, certified for the subjectst,hey will teach. Descriptive bro­otuires are available and will bemailed to prospective studentson request.

Registrations are now open,according to Sister Carmela, whoalso notes that the academy con­ducts a year round psychometriccenter, giving intelligence, abil­ity, achievement and intereststests. The facilities will beavailable during the Summer forchildren and adults.

no less authority than Chair­man Newton M. Minnow of theFederal Communications Com-

'mission. He recently urged toptelev1sion executiv.es gatiheredhere for a national convention tolook at their TV screens for awhole day. "I can assure youthat .you will observe a' vastWlasteland," he said.

Vast Wasteland"You will see a procession of

game shows, violence, audienceparticipation shows, formulacomedies about totally unbeliev­able families, blood and thun­der, mayhem, violence, sadism,murder, Western badmen, priv­ate eyes, gangsters, more viol­ence and cartoons" ChairmanMinnow continued.. "And endlessly, commercials-­

many screaming, cajoling and'offending. And m,ost of all bore­dom. True you will see a fewthings you will enjoy - but'Niey will be very, very ,few."

Priest Wins Honor,For SportS Photo'"

KANSAS CITY (NC) - Apt'iest was honored here as oneof the country's top SPOl'ts pho­ilographers.

Father Vincent Lovett re­ceived a scroll from Look mag­azine signifying honorable men­tion in a sports photographycontest which drew entries fromalniost 700 press photographel'8e.tlroughout the country.

Father Lovett is executiveeditor of the Catholic Reporter;Ilewspaper of the Kansas City­$t.. Joseph diocese. His prize­winning photo w'QS an actionebat of a high school basketballgame.

.Awarded Med~NEW YORK (NC)-The Trap­

pist priest who has won literaryacclaim writing under the nameof Thomas Merbon was awardedthe medal of ex<:eUence at theeommencement exerciseo of Co­iWnbia University here.

Protestant HailsGood Treatment

MONTREAL (NC)-A Prot­estant school official said herethat Protestants are' so welltreated in Quebec they almost~l as if they are a part of themejority.

Malcolm' Campqell, president6f the Protestant School Com­mission for' the District of Mon­treal, said at a tree-planting cer­emony: "As Protestants we are aminority, but we really feel as if1re were a part of the majority__ We have everything we want,-. In the 35 years I have beenOIl the Protestant. School Com­mission, never have I had reasonillo protest against any interven­tion."

'r.he population of the Arch­diocese of Quebec is over 95 per­eent Catholic.

Two Uses of TV Both NeedImprovement in Format

WASHINGTON (NC) - Two vastly different uses oftelevision on a broad scale have been noted in recent officialstatements' here. There is the clear implication in thepronouncements that both uses could be improved to thebenefit of the human race.i'll one statement the U.S.-Information Agency notedItnat communist-bloc coun­tries are using television moreillnd more for propaganda pur­poses. This referred not so much~ indoctrination programs forhome consumption as to "shows"6eamed into areas borderingRed-ruled nations.

There has been an impressive!hcrease in TV stations and setsin Europe in the last decade, theagency reported. In 1960 alone,TV stations' increased from 899f,o 1,224 (about 36 per cent) inDiOn-communist-bloc countries,and from 189' 00264 (about 40per cent) in communist-bloclands. Sets in use in non-bloccountries increased from 26,796,­000 to 35,535,000 (about 33 percerlt), and in bloc countries fromS,294,OOO to 7,407,000 (about 40percent). ..

East GermanyOf particular interest is a con­

tinuing effort of East GermanyGtations to reach an estimatedaudience of 600,000 viewers inWest Germany. There are threeIhighly propagandistic programs&at are regularly used in thisproject. Recently, one of them.a particularly anti-West "show".was put on the air during theintermission period of an EastBerlin performance by the La&ala opera company of Milan.Jl is thought that hundreds ofthousands of West Germans left~ Red propaganda broadca'ston rather than take a chance on­missing some of the opera.

Castro CubaA particularly disturbing item

ill the report is the fact thatCastro Cuba ha£ establishedGlose TV ties with all commu­Idst-b 1o e countries througha«reements for the exchange ofprograms. The Castro regime

,baS seized aU TV stations ineuba. I

Meanwhile, baCk at the fori,things are not going too' well in:"United states TV, according to

Page 4: 06.08.61

".+§J

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Pope ~e~s· All .'I'n Afternoon

VATICAN CITY (NC)-~

~any sovereigns can spend aSunday afternoon touring theilterritory from top to bottom.but that is' what His HolineaPope John XXIII did a wbBeago.

IIi fact, he did it from bottcmato top: from the Vatican Gr~toes, deep under his tiny doin~to a tower atop Vatican Hill.

It was a sunny Spring daa;'perfect for an outing. Pope Johnbegan with the Vatican Grottoellbeneath St. Peter's Basilica. .I{lIstopped to pray at the tombs 011Pope Benedict XV,' Pope PiUXI, and 'Pope Pius XII, aU Witimmediate' predecessors. .

. Then he went out into the Cii11of the Vatican and paid a vi.to the little Church of St. Pere­grines next to the editoriSi'offices of L'Osservatore Romanq,Vatican City's daily newspap..·

His next stop was the Churellof St. Stephen of the EtbiopiaDt!;which stands behind St. Petel4iBasilica.

After this he went up to tiletop of ~e Vatican Hill wherework is under way to renov.the tower of Leo'IV for use 88.Summer house.' There' he . aeocended a part of the scaHoldkICto make a close insP~ction.

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NUNS HELP BLIND BOY: Pascualito, a young Peru­vian Maehuaca Indian, has· been graQuated from the insti­tute for th~ blind, deaf a,nd dumb conducted by the Francis­ean Sistel'g of the Immaculate Conception in Lima. He didnot know a word' of Spanish when he entered the insti.tute. Now he-can read and write and play the accordion.NC Photo.

nrela~d falglTnm«llgeST. AUGUSTINE (NC)-Arch­

bishop Joseph P. Hurley, Bishopof St. Augustine, will head adiocesan pilgrimage to Irelandthat will sail :from New YomCity, on Aug. 14.. . Father Leo'Danaher; pastor of Sacred HeaI'tchurch, Jacksonville, Fla.. wW'he~ 8,9iritual dk.eo~

Ridiculous Displa.y '.Finally, there is the rnatter of

an expensive wedding. Of course .I every girl looks forward to her.I wedding as· the major event in, her life, but if the display is out

of proportion to her well knownstatus and income, it 'becomesabsurd and ridiculous.

Whom .are people trying to. fool 'when they engage in such

conspicuous f:0nsumption.? Obvi­i ously not their relatives andi friends, for these all know better!, With a husband in the army; and, both sides of the family

struggling to make ends meet,! isn't it silly for a working girlI to use all her savings to impress

people who will not be. im­pressed?

With such a lack of commonsense, one wonders'· whethershe's ready for marriage..

\

THE ANC!-:O~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. 'June H, r9614

Advises Parents t9 OpposeSon's IU..Timed Marri~~e

By Father John L. Thomas, S.J.Ass't Sociology Prof.-St. Louis University .

"Our 22-year old son, who still has over a year to gofI'I. military seryice, writes that he wants to get marriedthe last of next month. We know his girl is putting thepressure on. She says she's against long engagements andhas a good job. We say that while artfully arguing th~t "God.marriage norfnally means will understand."babies; .our son will have to Know God's Lawlook for a job when he gets· Be' fir~ in pointing out toout of' service'; and besides, she them that there is no mysterywants a big wedding that will about the' normal implications ofuse up all their' married life. They have no rightsayings, because i to marrY'unless they are reason-her folks don't ably prepared to accept its obli-have that kind gatio'ns according to God's laws~of money. What The fact that other couples,can we do?" , even other Catholic couples, may

From the gen- casually ignore the divine moral,· eral. ton e of law in no way lessens their re-

your letter, I sponsibilities. Marriage is forgather. that you adults. They know the facts of·feel you pretty life and the laws of God. Whywell know the should they try to fooC them-answer to that selves? .1as t question. But she says she is oppos~ toThe situation looks hopeless, a long engagement? Perhaps shesince your best arguments have' is worried about being able tomade no impression. I'm rather.' hold' her man, yet their engage­inclined' to agree. Most young . ment is not a normal one underpeople raised in our'affluent so- the present conditions of' neces­ciety aren't dispOsed ~ worry sary separation, and if the coupleabout the future. ~hey want are really in love, further delaywhat they want~and they want· will no't 'prove harmful. .it right now! Requires 'Self-Control. ~hej~ea of postponing JJ~ese~t. Perhaps, like many couples in

satIs.factIons ~or future g~m~ IS love, they find it difficult to ob­fore1gn ~o the1~ way o! thmkm~. serve premarital. chastity.Re­Proceedmg w1th naIve con£I- mind them that this is no excusedence tha:t everything ~ill some- for an ill-timed marriage, for'how work out all, nght, they in their circumstances it will be~~oughtlessly .inc,:,r responsibi.l- easier to observe ~remaritalItles and obhgatlOns that w1ll chastity than chastity in mar-dictate the entire future course , riage.. . .'of their lives. . . . .

Experience is a good teacher . T!lls truth comes as a surprIse. . ' to many young couples because

but m th1S case the lessons that th f'l t l' th t th b. h . 1 b f b f't 1 ey a1 0 rea Ize a e 0 -·It teac es w1I e 0 ene 1 on y f Ch . t' t d dto others. . servanc~ o. r1S l~n s an ~r s

'On Their Own' of chastity m marrIage requ1res. a great deal of self-control and

Nevertheless, as parents you self-denial under the difficultwant to. do what. you can. Per- situation of marital intimacy.haps th~ situation is not as hope.. . Surel by taking proper pre-.less as It now appears. At least . y, , . . ,

'd l"k t f lth t h cautlOns and prof1hng from ex-YOU

d1 e 0 ee . a, you ave perience, the. normal intelligent

use every means m your P?wer unmarried 'couple can controltDsave ~o.ur son from makmg a their impulses and drives whilepoor dec1SlOn. What can you'do? .. .

I · . th f' t 1 h ld datmg 1£ they really des1re to don e us. p ace, you s ou •- "make it very clear to the couple so.that neither you-nor her parentsare in any position to lend themfinancial support.

If they marry, they're on their:" own, a'nd it doesn't take a finan­

cial genius to figure out that hisarmy pay,' or his beginner's earn­ings immediately afterwards,won't cover many expenses.

But she 'has a good job, andtheir pooled income will morethan meet their need? You mustbe realistic here and tolerate nononsense.- As you have already told them,

at their age, marriage. normallymeans babies. Few young couples

· are capable of observing periodiccontinence from the beginningof their marriage without seriousstrain and the risk ,of destroyingtheir sense of unity as a couple.

Only AlternativeThe only alternative is to use

contraceptives, which they know 'H· d RICh' his seriously sinful. Be. frank' gnU u ~s urcwith·them on this point. This is i Controls Membersn<> time to be silent. ,. TUTICORIN (NC) -A Hinliu. Some you~g. coup~es I~ldu!ge. judge has rejected a ·commun-

~n a ~ubtle bIt of ratlOnalIzahon . ist's contention that the Catholic I

IJ.l th1S J?atter. T~ey. enter mar- Church had no right to excom-'· rlage vo.:1th~ut thmkmg throu~h ; municate him.. and to refuse to

the oblIgahons. they necessanly take him 'back into the Church.incur. " Judge V. Bhavani Shanker, of~nce they. a~e J?arrIe~, they Tuticorin Subordinate Court has

Ins1st that ~t 1S 1~POss1.ble to cited a 1954 ruling of the Indiano.bserve <?od s. law m the1r par-. Supreme Court that a religious~Icu~a.r s~tuah,on, so they .feel denomination enjoys completeJustif1ed 111 usm~ contraceptives, autonomy in matters of doctrine '.

C L R S·· and worship.(!Jhuc.uic (Oell'ilu-asll's The Indian jurist cited another

Sh«llll'e in Gr«:!lll1U's court decision which "lays down·WASHINGTON (NC)-Scien- 't~ principle that the rures of

fists in four Catholic schools are Canon Law must govern theamong recipients of 56 National matter in cases of dispute andScience Foundation grants total- the bishop's authority is su.-

." 'preme."ing $716,400 for aevelopment ofnew teaching apparatus. . I

The grants are intended tohelp .scientists develop equip­ment for use in schools and col-leges. .

Recipients in Catholie schoolsInclude Father Stanley J. Bezus­zka S.J., Boston College mathe­matics department. for develop­ment· of mathematies teachingBPparatus for use in higb~

Page 5: 06.08.61

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CORPUS CHR][ST][: Rev. Joseph L.Powers, Director ofReligion at Bishop Stang High Sch()ol, No. Dartmouth, illlshown, celebrating Solemn Mass in the school auditorium on the Feast of Corpus Christi assisted by visiting clergy andthe faculty and student body of the school. After Mass an outdoor Corpus Christi procession with Benediction tookplace, with 'another Benediction concluding the celebrationback in the school itself. '

I" §S'tti"'.'MfS

FINAL VOWS: Sisterkcinthe du S.C., the formerRita Teasdale, daughter ofMT.. and Mrs. Ernest Teas­date, Fall River, has pro­nounced perpetual vows at1lhe motherhouse of the Sis­ters of St. Joan of Arc.Quebec. The' communitycares for priests and rec­tories. In F'all River, mem­bers staff the Bishop's resi­dence and the rectories ofD. Mary's Cathedral andL~R'e Dame Chu1!'ch.

Nam~ Top CoyleHonolr SthJldl2nt~

Top three students in eachclass at Coyle' High School,''launton, were recognized at fifthQIlIlual Honor Night ceremonies..Also receiving awards wereNational Honor Society members,blgh ranking students in variousdepartments and boys outstand­fng in co-curricular activities,

Outstanding seniors were Ken­neth Cwikla, George Simmonsand George Tyson. Cwikla,m:amed Coyle Man of the Year,€Uso received scholastic awardsand will be salutatorian at,graduation exercises.

Gerald Cunniff received the&hlete of the Year.' citation:Horace' Travassos will be vale­~ctorian in addition to receiving£atin, French and religiQnawards and scholastic certificates.. Outstanding among juniors~were Geoffrey Kane, RichardBrezinski and Peter Saracco,wb i 1e sophomores included'Michael Carroll, David Gay and-Joseph Costa.- Freshmen especially A com-'mended were John O'Keefe,'Daniel Hoye and Gerald Puccini.

Urges Lay GroupStress NecessityOf Religion

COVINGTON (NC) - Agroup of convert - makers

:have been urged to "give"Jleople the temptation to be-.lieve." .

Father John J. Marquardt,·rector of the Glenmary Semin­ary in Glendale, Ohio, has

.called on the Apostles of theHoly Spirit to "communicate topeople the basic truth that the

.DlQst important thing in life islleligion,"

"Have another look at thecorporal works of mercy .;,- theooaracteristic works of Chris­

'·tianity," he said. "Give peopleflbe temptation to believe."

Williqm J. Haig, society gen­€?al director, reported in the five~ears of its existence the organ­'ization has grown from 10 mem­bers to a present membership of<ilOO.

He said known results of mem­lOers' work include 69 I,ldult con­v.ersions; baptism of 19 children;and the return to the practice oftb.e Faith of 51 lapsed Catholics.The group has sponsored fivei:etreats for non-Catholics andtwo days of recollection for non­Catholic women. It has distrib­tIllted more- than 20,000 pamphletsend 25,000 news letters.

Page 6: 06.08.61

3

Pope Grateful-,For AdviceOn Council i,~

WASHINGTON (NO) ­Protestant and Orthocto.church -groups are telling iMHoly See what. they thW.should be discussed at the coRa...iDg general council of the cMi.-olic Church. '

Arid the Holy See is grateftlfor "these suggestions, says ..American priest who is helfNIiIGJ>repare for the council.

Fat her ,ThQmas StrapskaC.S.P., said the, suggestions aMcoming at the express invitatkMaof the Holy See'. They are flo..ing in steadily to the Secretarialt

,:for 'Promoting Christian unitiI.Gf which the young Paulist, is •staff member. ~'We have alre.received many such suggestio";and we hope history will say Wehave used them wisely," he saieLThe 'Christian 'unity secretariat •Gne of the bodies set up by Hie.Holiness Pope John, xxiiI1itprepare for the Second Vati~

..C9uncil,· , '.:1, , Tolerance .,'·A favorite suggestionof.~

:<;a~holics is ,t!lat the co\JJ.l~thresh out the problem of tc)~ance: how to' reconcile'the ..mands of truth with the rights ..those in error. Another suggeste4topic is, the related problem _the ,Church's status with theState. Still another is the ....man's role in the Church.

Father Stransky said he coullnot' spell out the suggestioriDmore specifically or name. t'begroUps that had offered th_

, He said the Holy See consi~

·the suggestions confidential.~, revelation of who had made ..suggestions will have to comefrom those 'persons or gro..themselveS. ' '

ObscrversFather Stransky said the~

of "possible non-Catholic 0b­servers at the council has not _been decided.

He said that if any non-Ca.olic observers are invited, tblIIinvitations will be sent withom·publicity. '

In any event, non-Catholqwill not take an active part __the counciI"s deliberations, _said. '

"The age :,of the count..Reformation is over," Fat~Stransky said.

"The main lines of argum-'in the counter-Reformation •ways centered. on points of _ference between Catholics'"Protestants. Now we have ee­tered a period" of common.~'nection on the' nature of Cbr"tianity, itself. We have' 00_iradually to realize that the· ...,vision of' Christianity, ifl •scandal, and a 'contradictit>ll ..Christ's' will 'that they maY .. 'one.',- , " ,

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Forwardl

ANCHOR

MANAGING EDITORHugh J•• Golde"

THEANCHO~-Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs. June·S, 1961

@rhe,

Heart of ChristTomori'ow is the Feast of the Sacred Heart and this

month of June is so dedicated.Most Catholics need· ito reminder that this is not

just "another devotion" that one can take or leave... 'The heart is the special symbol of love. And, If the

Heart of Christ means anything, it means not only Hisemptying of Himself and going to the extremes of love formen. It indicates· also the love' of the Father whQ wo.uiddeliver the Son for His wayward children; And it show(3tlJe 'value that God. places o? those Whom. Christ. ~asredeemed at the prIce of HIS blood. Men need vIsIble.reminders such as this of the great realities that existunseen but true.

Published weeKly by The Catholic Press ,of the Diocese of Fall Riv.410 Highland Avenue ,

Fall River, Mass: OSborne 5-7151PUBLISHER

Most Rev. James L CO,nnolly, D.O., P.hD~ .GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER

Rev. Daniel F. Shelloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll

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OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE Of FALL RIVER

Leaving the, Ghetto, Of what possible interest can a statement ,by theBishops of Tanganyika have on the rest of the world ?Butone issued a while ago underlined a situation common to,all areas. ,

On the occasion of that nation's achievement of self-government, the Bishops called upon the 1~500,O?O,Catholicsto do all in their power to aV9id a ghetto-hke eXlst~nce, andto take the lea~ in' the quest for national unity' andbetterment. . , " ,, 'I:he Bishops' pointed, out the e~iste?ce'in .t?e ~ation~f many differences -' in:'cree<ls, soclolo~les, polItIcal Id~~, ......ethnic and so~ial and cultural backgrounds -:- and U~ged

,"the widening of common ~greements between individualsand varying groups and their common purs~it of basicbenefiCial goals/' Catholics must be in the forefront, elsethe "illusion 01 comfort and ~ecurity of a ghetto-centeredexistence is a sorry type of peace and Ilot the dynamic loveof neighbor which should take us to every place where 'wecan serve'. Only by living in the midst of our fellowmen, andshowing practical interest in their welfare, can we, hope, TODAY-Mass as on Sunday" MONDAY~St. John fJl SMIeach of us to become in some small measure t,he 'salt of the ,The Christian is the mature man, Facundo, Confessor. There is a

, , , ~ because he has learned to give, vast difference between' anxietyearth,' 'the light of the world.' " , to love,' to share. Not bis the and that watchfulness which is

The Catholic cannot afford to be smug inhis pos,session clenched fists of the baby or tpe the lesson of both Epjstle andof the Faith and jealous in his keeping of it. He cannot pride and possessiveness of the Gospel today. And if at times weremain behind the breastworks and divorce himself from "self-made' man." His response Catholics have' surrendered tohis fellow men _ those who may be admirable ,and those to genuine values, the ·value of . the temptation to separatism, to

the human person in particular, ghetto':'like isolation from' C)thernot so likable. He must --'- above all~ not be afraid to bring will not permit him to place human beings, it is because thehis religion with him intQ the marketplace, to put its (after the manner of the Gospel. difference has not been clear toprinciples into action, to take the lead in activities 'of. characters) farm or oxen or even' ' us. John's gifts, as a confessor of

benefit to all, to recognize the sincerity of these who do' wife· (the exclusive love of only the Faith, was the reconciliationone) before the banquet assem- of enemies. No one has ever be-

not believe as he does. bly of all God's sons. come a saint merely by "protect-When are Catholics as a group going· to leave the ghetto TOMORROW _ Sacred Heart ing" his own faith. Outgoing

and take the leadership for which their Faith aims at of Jesus. The humanity we love, love, love whic:h faces danger,which knows no boundaries, is

preparing them? for which' we care, toward which 1 'a ways watchful. But it dispelsI we feel responsible, is the hu-' anxiety with its confidence.

Perl-shl-ng ,by the .Sword manity of Jesus. He is the Sonof Man. He is the whole Man, TUESDAY - St. Anthony eI

The assassination of Dominican Republic strong man final and ultiinate Man. And Padua, ConfessOr,' Dooto!'. The. r I 'I hbecause he is that. every' human same theme of breaking down

Rafael Trujillo surely' portrays in Iteradetal t e being, tholigh partial and in- barriers, of identifying ourselvesinjunction of Christ that '~those who take the swor,d will complete, shares in the splendor 'with all men, can be traced iii.perish by the sword." of His humanity.' this Mass of a "doctor," a great

',Even as he died under an assassin's bullets, this dictator It is Jesus .we love in every- teacher' of -the Church. Indeed it, man ari4 everyman in Him. To is so common Ii theme in, the

who had intimidated aU opposition in his ?~-;year,rule w~ gr~rw' t,oward him and in New Testament that one won-waging a campaign of. violence and slander against the Him, this feast of the Sacred ders' how we could eVe1- hawChurch. 'Heart proclaims, is n~ to be- regarded withdra~land stay-

His hEmchrrieil inspired,'mobs to "attack priests and' coine less human ~ut to ,become ing "with our own kind" 88 II

b · h' . d 'II' f ','., 'th'" 'th . I more human. And when any virtue. : . " ', IS ops. an , a or on~ r~ason: ~lr ~l~es were" ~,ony ~ person confronts ,any other per,,: ' " Sait and light al'e functional',ones raIsed mprotestaglitmst hIS VIOlatIon of/hum~n rlgh~;son, he looks (G9spel) at Him, anduti~itaHan it~ms, ,useless' in

The language used by t1:Ie government-controlled radio whom he has pierced. iSolation, Salt has to permeatein 'attacking, the Ch!1rch was of the vilest language, ~ as SATURDAY":":'" St. Margaret, a foreign substanee, bE!come oneone bishop was not 'afraid to state·- "not proper even for Qucen, Widow. Human virtues wi~ it (yvitl:l(~utCe~sirig'tobe S M

salt). 'And light is for the sake" ervice' eri'",·the lowest social level." The Church was threatened with are extolled in the Epistle of , of men who in it learn to 'see. I.~

legislation that wouldeliininate all Catholic:liIstruction'for tod{l.y's Mass-human providence, The uIte, misSa: ese' warns us Papal M,edal's. . . .'; . ".. . dedIcated work, open-handed' .,' "CatholIc chIldren m prImary and secondary, schools, t~atgenerosity., For Jesus 'did not ,agaip.st l!ny hopesw,eJJ:light har- NEW YORK (NC)-Five p-.

ld d 1 11 C th I' h' h th t f th t t to' d h' Id d bor for a sheltered and lIale sons' whose servI'c'e to the Pau,.; .....WOU ,ec are a a, 0 IC C urc es e proper yo. e s a e, come con emn t e wor an Christian life. "Out 'you go," it .._that would seize all Catholic schools' that would renounce the human but to save, enhance te.lls us, 'and into the midSt of Fathers and the Catholic Cbu~the nation's concordat With the Hoi; See. ' ' . , and elevate.His saints, ,likeMa~':'to~ls more than 200 years ",erie

. . . '. . .' garet, are rebukes to our pessl- men. awarded the papal medals ..Prlests who had seen the GeneralI,sslmo, at work could mism, about 'human nature , "EDNESDAy-St.l\asIl, Bisla- Ecclesia et' Pontifice here.

brand him' as nothing"but a dictator and a murd~rer who touched by grace. Piety toward 011, ponfessOl', Doetor, Jesus' lan- Tho~ honored included:had used his grip on the country to amass a famiiy fortune' ' those saints i,s ~,ot ~nlY worship, guage in the Gospel is paradox,- Austin Gordon, lifetime p.-Gf close to a billion dollars. of God, who m,akes them holy, ical. One time He tells us to love, ishioner of St. Paul the Aposttt

, . b . 1 "ed" I . . who enables and graces them, and another time to "hate." But h 'h h 'd t f f~He lIved y VIO ence and dl m VIO ence. But .thl8 but also piety 'toward ourselves to "hate" oniy in the sense of c urc ere, preSI en ,0 a -

death points up the struggle of the Church against dictatoi'Sand' what we might become ift recognizing' even against, tfie ~~:~:;-:~l~~r~~t~:~h~~~c:e~::'Gf both the right and the left. The Church has many:foes. Christ. p,ower of leliset- goods and loyal- ' when be succeeded his fat~And, throughout all the acc6unts of their actions against THIRD SUNDAY AFTER ties the ultimate demands of whC?was36yearsbeforehim.her, there' echoes the voice,' "I am Jesus whom' tho"~" PENTECOST: Sunday Mass is no God's, Word. James Coulter, also a Iifetm.... _... h'" t'h" "If . h- One's s'eIf and one.'8 family aJ'ePersecuting." " gat ermg ..or, e se -rIg teous parishion~r of St. Paul the Ape...

and self-sufficient,:fol' those who 'the objects Of this ,"hatrecl"- ,tie church, retired vice preSideJit.' th Ch "h .' I" 01.. perhaps:, another rem.ind.et thet " "VIew e urc as a C lque Of' the Emigrant Savings ~:...-.

the 'savoo, with' 'no responsibili- theC~istian's,cOJ:nm,unity iithe a ,Knight of 'Malta, who oWt, ties toward the ~est of the world human ,race and ,fhat if fa·milia! In()l'e than 50 years has 'sHwii

and no common tie with ,the rest' ~ttachmeiit, attachinent tG one's the church as an altar boy, u....of hum.anity. O'ur public worship group or clan, diminishes -instead 18y .instructor ..of 'altar' boys ...is celebrated to give us a mission of strengthens the capacity'w> as ,president of the St. Vin~

, as well as to'teach and inspire \18. love men of all races ,and natim}f; de Paul Society hi -the parisll.' ,'J' tel'''' . t d ' --then it is a t,hreat to salvaUOA., ' . ,esus ... us more In 0 ay s E~art O'Shea,busi~~' ~

Gospel' than the fact that God's . M" k II ager '·,of St, Pa··' the A~love for us sinners ia a constant, . ciry' no church for 41 ye;;;s and ni.a~.love, pursuing even'wheh we runMAR¥KNOLL fNC) -Mary- '01. 18y' help at the P,aulist 'NlIiWaway, Were we Catholics even knoll magazine has published II York Fou~datioD. ' , ,

, 99 per cent of 'the human ra~e, spedal anniversary issue matk-we should leave the 99 and know ingthe 5Ot~ anniversary of the John Watters,' a native of~and love and seek 'the one. The founding of thE:- Maryknoll _land, who has headed the r~worship offered at Christian Fathers. The community, dedi- tion desk at St. Paul's~altars is, not a sign of separation cated to foreign mission work, tor 22 years.. '. .and segregation. Quite the oil- was·founded in tM United States Catherine Leonard of Nol'WOGC!ttposite. It is the sacrament of in 1911 by Father-later Bishop :N. J., who has been bookkeepell ,mankind's unity, 01. mutual l'e- ..:-James A. Walsh, M,M., \8nd and cashier of the Paulist :BlMasponsibility.. Father Thomas F. Price, M.M. here for 42 yean.

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Page 7: 06.08.61

7THE ANCHOR~ ,Thurs., June 8, 1961

Co.mp~ny1i'",iillP~OIi'l0 O$~orl'ile 5-73]]

LARIVI ERE6SPharmacy

Prescriptions called fewand delivered

HEADQUARTERS FOR,DIETETIC SUPPLIES

600 Cottage St. WY 4-7439New Bedford

.: .

, Sodality ElectsNew officers of, Our Lady of

,Good ,CouDsel, Holy FamilyHigh School, New Bedford, in­clude Maureen Mitchell, prefect;K.athryn ~aguire, vice prefect;J!:I1een PaIva, secretary; ElaineMatthews, treasurer. BeatriceAbraham and Jeanne LaForestare consultants.

Deplores 'Wo~md'Spiriiuality Laghi 'Space A.ge

W1\SHINGTON (NC) .......A Spanish novelist deploresthe 20th Century's I'dispro­portion" between scientificadvances and spiritual vitality

"We spend more time o~reaching the moon than onknowing' one another," observedJose Maria Gironella, author ofthe award-winning novel "ThoCypresses Believe in God."

Mr. Gironella declared "with­out God society is a failure, andmany of those in power in uUi'

era push God aside."The Spanish writer said he

feels hope in the Christian sense, -as a' "theologiCal virtue"-but, is "pessimistic in reference to thenear future ,and on the plane ofinternational policies," ,

'.'1 do not see in the West polit­ical men capable of holding backthe communist avalanche whichis .the mark of our' century," ho

,said. '", SPll>lllis~ Censorshillil

Despite govern~ent censo~ship irt Spain; Mr. Gironella said.he hils not experienced difficultyin . having novels published.noting the worst Spanish cen­sorship defect is "arbitrariness,

, because it frequently rests on thementality and mood of the read­er on :duty."

However, he added, his workshave ,been published in theirentirety, without any cutS.

...~

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Great Needs.. In Father Foley's' oPinion the"great: needs of the Bolivians are',ro~ds ,and credit. ~oads are amust in any plan of economic.assistance, This opinion is also"held 'by' our own' Governmentwhich recognizes, the' need fo~adequate transportation' as an

:important, par~ of,Qu~ ,overall,plan tq assist Bolivia to stabilize,·diversifY,. and deve1op' 'itSecon­'omy.,,'

',The 'Communists 'have' not;o.verlooked Bolivia-';"i\nd, t~e COll­o djti9r~ q.etailed by, ;E,ugene K.,Sulhane in, the March i2, 1960'issue of ('AmeJ:ica;o' 'still exist'and' 'have been' intertSified. So.that, ,more than ever, the Cath­olics of Bolivia must be ~trength­ened in their faHh-the Church'b'race<fas a living 'shield against•It 'ruthless; Godless, and driving,enemy:: It is true that the missionarieshave been well re'ceived and are'doing well-Maryknoil of itself'mainta'ins'two schools, 60 priests,'10 Brothers, and 40 Sisters inBolivia-but the country is aboutthe size of Texas plus Californiasome 420,000 square miles, and'mote priests are needed. Needed-badly and soon.

Father Foley was ordained in1948 by Bishop Lane at Mary­knoll and was sent at once toBolivia. In 1956 his parents:Mr~ and Mrs, Thomas J. Foley:move,d to Falmouth and Father

:Foley' 'can now ca1L61' TriUmph"Street, his home., ' " ,

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" ,-....k" S··'9iikWG'Jil!Ii'$!I?§IUWHs d'f"''':M'',.ji iiil'J@4':jf;::; •. ,0···.;.:,. -

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Do 'what ''the professionallaundri dQE!S .:...:., usJ a gas­fu~led cIoth.eS' dJ;'~ for~d and econOmy. In dry_ing clothes, gas brings yOOl,'all the advantages it pro­

vidElG in all' the othei- major " 'household jobS 11 doeS'­

~ooOOmr. speed, 'C1eaiu,i~~deppndah,Uty. safetY," sii-

, eo.ce. and automatic· cOntroL

· C<e~l!.

,Saavedra-San Isidro' :with 10members, and why the member­ship has grown to I50-and whyFather Foley is Diocesan direc­'tot' of cooperatives.' ,, 'Na~,:,rally, the coop'~rntl~ewasnot s~arted by waving ,a wand,

·snappIng, the fingers, ,and sayingsome magic w()I-ds. 'There wasmuch hard work,' burning 'ofmidnight oil, conference's coax­ings, explanations" and' morehard work, before Father wasready to take ,his plan to theofficials of the Point IV Inter­national Aid Program, to securet1~le necessary loan 'tQ help the'rIce growers. " ,

But his love \for the' people hisdetermination to' help them' hisspecialized knowledge, and' his0l;ltspoken, energetic and sincerebelief in his project, all broughtm~tters. to a most successfulconclUSIon. ",'

• In. add.ition to' 'th~growingmemb~rship, the cqoperative nowowns a c~mbine and; a', thrasher,

"'White'sF' 'D· ', "","; r, ,.. ,Jlf;.... " ,~~,ry

IISPECIAL MILKFrom 0' : ' 'Own, .ur;, ',' f

"" ,Te~Herer, I",

'AcUshnet, Mas..:' WY 3.-4457. '. .,....,. .: .

• S~icd" MiNe'. Homogenized ,~. fI) MUk

, , Ii' Buttermilk:-,',~, ,Tropica~,,Qr~~~,J~fcID'o <C4il~ and Choc. MiJac'<J ,le99s - BlJttor. '

Falmouth Maryknoll' Missioner 'Aids BoliviansIn Developmen,t, of Rice Cooperat,ipe

. • . By Russell Collinge 'thinro~~t~e~, llUSSIO?ary prIests and 70,QO? parishio~ers! , In this situation you mght

a I.eyer bme allowed you co~ld sIt,back, WIth a clear conscience; and sort ofcatc~ you~ br~a~h;.,But not Father Thomas F.' roley of Falmouth, a Maryknoil Missionerstab,onedm BOh~I~. He ,found tl),atthe,' econoIUlc and social conditions of thep}ajority of

the native nopulation re- 0· . r~ , ' and '0 number' of auxiliaryqUlred serIous and energetic motorg....,....all for the use of mem-help and' revision~ So, being bers as and when rteede(l. TheFathe~ Foley, he went to ,',- ·co?perative also has its own peel..work..-:-a,\d' in ~ovember of 1957 . ing and d~Ying plants imd sevQfound~d, 'a' ,rice, ,cooperative in' eral other' Installations.the Santa Cruz' area. ' And the members get better

Why a cooperative? Well it is ,~, prices for their. rice and a re-an unfortunate'fact that' the suIting lift and improvement inaverage individlialin Bolivia has their living.little ae<:ess to any outside mar- And the interest of the Churchket and, )nust, depend on local ' In. the life and physical well-buyers for' the ric'e crop. Let us beIngof t~ese people makes forsuppose that the" Bolivian' gov- 'a better reception and accept-ernme~~ has ~llotted lan,d to a ,,~nce, of, the interest in their spir-Bolivianr and, qis 'family. Natu- ' Itual well-being and advance-rally; the man is 'eager 'to clear' ment."the land, build ,1' shelter for. him­self ,and his :famIly,'imd plant acrop," ' , ," :': '" " '

But to' do "ail: this he 'needs,equi(im,en~-->:-and,he will have no 'money: u'ntil he'liiirvefits'his cr(jp.So he imust borrow, against hisharvest. And when the crop' 'is ", "in, he must pay his debts-andthe man who made the loan takes

, payment in rice. And the value: of the rice at harvest time may, be \only a fraction' of its worth; at market in the spring. But theI,debt must"be paid - and after• ~hat the' man an'li his family can

barely get by on what is left.,And the next year he must

'borro~ again .•-:- and again the~~r~~st .goes to pay off the loan

,":-l;l~d again there is very littleI~ft to l\ve on. This is a circle'

, that' can end in frustration and,desp~ir and the abandonment of'the land. '

• ! . ,.

Cpoperative Solves Problem, With a cooperative to supply,the capital and see that the rice, is sQld at ,a time when prices aregood-the man can be proudlyself-supporting and even beginto save a little.

,And,he willMve time to think,about bett~r things for his fam­,ily. ,School for his children-and,for himself, a chance to thinkabout, his religion. to listen toinstruction, to become an under_

r

'standin'g and working Catholic.','Thus his' material gains can,"and'do, lead to spiritual gains­'which is what tii¢,'missioners had','in mind in'the first place spir­'it'ual . welfare' being the' basic'.~?rce behind 'their everyac't andtholight'. ' ' ,,' ",'" 'The" Indian 'populatiOli' of

'Bolivia 'is Iiuge:'-two and a halfn'l'iUion out' of 'the totalpopula­

,tioh of 'four .itiillio'l)--':anci whilethe .firs~ Spanish priests 'began

'iristt'udion in theCatholic£aith'and irifused"'a' sOllnd and solid'base' for Cath6licfs1U, they-were'recalled to Spain before' thJycould 'complete' their work ofcorive'rsion. .. '. "'SO~l! large number "of Indians

"are'Catholi~sas"a matter,ofi-ou-titie -'and habit;' 'They atte'rid

'M;lSSah'd the~:lcraments because, thet 'always 'did-not because of"a strong and liVIng faith:

, Gnawing Needs ' ,, An~ it, is hard to ipstill the,n,ece~~ry knowledge and·, belief~ben there is so much competi-

, ,~IQP ,. from, the, insistent 'and,g~awing needs 9£ ,day to day, ~x~stence." ' ,, ,It ,is ,hard to give instruction,~ a !T!an who, is hungry-,-a ,man",W~9 ;W~8 hungry,y.esterday and,

qUIte likely, will be ,hungry ,to­"p1orrow--a man,;whose attentionand, th,o~ght is fixed' on ,how he

"play ',obtain, the minimum'needsof liv~ng for. ,himself and his,'f~ily., '" , " '", ,1'hat 1$, why, Fllther ' Foley',fo\ln.<ied " ,t;h0'" c~perative of

Highly EducatedWomen Moder...WOIlI~ Need :.. ')

: : MiAMI SHORES (No) -:­'The world is in gteater'ne~d,of highly educated wotrlen'tOday 'than it has ever' b~n"~a!=cording to Father J~hrt T.'F6udy, superintendent of sch061Bof the Archdiocese of San Fran­Cisco

Speaking at the Barry Co~1ege'commencement exercises, 'theCalifornia educator said "Appar-

'eritly God and nature havegiven' to women the great re­sponsibility of conserving ,formankind the treasures of thea'race."

"Men will turn 'their back on,established, values or patterns;"asserted Fr. Foudy, "they willreject the inheritance of theirIfather, they will under-,estitniitethe traditions upon which tb,~ystand, and they will venture in'todeep a'nd unchartered wat.ir's.'In their wake will rise r~voit'J.-"tiona, voyages of explo'ratioh.new forms of art, chaos,' risk~nnd bruises.

: '''Women,on the' other" h~l)d'transmit the 'values' of the' rilc~to their young, they protect th'~ir'homes against the invasio'n' 6ftawdry things, they bring toucnesof-'civilization and beauty 'to

"male society, they prot'ect'tlie-:helpless in 'their great roles 'asparents, teachers, nurses, soti~l

, ~rkers and even as secretaries~"

. World Drive ',Every year sees an increased

DUmber of YO,uths attending col­'lege, Father Foudy noted.' Then'be added:, ': ~ere is no need in these"tumul~uous times for wives withquiescent minds, for mO,the'rgwho lack intellertual imthusi­asm, for teachers who don't readwidely, for social workers who8lmply fill out reports, for civicleaders with a knack only forfashion shows-in brief forwomen who will permit the greatinheritance of our race to bestolen, wasted, or unappreciatedbecause they don't understand.

"'The men of today and to­,morrow need women who are

Intelligent, learned, culturedand profoundly religious." ,

Throughout the world, not:only in communist controlledeQl.\ntries but also in the 'United'States, Father Ifoudy sees signs"of ~n increasing drive to replace',the family' as the foundat'lon of:the 'social order. " ,

,: ' 'F~nill~ Life ,'" ,~e state or the organization"b being held up as the only: ~eli­~Qblj! ,sour~ <?f'strengtll 'and, w:e,l­

"~," he !ltressed. "Fa~ily rignts.Af 'lot challflnged direc~ly, are

hampered by ,an offi<::fal policyto ma~e ~reedom of .choice ever

_m0t:~" dJ~icult. SYmpathy" .£orparents who must make great

,sacrifices for the education' oftheir children in other than stateschools simply does not exist allpolite disclaimers to the <:ontra­r:y." ,

'The family' unit is allowed,: much too easily to disintegrate'he" emphasized, under the as-:8umption that' schools, play-

l grouQds, and social service, canmake up the lo'ss.

,,~riests Answer~ Via' Redio '

ST. L6UIS (NC)-Ten priests!, will take turns weekly in an-• 8wering listeners' questions ori a

radio series beginning here June5; -Th~ Catholic Radio and Tele­

.' vision Apostolate of the St. Louis: archdiocese announced, partici­, pation in the half-hour' program,: entiHed "At 'Your Service." 'It is",produced by KMOX Radio.: ,.. Members of various faiths win~take part in .the program on dif-

ferent ,day.s. ,Catholic represen-',.~~ives wUl ,b,e heard each Tburs-

"'4ay. , ":" ,, ,,:,~isteners ,may' telepho~ tlte"atatiPIl and ~s,lt the lO1est ,priest

questions reg,arqing" the . topicunder discu~sion.

\ ,~sgr. Edward, T:"O'Meara, cD­. !"?etor of the,'archdiocese's ~oc~

, . ety for the Propagation of theFaith, will appear on the june S

:: program. The topic that day win, ~d: "Do Cathol\cs Re~' B~~,,~

'it'¥Ile;r Sins 'Are Forgivew 'tQTelling Them to 1:'1 Priest2,"" ,

Page 8: 06.08.61

··GIIii~PRIVATETUTORING"~

IN STUDENT'S HOME:~Elementary and Junior"High SchooJ Subjects ','.. ~.

Call OS. 2-7320between 6· 9 P.M.'

'NUns' Are Plan"""Lima Press, Work

LIMA (NC)-This July some­thing new will be added to theapostolate of mass communica­tions in Peru. The project is thework of the Daughters of St.Paul who are well known abroadfor their press apostolate. .

Mother Maria L'ouisa says thG'Daughters of St., Paul will starttheir plan with a book store anellinformation center in Lima. Fromthis they' will distribute theirprinted material, and then workinto movies and film strips.

Intellectual AppealIssue for Priests '

ARDEN HILLS (NC)-PIG-,neer priests faced physical haz­ards, but the prieSts of tOdayface "the even more taxinghaza~ds of the intellects," FatherPaul Koscielniak, pastor of st.John the Baptist church, NewBrighton said In a talk at thealumni' day of Nazareth ·Hanminor seminary ,here in Minne­sota.

. "The minds of. the new g~&.eration constitute our challehg.ing frontier," Father Kosciel-niak said. ' ~

"The Church 'faces very hardtimes in the not too distantfuture unless its leaders, bothamong the laity and the cler~

make a large scale appeal to, the.minds ofthe present and future,Ithe said. .

Daughters of IsabellaAward Scholarships

ST. CLOUD (NC) - ThomlWHerzing of ,St. Cloud has beennamed winner of the journalismscholarsh~p awarded by Minne­sota area Daughters of Isabella.

The scholarship" valued 'M,$1,800, is given every three yearsfor graduate study in journaiismat Marquette University, Mil-

.. waukee. Awarding, of the schol­arship is administered in coo~eration with the ·St. Cloud Vis­itor, newspaper of the St. Clouddiocese. Mr. Herzing's selectiOawas announced by Father Vin­cent Yzermans, editor of thoVisitor. ' .

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Six Members of FamilyN,ow in Religious Life '

COLLEGEVILLE (NC) -.'nleRev. Otto Weber, O.S.B., who

,was ordained, a priest here Sat­urday, is the sixth member, of

, his ,family to enter ,religious life.

Other brothers and sisters inreligi9us life-all of them Ben­edictines - are Father Arnold

'Weber, a.S.B., St. John's Abbey- here, Sister Jane, Sister Berna­

dette, and Sister Helen, all of St.ClOUd, Minn., and Sister Mar,.cella, St. Joseph, Minn.

Father 'Weber is one of ninechildren. He is a native of St-Martin, Mino. .

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College Officials BanBed-Pushing ,Contest

MANCHESTER (NC)-St. An­selm's College' officials' have,vetoed' an 'extra currlculumac­t.ivity---a ~bed-pushing ,contest.

St. Anselm's seniors and mem­bers of the Sigma Phi Deltafraternity at New/Eriglimd Col-'lege in Henniker had plannedsuch ,a contest on the heavilytrafficked ,Everett Turnpike.

St. Anselm's officials said theywould act personally, if neces­sary, to block any attempt to 'stage the contest, They said itwas below the dignity of St. An­selm's students and hazardous'o~ the busy thoroughfare.

Fund Raising GroupMembers of St. ,Catherine's

Fund Raising Group, Fall River"will hold a dinner meeting Tues-'day, June 13 at Copicut Lodge.Reservations will close tomorrow..

Plan to Commemorate' ServiceOf Sisters During' Civil War

DETROIT (NC)-Fifteen nun- work in caring for the sick andofficials of religious CQngrega- wounded of the North and Southtions will receive plaques' Wed- during the Civil War.nesday, June ~4, comme~~rati~g Some 2,000 American womenthe .work th~lr commumtles dId served as nurses in the Civildurmg the CIvil War. War, and more than a third of

The plaques will be awarded them were members of Catholic,at a dinn'er during the 46th an-, sisterhoods. Their names are on

, nual convention of the Catholic file in the archives of the WarHospital Association of the U. s. Departme'nt.' ':.

, and Canada. ' ' .AQout 5,000 RelIgious and laitY,

. The" nuns represent com~un- are expected to attend the hos­ities that have been recogmz<:d pital association's convention. Its~ the U.S. governmentfor theu: ,theme is "Attitudes, Actions,

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criminal."'Free' Rein'

In. the dissenting opinion byAssociate Judge 0 Charles W,Froessel, the three 'minorityjudges warned against trying tolimit the definitiQn of obscenitytoo severely.

"If only 'hard-core" porno­graphy. may be proscribed,'~ itdeclared, "pu~veyors of D:laga.,.zines and periodicals-on 'll l~rgescale and almost free rein-willbe at liberty to flood newsstandsand~ ean9Y stores in every ~ocalcOqlplunityin the State with ma­terial 'the average person' 'wouldcondeinn as obscene -and lewd."

,THE ANCHOR-Diocese ,of. Fall Rlver~Thur•. )u~ 8,,196.1" ", ',_.

'Efficiency, Old Fashioned Ai,rs,Can Combjne in New Kitchens. '. .

By Alice Bough 'CahillUnless you were lookit'tg at an oldfashioneq picture

, book depicting women in, "Mother-Hubbards,"a sink-pumpand a wood and coal range, you would have no appreciationof the cold, drab, inefficient kitchens in which women

'worked at the turn of thecentury. American wome~' put one in so that as yo~ din~have since been emancipat- you can have light from out of

doors. It would be especiallyed however, and today we pleasant if such a window couldba~e bright,' gay kitchens, filled overlook a garden.with charm. Designers and dec- It might be possible to' buildorators h a v e corner' cabinets on-":each side ofmade a con- the window. An old pine table·sistent effort in f~ont of this window wouldto surround the lend itself perfectly to this eat-

, housewife by'ing area, which is right next tobeauty, with the the kitchen work section. Butaid of color by careful plan~ing you 'can _dynamics, more make the area.seem like 'a· se{i"'EASIER ONFA'J'HER'S POCKETBOOK: Three Geierefficient plan- arate .room. brothers, who graduate this month from the Christianning ~ndscorefl ,If you have counter spaCe,left,' , ...

B,rothers Academy' in Albany, will ente,r. St. Michael's, Col-of, new electri- 1I8e it as the top.JI., a plalmlngeal de vic e s. and 'ordering desk.' Have shelves ,lege in Vennont this Fall. James, left, and· Gerald, 'center, 'Modern . tech- built, within reach' for cook- are twins: FrankJ.' 3rd is at right. They will get reducednology has tak- : ,books. This makes it possible " rates u~de,'r a program for fami,lies with more than' one sonen much of the drudgery Out ctl . to plan meals while sitting"

, k in St,. Michael's at the same time. Their East Greenbush"kitchen wor. , dciwn. Invest in a- couple of.'First we went In for -the an- slates to hang on the wall by the N.Y. parents will save one-quarter tuition for a second son

white hospital look, but today, desk fQr family memos" freq- and one-half for the third. NC Photo.we stress eye appeal with color. uently-called phone numbers, orSuppose yoil have an old ~ousel appointments.with an extra-large kitchen in Paper Kitchen Wal1tlwhich one takes many steps i~the preparation of meals. Why It has become quite populat' ,not plan to get some stepsaving to· paper the walls of a kitchen,efficiency by building a smaller, and there's no denying one getswork area?, a lot of charm in wallpaper.

Blend Old, New Today's papers come in charm-You, can retain old fashioned; .tng designs, and washable qual­

marm- with a cl~ver blending of, ities make them veri popular.the' old and new. Figure if it In other words, women are nowisn't possible to build- a ~ork ,treating their~itchenwalls likespace around your stove by en- those in any oth~r room.'closing the area with floor cab", Colorful scenic prints iii a kit:',:!nets the tops of which ,would ehen (above sirik and work areaprovide you with an extra, ,or table) bring dreams of trips

'amount of counter space. You to take or ,remembrance of those'might have one counter extend' you',ve enjoyed. If you're clev~

'out enough to make a snack: 'with the paint brush,instead of.bar. : ,.... , prints or photos, you :might ,try

Hang a copper hood over ,your . your hand at doing a :mural, astove 'and hang pots and pans on 1a Grandma Moses.

, one of the partitions. Since you Of c;ouree, if you like ,whimsy,have created more, storage space you can add country-kitchenby' the two or three-sided cab.,.' ,atmosphere' with, a Franklininet enclosure, perhaps wall,. stove. In a large .;kitchen, ..it's

· cabinets could be' used for dis- really, welcome' as a "c,hill-t:e-',· play :of gay china or kitchen ,mover" on cool moI?lings, if'accessories. ,', ~ you're determined' to maintain

· . You might 'convert, the end old fashion~d' charm. (Those,that has been' c,leared into a" who have fired a stove will ad­pleasant dining area. If you" vise you to keep a pair of house..haven't a window at this end, hold gloves on a nearby hook!~

~ ,

'Court Holq, iHara, Cor.e' ObscenityAlone Liable in New York State

ALBANY (NC)- Only maga­zines containing ,"hard-core por­nography?' will be banned in New,York State under a new rulingby the State Court'of Appeals:

I ,In a 4-to-3 decision, the state'shighest court drafted a new ,andconsiderably restricted d~finl-'

, tion of obscenity in holding that ', Gent magazine was not a legally

obscene publication.The' 'dissenting justices held

,that to limit the .s~ate-"s antiob~,sce,nity law to "hard..;'core porno-t graphy" would open the door '

"so widely as to' be' tantamount :.,to repeal in large measure" Of''the law. '

'Sexually Morbid". In' one of two' major'ity opin­ions, Associate Judge Stanley H.Fuld'defined pornography as'fo~

cusing "predominantly on what 'is sexually morbid; grossly per- ,verse and bizarre without anyartistic or scientific' purpose orjustification."

Chief JUdge Charles S. Des­mond agreed that the magazinewas not obscene and that a strictdefinition should be applied.

He defined pornography as~the extreme form of gross and

,illintentioned sexuality whichAmerican' statutes 'and courtsmay ~onstitutionally punish as

,Alumnae ReunionPostponed from' June 4, the

,annual corporate Communionand breakfast of the alumnaeassociation of Sacred, HeartsAcademy, Fall River, will beheld this'Sunday. Msgr. Hum­berto S. Medeiros. former asso­ciation chaplain, wlll celebr~teMass at Sacred Hearts Conventchapel, Prospect' Street, at 9o'clock and will speak at thebreakfast. Reservations will closeSaturday.

Page 9: 06.08.61

New Bedforef

Nf·iU.",.""

SHEATING OIL

Nun Teacher HasWord of Praise

NEW ORLEANS (NC) ­Teenagers generally shun re­sponsibility but when a crisisarises they know just what to do,Sister M. Caroleen said at theannual lUncheon of the Louis­iana and Mississippi circles ofSt. Margaret'. Daughters.

The School Sister ()f NotreDame, principal of the highschool of Redemptorlllt parishhere, illu9trated her point witha story about a boy student ather school who fractured hisneck in a diving mishap a fewweeks before graduation.

"The other students in thegroup," she said, "got the boyto a hospital, called his parents,got a priest and stayed right atthe hospital with the boy. Asmany as had been on that picniccame to Mass the next morning.which was a senior-privilegeholiday for them. No one sug­gested to them that they do this.I never saw teens rise to aaoccasion like teens do today."

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T+tE ANCHOR...,. 9Th~rs., June 8, 1961

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SOCIAL WORKER OF YEAR: Mrs. Conchita Sanbornright, assistant program director of Catholic ReliefServieesin the Philippine mission, receives the Woman. Social Work­er of the Year award in Manila. Presentation was made byMrs. Gill Puyat, left, wife of a Philippine Senate member.Mrs. Puyat's secretary is in backgmund. Mrs. Sanbom iswife of Lee Sanborn. of Holyoke, Mass., CRS Philippineprogram director. NC Photo.

Nun 'Medi~al Technologist of Year'Develops Test to Find· Blood Trait

HOUSTON (NC)-A Sister at trMtment.St. Elizabeth's Hospital here baa PreViously, te.ts for the traitdeveloped an inexpensive, simple were long and complicated.test to detect a red blood cell Sister Raphael said about atabnormality called ":sickle· cell per cent of the hospital', pa_

trait." taenta:·=:.:are:.:~found==~to:.:ha:v:e:.:the:,:.,:tr:a:it:.-=============:She UI Sister Raphael, receot17' ~named "medical teehnolog~ ofthe year" by the Texas Socleirof Medical Technologi»ta. '

A Missionary Sister of *be Ia­maculate Conception, her fam­ily name is Sylvia~Poor. She illa native of Lynnfield, Masa., anda 1942 graduate of Trinity Col­lege, Washington, D. C.. whereshe majored in chemistry.

Causes CompliC&tioDsThe "sickle cell trait" is an

inherited abnormality foundchiefly in Negroes. It can causeserious complications in patientsduring some types of hospital

Santa Clara UniversityHas Woman Graduate

SANTA CLARA (NC)-Mrs.Marian Doscher became the firstwoman graduate of the Univer­sity of Santa Clara in its 110­year history at the school'soommencement last Saturday.

She received a master of bus­inesS a'dministration degree 'fromthe SchOOl of Business.

The Jesuit university has ad­mitted women in its graduateprograms and law school forseveral years, and next Fall willb.egin coeducation in all its de­partn'lents,

Intelligent ApproachTo quote the head of the FCC:

"I intend to find out· whetherthe people care . : . whether thecommunity which each broad­caster serves believes he hasbeen serving the public interest... when a renewal (of stationlicense) is set for hearing. I in­tend - wherever possible - tohold a well-advertised publichearing, right.in the communityyou (the statimls) have. promised.to serve. I want the people whoown the air and. the homes thattelevision enters to tell you andthe FCC what's going on."

Chairman Minnow and Mr. Col­lins have spoken forthrightly,undoubtedly causing conStema:"tion in the camps of the tele­vision indu!JUy against which we,the parents of young America,have seethed.

No longer need we mutter,"Ob, stop it!" as we shut off theseta.

With an intelligent approachto the problem, we can monitorour sets, note time, prog:ram ap­proval or disapproval-and why.We can write Chairmaa Minowat the Federal CommunicationsC~mission, Washington 25, D.C and find ,out from him whenthe licenrteS of our particulartelevision stations are due forrenewal. W~ then enlist the helpof local groups--clvic, PTA,church or community-and alertthe local stations as to what wewant and do not want to viewon the screens in our homes.

"then I'll set the· table," "dustthe living room" or whatever.

It was only in the Fall, whenwe discovered that the· uphol­stery OIl that ,sofa arm wasthreadbare that we realized howmany. hours had been spent andhow much junk bad been ab­sorbed through those intent eye­balls!

Now. a fresh wind of hopecomes, fortunately, just· as an­other Summer approaches. Twoperceptive and clear-thinkingnew figures of stature agree thattelevision is Cheating the people

.of their natural right-the airwaves. Both LeRoy Collins, for­mer Governor of Florida, newpresident 'of the National Asso­ciation of Broadcasters, and thenew chairman of the FCC, New­ton N. Minow, are determined torestore right order-television­wise.

Honor Students Elect, New officers of the NationalHonor Society at St. Mary'S High

_ School, Taunton, are MarleneGrant; president; Mary Morin,vice president; Jeanne Poirier,secretary; Maureen Gamache.tresasurer.

THRICE HONORED: Mrs.Albert R. Spillman of Hemp-,..etead, Long Island,.ba6 beenelected vice president of the.World Union of Oatho1ieWomen's Orgimiatione. She'11M been chosen "Out8tand­iBg Womaa of the Year" illIltligious and eivie activities..,. the editors of Who'. Whofill Amerieaa .Wome. aRd• has Neelved .. honor­IrI Doctor of. BIJ~degree from Loretto HeightlCollege, Denver, ... all-......NC~

How to Stop Avalanche of JunkFromTelevision Stations

By Mary Tinley DalyDid you ever have the impulse to shout, "Oh, stop it!M

at your television set? Or even descend to "Shut up!"? Theuuseating stream of violence, the glorification of crime andtriminals, the over-adulation ()f mediocre "stars," and theendless parade of trivia find6eir way into our homes,like it· or not. The onl,. an­swer has been a click of thebutton. You can turn it off-.--fJoan we. That takes the stuff a.tof your house and out of OUl'll'­

tor the moment.Nevertheless, ittoes on and on.

Far be it from_ to monitor~ viewing ha­bits of others,but we'd like toknow that thereare good pro­grams availableat prime timelor us and ourChildren to en­jOy; that the young people ofAmerica will not be overwhelm­

'ed by an avalanche of demoral-king junk.

Quality ProP'lUD!JThis past year, fortunately,

ftlere have been some programsfit quality-interesting, taste­fully produced features the wholefamily and its friends can enjoy.('We note here, as an example,the exceptionally fine "Age ofKings" series.) This and ,8 fewothers stand out like scatteredI'08e blooms in a field of weeds,eomplete with snakes.

"Forbid your children to. watch'l'V." Easier said than done. Or,"'Make a schedule, see that theystick to it. Censor everythingyour children view." Theoreti­eatly, this is just ducky. Practi­.ny, over the weeks, monthsand years, it would become analmost full-time job.

In the winter, with homework.... the evening, it is practical.TV as a luxury to be enjoYe4.... small doses can well be reg,..lated: only those programswhich; add richness or real en..jo)"lBent are allowed.

Come Summer, and it is· upoIl

v _,'there· are -cOuntlesshoun fil­led with "nothing to do" and theirresistible 1iemptatiOll to "j8Stwatch TV..•·

Ats. a penonal sidelight: wehadn't thought our Ginn7' .wuInueh of a viewer. OIl, we'd n0­

tice last Summer that she wouldbe sitting, eyeballs sticking out,ehin moving back and forth onthe arm of the sofa, right next tothe TV set. "Just want to see

. tbJs one out," she would say.

I r I t> I t -i , J.i f- l'- I r ~ i ; ~; t ; t . " i.' I I I ! • ,t. ttl "l , 1<' , I J t l l l- J I I f

Page 10: 06.08.61

Cardinal Asks Missioners for Africa

THf ANCHOR- 1 tThurs., June 8, 1961

Bishop HelmsingScores CheatsIn Classrooms

SPRINGFIELD (NC) ­A Bishop has deplored theamount of cheating whichhe said goes on in the ave­rage Catholic school classroom.

Bishop Charles H. Helmsing ofSpringfield-Cape Girardeau as­

. serted:"If I would try to hide from

you that cheating has been pre­valent in our schools, I wouldbe like some of the stUdents, •lia~."

End in ScandalSome adults act as though It

is natural for a child to lie andcheat, the Bishop declared. "Alllies are unnatural. There exist.no human being more honestthan an unspoiled child. Fromthe first day in the cradle every ­child should be taught thatamong the worst sins one of the 'most shameful is, lying. Amicheating in school work is ~way of lying."

Bishop Helmsing emphasize4that the Church since its earH­est days has taught lying i8never permissible. He said thatcheating in school violates therights of others and hurts theindividual himself.

The prelate recalled cheatingled to the scandal of Americansoldiers deserting their countryin .Korea, the present collegebasketball scandal, "the craf'S de­ceit on the TV give-away pro­grams." He also recalled thescandal some years, ago of WestPoint cadets cheating in schoolwork.

False StandardsBishop Helmsing deplored "the

patently dishonest talk of somepoliticians," the "sham of abus­ing the Fifth Amendment" of theConstitution and the "unwhole.­some veneer of our advertisingworld which sets out to set upfalse standards simply for Uwlsake of profit."

He said there are too manr,elements in the world whichconsider the old fashioned ideaof honesty as "old hat."

Upholds Convictfoft-Of Theater Owner

CLEVELAND (NC) ~ Thethree-judge district Court of Ap­peals here unanimOUsly upheldthe conviction on an ob&cenitycharge of a Cleveland theaterowner fined $2,500 for showiACthe film "The Lovers."

The court affirmed the Com­mon Pleas Court conviction otthe theater owner, who weefound guilty in the lower cou"last year.

The Appeals Court said •found no errors in the trial alHipointed out that the prosecutioahad used eight witnesses ..prove that the film was obsc~by community standards.

Addition to Buildi....DETROIT (NC) - Work hall

begun on a $750,000 four-stOllfaddition to Lansing-Reilly Ha,,'residence of the Jesuit Fathers ..the University of Detroit, •make it possible to house all thepr~sts at the univel'Jitr iJl.>,,_lMIoildini.

Priest Denies RidersRed Inspired

NEW YORK (NC) - Fathef',-John LaFarge, S.J., pioneer in

the Catholic interracial councilmovement, said here that theexcursions of "Freedom Riders"into the South may have accom­plished "some' good for tbeNegroes."

The Jesuit expressed sharpdisagreement that the "Fr.edonaRiders" project was "communistinspired." He asserted: "Thecommunists had nothing to d4twith it."

Father LaFarge agreetl thetracial tensions had beE'o in­creased by the "Freedom IHderS»but deplored the "outragec'us be­havior" of the Ku Klux Kl,tll andsimilar organizations in Allibamaand Mississippi. Many N~groe.

are becoming "extremely impa­tient" over the rising tide of bit­terness which has arisen In "theintegration movement, he 'laid.

chanics, office work, nursing andteaching.

Stud,. LaD~1laI'es

Following the departure cere­monies the Papal Volunteers willtake part in a four-day religiousretreat in W;,chita: The volun':'teers for Belem will then leavefor that city, where they willstudy Portuguese and receivesocial and cultural orientationat a center operated by the Sis­ters Adorers of the Most PreciousBlood of Wichita.

WHOLE FAMILY TOGETHER AGAIN: "I'm your mother," and "I'm your father,"said Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Varga of Roselle Park, N.J., as they affectionately welcomedtheir five-year-old daughter, Eszter Ilona, second from left, whom they hadn't seen sincethe' pigtailed child was lO-months-old. The pa rents had fled in the October 19~6 Hungarianrevolution. "And these are your two American-born sisters Christina and Eniko," saidthe happy parents in unison as the family w as reunited. Sh~ was the first child broughtout of Hungary by CRS-NCWC since the revolution. NC Photo.

';";"""_.'--'_.. '-.'."

Papal Volunteers to Leave Kansas for Latin AmericaDeparture ceremonies for the rest of the country in promoting

first U. S. Papal Volunteers for the Papal Volunteers program,Latin America will be held in aimounced last Summer by theWichita 'and Kant!8s, City next Holy See as a project for send­Sunday, June 11. . big U. S. laymen to aid the Latin

Twenty-two laymen a III d Amer-ica Church.women will receive mission The ·volunteers have a widecrosses as the symbol 01. their range of educational ana occu­apostolate in Brazil, Peru and pational backgrounds. They in­British Honduras. The 22 volun- elude individuals with a nighteers, ranging from 20 to 54, in- scho'ol education. others whoclude 10 single men, 10 single have done university post grad­women and one married coupde. uate work. They have, had ex-

The four dioceses of Kansas perience in such fields as farm­are substantially ahead of the ing, plumbing, carpentry, me-

Heads City UnitNE:WARK (NC)-Msgr. Cor­

nelius J., Boyle, director of theNewark Archdiocesan Council ofCatholic,. -Men; has been namedchairman of the executive com­mittee of the Clergy AdvisoryCouncil of the Mayor's Commis­sion on Group Relations. Thecouncil, composed of some 100clergymen of all faiths, advisesthe Mayor's Commission on mat­ters pertaining 'to relations be­tween racial and religious groups.

K of C Councils AidStudent Centers

BURLINGTON (NC) - TheKnights of Columbus of Iowagave, more than $25,000 to theCa.oolic student centers at foursecular schools in 1960, StateDeputy Larry Hurley of DesMoines has announced. The stu­dent centers aided are at theState University of Iowa, IowaCity; Iowa State University,Ames; Iowa State Teachers Col­lege,' Cedar Falls; and DrakeUniversity, Des Moines.

Three new K. of C. councilswere ~ormed in Iowa last year.

He stressed that the idea ofworld community ought to "re­ceive its best support from thenations wbich have the Christiantradition; and these are the na­tions of' the- West." The' prelateadded "this sense of missionIthould 'be most easily under:'stood by those who have beeRtrained in the atmosp~re of aCatholic university."

"Above all," Msgr. Frekingaaid, "our Catholic universitygraduates should be wililing toaccept the, responsibility of pen­etrating our present age with thefull truth of God's teachingsabout mankind and its ultimatedestiny." ,

UrgescGraduatesTo Lead WorldCommunity Role

NEW ORLEANS (NC) ­Graduates of Catholic col­leges should play a leadingrole in a world commUJ;1ityeffort aimed at bringing aboutpeace, Msgr. Edward A. Freking,executive chairman of the Cath­olic Students Mission Crusade,said at Xavier University's com­mencement. "Catholic univer­sity graduates, with their knowl_edge of the universal dignity ofman, should be able and readyfor positions of public service inwhich they can work for therecognition of this liignity bygovernment and by public opin­ion."

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~hops Declar•.Germans MustMake Amends

BONN (NC)-The Bishopsof Germany in a joint state.. 'ment recalled the Nazi war'of genocide against the Jewsand asserted that "our nationmust do everything possible tomake restitution for all thecrimes committed."

The statement was issued inconnection with the current trialin Israel of former Nazi leaderAdolf Eichmann. Publishing aspecial prayer both for murderedJews and their persecutors, 10be said in all German churches,the Bishops called on GermanCatholics "to ask the Lord, in aspirit of atonement, to forgivethe sins committed by member.of our nation." '

EiclumtalU!,~1 '.J:arlier the same week, Juliue

Cardinal Doepfner, Bishop 0( ~Berlin, personally commented o~ "the Eichmann trial. He told a,rally 'of 8,000 young people inBerlin that "it will be the spe.;.cial task for the younger gener­ation to learn from the crimes ofthe past to build new bridges ofunderstanding and to atone forthe crimes committed." ,

Cardinal Doepfner asked Ger­man youth not to forget the ex­ample of those German peoplewho had given aid to the Jewsduring the persecution. He men­tioned in particular the lateKonrad Cardinal von Preysing,Bishop of Berlin, who he saidwas among those who riskedtheir own lives to help theirJe-.yish brethren.

Day of ConfessionCardinal Doepfner spoke at

the Berlin observance of theCatholic youth "day of confes­sion," held throughout Germanyunder the theme: "The truthshall make you free." Govern­ment officials in the Soviet zoneof Germany banned use. of thetheme.

rhe Bishops as a whole said iRtheir statement that the terribleviolations of man's dignity per­petrated in Nazi times happened"because political leaders triedto annul the eternal laws ofGod."

Material restitution is neces­sary, but not enough, they said.The Bishops appealed to theclergy and laity to add visiblesigns- of active atonement tetheir prayers. Men and womenbearing responsibility in Ger­many today were asked tostruggle against any attempt"to' annul again the command­ments of God, endangering man'.dignity and rights."

who very often for the first timefind themselves in a Christiancountry."

"And so," Cardinal Rugambwastated, "by begging you to havethe many needs of Africa in yourprayers, above all, I ask you topray frequently that the Divineguidance may always be with allthose who in Africa occupy postsof responsibility in Church orstate, and that they may bedocile to that guidance."

Lay MissionersReferring to missionary work,

he stated: "There are varioWlways of making known the Gos.,.pel of Christ. Some announce itby their preaching, others in thewonderful example of the Chris­tian charity of their lives.

"Africa's need, therefore, itInot only of missionary prieststo undertake the pastoral careof souls" but aiso of Brothers andnuns and lay missionaries who,spending themselves in works ofcharity, manifest in their dailylives the Christian ideal.

"The cross has already beenplanted far and wide in Africa.Official statistics put at about20 millions the number of Afri­can Catholics. But the populationof Africa is reckoned at about215 millions, so Africa's need ofmissionaries is still immense."

Mass Only AnswerTo Challenge Today

MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - TheMass is the only answer to thebiggest challenge facing today'sworld, "the challenge of formingone human race," a Jesuit theo­logian said here.

Father Bernard Cooke, S.J..chairman of the theology depart­ment at Marquette University,Milwaukee, said the most power­ful, lasting source of unity be­tween men is the lesson of lovethat radiates from the Euchar­istic sacrifice.

Giving the year's final Cath­olic Thought lecture at the Cath­olic Youth Center, Father Cookesaid isolationism is impossiblein the modern world. "But oneworld doesn't necessarily meanone mankind," he said. "It's upto us to work for real unificationinstead of just rubbing elbowsin conflict."

Mark, disciple of St. Peter,founded the Church at Alexan­dria, and all along the coastal

. regions washed by the Mediter­ranean soon sprang up Christiancommunities."

"It is difficult to over-estimatethe good missionaries do," hesaid, "in giving a truly Christianwelcome to my fellow Africans

FIRST N~GRO, CARDINAL AMERICAN VISITOR: Laurian Cardinal RugambW&"Bishop of Bukoba, Tanganyika is making a three-week tour of the United States. He iswelcomed in New York by, left to right, Guichard Parris, National Urban League; FatherLaurence J. McGinley, S.J., Fordham University president; Cardinal Rugambwa; FatherJohn LaFarge, S.J., of Amel'ica magazine and Dr. Thomas Patrick Melady, chairman,Africa Committee, Catholic A88ociation for International Peace. NC Photo.

Record NumberCHICAGO (NC)-Some 50,000

students, an all-time record, willbe graduated from Catholic,Protestant and Jewish schoolsin the Chicago area this year.Parochial schools will graduate44,618 pupils.

NOrREDAME (NC)-Afri­cans are grateful for the expan­sion of the Church in Africa buttbe continent needs many moremissionaries to carryon theChristian Apostolate, says Lau­rian Cardinal Rugambwa.

The Bishop of Bukoba, Tan­ganyika, who gave the bacca­laureate sermon at commence­ment exercises of Notre DameUniversity, emphasized that mis­sionaries, who in their dailylives give Christian example toothers, are especially needed.

The Cardinal, awarded a uni­versity honorary degree, pointedout that the Catholic Church wasestablished early in Africa, al­though it was almost obliteratedby the barbarism of the sixthand seventh centuries.

"It was Africa," he stated,"that gave shelter to the HolyFamily in the first persecutionof the I many .that the harshpowers of this world have wagedagainst our Divine Saviour. St.

Paraguay TightensPeoples' Liberties

ASUNCION (NC)-Paraguay'sBishops have received no gov­ernment answer to their jointprotest against the jailing andtorturing of a Catholic Actionweekly editor.

Catholic organizations, includ­Ing the Cliristian Democraticmovement, joined the nation'sBishops in protest against thepolice treatment received byEliseo Sosa Constantini, editorof Comunidad.

Comunidad has been criticalof the President Alfredo Stroess­ner regime which was de­nounced by Catholic Actionleaders for "uncontrolled andinexplicably violent" police sup­pression of students. In recentmonths,the regime has relaxedits earlier policy and permittedpress criticism of the govern­ment. Police suppression of othercivil liberties, however, has beenstepped tip.

Says CollegiateEducation AideIn Community

ST. LOUIS (NC) - A col..lege education should, mul­tiply a person's capacity tomake an important contri­bution to his community, theSurgeon General of the Navyemphasized at St. Louis Uni­versity's commencement.

Rear Adm. Edward C. Kenneyreminded the graduates:, "It isnot trite, nor outmoded, nor'squ,are'-as the beatnik mightsay-to point out the joy andvalue of any life, howeverbumble, lived to the full as aresponsible, contributing mem..ber of a community.

"In pursuing a career in somechosen ,field, your college edu­cation should do at least twothings for, you: It should enrichyour life and give you' deepenedsatisfaction in all the niceties of 'living, because of the bl"'oad cul­tural background you have ac­quired. Equally important, itahould multiply many - foldyour capacity to make a seriousand important contribution toany community in which youhappen to live.

"The real pillar of American.society we know and treasure isthe man who, while doing hisown job well, has time and in­terest left over for selfless serv­ice to his neighbors, his city,his state, or his nation."

'to ~ TThH~ ANJC;HOR-S· 196·1

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SHOP, TOWELSAfeet ReclaiM° Iftdu.triaI GIov..

By Most Rev. Fultml J. SIt~•. D.D.

With St. Paal It was quite 'different - he asked" be remem­bered. Paal was a &Teat collee&or for his missiolUl, particnlarl,.for his Gentile eonvens hi. .Jerusalem. His"adveriisfn&' piteh" was very simple: "Ifwe have SOWD auto you spiritual things,Is it a &Teat matter if we reap your ca.rnal&hiDes!" &. o&her words, we have given youspiritual lmowlec1&'e, inner joy and peace,&he Sacramenta. TIle least "011 eould do inexehaue for theBe' splrflual blessingswooldbe to dve 88 a few of your materialU1.Incs, sueh as coinA. Paul even impliedthat it was iDl....ible te measure the valueof the former wKh the littleness of thelatier•

Dear reader, for many weeks you havebeen reading' 1Ihis column. But shall it betreated as you 1Dight some T.V. advertiser? Shall you look: at the"Sudsy Suds" program and buy no "Sudsy Suds"? Shall your mindbe ,filled with Spiritual thoughts, your heart elevated, your zealinflamed by the sacrifices of others as they appear in this column,and yet shall you do nothing? "If we have sown unto you spiritualthings, is it a great matter if we reap your carnal things?" .

Modem advertising, as it appears on television, never aekIthat you buy ''Sudsy Suds" because "if it were not for 'Suasy SUds'you would not be enjoying this program." No man who watches aprize fight on T.V. is asked' to buy a ra~ because the companythat manufactures them is bringing him the bout. There is neverany concrete relatioIHIhip established between the benefactor ­in this instance, the advertiser - and the viewer - the prospectivebuyer. Perhaps the realOn is that our modern world of advertisingis not very clQsely related to ethical and moral considerations.Hence, it does not say: "Since you have been entertained, rememberus."

We he« not for soap suds 01' a cereal. We beg 1101' the Holy'Father and all of his missio88 - for the Godless and homelessIIliIIions. for the missionaries who need your fnnds to brin&' &hemnecor. Pleue help. Send yoar sacrifiees &0 TIle Society for theProP&l'&tton of &he Faith, and We shall send them to the Pontifffor the ..... of the world. What "SPOIlSOl"" coold plead for a bettereaaseT •

Cut out &bia eollUDo, pill "OUI' sacrifice to It and maO it to tileMOlIt Rev. I'ultoD J. Sheen, NatIonal Director of the Soctet7 fortile Propaption of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York I, N. Y.,_ 1'OUl' DioceIIIn Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINB,3tI8 Korth MaUl SWeet, Fall River, Mall.

GOD LOVE YOU ~ Mrs. J.N. for $10 "In fulfillment of apl'ODliee I made during last November's election." ... to Anonymouafor $3 "In memory of a little boy that God took back to Hisheavenly home after letting me love him for almost five years."•• • to M.8. for $6 "I saved this money on my light bill and amsending it to you to help shed some light about Jesus," ... to B.,B., L. and M. for $1 "We were going to use our savinga to buyscraP so we could build a soap-bo,x car, but we dec~ded to lend itto the Kiaiou."

We waDt net~ y.. sacrift~ bat ..... ,... pn,.en. Sea4FMl' req1lellt &Bd a $! saorttiee-offerina" fOl' the WOBLDMJSSION&OSABY, ... we will .... ,... tbetle multieel_ed~~1e8Ie4Ibr Bishop> Sbeea. Each time y.. _,. the WOIlLDMlSSIONKOSARY ,... wta r........ to _ ..we a _0,. saorifiee f."1IoIr F.......

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THE ANCHOR-DiQcese of Fall River-Thurs. June 8. 1961

Church in MexicoTo Help Indians

MEXICO CITY '(NC) - Thetlburcb is !lteppmgUP its labors:.. improve the lJpirituar andmaiecial wen-being of nine mil­lion Indians in Mexico.,

A congtess "of the apostblateUlOllg the Iiidia'n population has'propOsed the establishment of a 'eommittee for aid to the missiGna• part of an OYei""'all plan. The·program a Iso includes tilefounding of an inter-diocesanlIeIIlinary for rm.i-onaries, tl'am­ing schools for Indian leadersad medical aid as well as lIOCialMId moral betterment.

Mexico's total population of1Z,500,OOO is about 30 per centIndian. 10 per I'ent while and 60.... cent m.i.xed.

12

Lauds Labor ·MovementlsSupport of Peace Corps

By Msgr. George G. HigginsDireetOr. NCWC Social AetieD Depar1meD&

One of the most encouraging aspects of the U.S. ~vaceCOrps program has been the American labor movement'sfflterest in it. Although Much of the publicity for the Peacetlorps has stressed the participation of recent college

gi-aduates,.it is by DO mea~ Apart from the good that can'I8rrect to mfer that there IS be accomplished by the PeaceDO place in the Peace Corps Cor p I volun~s generally,for skilled older volunteers. there~ to be a .special C?p­From the very beginning, union- portunity. for American UnIonII8ts have proclaipled their sup- workers m the. program..

r,t f the The new nations of Asia, Af-

Pp 0 °c rica and the Middle East, as welle ace orps, f the Latin Am .

and it is sig- as ~y 0 , encan'f' t t h t countries, are currently under-

BI Ican N ti ~ going an industrial revolution in~e . aCo which representatives,of the free~vlSory oun- '.e'" I for the tra~e union movement can playPeace Cor p s a VItal role.'iDcludes two Union &ole .lmporlan&uion leaders The experience of union mas-_ Joseph A. 0 ~ s, carpe!1ters, electricta.ns,Biemepresi- prmters, pamters. construction• e nt' ~ the workers, ~d: others can - i1Com m u n i _ prope~ly utilized. - help ~ese NEW COADJUTOR: Most..tions Workers, and C. J. Hag- emergmg countnes to aVOid or Rev. Joseph H..Hodges~gerty president of the Build- overcome some of the! complex West Virginia native who isiDg ~nd Construction Trades problems which they must inevi- Auxiliary to Bishop' John J.Department, AFL-CIO. The ~ably f~~ in. a periQd of r&:Pid.-non movement's liaison with mdustnahzation and soc I a I Russell of Richmond, has.. Peace Corps is being hand- change. , been named Coadjutor Bish­died by Harry H. Pollak. an In addition to giving assist- op with right of successionAFL-CIO international !'ePre- ance in vocational training proj- to Archbishop-Bishop John~tative. ects, community building pro- C

Needs Matarity, Experience gr~Ins, and similar efforts, U.S. J. Swint of Wheeling. N. umon members can work on pro- Photo.

For many obv1ous reasons, the graIns that are of particular in-..jority o.f the ~eace Corps voo- terest to the free trade unions. Graymoo'rs Pick¥Dteers w111 ~ m the 21-~ age In the developing countries,bracket. But if the accent 1S on the role of these free unions is F th K Irouth, .it ~s equally true that vitally important. l'beir coop- a er oe zeremphasIS 1S bei~g placed. on eration can serve to translate Washington (NC) - FatherIRental an~ emotional ma~rlty, Peace Corps activities' (and Bonaventure Koelzer, S.A., :was~ on skIlled workmanllhlp. other developmental projects as elected Superior General of the

It is in these areas that the well) into terms of economic Society of the Atonement-4belebo~ move~nt.hopes to make and social juStice for the people Graymoor Friars. .• IObd contnbution to the Peace of the emerging areas. He succeeds Father Angelus4I!lorps pragram. As Senator Hu- Delahunt, S.A., who has servedbert Humphrey of Minnesota Leaders of the A~e~ie~Ia~ two six-year terms as SuperiM'l'eIllarked in a recent radio in- movement are realistIc 1ft their General of the community. .terview: 'evaluation of the Peace CorPi.

"'The Peace Corps ill not They do not view it a'S a pana- ~ Father Koelzer wail bot'll ittMerely a youth projeet - I cea to solve the political. prob- Muenster, Tex., in 1912. Be~ just tor you.ngsten. Of lerns crea~d by cOmmunl1/tlll Ol" joined the Graymoor Friars in«Hlrse, we want the pep, vital- u a. substitute.,?r ~t ecG- 1926 and Was ordained a priest.." enthusiaml. energy, and im- nom1C and military aId pro- in 1938 in Amarillo. He served.-.mation of yollDC people but grams, but rather al a new aU two ternlS •• superior of thewe also need maturity' potentially useful technique ill GraymOOl' mGDastery in Rome

.. .' ~ continuinC battle againsj; before becoming vicar leDeralWe need espen~, anel it poverty, disease and illiteraer of the communiQ' in 19M-the

I18ems to ~ that 1D the lab&r in 1ftUly pan. of the fidel. post he held at the time of hkfield - particularly among pee- election as Superior General. III:pie who have bad a vast Ullount tiolyCrossDegrees hia new office he win reside 1M:of experience in union organiza- WORCESTER (NC) -Father the Graymoor headquarten ialion and the leaderlllbip of local J hn C .__ M ' S J GarrillOft, 'N. Y. 'wons, or at the state, intema- • 0 our.....;r W'~y, ...tional or national leTel -:- that theology profeSSOl" at Woodstock Father Alphonau Hobaa, SA..bIboring people wiib that kind (Md.) College, and Frederiek BostOn, bas beea ChOseD vicarof exper':mce are equipped to H, Boland, president of the general for a six-year term. Newbe directors, group leaders or United Nations General.A.em- definitor. general are Fathenstaff leaders for teams of Peace biy, will be among six perIOD Thomas Condon, S.A., New York;eorps personnel that may go receiving honorary degrees next Wilfred Brennan, S.A., Water­lIMo a particular area." Wednesday at commenceDU!nt bury, Conn. and Austin Kii-

exercises of Holy Cross College. wedge, S.A., Framingham, Mass.Leaders OpiintWieAt this writing, many of the

details of the unions' coopera­tion in the Peace Corps effortftmlain to be settled. But unionleaders are highly optimisticht qualified workers can be ~_attracted to ~ pr-ogram once ii: •tile practical machinery is in 0p-

erating order. aIn underdeveloPed a rOe a. ' 8

where highly skilled workmenare scarce, experienced work:- UI

men" will fill an urgent need. As' '0' ~with other Peace Corps pel'lJOn- Unel, of course, the union peoplewill be sent only to countriec S­which request their services. - c:'l'Ihey' would also obtain in ad- Zvance the approval and ooopera- UI ------------------------ 8tion of local- trade union m,ove- ' ii2 _r- ...,aents in the host coUntries. THE CAPE COD

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, :rWIN CHAPLAINS RECEIVE TWIN HONORS: Twin Catholic chaplains, Father(Maj.) Joseph G. Gefell, second from left, and his brother, Father (Maj.) Gerard J.Gefell, are awarded senior parachutist wings at Fort Bragg, N.C. by Col. John O. Wodds,corps chaplain, left, and Maj. James A. Skelton, 82nd Division chaplain. Both chaplains.,from the Rochester, N.Y. diocese, completed t.heir 35th .jumps rECently. NC ~hoto.

Name 97 Coyle B~ysTo Honor Roll

Ninety-seven students at Msgr..Coyle High School, Taunton,have merited inclusion on thehonor roll for the current mark~ing period. They include 36 boysmeriting high honors and 13meriting honors. The remainderachieved honorable mentions.

Horace Travassos leads the I

seniors for high honors; GeoffreyKane the juniors; Joseph Costathe sophomores; and Louis An­drews, Peter Gay and MichaelReilly tie for first place amongfreshmen.

Explanation .on St. ChristopherContinued from Page One - the same sit.uation that exi1Jt~

Patrick is among those saints before last year's changes."about whom there is little or St. George, the patron of Eng-no historical knowledge." land and protector of soldiers,

The same does not hold true comes down in folklore as afor such saints as' Christopher dragon-slayer. But scholars holdand George. Both are among that despite the myths that havethe "Fourteen Holy Helpers" _ developed, historical· evi<rencesaints who become widely popu- points.to the fact that there waslar in continental Europe in the a real St. George, wh() was mar­Middle Ages as special protec-' tyred in Palestine, probab,lytors to he~p men in need. They before the time of Constantine.had not only their individual The Holy See in its new calen­feast days but a joint one OR dar eliminated the feast of St.August 8. ' 'George - traditionally cele-

Medieval Wt"fteto!l brated on April 23 -: reducing. ' . it to a 'commemoration.

Medleval wrlters wrote wch Further Changesfabulous accounts ab~ut them as His Holiness Pope John XXII'Ito cast doubt on thelI' very ex- Indicated at the time the newistence. Thus St. George ,was the calendar was issued last Julydragon-slayer; St. Ohristopher tha~ further chanr~~s in the cal­was 18 feet tall. Except that endar and the liturgy would bether.e was a martyr n~~ed made by the cOming ecumenicalC:hristophe~ in earl! C1mstIan council.times, no~hllig certam ~8 know,1l Father Joseph Loew, C.SS.R..about hlm. St. ChrIsto~hers an official of the Rites congre­Day falls on July 25, WhIch is gation, said last summer that thethe feast of.,St. J~mel the new changeS made were. in gen...Greater. The Apostle s feast ~ eral only revisiol'Nl. After men­a second class one, ~d there IS tioning the elimination' of suchonl>: a commemoratIon of st. feasts as those of St. Qeor-ge andChrIstopher in the new calendar' St. Et!stace--uby reason of their

local character, or of less certainihistorical element" - Fathet'Loew said:

"A work based on the prin­ciples of criticism of (historical) .sources would certainly havedemanded more decisions."

Record Collection. NIAGARA FALLS (NC) ­Earl C. Hull, owner of two radiostations her.e, presented a $20,000classical record collection toNiagara Universi~

H'igh Schools Grciduote 636Continued from Page ODe night in St. Lawrence Church

honor graduates include Mary with Auxiliary Bishop Gerrard,Martha Andrade, Pauline Cabe- pastor of st. Lawrence, presidingceiras, Nancy Pauline Holewka, and awarding diplomas to 91Yvette Lena Saucier and Donna seniors, including 3j) boys and 56Maria Silvia. girls.

St. Mary's Church, Taunton, Rev. Edward J. Mitchell willwill be the scene of the 3 o'clock speak and Paul Ponichtera willgraduation of St. Mary's High be honored as highest rankingSchool. Rt. Rev. Msgr. James J. graduate..Dolan will preside and award Prevost High Schooldiplomas to 39 girls. Rev. James Rt. Rev. Msgr. Alfred J. Bon-F. McCarthy is scheduled as neau will confer diplomas uponspeaker. St. Mary's class day was 56 Prevost High School seniors atheld June 1 and a baccalaureate 8 Sunday night in Notre DameMass, held in conjunction with School auditorium. Rev. DonaldCoyle High School. will be cele- Belanger will be speaker.brated at 9 Monday, June 12. Prevost class day is scheduledRev. Cornelius O'Neill will for tomorrow m.orning. Valedic­preach. torian will be Michel G. Methot

Summa cum laude graduates and salutatorian Frarcis J.of St. Mary's are Mary Flaherty Trenholme,and Shirley Gorcyzca. Mis/! Fla- Also at 8 Sunday night will beherty will also be recipient 01 ceremonies for 66 graduates ofthe Msgr. Dolan Scholarship and St. Anthony's High School, NewJean O'Keefe will be presented Bedford, including 16 boys andthe American Legion Award. 50 girls. Bishop Connolly will

Jesus Mary Academy preside at the graduation in theBishop Connolly will present school auditorium and" Rev.

diplomas to 28 seniors at Jesus Henri Charest will be speaker.Mary Academy, Fall River, at4 Class day will be held at 10:30Sunday afternoon. Ceremonies. tomorrow morning.will take place in the academy Diane Bernier is St. Anthony'sauditorium with Rev. Edmund valedictorian and Yvette TherienL. Dickinson as speaker. The is salutatorian.academy cbiss day is today and Monday Graduationsgraduates singled out for special Bishop Connolly will conferdistinction include ,fucqueline diplomas at 3 Monday afternoonAllard, valedictorian and Muriel in Sacred Heart School hall, FallSt. Amand, salutatorian. Miss River, upon 63 g~duates ofSt. Amand is also winner of the Sacred Hearts Academy. Rev.

.Betty Croclter medal and a Paul G. Connolly will be speaker.defense bond. The academy class day will

Very Rev. William Condon, be held at 3 tomorrow afternoon,SS.CC., Provincial of the Sacred ,also in the hall. Graduates withHearts Fathers, will be presiding highest honors include Maryofficer at the 4:30 graduation of Elizabeth Badwey, Mary Eliza­Sacred Hearts Academy, Fair- ·beth SUll~van, Katherine S.haven. Twenty-three girls will Dannemann and ~tricia Annreceive diplomas from Father Rocha. They, together withCondon and will he'ar an address seniors who have earned highby Rev. Clement Kilgoar, SS.CC. honors and honors, will ,be claSIJThe Fairhaven academy also day officers.held class day exercises today Bishop Connolly will also con.and high-ranking graduates in- fer diplomas at 8 Monday nightclude Rita Thivierge, Gardenia upon the 127 graduates of CoyleWojtuszewski, Jeanne Gingras High School, Taunton. R~v.

and Celeste Zerbenne. Joseph I. Collins, spiritual dire<:-Holy Family High School, New tor of the Catholic Club of Har­

Bedford, will .hold commence- vard University and Radcliffement exercises at 7:30 Sunday College, will speak. Coyle I;la88

day was held last month.Horace Travassos is Coyle

valedictorian and Kenneth Cwik­la is salutatorian.

Names Msgr. HigginsTo National Board

PALM BEACH (NC)-Msgr.George G. Higgins, director <ifthe Social Action Department,Natronal Catholic Welfare Con- .ference and columnist for TheAnchor, was one of 15 publicmembers named by PresidentKennedy to the President's Com­mittee on Equal EmploymentOpportunity.

The group, headed by VicePresident Johnson, is designedto end racial and religious dis­

(crimination in government em­ployment and in companieswhich sell to the government.George Meany, president of theAFL-CIO, also was named to thegroup.

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..~ Q ~nBioG. ' .

..Cuban Sal.esians. ·Ma.y NQ,W ~Qbor .]ii SO.. Ame'(l'ica .-

NEWTON JNC)~tiglify­-three Salesiapnuns.anQ nov­.i~~s 'whostaifed .'ii. Greater.Havana schools" ail.d orphan­.a~es" find their former r~le.re­versed here in New Jersey at·the Salesian motherhouse whe'rethey have found refuge frompersecution, Now they' are stu­dents instead of teachers.

Sister Mary Palatini,' novitiatesupervisor reported another 70Saiesians' have arrived' safely inMexico. That group is stayingat· the' provincial house at Santa

'Julia, Mexico. Six' other Sal­eSiaris have been left behind inCuba' to maintain ~e Havananovitiate. .

The refugee nuns, most' ofthem Cuban natives,. declin'ed todiscuss conditions' inside that'country, .

. 'Nuns' Will Re~urn' ,"The Cub.an, peop4l. love the

American people, We are gl.'ate­_ful to be here,"one nun cC)m-m'ented.·: ' ..

.The.Cuban Sisters win remain.here untll.they receiv.e. assign­'merit's ,fro~ . Mother' Angela,Superi~r Gen~ral in Turin, Italy.It. is e~pected that .they will beassigned to. Salesian foundations

. ,jn E.c;uador,.. Argentin~ Puerto~ico, and, Italy,. homeland ofafew of the memberS",of the ~rol,lp.

One nun recalled the Havanadeparture. A crowd of' Cubanscame to see them off, she said,singing ·the Spanish 'hymn "You'Will Reign 0 God" and 'shouting"The Sisters' will return!"

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. Fight RavagesLYONS (NC)-~i~rre Cardl-

,nai Gerlier, Archbishop of Lyons,bas urged.auCatholics and non­Catholics of his diocese to riseup against the "growing ravages"of public Immorality.

,,

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·M'ount Saint·· Mary Academy~~ited, Iby, the New England Ass~C:iation of Colleges ~nd Sec~ndary Schook .'

• .• " f Member of too (:~lIege ~~tra~ Examination Board . , . .

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indudingthe Commercial CourSe: DevelopmentCllI re.adingj for high school anCi..;; college 'student will be offered.. - - , . '. ." .. ,

ADD!il6~AfIN~O~~liON M;:Y ~IE ,08.1AlNlEfOl BY '!\fRI~J~G.· o.~ .'(alE~OlNJa~~', ",'-0 ·M'iT. ST.··MARY ACAIOIEMV, OSISOR!'llE ~-~'1~ Oil OSBORNfE'~-2n&. :..:1".'Ji.:. '". ".,..'. I: . '.

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'.,

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-' PrOYBncetownST. P'ETER THE APOSTLE· $25.. ' . 'Mr & :Mrs 'George Lemos· ',$15 .Boat Jimmy Boy

, $10'BoatSilver Mink, Boat Skip­

per, Anonymous, Mrs 'HowardBurch, Mr & lWrs Augustus Reis.

Chief & Mrs FranCis MarshallMr &. Mrs Sam.' J anopolis. Mat­thew Joseph.Mr & .MrS Gabriel'Fratus;' Mrs Burlon ': Kenney,'Joseph A. Days. '

;;,

"~..JiIlllIB]SUMMER SC·HO·OL~'. - • I' ~

SEES P.A:PAL 'RELIEF WAREHOUSE: George' Mc­Govern, center, dh:-ector of the U.S. Food, fo~Peace ;Pro­gram,. chats :with Msgr. LuiBi' L~gutti, lef~"and BishopFerdinando Baldelli on his visit to the Pontifical Relief Or­ganization in Rqrne. Msgr.. Ligutti is art American ·who is

.,permanentagrieultural representative to. the Vatican; Bish­opBaldelli heads-the Pontifical"agency. NC Photo.'

;~~.;-':'-... '

"

I

THE ANCHOR-Dioce'~e of f·ori ..River-Thurs: June 8, 1961',' .,.

f(1lU RoveII'ST. MICHAEL

$iO

.;':·.':.,:Si'·e~~~~ ,Gift$: ~. Fr:;~i~~~~ONYOJFTHE~_' .:." ~sa1i'o@wa8' . ' DESERT. -' R"l $JI.@ _David Gerzoro;

.",:' ".. " $1000 . " HOlLY NAME . ~_·, ..Atlantic & Pacific Tea-Co: ' '', . . $10

" $500 ',\ Mrs Frank Patenaude..Taunton Greyhound Assn.,· I~e. .Mr & Mrs Raymond PhilllPlJ

$200 lHlOLY ROSARY'Kurtz & Denning, Architects . $25

• $100 Manuel E. Medeiros.F. S. Payne Co. 'ST. ANNIE

$50 $10.' C. 1-. Heffernan Mrs Herminie McKinnoa. "

'" $25 . ST. MJrCJFllAEL.', ·:Will & Baumer Candle Co. .. $25

$20 '.John Lima, ManuelLimS..!\ H. Scanlan, Inc. . Ss. PETER & PAUL

m , $WWestern Waterproofing Co. Ine. John :Finnerty, Mr & Mrs Her-

N~w ftiedfoll'«Q ' l;>erl .Holt,· Mr & Mrs 'Ronald$1000 . I Miranda;' Mr &. Mrs Raymond.·

. .;. Fi'rst' Safe Deposit National . ':FolaL :' . ' ,., .. \ ' .... ST.' WILLIAM' .:Blink ' ,

$250 . , .. , ' $25.

- "'My B~ea'd Baking Co•. ' C.k, ~~~:A~~;D ~EART-:'". George O'Hara Chevrolet ... $10,'" ,. . . $150 ..~'4:beBrosse Oil Co. , ...J:t;lhn Silvia.. " ".,.... $100 . I' New .Bedford

Aerovox .Corp, .... IMMACULATE CONCEPTION.Kiwanis Club of New Bedford' ", $50 .• '.

-.; , . Alden C&rrugated Conta~ner ' : 'New 'Bedford€reamery .earp:' . ' '$25

, .,... . $50 Community PharmaCyStanley Oil. Co.,' $10Gulf Hill Dairy Mrs Rose Rogers

$25 SACRED HEARTAtty. Jack. - London" Kay . $10

I ,Jewelry Store,. Inc., Charles s.. lVIr & Mrs Joseph A. Jackson.Ashley & Sons, Inc" Atty. Louis . Joyce Jackson.Stone, New Bedford Stevedoring. ST. JAMES.,Co" Mason M. Taber~InsuraIlce, $25 . .Greater New Bedford &. Cape Mrs Edward, Arnett & JobaCOO'Labor Councii. . 'Arnett.

"Catholic Nur~es Guild I"~ _ '$15$20 .',., -Mr & Mrs Daniel Hayes.

'Enterprise Stores :'$10 , .$15· , Anna bOno\tan, Mr & Ma

'TWUA Local No. 1393 I, " Francis .Holt. .'. ,,' $10 ;."

, John S, Dunn-Marine Service' AttlehoD'O'&'Supply Co.,' Household Fin"; HOLY GlI9STance' Corp: Dr Nelson Hastings. . $20. Cape Cod Fabrics Inc" Guy'll' In '. 'Memory: of .'Re¥~ James

PP-lu-macy TWUA Local No. 590 ~owney.

. Fall Rive... I $10.. lVIr &; Mrs Herbert Barry, llIli'

$300 &M:rs Richard-Marsh. In Memo-Citizens Savings ,Bank ory of Rev. Thomas McNult)t.

rhe Fall R~~~~ Broadcasting .,.' DodgeYilie .Co·.~WSAR • ST. STEPHEN'

.. Oliver M, -Cherry . . . '. $10·D·r & Mrs Daniel J. Dorman'\ 'Mr' & Mrs Arthur Bartl'. William ';T,' Manning Co. Inc.'. .' , .

;.d. . $50 " ',.:.: .' Fo·irhaveri-.'. Walter C~Fr'aze .) ST,· JOSEPH ", Catholic Young Adult Organ- . $10. ',,' .. '~tion. '.'. ,Man\1el Casti.lhas, AI~an Duch-, 'United States Trunk Co; , , '., .esneau, Raymond Gamache.':'Glenn ·Fouildation.' Iric;',· ... ,,, . , "Mattapoisett

!.,,.;.. ,"0 ''0'',.' $40 . .,: : . • "', ST: ANTHONY"i"':Atty; RiChard' It. Hawes:',. ; ,; : , "'1 '$io':" ';:':.',,,

,'Magoni's .Ferry Landi~g:):' "., 'R~serv~tion I G6lf Ciiib

. ·:";e~_~c.. ,~~:~cal"C~·~ ~ne. .:'-'~.; ','; ".' :~a'~tuc:k;t:~, ' .. : $25 . ' OUR LADY: OF"TillE ISLB

" Watu'ppa''Gas'& Fuel Co:, 'In~~ " ,':'$25 <> ,.,:,

eoffe~ Sam Ihc,. Travis Furril':',:. 'Mr' & 'Mis .<tren-villeIoGiJrUiJ~r~,·co,;·i:l:ic.,.Adams, Dru~.C~::'· : :No~AtJfleboro

.- ~~c". '.Stafford Fu~mture.c:o... ' . , "ST. 'MARY'S:RlllI,l.h ,K\!~.~s: Robert. A....C1ark.. ,'." , .' .', $10: ,',t.a~l Rlyer: .M;~ll~ Produ.cers~~ ._. Mn Louise J. farrandes, Mr & '.Inc". .,: I ,., .'. 'k '.: ·Mrs -Ralph Allen,." Mrs Julia• .-Nnalgam~ted Clothmg W?r ~ . 'Hammond,' Mr &.'Mrs John Me­ers~of Ameqc,a,'F, W. Woolw<?rt},i ""Gowan, Mrs Geraldine ~Fillman.,Company, Al s Auto Parts. ''',,'.' . N 'D·' ht .· '.-.. "$20 ";, ..' ~."Ig" "on

T, K, Webster Co., Inc., Nelson " ST. JOSEPH!l. Cherry. . :.;" .' $10· ,.~.: '. , "$16:~0. " . ,q.' 1VJ'r &:Mrs T~~maB.,Higgfna

;,;.~ohnP .. ~lade & S,on .. ", ...... No.· Easton:,r, •., >. , • $15., ' . " "; IMMACULATE CONCEPTIoN.... l,tay'.s All to RadIator vv,orklJ, J., ,. . ... '; $10" , .,.Engine ,Service & Supply Inc.. , Ch' I' -. C' II';' '. ,.,.. L'· '.' . '.' . ar es u ivan awrenee

. James ;r..JYfurphy Ins. Cto·D

. ' . Hurley, Simpson Sp~irig Co." ,At.t,y, Lmcoln D.,Bray on,. ,~" I "', '" ·'W .... 'iL' ; ."on Buriali:Vault CO. .H '. " !.. ,,' a,reWllom.'. Fan River 'Catholic Nursoo ',- .""". ST; PATRICK'SGuild· $10

$12 Mr Be Mrs Robert Mott, Mir •:';'S"& B Corie"Co.. "Mrs Frank'Rose:' .

'$10 . ,', ; ~ .'. "Warehairi'National Bank, lli'fmJHorvitz & Horvitz, A Friene!, Annie Veiga. _

Jackson Co.• Inc., Atty J. Clark '. ,,', '0' :"~';'Dil' fL:.'Williams, ·1\:tty:· Lester I. B.akst.· ". . G1~.Q f.II rJ5· Gell Motor Sales Inc., Frank ::... . SACRED.·HEARTAllen Lumber-CO.,' Atty. Joseph $10..

(A. Cohen, Universal CIT: Credit tIIlr ,& Mr!!, ,)Yralter Smtth ,Jr. :Corp., Martin & ·Sullivan. SWGnSea~:, Joseph Nadeau & Sons, Motor ST. DOMINllC

;·Truck Sales Co., Seal Sac....I?c.. ':":' '$10Manny's Truck Sales & Servl~. , ,-Frank A. Phillips.'.: Beacon. yarment Inc., BuffIn":',.:.. ..' 5", : .' . t:.~~onFlortsts; Cape, Cod Dress '.j ,. . om.eIi'Se.,,Mfg. Co,.. .' ." ST. THOMAS MOREl:! I'>..n· AAoIloI!l.. . $10 ., U"l@. I u· euoro , :Mr' & 'Mrs John C. Lennon.:,. $15 . .; . ~ v . It.

Souza Bros. &_DeMayo_'Inc.~@.,a «:iIll'm@lYIR'tlJ'.." $10 .' .. ST. 'P~S X :

Atty ·Chaties R. Mason, Tor- .$I!). .,\Quato Tasso Lodge No. 1479. Mr & Mrs James Dela~

'-t

I I

Page 14: 06.08.61

ICommunioR Breakfasts

The Parish Parade

,--.

< I

THE ANCHOR­Thurs" June 8, 1961._---1.Laotian Reds KillOblate Missioner

BANGKOK (NC)-New wO'JlOreaching here from the comm~ist held sections of eastern La6flindicates that captivity an6sometimes death are becomiQIIthe normal lot of Catholic mis­sionaries in the area.

Fat her Vincent L'Honore\O.M.I., was killed· by the com.munist Fathet Lao on Ascens~

Day, according to reports reael'~

ing here. The 41-year-old Fre~• Oblate of Mary Immaculate WM

on his way to a Christian villagein Red-held Xieng KhouaDl!province when he was slain.

Seize OthersFather Noel Tenaud, M.E.I\,

57, was wounded-perhaps mOSootally-by Pathet Lao men at lrirJmission in east central Laos, illthe Vicariate Apostolic of Thak>­hek. Wounded with him was.catechist. "

Another member of the ParilForeign Mission Society, FatherMarcel Denis', 42, was seEJil,being led away by the PathdLao on April 17 or 18, it ~learned here. .

Two other French mission...both Oblates, were reportedearlier to have been seized .. ..,..the Red stronghoid of XieJiesKhouang.

.'

da'l2earSstOlissioDS....-.'.ANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Pre.ld.nt

..... J..... T. I;': Nat'l *'rseIMII .. _leatl_ to:

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFAaE ASSOCIATION .,.('-08@l!.ouBnfgt@llll AWl. atl4~~ St. Mow Y@)m !7, N. ~o.'-.~~===~~====--~---~-~=~-~==~J

Dear Cardinal Spellma~: .'Here's my I'ift, "no strings aUachecl." Pl~ lISe it In ..

Nea.. East where it's. '..ee4e1ll most.

MARATHAKARA .~

NAME .•• 10 ... ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••• : •••••••'. o.~

.'1.'ADDRll:SS .. ~ '.:-:-:-:-': ..~ ...... , ..... '...... :: ........".2

Fift)' )'ean ago there 'were fewer than 50 families in &he va.lage of MARATHAKARA in pagan INDIA. Today there are ..

I!.t rh lleast 200. Indians' are noted for theil'L~.7>~-· "'J,. Barge families, and Catholics in India'V d' are no exception. The present cha~~ ~. built 50 years ago, today must serve

QJ ' 0 nearly 2,000 people. The chapel is !Ie

~ :j ovell'-Glll'owded, in fact, that when theCT" V> Sistell's come to Mass Utey crowd in..+ t the tiny sacristy, unable to see tIWJ

!Wass being offered . . . In honor ofthe BLESSED VIRGIN, to whom theGlhapel is dedicated, we'd like to help'tile Catholics of MARATHAKARA

Tbt Holy Patm's Mission Aiti build a church large 'enough for tbekfur Iht Qrienta/ fJ'krrh needs. The people, who are God'll

poorest, contribute aU they can. They Will. provide the manuAIIlabor But the)' need $4,000. 'to make their dream come tnIe••• Somewhere there is an American Catholic who wants to desomething significant for God in memOl'Y, perhaps, of a parent,wife or husband. He neecll not contribute the $4,000 all at 0_For tax purposes, he can space his payments to suit himself••• Will you help us poor Catholics in paga.n IN~IA by sendiDll$100, $50, $20, Ol' $5.00? If all of us do somethang, even 80­thing small we'll build that church In MARATHAKARA. •will be dedicated '0 the BLESSED VIRGIN, a gift. from Cat&­olics in America . . . Whatev~r )'ou send, do it now • • • aDimark It MARATHAKARA.. ,--:

HOW TO HELP A 'MISSIONARY? ~Money, by itself, is not enough., St. Therese of Lisieux, ....

Little Flower took III short walk every day, When she was seD­ously ill, on'the infirmarian's advice. The effort was painful.When asked whether it might be better to take a rest, she JOe­plied: "Do you know what gives me s~ength? I take each.~foi.' some missionary who, somewhere, far away, is worn .­with his work: for souls. To lessen his fatigue. I offer mine ..God." ••• This helps to explain why '80 many Moslems are~today in the Shrine of the Little Flower in Choubrah, a sectiOll

'of CAIRO. They venerate the little saint, leave money for ~,poor, sometimes bring live sheep to be butchered 80 that th~in need will have meat .. Whether or not we have money ~give, there's something each one of us can do to help our str.gling missionaries. We can offer our daily Mass or Rosary, ~temptations, disappointments, aches and pains. Somewhere ..the Middle East there is a. Pri~st or Sister Who needs help mosLWill you do something right now .. '. today ... to help? Mi&osionarles, after all, are only human beings. Let's do sometbiDlto help them fight discouragement! ...

"HUNGRY' AND YOU FED ME" '?

If you've never been hungry (Which of us has been!) ~can't imagine what it means to be a PALESTINIAN REFUGES.Hunger gnaws like a cancel!' in the· stomach. Our Priests ...Sisters are feeding, clothing, giving medical care &0 thousan_of REFUGEES every day. It· costs only $10 to feed a REFU­GEE FAMILY for a month. Will )'ou, in the Ilame of Christ, ..without your "evening out" 'ihis mont,h'to help us feed a ramil»!YOUI' sacriftee of $10 wm be worth a million. We'll send 1"011,IS a token of our thanks, all1 Olive Wood Rosary from the JIGIIrLand..

HAVE YOU MADE YOUR WILL? MAK:E rr A CATHOLIGWILL-REMEMBER THE .MISSIONS. .

"':f,c-'~.r'(. 1(' :.'

\ ": i: "

FORCED TO MOVE: Brother Laurent, 87, left, oldestof 104 Christian Brothers who have arrived in Miami fromCuba taiks with Brother Cedmon, F.S.C., 77, 54-year island,'veteran. Natives of France, they are enroute to new LatinAmerica assignments. NC Photo. .

MR.FORMl/LA .7

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Dr~ Fisher' Says·Anglicans CloserTo· Rome

LONDON (NC) - Dr.Geoffrey Fisher said shortlybefore his retirement as

·Archbishop of Canterburythat time will bring the Churchof England 'and the CatholicChurch closer together.

"As soon as you try to get onwith other people, you don'tchange your doctrine but some­how it adjusts itself," he said' ona nationwide television inter­view.

The retiring Anglican Prima.teof All England was asked about

· differences in doctrine over"family planning." He repliedthat family ,planning means par­ents must not commit themselves .to having as many children as

.. they can physically produce, thatthey must exercise restraint andto that extent plan their family..

Agreement"On that matter the Church of

· Rome and ourselves are com-· pletely agreed," he said.

'''Only, unfortunately, they byfamily planning mean adopting a

-certain method of family plan-· ning. We think that certain· m~thods are legitimate snd· can be' used in a Christianmanner, and they think theycan't· be. '

"That's a dispute aboUt ways· and means, and you can alwaysget on with people who differabout ways and means. But ifyou analyze it. there's no differ­ence of principle between us all."

Dr. Fisher retired on May.as Archbishop of Canterburybut remains in the House ofLords as a life peer with the titleLord Fisher of Lambeth. He,wassucceeded as Archbishqp of Can­terbury by Dr. Michael Ramse~Archbishop of York.

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OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL,SEEKONK

Newly installed officers o.t'theWomen's Guild include Mrs.~anuel ,DeMattos; president;~Mrs. William Bishop, vice 'pres­ident; Mrs. Jack Hendricks, seC­r~tary; Miss Angela Medeiros,treasurer. -Guild meetings, sus­pended fOr the Summer, willbegin again in the Fall.

OUR LADY OF GRACE.NORTH WESTPORT

New Women's Guild olficer:sare Mrs. Louise Perron, presi­dent; 'Mrs. Ro~ Borden, vieepresident; Mrs. Yvette Ciarlone,secretary; Ml'fl. Mary E. Graham,treasurer.

ST~ ELIZABETH.FALL RIVER

The parish :feaR wiU be cele­brated' Saturday and Sunday.jJune 24 and 25.' Jobn Massa, ismairman.

The Women~ Guild plans all

August frankfurter roast at theSummer homo ot. Mps. Manuellledeirofi.

ST. MARY'S CATHEDRA>L,FALL RIVER

Mary Leary and James Cottrenare high average winners for theCathedral Junior CYO Bowling,League. High "3" winners areKathy Lynch and Everett Mc­Garty; high single winners areJan Taylor and Richard Gardner.Rev. James Buckley is groupmoderator.ST. JOHN BAPTIST,CENTRAL VILLAGE

The Ladies' Guild will hold abanquet tonight at Sunderland'srestaurant. Members will meetat the church haH at 7 to proceedto the restaurant. The unit re­cently sponsOred a breakfast forFirst Communicants of the par:'ish.OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL,NEW BEDFORD

The Women's Club will hold aday of recollection at Mt. St.Joseph,Bris~ol, this Sunday.ST. THOMAS' MORE,SOMERSET '

The Holy Name Society willmeet at 8:45 this Sunday morningin the church basement in orderto attend 9 o'clock Mass and re­ceive Communion in a body.Breakfast in Somerset' HighSchool cafeteria will follow Mass,with Rev. John H. Hackett,J.C.D., assistant chancellor, asspeaker. In charge of arrange­ments is Armand G. Bernard.

ST. ANNE'S,FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society plans,its annual family Communionbreakfast for Sunday, June IS,following 8 o'clock Mass. It willbe held in the school recreationhall, according to Albert J.Desmarais, chairman and HolyName president. Very Rev.Albert M. Ethier, O.P., prior ofSt. Anne's monaste!y" will speak.HOLY ROSARY,FALL RIVER

A ham and bean supper willbe served by the Women's Guildfrom 5:30 to 7:30 Saturday night,June 17, in the. church hall.Tickets for, the event, open tothe public, are available fromcommittee members or at thedoor. Mrs. Anthony Pannoni andMiss Rose Saulino a.re co'-chair­men.

SACRED HEART,NORTH ATrLEBORO

Knights of the Altar will at­tend 'an outing at Crescent ParkThursda).-, JlH1e 15, with trans­portation furnished by mothers.The event will start at 1, endingin the early evening.

The CYO will visit the WestIsland 'home of Mr. and Mrs. Al­fred 'Lacasse, adult advisors tothe group, at 9:30 Friday morn­ing, July 2. They will be joinedby members of othe'r CYO par:­ish units.

The CYO unit has lately a~­quired a shuffleboard table andtwo pingpong table$, gifts ofConseil' Duvernay, I'Union St.Jean Baptiste and Dr. RobertBedard.

Pre-primary students willhave a graduation party tomor­row' afternoon, at 1:30 withLadies ,of St. Anne Sodality inch~rge'of arrang~m~nts, headedby Mrs. 'Richard Deschenes. 'Graduat~ and parents will re­

..ceive corporate Communion at·8:30.Mass Sunday morning, June·-1S and. graduation, 'ceremonies',will take place at 8 Monday eve.-ning, June 19 in the church: Fol.

-lowing. the ceremonies, awards_and this year's scholar~hip will,be announced in, the hall, and aparty ,will follow with Mrs.Ralph Patunoff and mothers of

,graduates in charge of plans. .Tuesday, June 20, graduates

of St. Mary's, North Attleboro,.will join the Sacret:i Heart eighthgraders for an outing at LincolnPark.ST. DOMINIC,SWANSEA

Lafayette Hose, Foxboro, willbe the scene of the annual -in­stallation banquet of the Wom­en's Guild, to be·. held at 7:30Tuesday evening, June 13. To beseated are Mrs. Norman' Ashley,president; Mrs. Rene Pelletier,vice president; Mrs. CatnerineHeald, "Secretary; Mrs. ThomasLawlor, treasurer.ST. MARY'S.FAIRHAVEN

The Couples 'Club will electofficers Sunday, June 18: Futureplans include a weekend tripto New York City in October.ST. MATHIEU, . .FALL RIVER

ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL, Mrs. Lionel. Dugal heads' theFALL RIVER Women's Guild for the coming

Corporate Communion Sunday year, aided by Mrs. Arthur Morinand installation of offiC'ers of and Mrs. Anna Forcier, vice'the Men's Club will take p~ace . presidents; Mrs. Roland Frazieron Father's Day, June 18. Meni- and Mrs. Raymond Antaya, sec"';bers. will receive Holy Commun- 'retaries; Mrs.. Gerald Desmarais/ion in a body at the 9 o'clo~k ,treasurer.Mass and will go immediately to ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, •White's restaurant for breakfast. FALL RIVER ,.' '. , '.

Very Rev. George V. Kerr,pastor of St. Francis de Sales, Patronal feast ~f· the parishC,hurch, . and former All-Amer- will be marked Saturday and

Sunday, June 17 and IS: Theican guard at Boston College, celebratiof1, will also observe thewill be the guest speaker. golden jubilee of St.' An'thony's. 'ST. JOSEPH, The program ,will includeFALL RIVER .... blessing of St. Anthony bread

Most, Rev. Thomas J. Riley, and . other foods ati'SaturdayAuxiliary Bishop of Boston, will . night, June 17, followed at 7 by

, address members of the Men's a procession, sermon and bene­Club of St. Joseph's parish, Fall diction; then a oand,concert andRiver, at their annual Father's auction.Day Communion breakfast, Sun- Sunday's schedule Will beginday morning, June 18. at 10:30 with' a solemn high

Raymond Martin and Joseph Mass, followed at 6 by a secondKennedy are co-chairrrten of the band concert and auction.St. Joseph's parish breakfast. The weekend celebration willJohn T. Smith will be t~ast- be preceded June 12 thl'ough 16master. by a bazaar, featuring handmade

Sunday, June H will be the articles and dolls,deadline for reservations for theinstallation banquet of theWomen's 'Guild, scheduled fOl'7 Thursday night, June 15 atVenus de Milo' restaurant. Guildrepresentatives will be in: theparish school after every Ma88on' Sunday and .tickets will beavailable at that time.

Page 15: 06.08.61

Treasurer

FALL RIVER

MONAGHANACCEPTANCE·

(ORP.

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Thomas F. Monaghan k,

New BedfordElects Slate

The New Bedford Area croofficers were elected on Sunday,May 21 at the Catholic YouthCenter in the, Whaling' City.

The newly elected officers areMiss Anne Morrisey of HolyName, President;· Miss Pamela '

.Galligan of St. James, Vice-Pres-ident; Miss Rita' Estrella, of St.

,James, Secretary; and John Duffof St. Anthony's, Mattapoisett,Treasurer.

The New Bedford Area CYOadult advisors will have a din­ner-meeting dUring the monthof June. The exact date will beannounced at a later date.

Mr. Adelard "Frenchie" Bas­tarache was chairman of the

. banquet· committee w hie hawarded trophies to' St. Theresaas chaml2ions of the girls leagueand Holy Family GrammarSchool the boys champions.

St. Theresa, which was coach­ed by Mrs. Otley, were unde­feated and extended their threeye~r winning streak to 35straight victories while HolyFamily coached by Tom Manley,had a 12-0 record.

Joey Gallagher of St. Johnthe Baptist School received theMost Valuable Player trophy forthe second· straight year in theboys league while Miss NinaPoyant of St. Theresa receivedthe Most Valuable trophy in thegirls league.

Mr. William Ferreira, anardent, participant in CYO en­deavors for the past 22 years,served as Master of Ceremoniesand assisted Miss Carole Scar­pitti, the girls director and Mr. ­Bastarache, the director of theboys in the presentation of thetrophies,

Rev. John F. Murphy of 'St.Lawrence was the main speaker.Other speakers 'included Rev.William E. Collard of St. Theresaand William F. Doyle, assistant

The Weekly CYO Record Hopsheld at the Catholic Youth Cen­ter in New Bedford have beencontinuing to grow' steadily weekafter week. These Hops whichare restricted to CYO membersare run by Arnie. Briden whotakes charge in grand style.

JI{I"~ , WANTED: OTHER SHEPHERDESSES'1;';::. ' Might no\ Christ, the Good Shepherd. tie calling 1011 to

"":<: HIe service T.,::: The Sisters Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. Sel've the divine Shepherd of souia in 'the following fields:

Teaching. Social ·Work, Nursing. Foreign Missions. DomesticWort<. For detaiia write: '

Reverend Mother Provincial, Provincial B_ ol liteGood Shepherd, B~ View, Saeo, Mable.

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Young men are require'd to dressproperly: a coat, tie and shirt;and the young ladies to wearapparel consistent with Christianmodesty. Black jacket specialistsand their feminine counterparts .as well as rumble artists neednot apply. The CYO is interestedin quality not quantity.

These ';nd other social func­tions are supervised by the CYOarea priest as 'well as by adultadyisors. Once having arrivedat the dance the young personmust remain until its conclusionunless spel:ial circumstances' athorrie necessitate an .early de­parture. The parents of many ofthese youngsters furnish trans­portation to and from the dancesand are happy to know that theiryoungsters are in good Catholiccompany.

The young' people desire socialcontacts. It is one of' the ines­capable personality' facets oftheir particular age categOry.The ,CYO strives. to meet thisneed, realizing that' the numberof marriages in 1960 inclUded

. more 19 and 20 ye'ar olders thanany year previously. Mixed mar­riages, as any' priest knows, arereplete with risks and difficultiesto the Catholic ,party and the

'chilqren of such unions. Thesocial agenda of the' CYO is' ameans of combatting inter-faithmarriages and encourages ouryoung Catholics to realize thatthe sacrament of Matrimony isprimarily for aduts who are pre­pared to assume the complexduties of this state of life.

Bishop Connolly has accordedthe DiOjlesan CYO program h,isepiscopal endorsement as well ashis abiding personal ' interest.May we have the enthusiastic

,cooperation, response and assist­ance of all those. to whom Godhas bestoWed specialresponsi- . ,bilities in .the important workof administering to the spiritual

,and temporaal .needs of our': young Catholics. .

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Parish O'utingThe Holy Name 'Parish CYO

will .hold an outing and cook-

ship in the CYO-and cer,tainlynot a primary one--is to pro­vide such a young person withthe opportunity to know the par­ish and area spirifual directorsand to participate in a cultural,physical and social atmosphereconsistent with our Faith.

Today, as never before, agen­cie's and organizations that a~'e

secular_.or- quasi-religious arefostering indifferentism in theminds of our young people andthey are. offering a strong lureto win the patronage of soulsthat need· direction from u·s.

Contrast that' picture with thesocial program of the CYO wheredances are restricted solely toCYO members in good standing.

CYO AC,TIVITIES

YOUR CYO>. g)~R,ltCCTOR SPEAKSREV. EDWARD C. DUFFY

IMPOR.TANT DATES ONTHE CYO CALENDAR'

June 17, '18, New EnglandCYO Convention., June 26, 27, CYO Recreation

Day at Rocky Point Park.July 1, Girls CYO Field Day

-Our Lady of the Lake CarI!-p.

"

A priest 'who is engaged inplanning and promoting the ,ac­tivities that 'comprise the agendaof" the Catholic Youth Organiza­tion would be very naive if hethought for a moment that hehad the full, magnanimous sup­port of all adult Catholics whoby their office, professional orparental status are directlycharged " with the training,'moulding and education of youngCatholics.

The joyS and gratifications o~

this particular, Diocesan collat­eral duty often are tempered by, 'a marked rehictance or a stub­born, unreasonable attitude' onthe, part of some ~o take a per­sonal interest in the CYO fourpoint program. Sometimes theirobjections are 'framed 'in thefollowing manner- "Altogethertoo much is being done for theyoungsters today, They are beingspoon-fed and wet-nursed by somany agencies and organizationsthat the youngsters have losttheir sense of responsibility andinitiative,"

The objection is a very validone in some cases. We cel:tainlycan sin by excess if a youth pro­gram "spoils" a teena'ger or takeson the appearance of the 'tailwagging the dog. The significantpoint, however, is that in almostevery instance that this criticismis made, the person who levies itis the very one who is offeringlittle if anything by way of aprogram that keeps our young·people in an atmosphere that ispredominantly if not exclusive~y

Catholic.To deny the need of· such 'a

Cathoiic youth program in thisage of the beatnik and off-beat"philosoppy is equivalent to 'say­ing, "Look, I've made. up mymind. Don't confuse me with the : Planfacts!" Some of these sages con­tinue by stating, "We didn't haveCYO in our day and -yet w,ekept the Faith." Our rejoinder : out at Cathedral Camp on Junewould be "Well done good and . 15th a~ 2:30 P.M. Shirley Annfaithful s~rvant but when Edison' . Collins, Susan Silvia, Edwardand Ford prod~<;ed their inven- Siegfried, 'John .D'Ambrosio andHon did you cast them aside as . John .~ullay WIll ser,":e on ,thepassing fancies or have you ae.,. -Com~l~tee for .the parIsh event.cepted them as realities that are All parIsh CYOers are urged tou'seful and practical in our mod- . attend this event.ern civilization?" The members of the St. Thomas

Nobody has ever made the _~ore cyo will have their.par­claim, nor are they apt to, that ISh outmg at Cathedral Campthe CYO is a panacea for all of ,on June 24th. Again all'mem­the problems and moral dangers ,b~rs of the parish CYO are'in­attendant with the rearing of vIted to attend.young people during their form­ative years. The association ofthe Catholic boy or girl in publicschool' with their parish oftenis' restricted to Sunday and tothe Christian Doctrine program(if they are participating in it).

, One salutary effect of n:ember-

Attleboro Area Cy'O',Cornft'anl.lle Sodols

St. Mary's Parish of Norton; wishes to announce that they'will continue their successful,weekly record· hops during the,summer months held at St.Mary's Parking Lot in Norton.Plans are also being formulatedfor an area dance with Seekonk,Mansfield, Attleboro, Norton andNorth Attleboro. CYO units par-.ticipating,

Ami DeCosta, Spiritual Chair­man, of Attleboro area, togetherwith the officers are formulat­ing plans with Fr. William Mc­Mahon, Retreat Director, to holda weekend retreat at CathedralCamp in/East Freetownfor bothboys and girls to be held in theFall.

The Area CYO Glee Club underthe .direction of Rev.· Roger Le­duc' will continue its weekly re­hearsals with plans to hold atnusical in the very near future. '

.'"

lHllENRY S. GILLIE'Ir JR.

~.. eyO PresidentC@1~e Sfi'tlMB~rnt

Henry S. Gillet Jr., son of Mr.&: Mrs. Henry S. Gillet Sr. of~873 Pleasant Street is 16. yearsof age and a member of theimmaculate Conception Parishin fall River. He will enter hissenior year at .Msgr. Coyle l;Iigh .School in the Fall. Having att~nded the Coughlin Scliool anda graduate of the Samuel Watsongrammar' school, he was the!leCipient of two scholarshrips,one for his fI:eshman arid soph-'omore years at Coyle. He has andstill is serving faithfully' as analtar boy sfnce the age of 10. Hem active in Catholic Scoutingand has achieved the rank of

• Life Scout" and Junior, Asst:Scout Master of Troop No. 18,iinmaculate Conception Parish.He is also a member of the HolyName Society 'of his parish and• mem bel' of the Fall River Area

\~YO Glee Club. F.or the pasttwo years he has been PresidentOf the Immaculate Conception~Y9, which, under 'hilf leader­Ship, has .attained many firsts' in~e parish CYO. He has been in­Str'umental in organizing a bowl_4r'g league in his parish; has beenone of the guiding lights behiricithe Paul Nogueira .Memorial~holarship in his parish CYO.

" He is a member of the CoyleHigh Varsity Band and waschosen to represent his' schoolwith a Catholic Youth FestivalBand in Boston under the direc­tion of Arthur Fiedler. He wonthe iJe~lamation Award and .hasappeared frequently on the

.,... ,Coyle High School honor. roll.During the past year he has alsoServed as Spiritual· Chairman ofthe Area CYO in Fall River. Hewas instrumental in establishi:lgthe first area officers Commun­ion Breakfast and more recentlybe was elected to serve as Pr0s­,{dent of the Fall River Dioees;meyo.

'Fa~'~ River Plans'Tw~ IOQ)'OQ.!ltil1lg" Mark your calendar~reserve:tbe day. The Fall River areaeyO will have its first, but areal big day which we call "Rec­reation Day at Rocky PointPark." On Monday,· June '26, alljunior CYOers in the sixth,seventh and eighth grades areinvited to attend this Fall Riverarea CYO social gathering. OnTuesday, June 27, all CYOers of'~igh school age and all youngadul ts are invited to make thisday their big day at Roeky PointPark. The Fall River area CYObas made arrangements' , forround trip transportation by bus.swimming pool facilities, record,hops, prize drawings and' con-

0- tests for both boys and girls, Be­eause the tickets are limitedreservations must be· made be­fore June 24. All CYOers maymake their reservations at the~O hfllls on An"wan Street"-nd Franklin Street.

THE ANCHOR- .Thurs., June 8, 1961

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..17

Notre Dame GrantWASHINGTON (NC) - The

University of Notre Dame h81lreceived a $19,498 grant from theSocial Security Administrationfor a study project in' 'credi1union 'service to low incomegroups. The grant was one of 12totaling more than $240,00@given under the Social SecurityAdministration Cooperative Re­search and Demonstration GrantProgram for research 8Iid dem­onstration projects in social!security and social welfare.

Films ~mportant

In Africa Work,Smith Asserts

WASHINGTON (NC) ­The importance of motiollpictures from the educatio~

al and communications view­points in Mrica has been em..phasized before a House sub-­committee.

Paul D. Smith of the LayMission Helpers of Los Angel~who has worked with Africafilms, a White Fathers educa.­tional film agency, told the subotcommittee on Mrica of theHouse Foreign Mfairs Commit­tee, that large segments of thopopulation in Mrican countriesstIll are illiterate and that mo­tion pictures play an importantrole in reaching them.

Mr. Smith said a motion pio­ture network is being estab­lished by Czechoslovakia illGuinea, Ghana, Togo, Ethiopiaand Morocco. He emphasized itis important to counteract thi!!influence by greater productiOftof educational., films for Africa.Mr. Smith said effective filM8must be produced in Africa widlthe help of Africans. . ,

He also reminded the legisla­tors of the importance of thework of lay missionaries whichpermit the freeing of priests andother Religiolls for more import­ant tasks.

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., June 8, 1961

Brother Leo recently was re­elected president of the Associa­tion of Engineering Colleges ofNew York State for 1961-62.

A native of New York, BrotherLeo joined the Brothers of the'Christian Schools in 1914 at St.Joseph's Normal Institute, Bar­rytown, N. Y.

As School Deanof the school of engineering atManhattan College at the end ofthis academic year after 31 yearsof service in the post.

Brother Augustine Philip,president 'of .the college an­nounced that he will continue asa faculty member in the depart­ment of mathematics.

Brother to RetireNEW YORK (NC) - Brother

Amandus Leo 'will retire as dean

Fall River AnnounceseyO Tennis Tourney

A tennis tournament is sched-,uled for' the weekend of June24-~5.· Application forms areavailable at the CYO Hall,Anawan Street, for individualand parish entrees,

The semi-finalists from each'park will participate in the finalsfor the City CYO championship.As an ';lide to preparing for thistournament, a tennis clinic willbe conducted the evening ofJune 15 at 6:30 at North Park.

Leo Strickman is cooperatin$with officials in drawing up thissports program. .

SPIRITUAL DEVELOPMENT: St. James Parish CYOof New Bedford, fulfills one aspect of the Youth programat an annual Communion Breakfast. Left to right: KatherineBrabin, secretary; Pamela Galligan,' area vice-president;Rita Estrella, chairman of Di~n Spiritual Committee;Jeffrey _Riley, parish CYO member; and David N. Haley,

,guest speaker.Noted Jesuit Tc» VisitBoston ,in August

ROME (NC)-Father RiccardoLombardi, S.J.; noted preacherand founder of the Movement fora Better- World, will visit theU. S. for 12 days beginning July~l.

The Italian Jesuit's series of'lectures and conferences willstart in Boston Aug. 3 at the re­quest of Richard Cardinal Cush­ing, Archbishop of Boston. Hewill then go to New York. De­tails of his itinerary are not yetavailable, but it is expected thathe will also visit Raleigh, N. C.;Ashville, N. C.; Cleveland, St.Louis and San Antonio.

His visJt to the U. S. is- part ofa lecture tour of Europe and theAmericas. He will go to the n. S.from Sherbrooke, Que., afterconducting a series of confer­ences there from July 16 to 30.

CYO ConventionJune' 17 -18 .

The Diocesan CYO Col).ventionin Fall River huge success.Now off. to Hartford and theNew England CYO Convention.The elections are over .....; thevotes are cast. The new diocesanCYO officers have acceptedtheir obligations and move for­ward to a banner year of vitalCatholic youth work. The newlyelected officers represent' allareas of the diocese. The votingdelegates who selected these of­ficers came from 42 parishes ofthe diocese. And'now those whomthey chose to represent them inthe work of Catholic youth willbe' off to Hartford, Connecticutfor the ninth annual New Eng­land Congress of the CYO whichwill be held in'the Statler-Hil­ton Hotel in Hartford. The dio­cese will send io young men andwomen to represent our youthprogram in this section, atwhich time four of our officersy.-ill be voting delegates to votefor and choose the' New Englandofficers. -

Girls' eyO Field Day July 1At Our Lady of the Lake

Girls CYO Field Day 'to be 1. Track raceheld at Our Lady of the Lake a) 50 yard dash- 7-8 gradeGirls Camp on July I, 1961. We b) 78 yard dash-9-10 gradehope that the. girls from every c) ~OO yard dash-11-12parish are interested in the day gra,dewhich we are planning for them. 3. Relay racePosters have been distributed a) running board jumpthroughout the area eYO's. We 3. Novelty raeesare dividing the children into a) three legged racethree grade groups: 7-8; 9-10; b) potato sack race "and 11-12. The name chosen for c) wheel barrel race 'this day is Colorscope. As the .

,children register they will re- 2:00-2:30-Panshceive a color for the team in 2:30-3:00-Finalwhich they are on. The schedule ' i. Softball thro'IJ.for that day is as follows: a) juniors-30 yards9:30-10:30-Registration (no fee) b) intermediates-90 yards,10:30-12:00-Team games . e) seniors-l00 yards

1. softball-two games; four 3:00-4:00-Water meetteams. a) free style relay-individ-

2. volleyball-two games} four ual and teamteams. b) swimming under water12:00':>1:00-Luneh -indiv.'1:00 2:00-Team relays. c) dog paddle-indiv.

d) innertu~ race-teame) balloon race-teamf) free swim

The trophieS and ribbonS winbe awarded to the children atapproximately 4:15 P.M.

DIOCESAN SPONSORED CAMPS.:.

OUR LADY of the LAKEDAY CAMP FOR GIRLS

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AD Campers Bring Their Lunches .... Milk is Served at Camp

14 MtLES FROM NEW BEDFORD • t-7 MH.ES FROM FAI.-I. RIVER 20 MILES FROM BUZZARDS BAY•- - - -(-- ,- - - --,

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ISUPERVBSION 'ROUND TH& CLOCK

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PROGRAMSPORTS AND ATHi.ElflCSWAURFRONT ACTIVITIES

HANDCRAFTS - SPECiAl EVEN1'S

Day Camp for B~ys

DEPARTMENT HEADS TRAfNmIN THEIR FOELD

AGES 8 to 14

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STAFFtHREE SISTERS OF THE HOLY UNION

OF SACRED, HEARTSDEPARTMENT HEADS TRAINeD

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PROGRAMSPORTS AND ATHLmcsWATERFRONT ACTIVITIES

HANDCRAFTS - SPECIAL EVENTS

I

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Page 17: 06.08.61

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He said that although Catho­lics "may be involved to an ex­ceptional degree" in the presentconflict over Federal aid to edu­cation, the controversy is not adenominational one "but onewhich embraces men of goodwill from all religions."

"Catholics ,today," he sta~ed,

"are standing for a principlewhic4 is common to all religiouspeople and which has played animportant part in the develop­ment of our reverent Americanculture. In the present case, the,con'flict, where it exists, is notbetween major groups, but be-,tween -the religious and the sec­'uIarists." ,

Msgr, Kelly urged all togetherto "move on to deal with this,problem in the spirit of JusticeWilliam O. Douglas who said:'When' the state encourages reli~gious instruction ... it follows thebest of our traditions.' "

Russian LibrariansTour Vatican

VATICAN CITY (NC) - Agroup of Russian scholars wereadmitted to the Vatican. Libraryand were pleased with what theyfound.

The Russian scholars werespecialists in library science.They showed particular interest'in the photo reproduction lab­oratory and in the restoration ofancient manuscripts. They ex·pressed to Vatican Library offi­cials their admiration for theequipment and, the techniquesused.. After a, thorough tour of thelibrary the Russians also visitedthe Vatican museums.

Each account insured Safe by apagency of the U. S. Govt.

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Religion' Ys. Secularism,jCo~trOYersyContinued from Page One Men of Good Will

WM~N SICKNESS STRIKESIT'$ IMI'ORTANT TO SEEYOuR:' DOCTOR. lNOWHENHE'oS GIVEN 'tOU APftESCIlIPTION. ITSIMPORTANT TO 6ETIT 'FILLED AT

TOUHEY'S'PHARMACY,

religious element in, education••The separation of Church andState, which was intended, toprotect ,religious freedom, intheir hands becomes the consti­tutional basis for the secuiariza­tion of American cul~ure, andthey are using the public schoolsas the chief instruments for thepropagation of their dogmas."

Msgr. Kelly l.ashed out also atthe viewpoint 'holding "religionto be a private affair, whichrarely, if ever, should be allowedto intrude in the marketplace.orinto' affairs of the common-wealth." .

, Secularistie'The theory that the State may.never support rel,igion is strictly'secularistic, he' said, and "in­volves the sweeping rejection ofall historic religions . . . "

"Stripped of its nicety of ex­pression," he stated, -dihis ideol:..ogy has no use for God, let alonea place for Him, denies the spir­itual nature of man, downgradesChrist, the Ten Commandments,and eternal life;

"~his is what Adolph Hitlerbelieved. '!Ihis is what NikitaKhrushchev believes. ,The in­evitable ,result of this seculargospel cis empty churches inNew York, Chicago and San

, Fl'Iancisco as su~ly as there areempty churches now in ~oscow,and a spiritually bankrupt so-ciety.. , "

Anticipated Result,,"'!Ihe return to paganism may

take' longer under the secular­'ists but the anticipated result isno different from what we knowcommunism - has a Ire a d yachieved. When that happens thegoal of the great apostle of sec­ularism John Dewey-the eman­cipation of the religious fromreligion-will be achieved."

, . Decla~ing that "the publicschool in, secular· eyes is vital tothe spread of this' gospel,'" Msgr.Kelly added,: "While the c1;lUrchesremain :aloof from the publicschool and enforce a strict' neu­trality on' each other, the mis­sionaries of the secularist reli­gion are !ree to ply the~,r, .trade/'

• SeaSts.1Te!. HY 81

SouthHyannis

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,100th Annive'rsaryVATICAN CITY (NC)-L'Os­

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Real EstateRene Poyant

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CONVERT: Rev. Nich~b

las J. Ridaell,O.C.D.; a con­vert from. Judaism while

,serving in 'the U.S. Navy;was ordained June '3. Heprepared lor the priesthoodat St. Philip Neri, Boston, aschool for delayed vocations.

Cuba WarrrrnDIfIl9Continued from Page One

the Chu'rch," Bishop Carroll de":,dared, "that nation would not bein the mess she is in today."

Petty politics and a desire forpersonal power must be for­gotten if the Cuban, people areto overcome their common en­emy, "the Bishop stated, addingthat Cuban refugees "must put'aside their selfish differences and,become united as Christians todrive' communism from, their'

- country.~ ,Lesson for All • !

"What precisely to' do aboutCuba is ,the task of statesmenand political leaders," he con­ti.nued, but the "primary respon­sibilityfor Cuba' belongs to the'Cuban people, both inside andoutside their nation."

Declaring that "it is time foraU of us to wake up," the Bishop

, added, that "we in this countrymust ·learn the teachings of theChurch, that were' ignored in.Cuba."

"Inslividtial men and women,"- the'Bishop stated, "must strive'

first for persomil sanctification,for right there is the beginningof the moral formation whichsociety and nations need in orderto thwart atheistic communism."

... Up to LaityHe. also urged prolonged study

of the, social doctrines' of theChurch. "For it is in those doc­trines that we hear Christ Him­self speaking to mankind on the'ills which afflict so many of ourbrothers," ,he added.

The Bishop said the Churchmay teach and preach these doc­

,trines, but he stressed that it isup to the laity to put them into

, practice.

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Father Considine, PURCHASE (NC) - WernerIW. Jaeger, professor emeritus ofHarvard ,University and Father':.John J. Considine, M,M., directorof the Latin America Bureau of'the National, Catholic Welfare~onference, received 'honorarydegrees Wednesday at com­mencement exercises of Manhat­tanville, College of the SacredHeart in Purchase, N. Y.

~

J8 THEANCHOR....,.Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. JUl')e ~, 1961

Chancery Office Gives AS$igll1lmentsContinued from Page One holds a Master's Degree in the

J!lt'ancis Xavier Church, Hyannis, oHistOl'y' of Education, and was~ appointed Director of the ordained by Bishop Connolly oneatholic Youth Organization for Jan. 30, 1960, after which heiihe Cape Cod Area. was assigned to Holy Name'~ Father O'Neil~ Church"

_, Father O'Neill is no stranger Father Mahoney80 the Island. Ordained in 1950, Father Mahoney. also a n,ative~e spent the Summer at Buz- 'of New Bedford and a graduate:(Qrd~ Bay and then was assigned of Holy Family High School, at­p Sacred Heart Church, Oak tended Pr~vidence College and'luffs, where he served for' SiK St. Mary's Seminary in -Balti­years before being transferred, more. He was ordained bylin '1956, to, Holy Ghost Church, Bishop Connolly on April 2, 1960,~ttleboro. He was <)ssigned to the and has served at Buzzards Bay

, ·'Ilaunton parish in March of 1960. since then., A native of Fall River, Father Fathe~ PegnamO'Neill, ,whose brother, Rev. Father Pegnam, a native ofPatrick J. O'Neill' is Acting . Whitman, attended Gardinal

'$uperintendent of Schools, is a Farley Military Academy intJi"aduate of Coyle High School. New York, St. Jerome's' Sem­,He took his classical studies at inary in Kitchener, 'Ontario andSt. Charles Colleg~, Catonsville" Mount St. Mary's Seminary,Md., and,studied Philosop~y and Emmitsburg, Md. He was 01'-'

/' 'I.1heology at St. Mary's Seminarydained for the Fall River Diocese, ill Baltimore. by his, )lncle, Francis Cardiq.al

_ Father Moore Spellman of New York, on May-----.: Father Moore, a native of New 4. 1960,' and has served' in the~edford, is a graduate of ,Holy Hyannis parish since then. ,F-amily High School and studied All asSignments and appoint­~ Cardinal O'Connell a~d St. ments are effective Monday,lohn Seminaries in Boston. He June 12. '

FATHER MAHONEY

,Korean Bishop 'lisits Fall' RiY~r .Continued from Page One have followed the unique voca-

~()quent appeal to the congrega-' tion of, becoming entirely part_~ns he meets., , of the countries they serve.

, ,_ "The Church in Korea is very' Such p~iests fx:equently adoptP,Oor," he explains. "We have citizenship of their chosen couri­~othing. ,That is why I have tries and always serve under the

rme ·to A~erica to beg for help. Bishop~ of the foreign lands ex­, , am a BIshop -'- yet to beg I' actly hke other members of the~ not ashamed. I do not beg Diocesan clergy. '(m" myself. I beg for my people Father, Schwartz said thatWho are hun~ry and poor. And Bishop Choi's program in' the, do not beg m my. name. I beg ,United States includes preaching.... the. name of Christ." , • in parishes under. the Mission­" , AskIng for assistance, he con-' ary Cooperative Plan and con­~des, "Forgiv~ ;ne for asking tacting as many ,religious su-'auch great sa~l'lfl~e. But when periors as possible in hopes o~~:,father se~s hIS chIldren hungry attracting Sisters, Brothers and

,end sufferIng he' becolTle5 very priests to service in Korea.~ld an~,dari~g.", . , .'. Another important objective, The BIshop IS accompamed In i8 the' raising of sufficient funds"18 travels by Rev. Aloysius for the erection of a minor sem­

Schwartz, an American pri~st inary in the Pusan ,Diocese..>--/ who belo~gs to the Kore~n Dlo- 'Korea is one of the few mission­

~se. Insp~re~ by Father .Lebbe, ary countries where native~mous mlsslOnar~ ~o O~Ina, he dergyoutnumber missionaries,\f!1 one of a few mlSSlOnal'le5 who Silid FafJher Schwartz and the'R" I·· R· great need is for adequate ac-, e IglOUS' ecelves .. commodations for.the'many vo';Fulbright Award catioris with which the area ha!'

beeR blessed.,BROOKLYN ,(NC) - Brother ' Another American

,~nathan,O.S.F., of the Francis- The Bishop is very gratified~ Brothers, of Bro?klyn, has 'by his reception in .the United~": awarded a, FulbrIght ~chol-: States, 'noted Father. Schwartz.

. ~I'shlp for graduate stU?y In art '."He has been received with open,~ t~e Academy of Fme - Arts, arms." A soureeof special' hap­Ven!ce,. Italy. . ,piness i~ recent days was his

A paInter , who works 1ft the 'ordination of another American!Ontempo~ar~art forms, Brotl~er priest who, will join Father~()nathan IS m charge of art m- Schwartz in Pusan as a membm'~uction in his community's' en the Diocesan clergy. 'Brooklyn schools. ,: His scholarship includes a cashaward of $2000, cost' of trans:..itortation to Europe and "return,'~U travel within Italy, full tui­fton a'nd materials. He will leave6K Italy in September and take• three-week refresher course~ the University of Perugia be­~re going to Venice.

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in Chile think it's prettyclausyto give English names to theacJ'lildren. So Father Thomas Gol­den; a Maryknoll Missioner fromthe Bronx, was' only a little SUF';prised' at a recent baptism he~when the child's father proadly.'announced that the boy wouldbe christened ''Mister.'' .;

'Auerb~~~ LaudsCardi~@~ ClW!Shinq

WASHINGTON (NC)-Arnom(Red) Auerbach, coach of thtlchampion pro basketball BostOGCeltics, was the guest speake!'at a ~orts night dinner at De­Matha High School in sUburb~Hy'attsville, Md. The basketballteam of the school conducted ~the Trinitarian Fathers waSrated by some pollsters as theNo.1 catholic High School teamof the country last season.

MI'. Auerbach drove up in dautomobile with a special licenseplate which reads: "Celties :a.llI>He explained that the "Celtics 1""plate is reserved for Bob Cou~former Holy Cross player anda Celtics star for 10 years.

'Number iOI!l0 l%l2Jl'

-, "It's a nice gesture by th0Commonwealth of Massachusettsto allot those special tags," l\Illl"Auerbach said, "and they are re.­served only for the playersr->about 14 of them. .. .

'~But let's not kid ourselves.Everyone knows who the numberone man in Massachusetts is. Nomatter how you judge him, fromthe viewpoint of mtesmanshi~

religion or just plain man-in-the- •street, the Number One man i!JRkhard Cardinal Cushing."

The "Number One man" is theArchbishop of Boston.

lHfE ANCHOR­·l'h~rs.,.June 8, 1961

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They are just like people' inthe U. S., he said, except that'they are much poorer materially.­Many children come to his schooleach morning without breakfast

Asserts Many U.S. Catholics HaveWrong Picture of 'Mission Natives-

BELIZE (NC)-A Jesuit mis- (01' Utea" as they call it) but'sioner here says that many Cath- their clothes are clean.olies in the United Sta,tes are 'getting the wrong picture of Many people come to the rec-.natives of the mission lands. tory each month for gifts of

flour, but.' there are hundredsmore, whose pride will not letthem come, the Jesuit said. .

OUTSTANDING BOY:' Rev. John Godelaer, SS.CC.,, pastor of Our Lady of the Assumption parish, New Bedford,presents Father Hubert Trophy to Thomas'Lopes. Awardis .made annually to pariso youth excelling in athletics,sCholarship, .character funnati<m.

Father Frank Stobie of st.Louis,' Mo., said: "Don't makethem all the stereotype niission"figure - starY-'tng, ragged andlanguishIng in deSpair." (He' ispnstor of' St. IgiJ.atius parish inBelize, the capital of BritishHonduras, and has been stationedhere for tw'o years:)

Father Stobie acknowledgedthat there is a great deal 01.poverty' among ,b,is parishione1'&

aBut he added that the same con­ditions can be found in mostmajor cities of the world. llow- 0

ever, he pointed out that thepeOple here are not sittingaroUnd hopelessly, waiting foroutside help. .

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Name Detroit· CoachTo Hall of Fame

DETROIT (NC)-Lloyd Brazil,baseball coach at .the Universityof Detroit for the paSt 16 years,has been named to the MichiganSports Hall of Fame.

Mr. Brazil,' considered· thegreatest aU-round athlete in theJesuit uniyersity's history," wasseleCted along with three other'for mer All-America football'

. players, .a onetime Detroit Tiger'pitching great and a majorleague executive.

Mr. Brazil holds seven U. D.football records and earned atotal of six letters in football andbasketball He was the firstDetroit university athlete to be .named a football All-American.

was thumbed out of the NewBedford game, Barry .donnedthe pads and caught a fine game.An honor student at Durfee, thediminutive Machado receivedthe Williams 'Book Award lastweek for excellence in the class­room.

By virtue of its fine showingIn, the District One NCAA play­offs in Springfield Boston Col­lege for the second straight year'will be the area's representativein the College World Series atOmaIla, Nebras~a.. The .Eagleshad to go qvertiine to subdue ~

good University of Connecticutnine' in the double eliminationtourney. Ken Borsari of Ware­ham saw action on the hill forthe U Conns in the final game.

Track NotesFairhaven and Somerset fin­

ished 2-3 in Class b and NewBedford pulled up 3rd in ClassA to lead the Southeastern Mass.delegation in the State Meet lastSaturday. Jeff Purvis, defending220 champion, moved up to an­nex the 440 in 51.1. New Bed­ford's Wendell Nooth qualifiedfor the New Englands at NewHaven this Saturday as a resultof his 50.4, fourth place effortin th.e Class A quarter niile.

- Somerset's Willard St. Ongetiea the Class' 1 low hurdles rec­ord twice, first in the qualifyirig,heat and again in winning thefinal. Unfortunately, a follow­ing round in excess of the 6 mph,limit caused Willard's record'­equalling PerforJ;Xlances to' bedisallowed. The big fellow has ayear to go, however', and we'lookfor him to get into the recordbook in 1962.

Representing New BedfordVocational, a one man track

'team, was Ken Rose who put: theshot 51' 1%" to win that eventin Class. C. Rose who is .only afreshman is' undefeated in hisspecialty. This winning effort inthe State Meet was his 10th con­sec,utive victOry of the season.Just wait till hegiows up! -

When last·, we looked oneJames Piersall .was leading the

'American League with a., .360plus batting ave,rage. Anothel1'.ex.,.Sox chattel, Willie' Tasb~,now with' Washington, also is amember in goOd standing of theAL's Big Ten. This Is indeedsalting the wound when it isconsidered that the Sox' currentouter cordon is .belaboring theball at a .230 or so clip. Despitethe lack .Of 'consistent hitting,the Sox are playing good ball.and getting' strong pitching.

Schoolboy, '~~@[[U'$ SeG$O~

Dra~ing To .Rapid C~OS~:By Jack Kineavy

Baseball league logs' have been written, dual trackmeets have been completed and only the current EasternMass. Baseball Tournament and the New England Track'Meet at New Haven, Saturday, stand between the schoolboysand history.' For the firsttime in memory, the Narryrace ended in a first placetie. Co-holders Case andHoly Family carried the circuit'sstandard into post season playon Tuesday.

There is apossibility thatlocal rivals maysquare offagainst . ea c hother in today'sq'l.arterfinal ae­tion. It has hap­pened manytimes in thapast. Victory onTuesday overtheir Bay Stateopponents will match Durfee andFairhaven in a rubber match.The same will be true in theevent Holy Family and Casewere triumphant in the quali­fying round.

Which brings us to the con­sideration of the sele.ction policyof the Tourney Committee. Wefrankly don't go for the inclusionof a second l?lace team in postseason play. The Tourney shouldbe for champions only with thealso-rans left to look forward tonext year. A Tourney of leaguewinners, as 'formerly existedwhen the Sportswriters ran thecompetition, would be far pref­erable to the present formatwhich exposes titleholders todouble jeopardy and discounts achampionship record.

The failure of New BedfordHigh to be selected for play cameas a real shocker to this corner.It is our humble opinion thatCharley Luchetti's club is asgood as any in the area and onthe basis of their fine- 11-2 rec­ord were deserving of ~ shot.However, this is ~n era ofleagues and a team playing inde­pendent ball has a 10ugh row:to hoe. English High of Bostqn,'12-2 on the season, was picked as.the pool team.

Yarmouth Undefeated, ' .Coming into the Tourney with

the best season's record is'ClaS!!C Lynnfield, 14-0. 'The onlyother undefeated' entry is Yar­mouth with a 9-0 mark. Back- todefend its Class B laurels is Mil':ford High which boasts a spendid15-1 record. A small town, Mil­ford is a true baseball mecca.Entered in Class C competitionis St. Mary's also of that town.

The Tourney calendar isspaced in such a way that a onepitcher team will not be at toogreat a disadvantage, except inthe quarterfinal round. Thesemi-finals are set for next Tues­day and th~ final for Saturday,the 17th. So, except for the prox­imity of the qualifying and'quarter-final games, a pitcherwill have plenty of rest betweenstarts:

We look for Durfee to bestro~ ,in To~eYPlaY.. ,TheHilltoppers' offense has comealive with the good weather andCaptain Lee Woltman's bat isred-hot. Barry Machado is aversatile lad. After Dick Kehoe

Allow Jailed BlshopTo Write .Relatives

HAMIL-TON (NC) - BishopJames E. Walsh, M.M., now serv­ing a jail sentence in Red China,is being permitted to correspondmonthly with members· of hisfamily in the United States.

This has been disclosed by hisbrother, former Judge ,WilliamC. Walsh of Gumberland, Md.,who last August visited theBishop, last U. S. missionary inChina, in his Shanghai prison.

Judge Walsh told members ofthe Maryland Bar Associationon a Bermuda Convention-cruisethat prior to his visit the Bishop

,had not been allowed to write hisfamily since August 1958. .

"But he is now ,permitted towrite either my oldest· sister,Mary, or me once a month, andbetween us we have now re­ceived six letters from him, thelast having been dated in Janu­ary 1961," Judge Walsh said.

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" Stonehi.11 College Grants Degrees to 25 From Dio~~se." --:----'--"'--'l

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