20
o MOlrolaty Forbids Use of Abortion For Any Cause VATICAN CITY (NC)- Vatican Radio has com· mented that even the threat ofa 'child cannot authorize abortion. The Vatican commentator spoke against a oackground of widespread press and. radio com- mept on the case of a U. S. woman, Mrs. Sherri Finkbine of Phoenix, 'Ariz., who is seeking an abortion for fear her baby will be deformed because she took thalidomide a drug feared to be responsible for the defor. mation of, babies. The commen- tator did not mention Mrs. Fink. bine. The Vatican Radio commenta.- tor said: "It is understandable that Q mother who is the prey of anxiety because of the unhappio ness she foresees for her own child cim wish for its death, and thus'subjectively transform into a test'imony J,ter desire te Tuin to Page Church in Spain To Morally .Harmful, Actions VALENCIA (NC) - The Church in Spain will oppose at all times any state activity deemed morally harn1:ful to Catholics, the Al,"chbishop of ValEmcia has asserted. But the clergy had no desire "to command in Spain" and neither does the Church seek "poli- ' tical opportunity" for the It wa's made clear, however, application of its social doc- in June by five Bishops of dio- trines, Archbishop, Marcelino ceses affected by the strike that they had never ordered th'eir Olaechea 'Loizaga of Valencia . t t h . be prIes s 0 preac sermons m - said iIi a pastoral letter. half of the strikers. The letter, which drew a dis- Turn to Page Eighteen stinction between the activities of the Church on the one hand and the State on the other, came in the wake of continued Catho- lic efforts to promote social justice principles based on papal encyclicals. And it followed by only a few weeks the' strike in northern Spain in which 100,000 workers were involved. The Holy' See, in a letter sent at the end of July to the Na- tional Congress of Young Chris- tian Workers (YCW) here, had called for increased promotion . 'of the Church's social teachings. On July 14 the Bishops of Spain urged in a' letter issued on the first anniversary of the publication of' the encyclical Mater et Magistra that labor, management and the goVern- ment draw on Christian princi- ples in working for a more dig- nified life for all people. ' The encyclical itself, consid- ered a blueprint for social pro- gress, was widely publicized during the workers' strike that began last April. The YCW and the Workers' Confraternity of Catholic Action had pUblished a joint declaration of solidarity with the strikers, and the Spanish. Bishops had supported the'strike's objectives. ' FIRST: Dr. Joseph English, an alumnus of St. Joseph's College, Philadelphia, has been appointed first full- time ;peace Corps psychia- trist, and will assist in train- ing for unit. NO Photo. PAP AL AUDIENCES GIVE INSIGHTS TO COUNCIL: During audiences such as thIs, His Holiness Pope John XXIII has himself given the best and clearest insights into what the cOJ]ling Second Vatican Council will be like. Above, he is shown welcoming a group of dignitaries' from a: new African nation. On one such occasion, the Pontiff said: "The work of the new ecumenical council is really directed en.tirely toward giving back to the fac'e of the Church of Jesus the splendor and the pure and simple lines of its birth, and, to present ft as 'the Divine Founder made it, without. stain or defect." NC Photo. Pope's Own Quotes TellCounc·il Aims VA.'rICAN OITY (NC)-The best forecast, of the Second Ecumenical Council can be fottnd in the words of John. This is true ,because it was he who first conceived . the idea for the council, he alone who had the power to convoke "it, and he alone who by his approval can give it ecumenical character. Alinostfour years have passed since Pope John first announced his intention to convoke an ecumenical council. Not a wee){ has gone 'by since that time III which, he has not 'written or spoken on the subject. An accurate picture of what the coimcii will be.. ,- not in its details but in its pervading spirit, motivation and hopes ca'n therefore. be drawn from the monumental record of the Supreme Pontiff's spoken and written Pope Jo'hn conceived the idea of a council, he said, shortly after he was raised to the Turn to Page Twelve o PRICE lOc $4,00 De. Year to 100 countries and encom- passes three million young adults, Msgr. Cardijn directed the bulk of his attention to the ' need for an active apostolate among working youth. Speaking of the United States, he expressed deep concern about the materialistic, secularistic in- fluences which' surround young men and women after they leave Sl;hool a'nd enter working life. He spotlighted the in family life, the high rate of divorce, early dating, and sexual immorality as indicative of a degenerating American society. In America, he' said; young people do not think of the future, because there seems to be no real meaning to their life, yet they '''must be the molders of society tomorrow." "It is not enough to teach them, to baptize them, to pre- pare them for Holy Commu- nion," he declared. "They must have a Christian. education for life." He cited the "absolute neces- sity" of having mature, trained' Christian leaders in every' sector of society, who' wUl' make, it Turn to Page Eighteen I FATHER JOSEPH v 6 0 N@o 33 <C'l 1962 The Anchor 'Church Is 'Not Church' Without Lay SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-"The lay apostolate is not an accessory, not a luxury, not something capricious .•• for the Church is not the Church of Christ without the lay apostolate/' This message, expressed with a dynamism bely- ing his 80 years, was brought here by Msgr. Joseph Card- ijn, a champion of the lay ap 0 st 0 1ate. The Belgian priest, founder of the interna- tional Young Christian Workers, spoke at Presentation High School and urged American Catholics to wake up to their responsibilities as lay apostles of the Church, in a world com- munity which more and more looks to the U.S. for moral as' well as sCientific and technolo- gical leadership. During speaking engagements both to the general public and local Young Christian Workers, Msgr. Cardijn consistently un- derscored the essential impor- tance of ,the lay apostolate to what he termed "the salvation of the Church and of humanity." He termed the lay apostolate the "mission of the layman to spread the reign of Christ on earth." He urged laymen to study their environment, so they can solve the problems of daily living that "laym'en alone can solve in a Christian way." As spii'itui\l director Of a 70uth movement which extenda Joseph Leaves For Chapla"i-n Duty An Anchor of the Sou!, SU'f0 and rirm-ST. PAUL It's "Goodby, Father" and "Hello, Captain" for Rev. Louis J. Joseph, assistant for the last two ·years at Sacred Heart Church,oOak Bluffs. Father left Tuesday of this week for Mountain Home Air Force Base in Idaho,' to serve as a qhaplain in the United ' States Air Force. With the was called to active duty on permission of the Most Rev- Aug. 2. He will report to Head- erend Bishop, Father Joseph quarters,' 9th Combat Support Group at the Mountain' Home enlisted in the Air Force and Base, with the rank' of Captain. Father Joseph is no stranger 00' service life. A native of Provincetown, he 'interrupted his high school course to' serve in the European theater from'1943 to 1946. bn graduating from' Pt'ovincetown High School; .he re-enlisted - in the Army and served in the European Occupa- tion Army and in Korea,receiv"" ing an honorable discharge in 1951. ' ,Father prepared for the priest'- hood in St. Mary's College, Ken- tucky, and St. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore. He was' ordained by Bishop COIll'ioilyin St..Mary's' FalI' o,n , Upon his ordination; Father Joseph assigned to the Island parish where lie served until hCOsaid his farewell to the . people at Masses on Sunday. Father joins several other Fan River diocesan priests who are serving as chaplains to provide for the spiritual. needs of those in the service througholit the "'orId. The ANCHOR

08.09.62

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DESCRIPTION

to convoke an ecumenical VATICAN CITY (NC)- Vatican Radio has com· mentedthateventhethreat ofa deform~d 'child cannot ing physich~ns, for unit. NO "Theworkofthenewecumenicalcouncilis really directed en.tirely toward giving back tothefac'eoftheChurchofJesusthesplendorandthepureandsimplelinesofitsbirth, and,topresentftas'theDivineFoundermade it,without.stainordefect."NCPhoto. 'bysincethattime III which, council.Notawee){hasgone solve in a Christian way." As spii'itui\l director Of a Photo. o o

Citation preview

Page 1: 08.09.62

o

MOlrolaty ForbidsUse of AbortionFor Any Cause

VATICAN CITY (NC)­Vatican Radio has com·mented that even the threatofa deform~d 'child cannotauthorize abortion.

The Vatican commentatorspoke against a oackground ofwidespread press and. radio com­mept on the case of a U. S.woman, Mrs. Sherri Finkbine ofPhoenix, 'Ariz., who is seekingan abortion for fear her babywill be deformed because shetook thalidomide a drug fearedto be responsible for the defor.mation of, babies. The commen­tator did not mention Mrs. Fink.bine.

The Vatican Radio commenta.­tor said:

"It is understandable that Q

mother who is the prey ofanxiety because of the unhappioness she foresees for her ownchild cim wish for its death, andthus'subjectively transform intoa test'imony 'of,l~ve J,ter desire te

Tuin to Page ~ighteeJl

Church in Spain To Oppos~

Morally .Harmful, ActionsVALENCIA (NC) - The Church in Spain will oppose

at all times any state activity deemed morally harn1:ful toCatholics, the Al,"chbishop of ValEmcia has asserted. But theclergy had no desire "to command in Spain" and neitherdoes the Church seek "poli- 'tical opportunity" for the It wa's made clear, however,application of its social doc- in June by five Bishops of dio­trines, Archbishop, Marcelino ceses affected by the strike that

they had never ordered th'eirOlaechea 'Loizaga of Valencia . t t h . beprIes s 0 preac sermons m -said iIi a pastoral letter. half of the strikers.

The letter, which drew a dis- Turn to Page Eighteenstinction between the activitiesof the Church on the one handand the State on the other, camein the wake of continued Catho­lic efforts to promote socialjustice principles based on papalencyclicals. And it followed byonly a few weeks the' strike innorthern Spain in which 100,000workers were involved.

The Holy' See, in a letter sentat the end of July to the Na­tional Congress of Young Chris­tian Workers (YCW) here, hadcalled for increased promotion

. 'of the Church's social teachings.On July 14 the Bishops of

Spain urged in a' letter issuedon the first anniversary of thepublication of' the encyclicalMater et Magistra that labor,management and the goVern­ment draw on Christian princi­ples in working for a more dig­nified life for all people. '

The encyclical itself, consid­ered a blueprint for social pro­gress, was widely publicizedduring the workers' strike thatbegan last April. The YCW andthe Workers' Confraternity ofCatholic Action had pUblished ajoint declaration of solidaritywith the strikers, and theSpanish. Bishops had supportedthe'strike's objectives. '

FIRST: Dr. Joseph English,an alumnus of St. Joseph'sCollege, Philadelphia, hasbeen appointed first full­time ;peace Corps psychia­trist, and will assist in train­ing physich~ns,for unit. NOPhoto.

PAPAL AUDIENCES GIVE INSIGHTS TO COUNCIL: During audiences such asthIs, His Holiness Pope John XXIII has himself given the best and clearest insights intowhat the cOJ]ling Second Vatican Council will be like. Above, he is shown welcoming agroup of dignitaries' from a: new African nation. On one such occasion, the Pontiff said:"The work of the new ecumenical council is really directed en.tirely toward giving backto the fac'e of the Church of Jesus the splendor and the pure and simple lines of its birth,and, to present ft as 'the Divine Founder made it, without. stain or defect." NC Photo.

Pope's Own QuotesTellCounc·il Aims

VA.'rICAN OITY (NC)-The best forecast, of the Second Vati~an Ecumenical Councilcan be fottnd in the words of ~ope John. This is true ,because it was he who first conceived .the idea for the council, he alone who had the power to convoke "it, and he alone who by hisapproval can give it ecumenical character. Alinostfour years have passed since Pope Johnfirst announced his intentionto convoke an ecumenicalcouncil. Not a wee){ has gone'by since that time III which,he has not 'written or spoken onthe subject.

An accurate picture of whatthe coimcii will be..,- not in itsdetails but in its pervadingspirit, motivation and hopes ~ca'n therefore. be drawn fromthe monumental record of theSupreme Pontiff's spoken andwritten 'word~

Pope Jo'hn conceived the ideaof a council, he said, shortlyafter he was raised to the

Turn to Page Twelve

o

PRICE lOc$4,00 De. Year

to 100 countries and encom­passes •three million youngadults, Msgr. Cardijn directedthe bulk of his attention to the 'need for an active apostolateamong working youth.

Speaking of the United States,he expressed deep concern aboutthe materialistic, secularistic in­fluences which' surround youngmen and women after they leaveSl;hool a'nd enter working life.

He spotlighted the breakd~wnin family life, the high rate ofdivorce, early dating, and sexualimmorality as indicative of adegenerating American society.

In America, he' said; youngpeople do not think of thefuture, because there seems tobe no real meaning to their life,yet they '''must be the moldersof society tomorrow."

"It is not enough to teachthem, to baptize them, to pre­pare them for Holy Commu­nion," he declared. "They musthave a Christian. education forlife."

He cited the "absolute neces­sity" of having mature, trained'Christian leaders in every' sectorof society, who' wUl' make, it

Turn to Page Eighteen

IFATHER JOSEPH

v@~o 60 N@o 33 <C'l 1962 The Anchor

'Church Is 'Not Church'Without Lay ~posto'a~e

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-"The lay apostolate is notan accessory, not a luxury, not something capricious .••for the Church is not the Church of Christ without the layapostolate/' This message, expressed with a dynamism bely­ing his 80 years, was broughthere by Msgr. Joseph Card­ijn, a champion of the laya p 0 s t 0 1ate. The Belgianpriest, founder of the interna­tional Young Christian Workers,spoke at Presentation HighSchool and urged AmericanCatholics to wake up to theirresponsibilities as lay apostlesof the Church, in a world com­munity which more and morelooks to the U.S. for moral as'well as sCientific and technolo­gical leadership.

During speaking engagementsboth to the general public andlocal Young Christian Workers,Msgr. Cardijn consistently un­derscored the essential impor­tance of ,the lay apostolate towhat he termed "the salvation ofthe Church and of humanity."

He termed the lay apostolatethe "mission of the layman tospread the reign of Christ onearth."

He urged laymen to studytheir environment, so they cansolve the problems of dailyliving that "laym'en alone cansolve in a Christian way."

As spii'itui\l director Of a70uth movement which extenda

F~ther Joseph LeavesFor Chapla"i-n Duty

An Anchor of the Sou!, SU'f0 and rirm-ST. PAUL

It's "Goodby, Father" and "Hello, Captain" for Rev.Louis J. Joseph, assistant for the last two ·years at SacredHeart Church,oOak Bluffs. Father left Tuesday of this weekfor Mountain Home Air Force Base in Idaho,' to serve as aqhaplain in the United 'States Air Force. With the was called to active duty onpermission of the Most Rev- Aug. 2. He will report to Head­erend Bishop, Father Joseph quarters,' 9th Combat Support

Group at the Mountain' Homeenlisted in the Air Force and Base, with the rank' of Captain.

Father Joseph is no stranger00' service life. A native ofProvincetown, he 'interrupted hishigh school course to' serve inthe European theater from'1943to 1946. bn graduating from'Pt'ovincetown High School; .here-enlisted - in the Army andserved in the European Occupa­tion Army and in Korea,receiv""ing an honorable discharge in1951. '

,Father prepared for the priest'­hood in St. Mary's College, Ken­tucky, and St. Mary's Seminaryin Baltimore. He was' ordainedby Bishop COIll'ioilyin St. .Mary's'~~lt::~ral, FalI' R~ve~, o,n Aprli~ ,

Upon his ordination; FatherJoseph w~s assigned to theIsland parish where lie serveduntil hCOsaid his farewell to the

. people at Masses on Sunday.Father joins several other Fan

River diocesan priests who areserving as chaplains to providefor the spiritual. needs of thosein the service througholit the"'orId.

TheANCHOR

Page 2: 08.09.62

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2 'THE ANCHOR-Diocese oHall River-Thu~AUjJ. 9, 1962.,,: ------------- .- ... ,- --, -,-.,-.-~~:;=.~--:- '. . ----:" ~-:-;:-

·D. D. Sullivan & Sons':FUNERAL· HOME469 19CUST STREET. FAU RIVER, MASS. .

OS - 2-3381· WUfred C. James IE;

Driscoll Sulli~an. Jr:

.:.c. P. HARRINGTON'"..,' .' .. ,;.. . - " ~ ;. . .!:

,,".,·:·,FUNERAL .HOME ",· ...986 ~Iymouth Av~nu.e· "'.· . Fein River, Mas~. ,., ""

Tel. OS 3-2271 " ..

DANiEl f.:. HARRINGTON"Ucenl... Funeral Dlroctor .

ancI Reglltered Embalm.r

O'ROURKEFuneral Home

571 Second St.fall River, Mass.

OS 9-6072MICHAEl J. McMAHON

licen.ed Funeral DirectorRegistered Embalme,

. Aids Lepe.-s.· FANTIO (NC) - Miser~·the . German BishOPl!l' LeritenFund" A g a ins t Famine andDisease, has foulided' its,'. ~rdtreatment station' for lepers IIIthis African village.

.JEFFREY E. SULLIVAN'_era' DOllie

550 Loeua1 8t. '"all River. 1IIua•.

OS 2-219... Rose &. SulllvaaJeffrey E..$uWvaa

j' '. : "\

,.Federal Agency,Studies BirthCont~ol Drug

WASHINGTON (NC) ­The .U. S. Food and DrugAdministration is investigat-.

. i1tg whether there is a causa2lrelationship between a table~commonly known as an oraleantraceptive and blood-clotformation in women.

The FDA made its disclosurefollowing a warning in the Brit...ish Medical Journal that fourwomen in England who had beemtaking the drug, known as Con­'ovid" there and as '~Enovid" illlthe United States, had devel­oped blood clot and one died.

StudiesThe FDA, which gave permis-

. sion to market the drug in 1960,·said that studies -of two U. S.fatalities after the taking of thetablet in 1961' have failed wconclude that the deaths Wer(l

caused by Enovid.:Since those two deaths, the

FDA said, it has learnesd of 26additional cases of thrombo­phlebitis, including four deaths,in women· who have taken thodrug.

The FDA noted that undell'Federal law, acti.on to suspend'or revoke the gO'\Ternment's per~

·mission to sell drugs requireopr~of that the drug. is unsafe.

·Enovid is available upon pree, scription.. Catholic Teaching

Enovid uses a synthetic hOI\-· m.on~ which interferes with' thesecretion of other sex hormones..presumably by blocking releasefactors in a gland in' the, brain.The result of continued use Iesuppression of ovulation. . ,

· 'The Catholic teaching on tlMi·use. ()f such drugs is' that it it!immoral to employ' them as Iim~~ns of preventmg ~nceptioo,according to Father Henry V.Sattler, C.SS.a., assistant diree­

·tor of the Family Life Burea.u Oi.tbe'National Catholic Welfa~

Conference.'Howe,ver, Father SatUer noted,

there are circumstances wheretheir use is legitimate, such'aefor' treatment of certain female

'disorders and regulariZation:Oi·cYcle.·· , .

FUNERAL DIRECTOHU IBVINGTON CT.

WY 7-7830JlfEW BEDFORD

DONNELLY."""PAINTING ..- S~RVICE '.

AUBE,RTINE.... "

Funeral Home'

BROOKLAWNFUNERAL HOME, INC.L ....... &oJ' - 0. Lorraille 8oJ'

ao.- LaJPrall...

Helen Aubertine BraughOwner aad .Director

Spacious Parking AreaWY 2-2957

119 A.llen St. New Becllord

Commercial • Industrial:'Institutioncil

Painting' and Decorating

'135. Franklin' Stree.tfall River OSborne 2-1911

Retreat League'Se,fsSupper~ S,ched"le

,Diocesan community chairmenof. the Retreat League will meetat Cathedral, Camp Sunday, Sept.9 -for a buffet supper. They in­clude Williun F. Hurll and FredR; Dolan, Fall River; Louis J.Heffernan and-Joseph W. Dl.tffy,Somerset;. Fra.nk and MailUelM~l1o, 'Seekonk; James S. Mouraand Joseph· Scanlon,' Raynham;Dr. Ambrose F. Finne'tl andJoseph Kelleher, New Bedford:Clayton B. Rennie and Edward

.J. C~stie,Taunton; JosepbA.Saladino, league pr~ident, Fair­haven: Willi'am K. Demers, At­tleboro; ,Charles Carpenter,Swansea, Other men wili be ap­pointed at a future date

Retreat calendar' at the Dioc­esan house includes Sept. 21-23,laymen: Sept. 28-30, laywomen:Oct. 5-7, nurses; Oct. 12-14,Legion of,Miu'y; Oct. 26-28; SerraClubs; Nov. 2-4; couples; Nov.9-11, ,laymen. ' ..

\ ..

MONTHLY .CHURCHBUDGET ENVELOPES

PRINTED AND MAltED

OSborne 2-1322WYman 3~1431

RECEiVES TURKISH AWARD: Bishop Edward E.Swanstrom, executive director of. Catholic Relief Services­NCWC, receives congratulations and 'thanks from Gen.Galip Goker of Ankara, Turkey, p~esident of the TurkishSociety for the Protection of Ghildren, upon the Bishop'sreception of the Society's Gold Medal of Merit. NC Photo.

'For Latin America-i ROERMOND (NC)' - . TheDutch Redemptorist Fat her swill open a minor seminary next'month here in :the"Netherlandsto· educate ·missionaries· . forLatin America.

.SeminlariofilS' to Discuss RoleOf ~aymen in' Church Growth

ST. BENEDICT (NC)-Serni-' theologian at Woodstock (Md.)narians from Louisiana, Arkari- . College" and leader in the field 'ofsas, Mississippi, .Mebama and' interfaith understan~ing; JohnTexas will meet at St. Joseph's Cogley, of the' C~,n~er for theAbbey here in Louisiana' Mon- Study of Democratic Institu­day . Aug. 27 for Jiseussions on tions, Santa Barbara, Calif.; and"Th~ Role of the Layman in the Rob~rt Hoyt, editor of tl1.e Cath-.Growth of the Church." olic, Reporter, newsi>aper of the

. The meeting will be. under Kansas City.:. St. Joseph, Mo.,sponsorship of the Seminarians' ·diocese.Catholic· Action Study of, theSouth. - . . .

'Archbishop John P .. Cody,_Apostolic Administrator of NewOrleans will give the keynoteaddresil·. -. A~ong participants will beFather John J. Considine, M.M.,director of the Latin' Americanbureau of the National CatholicWelfare' Conference, Washing­ton; Father GuStave Weigel, S.J.,

, Legion ,of DecencyThe foll~wing films are to be

added to .the lists in their re­spective classifications: .

Unobj,ectiona'ble'for adults. aridadolescents: Guns of Darkness.

Unobjectionable for adultS:Panic in Year Zero. .

Objectionable in part for all:A Girl Named Tamiko (lowmoral 'tone). .

Separate Classification: Pres­sure' Point (study' of· paranoiae .basis of prejudice, requiringcaution' and .reserve, especiallyin the case of immature audi­ences, due to realistic treatmentemployed); The Sky Above andthe Mud Below (s~ientific rec­.ord of New Guinea. expeditioncontaining elements that may· bedisturbing to sensitive and im­~ature; .tabloid advertising hasmisrepresented this film . ,ofmerit by implying it is cheaplysensational) .

(A separate classification is. given to films not in themselves

morally offensive, but requiringcaution 'and some analysis as a'protection, to the uninformedrlgainst. wrong interpretations.)

All Kinds Of Insurance

91 WlLLLUI STREETNEW BEDFORD. ~S8.

DIAL WY '-5151IPSl'MnaO ~a@3

DONAT BOISVERTINsuRANCE AGENCY

CO)mbDtn~ S~h@tG~s"CeD ~B[j'e~tl'fi@fi1

SPOKANE (NC)-The'Dioceseof Spokane has combined direc­tion of Catholic schools and ofthe Co.~fraternity of ChristianDoctrine into one office calledsupe.a:intendent of education.

The 'post has been assigned byBishop Bernard J. Topel of Spo­kane to Father Charles D. Skok,who recently returned fromstudies in Rome. Father Skokalso . will be pastor of HolyRosary church, Rosalia.

"We hope," Bishop Topel said,"that such anirrangement willserve to unify the traiinng of. all .our Catholic students, and esPe­cially further a 'consistency in.religious education throughout'the~diocese so that whether our

young people attend a Catholicschool or not,.they will be givena comparable degree of educa­tion in their religion."

Father Skok takes over theduties' of two priests, both ofwhom served part-time.

SPokane Catholic elementaryand secondary schools enroll11,351 pupils. There are .5,880 .students in CCD schools .. ofreligion.

Nec,rology' ,AUG. 14

Rev. Rap h a e 1 Marciniak,O.F.M,~ Conv., 1947, Pastor, ,Holy

.Cross,: Fall River.AUG. 15

Rev. Charles W. Cullen, 1926,'Founder, Holy Family, E. Taun­ton.

Set Maronite MassIn Dia'logue Form

Char ,Bishop Joseph Eid, pas­tor of St. Anthony of' the De~rt

Church; Fall River, will markthe feast ot the Assumption,~ith the· first English languagedialogue Maronite Mass to .be .held in his parish. Scheduled ·for7:30 Wedne.sday night, Aug. 15,the Mass Will be for' the ben.efitof yoUnger parishiQners who areunfamIliar with Aramaic andArabic, languag~ used in theMaronite rite.

As Chor Bishop Eid celebratesMaSs in the official tongues ateam, includiIig' Rev. NormanFerris, Johr A. Monsour and'James Khoury will fo1l9W theaction iIi English. Such Masses~Ii be" repeated in: the future,

,noted Chor Bishop Eid.

New P,rovincialBOSTON (NC)~Father'John

V. O'Connor, S.J.,. rector ofWeston ,College;-has.been namedprov~nciai of'the New England

. Pr9yince of the Society of. Jesus.Father O'Connor, assistant pro:.vincial froni 1954 to 1956, Slic­ceeds Father James E. Coleran,S.J., who has been named spiri­tual director at the St. Andrew

. Bobola Jesuit resi~ence here.

.FORTY' "'OURSDEVOTION"

Aug. 12-St.... Theresa, N~w. Bedfotd:"Our ~. Lady: of . Victory,

Centerv'.lle. c':

·St. 'Joseph, WoodS'Hole.Aug,l9-0urLadyof Loutdes,

. ~': . Wellfleet... ' :Our Lady of Grace, No.

, : Westport. .. . Sacred' Heart, New Bed-. "'ford:' . .: .

Aug. 2~St.; Anthoriy. of theDesert, Fall River.

St. John the Baptist,Central Village.

Sept. 2-Our Lady of the As­sumption, New Bed­ford.

Our Lady of Mount. Car­mel, Seekonk.

TBB ANCHOR

hOlld Clue POI"'lJe I"U<I at FaO 1U..e2.14.... Publl8_ ..., 1'Il1ln., at UtRiabJaOD A.....ua lI'alI 81... ...... ..tile :1otbalJ. p_. >If .... 01"".... dIfuII RIvet 9ubocvh,lhII Iiluloo !:<I t:::cll\,_ '",aiel 06.00 Irl=1 11-.

Mass OrdoFRIDAY-St. Lawrence, Martyr., .II Class. Red. Mass Proper;_, Gloria; no Creed.: COlnrpon" Preface.' ..

SA.TURDA Y - Mass of the'Blessed Virgin for Saturday.IV Class. white. Mass Proper:Gloria; Second Collect SS.Tiburtius and Susanna, Virgin,

- Martyrs; no Creed; Preface ofBlessed Virgin. '

.SUNDAY -..:. IX Sunday AfterPentecost. II Class. Green.Mass Proper; Gloria; .Creed; ,Preface of Trinity.

MONDAY - Mass of previousSunday. IV Class. Green.'Mass Proper; No GIQria; Sec­ond Collect 5S. Hippolytus andCassian, Martyrs;' no Creed;Common Preface.

TUESDAY-Vigil of the As­'. 'sumption of the Bessed Virgin. 'Mary. II Class. Violet. Mass

Proper; .No Gloria: SecondCollect St. Eusebius, Confes­sor; no 'Creed;' Common Pref­ace.

WEDNESDAY - Assumpt~on of1Iie Blessed Vilrgin Mary. I

. Class. White. Mass Proper; Glo­: ria; Creed; Preface of Blessed

Virgin. Holy Day of Obliga-. tion. .

.THuRSDAY - St. Joachim,,'. Father of the Blessed' 'ViI:gin

Mai'y, Ccnfess' '. ,II Class.,,'White. Mass Proper; Gloria;'; no Creoo: Common Preface.

Je~lIit Theo~ogy' Expert ExpBainsSignificance' of "Hierarc.h·icGI' ,

MILWAUKEE (NC):-A'thee- .truth demands it," he said. He

10gian warned here against added:thinking that because the Church "In' every situation of history,is a "bierachical" society only the Church' of Christ will havebishops are "truly the Church." to bear witness to -the truth of, Actually, "hierarchical" as ap- Christ, 'no matter what the coStplied· to the Church "says just in misunderstanding and suffer­the 'opposite," declared Father ing; the cross will mark. theBernard 'J. Cooke, S.J., chairman Church,as distinctively as apos­of the theology department at tolicity or catholicity."Marquette University here. He underlined the central role

"If there were only' bishops of the Eucharist in the Churchin the Church, it would not be and the universality of thehierarchieal," Father Cooke ,ex- Eucharistic' sacrifice, saying it

-plained in an address at an in- must be "celebrated by all peo-stitute study of eastern and west- pIes and expressed in all lan-ern Christianity. . guages."

The, institute, whose themewas "Christian Disengagementand Reunion. Trends," was spon­sored by the university's historydepartment and Slavic· Institute.

Father Cooke examined thenature of the Church as it isunderstood by Catholics. HestresSed that all Catholics, notmerely the bishops, have a roleto play in this hierarchical soci­ety.

''There is a great and impor--tant equality among Christians,"

he said. "Some may occupy posi­tions of greater authoritativeimportance in the Church, but itCannot be said that one person ismore or less a member of theChurch than is another." .

The Jesuit' theologian calledattention ,to the Church's diltyto witness to the truth entrusted.to it by' God. .

"'The Church's own temporalsafety and security must alwaysbe' sacrificed if the service of

Page 3: 08.09.62

LATIN AMERICAN GUIDE: A new directory of U.S. Catholic colleges and uni-'versities published in Por,tuguese and Spanish is being prepared at Notre 'Dame Univer­sity by, left to r!ght, Dr. Luis Galvez, of, the College of St. Teresa, Winona; SisterMary St. Jude of. Salpointe High School, Tucson; Father Robert Pelton, C.S.C., andBrother M. Patrick of St. Mel High School, Chicago. Ne Photo.

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Girls Aid. CouncilMANILA (NC) - The girls

of Assumption Convent's college. department are engaged in wel­fare work at hospitals, orphan­ages and among needy familiesas an act of preparation for thecoming Second Vatican Council

Fall River Savings Bank

Prelates Will BeAt CCO CongressIn Hartford

Bishop Connolly, Auxili~

ary Bishop Gerrard and Rev~

Joseph Powers, Diocesan'CCD Director, will partici­pate in the 16th New EnglandRegional Confraternity of Chris.tian Doctrine Congress, sche­duled to be held in HartfordThursday through Sunday, Sept.13 to 16.

Bishop' Connolly will presideat a session demonstrating au­diovisual catechedi!=al aids andBishop Gerrard will head a unitdiscussing the place of, the· highschool CCD unit in the spaceage. With the Hon. John N.Dempsey, Governor of Connec­ticut, Father Powers will be co'­chairman of a' panel which will .discuss the concept of lay lead­ership through the parish exe­cutive board of the CCD. \

On the program are 28 general~essions dealing with all phasesof CCD, work, in addition tospecial sessions designed to helpbring Christ to .the deaf,blindand mentally retarded.

CCD in the SPlilce Age will bethe theme of the first generalsession, set for 8 Thursdaynight, Sept. 13. Speakers will beMost Rev. Ernest J. 'Primeau,S.T.D., Bishop 'of Manchester,N.H, and Most Rev. Walter W.Curtis, S.T.D., Bishop of Bridge­port.

Thousands Expect~d

An attendance of 10,000 is ex.pected at the congress. Generalheadquarters will be at theSiatler Hotel in Hartford, butsessions will be held at SoutoCatholic High School except fora youth session, scheduled forEast Catholic High School.

A special feature will be aclergy dirner' at 12 noon Friday,Sept. 14. Bishop Henry' O'Briellof Hartford and Bishop Chris­topher Weldon of Springfieldwill speak. .

Cardinal Cushing will preachat a closing' Mass in St. Joseph'sCathedral Sunday, evening, Sept.16.·

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Charges DiscrhninatioDCardinal 'Spellman said the

controversy ,over "Federal 'aid toeducatfon is '~a classic example"of' the tactics of the secularists.

He said some 6.5 millionAmerican children 'attend non­public grade and high ,schoolsand receive an education that'"equals that" given in' publicschools." He 'noted that thegraduates of these schools' 'serveas parents and citizens, are pre..'pared to defend their coun"try,and pay taxes to the govern­ment.

"But some argue that 'not onepenny of Federal funds may 'beused to improve the excellenceof their education, 'because intheir: schopls, in addition to theirre'gular subjects, they are per­mitted to learn about' God," hesaid. He added:

"This is injustice. This is dis­crimination". This is an economicpenalty against the schools per- 'forming a public service for ourcoun.try parallel to that of the'public, schools."

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Remove Goda n,ew religion, of secularism.This should be, ruled unconsti­tutional," he said.

The Cardinal spoke at the64th annual international con~

vention of the Fraternal Orderof Eagles.

Referring to the . Supreme,,Court's June 25 'school prayerruling, he cited the court's "highresponsibility" in guarding theConstitution and the "delicacy"of this task. He also, expressedrespect for ·the, "integrity anddedication" of the members ofthe court.

But he added that he is "con.;vinced that in this case six jus­tices rendered a decision which

. will be harmful to America."The Cardinal coniplained tliat

'secularists "proclaim religionand the State as hostile forces inour country, instead of friendly

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Prelate Reports 'Anla%ing~ ResultsFrom Laymen's Study, Cou,r~e ",PORTLAND (NC) ~ A Texas of the, basic doctrines of our

Bishop reported here th?t im iii.: Holy Faith," said Bishop Leve~..tensive course 1n Catholicism for"' 'Fo,rms Leaders, 'laymen which' origiriat~d in. "This stud~, is. made . underSpain has ,.had "amazing effec- the care!ul a[}~ ~k~llful.guida~cetiveness" since 'it came" to the of a' prlest-spmtual' director, aUnited States five yeat:s ago. ' lay rector lit1d. fr_o~ t.wo' to 10

Auxiliary' Bishop '~t'~phen A.'la~profess~rs.;'. .Leven, of San Antomo spoke to . :r~e cur~illo IS nev.er an end 'the 19th biennial. convention of ,l~ Itself. I.ts ,Purpose IS to,form.:the National Catholic· ~aYl'!1en's 'arid vitalize , le.aders . fo~ .~heRetreat Conference on the "Cur_ works of Catholic ~~hon.

siUos de Christandad" - "Little r-...;._....;'--!""-~~"""'!"~'"':""...-..,Courses in Christianity.;' 'The ·KEYSTONE.

Bishop Leven; taking 'part ina panel d'iscuSsion on'the new. ···OHice Equipmentmovement, said that its '''greatest" 5 I ..fruits" are renovation of family , 'a esroomlife re-establishment of the NEW AND 'USEDfather as the 'head of .'the home Wood and, Steel Desks and chairs'"and the reawakening in parents steel filing cabinets. lockers. shelv-

ing, .. tables, storage' cabinets. safes.of the responsibility for the' wardrobes. etc. ' 'thorough Christian education of 108 James

their chUdren." ~~. Street''The cursillo brings together , _ near Union

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Warns of Efforts ToPITTSBURG (NC)­

FranCis Cardinal Spellmanhas warned' of a , "two­pronged attack on the Amer­ican way of life ... the move­ment to take God out of thepublic school and to force thechild out of the private schoo~."

The A'rchbishop of New York,focused his fire on two maintargets: the. U.S: SupremeCourt's recent ruling on publicschool prayer in New York, andthe opposition of, sor:ne to Fed­eral aid for: educatio'rt 'in non­public schools.

Cardinal 'Spellman chargedthat advocates of secularismseek "to remove religion entire­

, ly, from the public domain, andto commit our government tothe 'side of irreligion."

''This is the establishment of

North AttleboroA Fall Rally Day is planned

for all parish societies by SacredHeart Church, North Attleboro.Purposes are to coordinate allclub programs and provide anintegr'ated spiritual theme foreach group. Cub Scouts of theparish will register by Sunday,Sept. 9 and will prepare for re-.ception of the Parvuli Dei Awardon the Feast of Christ the King.

Minister AssertsClergy's RetreatRich Experience

WASHINGTON (Ne) -'A Methodist minister hasdescribed as "~ rich expeti­ence~' aspiritual retreat forProtestant clergymen conductedby a priest at a Catholic retreathouse. '

"For all of us 'fellow Chris­tians,'" said the Rev. Clair'. M.Cook, "this was a rich experi­ence, one 'not intended to makeus Christian Catholics, but onewhich succeeded, I· hope, inmaking Us more catholic Chris­tians."

The retreat was held at LoyolaRetreat House in Faulkner, Md.It was condu~ted by Father Gus­tave Weigel, S.J., theology pro­fessor at Woodstock (Md.) Col­lege.

Dr. Cook described the re­treat in W a 1kin g Together,weekly publication issued hereby the Religion and LaborCouncil of America, an orgaqi­zation for li a i s 0 'n betweenchurchmen and labol' groups. Heis education director of thecouncil.

According to Dr. Cook, theretreat was attended by adozenProtestant clergymen as well asa' half-dozen Protestant ,andCatholic laymen. 'The clergymencame from Washington, D:C.,Maryland, Virginia, Texas, Ken­tucky, New Jersey and Pennsyl­vania. Denomir,ations repre­sented' 'included Episcopalians,Assembly of God, Methodists,Baptists, United Church ofChrist and Lutherans.

The retreat consisted of eightone-hour meditation periods ledby Father Weigel,' periods forspiritual reading or pet'sonal de­votions 'and examination of con­science, and Mass' accompaniedby a reading of the Massprayers in English. '

The retreatants observed si­lence and ate their meals in si­lence in the retreat house diningroom. 'During the' meals, they1 i s ten e d to tape - 'recordedreadings from spiritual worksby such authors as Aux'iliaryBishop Fulton J. Sheen of NewYork.

"The main point of the re­treat," according to Dr. Cook,"was to' expose those present byexperience 'to some of the spiri­tual meanings found by' Catho­lics in their own practices."

10 Trappists JoinMillmen's Unic;»n

LAFAYETTE (N C) - Ten,Trappist monks from Our Ladyof Guadalupe abbey near herehave . joined Millmen's unionlOcal 1120 of Portland, Ore.

They were not organizing "forhigher pay' and, better workingaonditions." Rather they" want,1» enable the abbey to put theunion label Oft products of its,woodworking shop, which speci­alizes in high quality furnitureand provides the 'monks' largestsingle source of income.

,The Trappists were "union­ized" by Peter Beach, businessrepresentative for the Portlandlocal, who traveled here so ihemonks could become unionmembers without leaving theirmonastery.

Beach found, however, thatAbbot ,M. Columban Hawkins,'O.C.S.O., would' have permittedthe monks to attend" a regularunion meeting for their induc­tion ceremonies. Furthermore,Abbot Hawkins lifted the ruleof silence, and the new union­men were free to ask their bus­iness representative any ques­tions they wished.

Page 4: 08.09.62

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UniYer~ity of BogotaSeek$ Lay Teachers"

WAsiUNGTON ,(NC) - Co­lombia's Cardinal has under­scored the importance of Catho­lic ,laymen in education in hiscountry, especially at the Xa­verian University of Bogota.

Luis "Cardinal Concha, Arch­bishop Qf Bogota and Primate ofColom,bia, stresSed' the need' forcompetent l~y instructors illsQcial service in a message re­ceived by the Latin AmericaByreaq ~f th~ National CatholieWelfare Conference.

,The Cardinal, - according toF~ther John J. Considine, M.M.,dl~ector of the bureau, is Seekinglay Catholic college instructorsfrom the United States for theBogota universitr.' '

Ch,iefs Honor Bishop,coos B~Y (NC) - The

Oreg~m Fire Chiefs have honoredBishop Francis P. Leipzig ,01Baker. who has served' as theirchaplain for almoSt 35 years.Gov. M~rk O. Hatfield pres,entedthe prelate, with a Bible at an"Old ~imers'" luncheon here.Tht; ,Bishop is the' .only chaplainey,er appointed by· ,the OregonFire Chiefs and has served themcontinuously since 1928.

, ,

Changing WorldNeeds DirectingBy Christians,

SOUTH ORANGE (N~

-, Christians must eithertake the lead in the move­ments of change sweepingthe world today or face the con-

'sequences of their failurei apriest-editor said here. ­"Change is a basic reality oflife,'" said Msgr. Richard Han­ley, editor of the Long IslandCatholic, newspaper of theRockville Centre, N.Y.• diocese.

"~hristians must begin todirect it or they will be sweptalong by it. Attempting to fightit is futile," Msgi. Hanley said.

He addressed an Institute forInternational Service being con­ducted for six weeks 'at SetonHall Uhiversity under the aus­pices' of the ,Association for In­ternational Development, a laymissionary organization withheadquarters in Paterson. N.J:'He said the need' for rapid

change in the developing nationsof the world caught the .chris­tia'n West by surprise and re­sulted in a vacuum of leader­ship. This vacuum must soon' be'filled, either by men dedicatedto 'the Christian' \ concept ofsociety or by Marxists, he de­clared.

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NEEDLEPOINT CHURClI: This towering shrine-St.Michael on the Needlepoint in Le Puy {Auvergne), France­marks Jts 1,OOOth aimiversary' this year. Built, in 962 atopa needle-like stone, formation,- it is accessible only by 268stone steps cut froin the side of the rOCk. NC Photo.

Ope~.Air' ,Ordination, Wedding¥ar.k Eucharistic Congress

BEAVCEVILLE (NC) - An ficiated at the ordination, In hisopen'..air ordination of seven serrmm he' urged p~re~ts to' seeyoung men and a marriage cere- . to it that nothing is don~ in theirmony at which 'the nuptials of' '13 couples' were blessed marked, home~ which might prevent re­

ligious vocations.a Eucharistic Congress here inQuebec. Bishop N.A. LaBrie. C.J.M.,

The three _ day con g res s national president of the Frenchbrought ti)gether thousands of' section of the Society for theclergy and laity of 32 parishes in Propagati~n of, the Faith, pre­the ',countries of Beauce and sid:,d at the marriage ceremony.Dorchester.

-, .,The' ,theme •of the congress,

stressed the family as the, sOurceof vocations,

Archbishop' l\1aurice Roy ofQuebec, Primat~ of Canada. of-

Camp,us ,MemorialADRIAN (NC)-Anart cen­

ter on the Siena Heights Col­lege campti!:. here in Michigan"as a me~orial to' Mother Mary

, Gerald.; late ',superior gi'!neral ofthec9tPmupity, has, beel1 ' a'n­nounced by the Sisters of St. 'Dominlc. "

,Austrian Youths AidOrp{1ans ,in' Korea

VIENNA (NC) - Som'e80,OOOAustrian Catholic boys arid, girlswere so: successful as moneyraisers ,that a children's village.for orphans will be - built inKorea as a result' ot' their ef'-forts. • '

The fund-raising' campaignwa~ ,launched by the AustrianCatholic youth organization on

, Family Fast ,:bay, a day set asideto collect money to help theworld's ,poor' and needy. Theyouths collected more'than' $20,_000. far more than' expeCted.

THE ANCH"OR-Dfocese of F,all River-Thurs., Aug. 9, 1962a ' '4

Fath~r H05' .Duty To Sha~e

I'n' Guidance of Children

School RecordNOTRE DAME (NC) - The

University of Notre Dame1sSummer school enrollment of3.167 students, including 1,472Sisters, set a ,new rec'ord for theinstitutio'n's Summer session.

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

, ':what can you do with a wife who won't face the factsof life, in raising our children? We have'- four, but thepresent major bone of contention is our' daughter of 15.'My wife started promoting her socially while she was stillin grade school. Now she, '

mate cross-sex association ofgoes out about as often as t::'O!ir youngsters while ignoringshe pleases and' my wife its necessarily emotional andthinks it's all right. When sexual overtones.I object to 'the late hours or the' r don·t have to tell you, Jack.type of'company she keeps. they, what reaction a man receivesboth gang up when these obvious facts of lifeon me and are called to such wo'men's at-claim I'm over- tention. Your wife and daughtersuspicious or are typical in accusing you ofdirty _ minded, being over-suspicious and dirty..so I get no min,ded. ,p I ate. 'How ' Like so many others involved

,doe s a man in promoting the system, theyhandle a situa- act as if troublesome elementstion like this?" in ,human nature cease to be. One thing is, operative, provided one con'sis-

e I ear. Jack, tel}tly ignores them. 'you've got your Unhealthy Situationwork cut out 'What hould you do? Well.for you! The mother-daughter Jack, as I indicated a' mother­combination-is always unfortu- daughter combination is anate and never ,easy to deal patently unhealthy family situ-'with. Besides, you're starting ation .....arents. by the very na­rather, late. though perhaps not ture of their common task ortoo late, _ at least, not too late mission. must plan and workto take some effective steps to together." ,protect your younger' children. If any combination exists, it

I use the term protect ad.. should be' between father andvisedly here. because' well-in,:" mother, thus making pat-entaltentioned. shallow _ minded 'authority a s tab I e. unifiedmothers like' your wife are a power.' Although I ~ay bereal, menace to their children reading betweetl the ,lines. yourand society. ' '~ case seems to illustrate the not

One-Sided Views uncommon family situation inIt may help you deal 'with which decisions relating to the

your situation more reaFstically raising of children are regardedif you ,understand, some of the as the exclusive 'concern of thesocial and psychological factors mother. Once this pattern is for­involved. In the first place. med, it is not easily changed. asowing to various changes in the you are discovering!social system, the mother's role Your ,first stEip is to redefine,in the training and guidance of the .situation. Botb you and theehildren has been notably ex- other members of your familytended. ' must realize that yOlJ. ,have par-

More than in; the past, she ental rights and obligatioQs.ten'ds to become the primary 'In practice this means that'formative influence in' their YO\l actively share in, makinglives, not only during childhood a~d, enforcing, ,decisions con­but throughout the teen-age c~rning, the raising of, your'period. ,children. M~re random protest

Particularly if their husbands does' not meet this requirement.are- unwilling or not trilined t:> ' , Spell Out Facts 'share, adequately in rearirig- t':le Second, in regard to, the spe-children, some mothers attempt cial dating_ problem that nowto take over this parental f~nc- concerns you. ri'!membe'r that ittion completely. forgetting that is usele~s to argue with peopletheir views and aims necessarily , whom you first' have to ,edti­bear a one:-srded. 'purely femi- cate. 'Whether' through wilfulnine stamp. ignorance Or convenient ,blind- '

Assume Major Role ness, your' wif~ arid daughterMoreover, ,even where, t.h's refuse to face some rather obvi­

does not happen, mothers tend ous facts of life.for vadous reasons, to be more Your job as a man is to spell,interested in social life and in these facts out,to them in no un­the need to' promo.te the sociali- certain tenns. Do~'t be put offzation of their children than do by their remarks about "over­fathers. Most mothers, are an- suspiciousness!~ or "dirty-mind­xiously concerned to have their edness."sons and daughters be socially Matter of. Conscienc'eacceptable and accepted. Start with the assu~ptio_n,that,Once they assume the major', your daughter is normal for her

role in the rearing proce. ,,' they' age and conseqtientiy quite cap­energetically promote the social able of emotional and sexual in'- ,life of their children as one of volveml'lnts. Point' out, that intheir principal functions. t~e past (and in many parts of

Apparently deriving 'consider- the world today) a good per­able vicarious satisfaction from centage of girls were marriedthe pcipu~arity of their young-' and bearing children at her 'age.sters (the social' game is a highly Since she is not ready 'forcOmpetitive one), they proceed marriag'e, in our ,society. herto enter their young hopefuls dating activities must be care­into' the contest at ever earlier : fully' supervised' and restricted.ages'. , This is a matter of conscience. I

Ignore Overtones Because you're starting so late, "This' qui t e' understandable they'll not give iii easily. Re­

maternal anxiety to guarantee ll),ind tI:1em that r ou mean Qusi­the popularity of their children ness, for your' stake in the out-is assodated with a more ques- corrie is high ~'tne salvation oftionable feminine trait. Through your soul 'as a parent.a' conver.ient selectivity in theirperception of reality, 'manymothers can, apparently ignorethe biological and psychologicalconsequences of normal sexual.development ,in their children- perhaps even in tbemse'lves.

Thus ''ley can eagerly pro­mote the ,early, frequent. rela­tively unsupervised and inti-

()

Page 5: 08.09.62

. PORTLAND (NC). - A com­mon Bible for Catholics andProtestants is "very po&sible,"Bishop John .J.. Wright Of Pitts­burgh said here in Oregon.

Bishop Wright said agreementon a common version of theBible would create a means ofexploring the roots of the Chris­tian tradition harmoniously, incontrast with the past practiceof using the Bible in a "polemi­calor defensive manner."

The Bishop, a member of thetheological commission for theforthcoming Second VaticanCouncil, expressed his views illlan interview.

He stated that the ecumenicalmovement is "the spirit of oU!'times." He noted "a rich ecu­menical spirit abroad in aUChristian camps . that disposesmen to friendship across theirdoctrinal differences."

He cited a "clear nostalgiatowards unity," caused by thedecline of nationalism and therise of international concept'

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Aug. 9, 1962

'Sees PossibilityOf Common Bible

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ICE CHAPEL SERVES GI'S: One of the most unus~alchapels in the world-a chapel made entirely Qf ice-wascon!;\tructed inside a glaCier at the edge of Camp Tuto,Greenland, Summer operations base of the U. S. PolarResearch and Development Center. Built by volunteer Armypersonnel in an ice tl,lnnel, the work· was directed by Father(Chaplain) Joseph V. Coshan, C.SS.R. Every piece of per­man~nt eqQipment, from the altar itself to the candlest!cks,is made entirely of ice. NC Photo.' '..

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Imagine, a a egegviith golf and I t Stt . the ~~autiful Virgin Islands IOcean voy. 8· mud.a over the . I amous for Its beaches and cryslal I

. ing In er 8' clear waler. Next, sail to GuadeloupeSWl

mm d f Thanksgiving. e I ,,!here Columbus first Idhded.n 1493, Iweek-en 0 Christmas. Yo'!r site .of Ihe famous shrine of Sciin'e Itan"e~ for r hotel while In I Marle.s de Copeslerre. and on to the Iship JS yOU d rograms - of I lasl, port. of call, Martinque. Here •port. P\anne p d aU' eve- 1 you." enl9Y Ihe haunting ,hythm ofactivity a." dav, an"ty of quiet, nallve orchestras and ·see· the full ,

• r lust p e f I color of these t'opical islands. Sciil •nlng, o. f those who pre er I bac.k to Boslon enriched with sou.relaxation br t bargain of the I ven!rs and a .world of .xper1encesit. \t's th~h es mplete cruise t you II nevedo,get. Enjoy Thanksljiving

Wit co I 9~y at .sea wilh all of the tradit'ionalyear I 5 flx,~gs tneluding turkey. This giganlic

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Boy Scouts. Cub Scouts lIodtheir families will participate ina picnic' at Camp Noquochokethis S.unday morning at 10. Carswill leave from Brightman andNorth Main Streets and partici_pants should' briJig their ownlunches, which may be in theform of cookouts. Swimmingand various games will featurethe program.

ST. ROCH.FALL RIVER

Men and Women's Councils ofthe parish will join for an outingSaturday night, Aug. 18 at theSummer home of Mr. and Mrs.Romeo Charest in Westport. '

A cookout and games' will befeaiured with departure time setfor 6:30 from the fron't of thechurch. Reservations may bemade until'Wednesday, Aug. 15.The planning committee isheaded by Mr. and Mrs. LeonelLavoie, co-chaiin:ten and alsoincludes Mr. and Mrs..Joseph.Paquette and Mr. and Mrs.Pierre Gagrion.·

The Parish Parade

ST. PATRICK.F.ALMOUTH

Third annual paris,h social islIet for Saturday night, Sept. ·sat Terrace Gables Hotel, GrandAvenue. Falmouth Heights: Rev.James E. Gleason is honoraryChairman and serving with himare Raymond Knispel, ticketehairman'and Mrs. Richard Pratt,treasurer. They will be aided bylarge committees. The event willbe featured by a drawing for II

television set, entertainment anddancing.

ST. JORN THE ·BAPTIST.NE~ ~Ei)FORD

The annual clam bake of theHoly Name Society will takeplace at 12 noon Sunday at theHoly Ghost Grounds, Horseneck.Games arid sporta .vill foliow thebake.

Austrians ShowAid Gratitude

NEW YORK (NC)-AustrianCatholics have donated one mil­lion sCQillings to the U.S. Cath­0'- - reli~ agency to la~nch aspecial food program in II newAfrican nation.

The contribution, about $40,­000 and a large sum by Austrianstandards, was ,donated in grati­tude for American Catholic re­lief efforts in Austria which be­gan after World War II and re­cently ended.

The Austrian gift was sentto headquarters of the CatholicRelief Services-National Cath­olic Welfare Conference hereby Austrian. Catholic Charities(Caritas) which sought it in anationwide campaign.

Food for PoorBishop Edward E. Swanstrom,

executive director of CRS­NCWC, said the money will beused to launch a feeding pro­gram in Senegal, one of thelargest of the newly createdMricanc 0 u n t r i e s and onetroubled with hunger and mal- .nutrition.

Msgr. Leopold Ungar, directorof 'Caritas in Vienna, wroteBishop Swanstrom that the giftwas sent "to express our lastinggratitude for the generous help·we have received from ·the peo­ple of America through CatholicRelief Services."

ST. JOHN BAPTIST.CENTRAL VILLAGE

The Ladies' Guild will meet atII tonight and final plans will bemade for a country fair sChed­uled from 2 to 9 this Saturday.A meatloaf supper will be. heldfrom 5:30 to 7, with a pe.nny saleto follow. A television set andbedroom furniture will be grandprizes to be awarded. '

ST. MICHAEL.OCEAN GROVE

Parishioners will hold I theirfifth annual bazaar Friday andSaturday. Aug. 10 and 11 andalso Friday and Saturday, :Aug..17 and 18. Gilbert Howard isgeneral chairman with' Rev.Richard Demers as director. Apenny sale committee is headedby Edward Martin and parish­foners are asked to donate prizes.

The Women's Club plans itsannual outing for TueSday, Aug.!1 at the Silver Gun, Mattapoi­sett, where Ii buffet. will beserved. Mrs. Walter Tetlow andMrs. Walter Bender are incharge of arrangemj:lnts.

SACRE~ HEART.NORTH A'J'TLEBORO

CYO members will hold anouting to Rocky Point, leavin~

o.t 10 Sunday mor.tling, Au~. 12from the church grounds. Reser­vations are necessary.

ST. 'rHOMAS MORE.SOMERSET

Parishioners are holding alawn party today; tomorrow andSaturday on the church grou.nds.Gilbert Lowney is chairman andannQunces that children's eventswill be ~eatured on SatUl'dayafternoon and a cake sale willalso be an attraction.

Page 6: 08.09.62

By Rev. Wm. F. Hogon,C.S.C.

~ Ston,hill Profe~r ~

20th General Couneil

Coming.Vatican

Council,

AD interval o~ 306 yearsseparated the 19th and 20thecumenical counCils' of theCatholic' Church. ,The Vati.

· can Counci~ was ~alled by PopePius IX: to meet in 1869 for .the .PUlP,ose,s 'oferadicating thenewest foe at-

: t a c k.i ng' theChu~ch, secu­larism. The cur­rents of thoughtin the ·18th and

,19th· centuries· w'e"r e turningI men away from

God and Chris­tianity. An ex-aggerated lib- ., . .

· eralisrii and rationalism with itstenet that what cannot be rea:"

· Soned out by man's mind cannotexist completely denied the ex­istence of the supernatural. . .

In France. another school., of'thought, the traditionalists, hadgone to the opposite extreme inan 'attempt to curb rationalismand denied that" human reasoncould know anything about God,but needed revelation and faith.

Atheism and deism with' itsnotion . that God 'started theworld anc! then left it completeiy

· on a", o~n were rampant. In ad­, dition, anti,·cle.ricalism prevailedin many' sectj'on~j)fEurope arid

.. in our'.own cquntry anti-CathO-'licism was widespread. .

'. Used in Ne~ ~e ' :'Pope Pius. IX call~d the Vat~

can. Council in an attempt tcstop this tide'of errors engulfingthe human race. In 1864· he hadissued an encyclical, QuantaCura, and a "Syllabus of Errors"'whichcondemnedQ the teachingsof the rationalists and the socia­lists. In 1'867 he publicly an-·nounced the. plan for anecumenical council, but)le hadalready considered it' for twoor three', years and bad soughtthe opinions of many membersof th~ hierarchy about the' ad­visability of summoning it.

Mter the announcement, .;\number of cardinais 'began 'pre­paring the agenda for the coun­cil with the' assistance of some

, 100 theologians and canonists;they drew up' an agenda whichtrel!-ted, . doctrinal . questions,problems of' the missions andchurch reunion, church disci­pline, I;eremoriies and religiousorders.

The abrupt suspension of tbe"council prevented the treatmentof all of these matters, but muchof ·the work don~ by the pre­paratory' commission was usedby Pope Pius X in his reform·legislation and was incorporatedinto the new Code of C~nonLaw.

, 'Old Catholics'. Before the council\ actually

began, rumors began to circulateand writings began to appear tGthe effect that papal infallibilitywould "be a key issue at thecouncil,' even thoug~ the ROpehad riot mentioned it. Feelingswer~ divided on tlie expediencyof making a definition on thispoint. . .

Some, who feared the rise ofna'tionalism with its wars illthose days, favored the defini­tion; for should the pope betaken a prisoner, as ha,d alreadyhappened, there would be nedoubt about his authority;

Others feared that such a de­fin,iUon would only provo~e therationalists to further their ri~cule of the Church. A very smannumber 'did not be~ieve in papalinfallibility, and these left .. theChurch when the actual defi~tion was' made and called tneJ&.selves "Oid Catholics."

Long Debates. Wben the council was solemn­

'Iy opened in St, Peter's i3asilioo, rurn to Page ~even

.::b1.... "-rrr

and, sellers he' is ridding thechie.f' fmage .we have. on earthof God~s lOVe and holinesS of

: anything :that might obscurethis messag,~.

The . Gospel ,is hard on themen of c·ommerce;. on thes,e' good,resp&:table' people, because' theywere' destJ;oYing (\.mwittirigly)the. sphere 'of the,; sacred.. Theywere . forge~ting that -man is.such that his life cannot be allof one' piece, so to spea~.Heneeds a time· for worship and atime for commerce, a',time forthe altar and a time for' nature.

'WEDNESDAY-The' A~ump­tion of the Blessed Virgin Mary.She, whom He gave us asoiJrm'other; stands for all"' of ' us,stands for the Church. "You

, are the glory of Jerusalem, the:foy of .Israel, the honor of, ourpeople" (first reading). So ourprayers today (see collect andpostcommunion) ,are that wemay share Christ's victory andhis glory a1! she does. . .

And our Lady's hymn in the· Gospel (Magnificat)· tells us tha't'for her' as for all of us such avictory' and such g~ory is God'sfree gift, God's doing, Gild'smercy. The "great sign" ,ofwhich the entra!:1ce hymn sin'gs'is ,Mary, sign of what God hasin store for those who love him.'

TUESDAY - Vigil of the As­sumption. At an incalc~l~bledistance after its Head (the dis­tance between creator and, crea- .ture),Mary has first place in .the' Church, .in the Christian

• community. 'She is, in fact, a_sym~l and figure and type' ofthe. Church. So we prepare witha 'special vigil to celebrate her"total immersion" ill 'the MyS­teryof Christ, her participation

, '. 'I"in His Resurrection and in glory.

. Urges U. S. ApproyeUN Bond, Pu~chase

WASHI:r:WTON (NC -c- The'president of the Catholic Asso:'ciation' for International Peacehas urged the House Foreign~ffairs Committee 'to approve"U:S. purchas!iof up to $100 mil­lion in United Nations bonds. .

.CAIP preside'nt William V.O'Brien, in Ii statement sub­mitted -to the committee, saidthe future of the tiN is at stakein' raising $200 million' for itsCongo 'and Middle East opera-tions. . .

.O'Brien, director of George­town University's Institute of

· World Polity, said purchase ofthe UN bonds by the UnitedStates would be in "the nationalinterest as well as the interna-tional common good." '

Land Reform .. ;. China

'cnm~lt<}h "th£ W~£1t .CWith·th~ Ch~ch• ". -6

By. R~V.,ROBERT W. HOV~A, Catholic University

SATURDAY - Mar;~ of St. .Mary on Saturday. Every cele­bration of the Eucharist in hon­or of the Blessed Virgin, is acelebration' of the Incarnation"You became'the mother of ourSaviour," "(He) was made man'"(Gradual). "~lessed is' the frui~

of thy womb" (offertory hymn).So in the Gospel Jesus teachesus that the Word was made fleshnot so that the flesh might be'worshiped but ,sci the Word ofGod would be heard and kept,listened to and lived by. '

, . 0'

MONDAY-MasS as oD SUD­

day.' So when Jesus castsout of the ,Temple the buyers

NINTH SUN DAY AF?l'IER..PENTECOST. LOve asks and re-_quires a 'response of love. Holi­ness demands a response"of hol­iness. So the first readingstresses. that moral life, thatovercoming of temptation, whichfor the Christian is. rio source ofpride but a response to the'mercy of God already offered tohim, already real for him. Andone of 'the reasons· the 'Church,and I}.er worship exists, the'world of the sacreCl, of the Tem_ple, ,exists; in this life, is to holdup before.us that love and holi­ness in order to elicit Our .te-sponse. •

TOMORROW - St. Lawrence,Martyr; "He who loves h.is'life

'loses it; and he. who· hates hislife in this world, keeps it un~olife eve r I a s tin g" (Gospel)."Hates" . is a strong way of'saying "places ·it ,under God,""subjectS.;..- it to His will."Martyrdom is an act .of love; ofa love which. is not uncertain.about priorities: His also' an'act .of witness, 'painting in the broadstrokes of life and blood theChristian'S commitment to' atrimscEmdent God, a God above

. all human and earthly goods.

"

THE ANCHOR-Dioce~e of Fall River-Thurs., Aug. 9, 19626

It

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River410 Highland Av~nue '

Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151.' PUBLlSHJ;R

Most Rev. J,ames L. Conn~lIy" D~D., PhD. ,GENERAL MANAGER Assf GENERAL MANAGER

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

Hugh J. Gol~ell

Personal Involvement

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE' OFIFALL RIVER'

Those who shake their heads over modern y'outh shouldknow what is going on in Philadelphia.

,One hunqred ·and seve,nty~five :college students areactive in nineteen centers in that city, working as voluntaryteach.ers giving free instruction iIi acadell'l:ic subjects on, a.high. school leve~ for several ~undred pupils from minoritygroups. ...'

Classes are held two nights a' week in boys clubs,churches, settlement houses and social agencies..

. Some of' ,the pupils are preparing for coileges while· others are making ~lP subjects that they failed in duringthe school. year.

, Here is a group of young adults giving the contributionof their work and. themselves to benefit individuals and thecommunity. .

This is the type of personal interest and involvementthat is truly inspirational. '

Newspapers would do wei! to give this kind of activityat least as much playas is given. to gr~m stories of delin­quency and rebellion. This type of young-adult activity isexciting in itself and in its results. '

It proves that when young adults are presented with.a ' challenge, that demands t.heir very best, a· surprising'number will riSe to the Occasion and- commit themselvesw"ith a dedication to the activity at llan~.

@rheANCHOR

Has HappenedWell,. it has happene,d.It has 'be"enhinted at many times, of course, but this

time it is put down in jts complete obvious form.It was inevitable.'A movie ad for a certain picture quotes, as a "come-on"

for the picture, a statement by the Legion of Decency thatthis 'story " ••• is developed in a context allen to Christianand traditional' natural n!'oraIity."· " '

S,uch a perverted use,of ~,Legion of Decency evaluationis certainly in poor taste. And what·a picture it draws. ofthe men who resort to such to sell a product, to make a

: Gollar. ,· 'For their 'aim can be' nothing elSe. '

. They are obviously wOQing those· who are looking for· the -iJIlmoral; the perver1(ed, the rin~sual in human relation­, ships. They are 'catering to. the group that is attracted. by·

.. whatever "is "alien to Christian 'arid' traditional naturalinorality." , . .

·It is ,disgusting that there are people who' will- beattraetep. by· just such a sal~s' pitch'- ;.'

It is disturbing that ~here exist people who will go toany lengths to: exploit .dirt arid suggestiveness. " ..

" ,-It.is unfortunate' ~f -:t,.egipn of Decency ratings, meant··.·'to be evaluations -1>Y n'ormal people' sensitive tQ J udeo-

.Christian moral standards 'of current Hollywood productions,'wiil be used alongside of the "banned in 'Boston" tag.topander to low tastes., i •

It is too bad that this. has happened.

I'For Want., ~f .. ~..,' .' .. I.

Parents and teachers who try to impI:esson their,'eharges th~ need of care in little matters, have amodern-day ,example in the "for want of' a n'ail a kingdom was lost" 'category. ' ,

,Three weeks ago a space shot at Venus was brought TODAY ~Vigil of St. Law-to an explosive halt when the vehicle veered from its course. renee, Martyr. St. Lawrence was

'In.. th~ fiery destructi~n, ane~ght alid one. half million' a deacon. In the course of his­· dollar rocket and a ten million dollar vehicle .were ripped tory, 'the office of deacon in.. the

. .',,-, Church's ministry has becomeapart. The hopes and plannings 'of years wer~desti:'oyed mereiy a stepping-stone, to thewith them. \ . . . . priesthood. .There is much talk

_And thecau.se? Well, it has just been released by·a in our time of reviving the an­launch vehicle director for the Nationaf Aeronautics and cient and independ'ent order ofSpace Agency. ' . .. " deaconship.

. -It, seems. that a hyphen was left'out of,' a mass of data The deacon was one who not,8,'ymb.ols fed. hito the rocket g'ui,dance .comp'uters. This ,'all- only assisted in 'a special way in.

the liturgy. of the communityimportant hyphen tells. the rocket to hoJd its traJectorr, but also ministered the temporalwhen it loses radar contact with the. ground. goods of the parish and repre­

. .. Someone forgot the' hyphen, and the 'vehicle veered . sented the parish· to the poorout of its planned colirse' and :had to be destroyed: .' and those in need of help. For

The possibilit.ies that these modEn'n example.s open u,p" the more vital our worship be-comes the more we must recog­

for a new catechis~ are fascinating. The moral 'examples nize our' solidarity aJ;ld ouroffer~d by the space age are many and exciting..The virtues social obligations to one, another,remain the same, and· the. need for' strong character is as material as,well as spiritual.pressing ,as ever. But think of the nianymodern illustrationsthat' underscore the old eternal truths.

"

Page 7: 08.09.62

SACRED HEART CHURCH, FALL ~IVER

7

"'fl/ick.".,,01

~~~HEATING,OIL

SAVE MONEY ONYOUR OIL HEATI'•. &611 ~-=

CHARlIS F. YARGAS254 ROCKDALE AV!NUINEW BEDPOItD, MAIL

THE ANCI'fOR-Thurs., Aug. 9. 1962

Asserts NeglectSlows ChristianWor~d Growth. PORTLAND (NC)-Neg-

. lect by Christians of theirown resPonsibility hasslowed the growth of aChristian world during the 'lastfive to seven centuries, U.S. Sen.'Eugene J. McCarthy 'of Minne­sota said here in Oregon.

'''Because Christians have been,unwilling to shoulder theirproper responsibility, whatevertheir walk of life - whether asstatesmen Or poets, businessmenor farmers - the developmeatofa Christian world has beenslowed, been diverted and' insome areas turned back," theS e on a tor told a banquetgathering.

He said "the optimism whichcharacterized the world at thebeginning of .the last century

. has gradually faded, not onlybecause the promises of. educa­tion, of science and a few politi­cal ·forms have faded, but be­cause of the rejection of Chris­tian principles."

"Modern man has seen thelights by which he thought hewas being guided grow dim andfade one by one. A world whichwas quite recently self confidentand even arrogant today has

'been brought low," he, stated.

Share BlameThe Senator said that while

Christians may blame the worldfor its rejection of Christianity,Christians themselves bear ashare of the blame.

"The progressive rejection ofChristianity is the result, on onehand, of the rejection of Chris­tianity by the world; on theother hand, we must also pointto the,' rejection, neglect andfailure of Christians to meetfully their responsibilities to­ward the world," said McCarthy.

"This failure to meet Chris­tian responsibility has takenthree general forms: personaland professional obligations andbusiness interests have beenused as an excuse; others havechosen rather to judge and con­demn thari to save it;· still others

.confuse saving the world withpreserving it in the form of someideal' past," he said.

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under Father McCarthy andMsgr. Carr.

Christian MothersIn 1960, following Msgr. Sul­

livan's death, Rev. FelPc Childsbecame pastor of the Fall River'parish. Assisting him in caringfor approxim!itely 4600 parish­ioners are'Rev. William· J.Shovelton, ReV'. John J. Reganand Rev, James F. Buckley.

Father Childs has erected theArchconfraternity of Christian'

,Mothers at Sacred Heart. Thisorganiza'tion promotes Christianfamily life with special concernfor parochial school children.'Of particular value to the parish,~ays Father Chil.ds, .is a projectof lunch hour supervision themothers have undertaken duringthe past year. '

Also active at Sacred Heartare a Men's Club, moderated byFath~r Regan, the Confraternity.of Christian .Doctril)e, the HolyName Society,' Women's Guildand Campfire Girls and Blue­birds.

River, 'Important

Diocese

,Fol~owing the Bishop as pas­tor was Msgr. J. Joseph Sullivan,who had previously served as a'~ura'te in the parish for 15 years; .

Refuses LicenseTo Rodio Station

Sacred Heart Parish,.,Fall

In History of City and

WASHINGTON (NC)' - The· Federal Com~unications Com­mission has refused to renew thebroadcast license of a Kingstree,S"C., radio station' accused ofobscenity and poor programming.

The FCC action was belieyedto be the first time it has refusedto renew a license. because of

· obscenity.. The commission in effect sup­.ported a finding by hearing

.~ishop Tracy Forms examiner. Thomas H. Donahue,

f L that station WDKD in Kingstree.Council 0 aymen . should be denied a licensere-

BATON ROUGE (NC)-Bish-., newaLop Ropert E. Tracy of Baton' National Implications I

Rouge has' announced formation . Donahue said the case "mayof a Diocesan Advisory Council,. have large-scale national im­made up of laymen on call to plications since it will reflectrender advice in their fie'ds. the policy of the commission not.

The council consists of one only in respect to obscenity butlayman from each of the dio- in regard to programming thatcese's 11 deaneries and 20 rep- misses by far measuring up toresentatives-at-large from the what the commission has sug­mo~e populous ·areaS. gested is required to meet the

Matters facing the new coun- public interest."cil in this diocese, establishedin July, 1961, include a diocesan Donahue's complaints of thecensus, scheduled for .Septem- grounds of 9 b see nit y wereber, 1962; a diocesan newspaper leveled against ,a WDKD disc'to begin publication in January, jockey who was on the air four1963; the setting up of a com- hours a day. The. disc jockeyputer system for .diocesan re- was' discharged by the stationcords, and a Catholic Life Cen- ,last year.tet to be built in 1963. . Donahue also said that only

17 per cent of the station's daily.14-and-a-half hours of broad-'"casting were used for materialother than recorded music andspot commercialS. As' many as420 spot" coinmercials were

· .broadcast in one day, he stated.

VotelGr DecreeA draft of 'the constitution on

, the papacy was presented to.:thegeneral congregation 0!1 IVJay 14;debates and discussions followeduntil July 13. Bishops, amongthem Americans, spoke freelyon both sides; approximately 35.spoke in favor of the' definition

,and 26 or. thereabouts spokeaginst it.

Forty more still wished to.speak on the advisability or in­advisai:lility of the definitionwhen 150 members of the coun­cil in a body proposed that thedebate be closed; and the ma­jority voted in filVor of this pro­posal, for practically all hadbeen said that could be said.

When the final decree 'wasdrawn up and submitted. to .avote, 601 bishops were present;451 voted for the decree, 88voted against it, while 62'wantedCorrections made. Two ainmEmd­ments were made and 533 votedin the affirmative; while Bishops order to escape the Rome Sum­Riccio of .Sicily and Fitige.rald . mer and impending disaster.of Little Rock, Arkansas voted .Pope Pius IX intended thenegatively, the y immediately. ,continuation of the council thatchanged their vote. Winter to formulate a decree on

Seventy-six other bishops left' the Church, but the city of Rome'Rome before the session in pro- was invaded by Italian troopstest; but in the months that £01- on September 20. This was the Se-:ninary' Receives'low~d, 'they submitted to the de- war for. the unification of Italy .. His'torical Articlesfinition: of the Church soleinnly ,and the city of Rome voted in

. "decreed in the public session on ,October to join the kingdom of. ERLANGER '(NC) - St:Pius ,,,'July 18.. With few excepti~ns~ it. Italy. X Seminary' here in Kentucky

was no~ a c~s~ !>f not bel~~ymg, . Thus the pope was forced to has been prese.llted, the ch~l'ice .,In the .mfalhblhty and ~~~n;t~cy suspend the council 'indefinitely and missal used by Father S~ep­

.. " of the pop~, ~~t rather of J?~gmg on Oct. 20, 1870. It was never be?, Badin, the first priest, or-, such a d~fmltlOn iI:1expedlent, at reConvened but it had accom- damed within the limits of the

that particular time. plished an important feat in de- " original 13 colonies.. Forced Suspension fining the relationships of faith French-born Father Badin

The very next day the French and reason and the primacy and was ordained May 25, 1703, bydeclared war on Prussia. Most :infallibility, of ~e pOpe ~hen ;I;lishop ,John. Carroll of Baltl-

, : of the bishops Jeft .Rom,e with speaking ex,. cathedra. ' more in that Maryland city. Hethe exception of the Italians and Next' Week:' From the Past to' became a pioneer Catholic mis-those from' verI' distant iancia iA ~Futute. sronar)' .inKentucq~ .' . .

Vatican Cou,ncUContinued from' Page, Six'

OIl Dec: 8, 1869, 679 me'~bersfrom all over the world were

• present: 43 cardinals, 605 billh­ops and 31 abbots and generalsof religious orders. At some ,ses- Ninety years ago, in 1872, Sacred. Heart parish in Fall River was erected. Rev. F. A.

- sions the number rose to 774. Quirin was the first pastor. Noteworthy in. the parish history is the fact that fourThe council had two type~.of . , . . ,., meetings: general congregations ~urates who served. there later returried ~s pastors. Among them was Rev. Matthew"·.in which proposed decrees were McCabe, who became second pastor in 1874. He remained at Sacred Heart until 1911,. discussed and debated by the when he retired. In 1885 he.

memb'ers, imd public sessions in erected Sacred Heart Schoolwhich solemn pronouncements and was. responsible f'o rwere made to the pUblic of the b ' , .decision reached in the general ringing from Europe the,congregatio~s. The debates' and Religious 'of the lJoly Union of .discussions of the gen~ral con- t~e'Sacred' 'Hearts, . Who, now .

, gregatloris were long and, heated staff ,many schools in the' 'Failat times; members were allowed River, Diocese and other parts'to speak- for linlimited' periods of the United States;,·:, Father' 'j'

and difficulties arose even' from :ti.abe a!sOpaidoff the ~li~rch .',the various accents and pronun- .clatfons- of the Latin hi' whIch .'Afterhis,reti~emerit;ReV'..Joh~'<,.ther spoke.. .. ' . W. ~cCarthy,who had. been' .,, Public Sessions pastor, of St;.'Mary's, North Attie... <,

'. 'There 'were about 89 general boro,beeame'permanent :rector .congregations in all; and as a at Sacred Heart. He too had beenre'sult of the discussions, changes a curate there previously~bad' to be made in the wording Father McCll.rthy purchasedof .decrees . and the' members the present Sacred Heart rectory\vould vote on the changes. on Wi~ter Street after the ori-

Four public sessions 'were ginai rectory, on the site of theheld: the opening, one in'which present Sacred Heart parochiala profession of faith wa's made school, had been torn down. Theby the members, and t'wo' at rectory, still in use', has had apwhich the two decrees of the interesting history.council were published. Originally it was a Baptist

On April 24, 1870 the first presbytery, and in 1904 it was''dogmatic decree, "Dei Filius", .purchasedby the Diocese, be­was promulgated· in the third coming the residence of its first

"public session after several Bishop, Most Rev. William Stang."months of discussion. DUring Later it w,,', sold to Dr. Phil­

- these months of discussion;' it, emon E. Truesdale, becoming, 'should be noted, petitions' for his first hospital and finally, in

"ilnd against making a definition' . 1911" it became Sacred H~art'of papal infallibility had been reotory.' , '. sent to the pope. .Father f?hilds

Primacy of Pope Sacred Heart Church was con..This dogmatic constitution, secrated 'Oct. 12,' 1922. In. 1926,

with its canons coride'mning Rev. Felix Childs came to the­errors, treated of God as Creator, parish as a curate, still ahotherrevelation, faith and the rela- priest who was later to returntion between faith and reason. as pastor.Materialism and pantheism werecondemned. . In 1926, Father McCarthy

It had been intended to follow died and in February, 1927 Rev.this decree with another on the . Edwai-d J. Carr, then. stationednature, unity and constitution of at St. Joseph's, Fall River and,the Church and the relations be- ' chancellor under Bishop Feehan,tween. Church and state; but the was named pastor.heated controversies ever papal Father Carr, later created ainfallibility made it mandatory domestic prelate, erected a newthat this -question be treated schOOl on land originally de-

'first. . signed for'a rectory. Opened in. '. A· large number of bishops 1931, the school had an enroll­sent a signed petition' to the ,. ment of 707 pupils in pre-

'pope requesting him tl,) ox:der '. primary and eight grades.'the' council to consider the ques- Msgr; Carr 'died in 1937 and·tion of the papacy. Pius'IX had . was succeed~4 by Rev. James R.

, it announced on April 29 that,· Burns, who died in 1945. Bishop'the primacy' and infallibility of ,Conno,lly wa pastor until 1951the' pope were to be discussed when he' was named Ordinarynext of the Diocese.

Page 8: 08.09.62

Stays Fres."Days ,Longer" ,

Sisterhood .. EstablishesVe"ez.uela, Mission'. BALTIMORE (NC) -'Four

Runs 'have established a secondmission center of Mission H~l~ers of the Sacred' Heart nuns' inVenezuela;- Mother M. Regis,Superior General of the s~hood,. has reported.. '.'

· The community sent eightn~n.s to. Venezuela, four .eacn ~

·Caracas and Barcelona: She' .saidthe' Barcelona center still is inits initial stages but "it is hoped.from this house some help can· b4! given later to the Diocese ofCumuna." .

·~Ren~}9.US··;'Elect·New"-S~pe'rior· . CASTELGANDOLFO .(NC)­Father· Germahl 'L a Lan d e,c:s.c:, Proyipcial. Super~or. 0«the Holy Cross Fathers' .Cana-

·dian province; has been elected·to a 12':'year term, 'as Superio!'General of'the congregati!>n. Hesucceeds Father' Christopher J.O'Toole, . C.S.C., a. native : ofAlpena, Mich:, who had held thepost since 1950." Father . Bernard Y.' Mullah~C.S.C., who has been serving allProvincial Superior. of the. con­gregation's . Indiana provincesince last N.ovEmiber, was .ele<;tedVice Superior Glmeral of thecongregation.

Fifty priests and Brothersparticipated· in the. chapterelEiction: '.

. Members of· the congregationwere advised ·by Pope John tolive the, lessons taught' in ~he"FollOWing of Christ" with reo

· ference to. following "the royalroad of tbe Holy Crqss,!' .

There 'they would find themeans of imitating the.' DivineModel' and of contributing'. toHis work of redemption in the

, world, the Pontiff told the con­gregatio'n;s leaders' at their 31stGeneral Ghapter since the ~on­gregation's fqundation in 183~

trated by the Sisters, Servants.of -the" ImmaCUlate .. Heart . of'Mary," will provide $240,000toward. the total ~xPense of 'oon­structing . a .c~llege ,union' and'dining hall, Ii stUdent residence

.building. and a small facultyresidence.

Oven .. FreshDauly at 1.ourN@D~&uIb@dD@cd .Stofe.

WomenPs College Rec'eives .LociqWASHINGTON (NC)...:.Mary_

wood College iIi Scranton, Pa.,-,wiil receiv'ea $2 million Collegehousing'"loan" it' was announcedhere by. Commissioiler SidneyH..Woobier of the .Community,Facilities ·Administration.

.The women's college, adrniniso'

LABOR/OF LOVE: Being needed ~s important to AgnesRegan, 68-year-old volunteer att}:le Veterans Administra­tion Hospital, Houston, Texas. Blind since birth, she spendsseveral hours' a: week, as ayolunteer. worker' for NatiCmalCatholic Community Service wrapping sterile masks forthe tub~rculosis.departmen~of the hospital under the ~uper-

, vision of Mrs.'Eleanor A. Treanor, left. Nt PhotO. .

Tt.fE ANCHOR-:-Dioceseof FotfRiver-l1\~r'8~,Aug., ',. tfd2<._ ... '.' -··r~.. ~ .<,~ ... _-.. ':.. \~. ,:,,' - ~ --:.•~ ..' /: ......, :":: :- ... '. , .,~ .~ '-

loan Jot:, CQllege'WASHINGTON (NC)·..:...· The

Housing and Home F i han c eAgency announce a loan here of$1,380,000' for the constructionof a residence hall and studentunion at the College of OurLady of the Elms, Chicopee,Mass., which is administered bythe Sisters' of St. Joseph.

-e,

Gove'rnn,ent Medical :OfficerAver.ts American': Tragedies" '. By Mary TinleyDa~y

,All heroines are not., out battling fire, flood and dis-.aster. Some are in homes, offices, classrooms, laboratories;Such a heroine is Dr. Frances O. Kelsey, medical officerwith the U.S. Food' and Drug' Administration, recentl1 re-comm~nde~ by' Sen a t ~ r . vainly b~ating at her office. doorEstes Kefauver for the DIS- for approval· of the drug.tinguished Federal Civilia~Notliing disastrous had hap:­Service Medal. "ManY people pEmed.must ,be nominated for' this . Nothing; yet. The FDA physi-aW-ard," Dr. Kelsey shruggedcian remained "stubborn.".

.. w hen . inter- Delay itl granting approval· viewed . i~' .her could be pbstponed, Dr. Kelsey· e o. IIi for t- felt, until. the drug could be.

able. suburban tested for possible future sideh 0 m,e. "We effects. It was, after all, not a.were pleased" dramilticbreakthrough as a lifeof course' ('we' . saver, merely. 'another . sleepbeing her· hus::, .producer.band and. two First "peculiarity" of the drugdaughters), but., . arousing Dr. Kelsey's suspicionI only did what. was that its effect on test ani~~ thQught. was mals was not sedation, as it wasright." on humans. Hence, she won~

The slender. dered could this be a true test?Dr. Kelsey is a serenely. calm " '. ,woman with, sparkling' brown .Five months· went by..~naeyes who looks ,far younger tpan British medical jo~r.nal,pr.K.el­her 47 years: Short brown hall sey read of a neurItis -' ~inglmgis brushed back with the 'casual and numbne,SS' .' of hands, andSophistication of a thoroughbred. feet,. po~sibly ~ile ..~ use,'~Her manner is pleasant but ut;l-. th~bd~!lu<:l~.. This made her still

· hurried and one senses that he~, more ·.SUSpICIOUS. 'respon~ibilities are not .taken In Ap~ii .Of thIs' ye~r, 1t·lightly.' , 'rnonthsafter the original appli-

'Dangerous DrUg:. ,c', .cation for approval.of,the drug,· . This hasbeen:proveri:: YOOits . horrible effec.tsw:erere-'· will i'ecall readi~lf that she kep,t portell. Application for approvaloff'the American' market ,a' ~ug was withdrawn; of course.believed to be..respOilsibl~ ,for: The 'tragic' malformation ofmalfor~atio~ of infants. Thou-. human fufants· knoWn as pho-'

· ian'ds of babieS,".i~':.i)t~er. c~~m,: cornelia··nad.'been' rare' uritil.tries, 'whose:mo~h~!s tQok -the recentl~.'" . .,. . .slee~ing pi~l.in. e~rl'y; p~egna~cy, : Accorqing:,to' H~leh~. Taus_·.were born wlt!i~?t.a:rms.or}~gs! , 'g ,'M Dof Johns' Hopkins Hos-'

'with Seal-lik~·.".fl.lppers" '. :at- ~;' 1" .... . . ..', '. .'t8ched to' shouldei:or ~hip, ;and, . pita. . , '. . '- .' "~.' '.with other malformations. ,,': "Phocom~l~a. ·1,1as ;long b~n

. .,... . known as ,'a, rare malformation.PharrnaCO~Oglst..and mother~ In Gernjany,,'a few cases 'VIrere

liIIl _well as ~hYSI~~an, pro ,K.el seen'in 1959 more· in, 196Q, andsey asked th1S reporter to warn. 'epidemi9;' ii~jIibers in; 1961.. By .readers.about ~he use o£ drugs.. N ' 'ber 1961 .,., ·the out-, D f tnot .~horoughly tested' and ~e-br~:~waSC6ii~ect~d'with' ~theFer .ecdared s.afe. The dr~g ..she use of a new' sleeping pill a~d"stopped ~ ", called thah~omlde" tranquUizercontaining thalido-'marketed m other countne~.un-, 'd I' S tl d Dr' A Spiers" f .d' . tr d . ml e. n co .an, ,. or

. er varlOUs a e na~es. '. cOrifhmoo , the rei a t ion .' by '. '.,Ask~d. how she did. SUCh. a showing that the moth.ers' .of at.-

marvelous traged~- prevent1Og' leaSt e'ight out of 10 'of the' 'af-' p e"job in this ~ountry, Dr. Kelsey. fected' babies had taken' the . .'I-,C·n·ICS~id, "Ifo';1nd. som.ething pecu- drug. .hla~ abofut ~:' 10 sPl;te of ,;11 the . ''Thalidomide' was on tri~l, inc alms or IS exce ence.. the 'United States, but fortunate- d

That was in September, 1960,'- ly it had not been approved for anbefore the dread aftereffects had use by the Food and Drug .,Ad-been noted. ,ministration, owing to ~he, fact

Proponents of the drug found that polyneuritis developed: in· '0' .t'dsomething decidedly "peculiar" some u~ers" ar'4 owing also, to . . U oorabout Dr. Kelsey.. She was an Dr. Frances O. Kelsey's dOQbts ' . '. .obstructionist, to their ,way of about the' safety. of itlj; use. iii ' ..thinking, a bureaucrat who was pregnancy." ", " ' - . B" b .!lcting unreas~nablY;in the light As to what Dr. Kelsey ~atl·. ar ecuesof overwhelmmg eVidence. done, for the expectant mothers '.

The drug thalidomide, of the of America in keeping this hide- .tr~nquil,izer famPy, had found pus drug' off the marketj'w,e n9te;popular. acceptance from d~~-. that Dr. Taussig says.: '; "The 'tors; pharmacists, and the pubhc. most· conserVative - eStimate' is,,' .bi many other countries. It iO:- that by, tbe'm6ntll. 'of"Auguij: :: ,~uc~d a qui,ck, re.1axing, .~ight- . 1962. some', ,:3500 ·.,babies" .w.ith 'lo~~ ,sle,ep, with, no han.gover.· It Ph~OIl1el~~:;.lv:{l~'~ilv.~ ~n}:)~1jD:.1iVas , sl\f~ f~r people w~th heart in G~rml\ny'a~~,sever~~~u,ndI'~9:,"" "

· O!' resp1ratory,tro~bles, caus~ . will havtdjoo)1'borii iii. Englllnd~:", ....., ,... .­chi!dren. no harm, a.nq ~as and'else~hert:;.~, ',',\',.~. ':::~'~':.:,,:. "

· haileq as the' answer to the. .~,.. . .". ,-~ .,problem of nausea' in .,e~rly" " ' 'i ...... ' " .. ' , . ' " .. , ,,:, :, _; , 'pregnancy: ' Moreover, '. unli~e' OrpharfJ:hHdr~n~ .Le~ve' ... . ,many of its relatives in the fie~d, . . . .' . " • .e. ., .thalidomide' was' suicide'-proof,. ForHomes,cin:,U..~· :'" '.:even' in huge doses. . HONG KONG (·NC(:.;"Elev~-n~.";

. Also,i~· was pointed out to Chinese orpli~ns,ra.ngirlg~.~ge:-.. ~Dr. Kelsey, dosages .many. times from, one to seve~, left here, for·. _," '....

.greater. t,han . comparable doses, the U.S;;, wiiere._~d9P.tiye parep~s:: ' ..to humans had. been proved to will welcome them'in ,10' cities' .,,'be completely safe on rats' and from California to New Hainp-'rabbits. . shire. .' .

Remains Stubborn. The- 10 .boys and one girl ern-. . barked •.by air .af,ter... :rs~e~viIigTalking with. Dr.. R;elsey, _

"whose commo~ sense and know- the blessing of Msgi-. Felix..Shek;ledgeabilHy come through -like Vicar General of the'Hong konga .great white light, we could diocese. Three ,of them were toimagine the frustratio.n of those. debark.'at Sap fJtancis~?,}wo..

going to,fl\milies there and one .to a, Los. Angeles;horne." ". . "

Three' .m'ore .'Of ,the chfidren',:were headed- for Chicago,. to be ..adopted.'by families in Evans­ville, .Ind., Akron,Ohio, andRavenna, Ohio.. The remainingfive orphans wete going to New'York, to meet ,their new parentsfrom Manchester, N.H., Corry,

,Pa" ,Harbor Creek, Pa., Haver­toWn, Pa., and New York City.

Page 9: 08.09.62

VCMI'tt! • MfinULi

DAVIDSON'S·Mac Gregor

, BP,\ND

JUST at All LeadingASk FOR Food Stores

SWEETNICS in Massoch"seth

Be Thrifty ...: Be WilsAsk your Meatman for.•

, DAVIDSON'S'(MacGregor Brand)

.' SWEETNIC •,Bake in the Bag-No BastiRQ"Ma~' says-

,'WINNING FAVORReal Scotch Ham flavorll

WITH ITS FLAVOR"

.fT~1l5HARMAcV1~,]CY2 QOCK so, rAll RIV£R,M.J\\1ff OSSOQNf 5-7829

CMt,I"'5 E~TO TIlKE CARE OF "lOUWITIt T1tESE S\Ctt100M SUPPUE$ ROM

TO'UHEY'$,PHARMACY

Nome College HeadROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC)

-Mother M. Celeste, eXpert OIlbiology, has been appointedpresident of Molloy College forWomen conducted by the Domin­ican Sisters here In New York.

THE ANCHOR- ~lhurs:;' Aug: 9,'" 1962

QueqecEducationSurvey Complete,

QUEBEC (NC)-The QuebecRoyal 'Commission on EducationhaS completed public hearingsfor its top-to-bottom study of

"schooling h~re where taxes SUP'>port confessional education.

The nine-member commission,which held 76 public he.arings.will present recommendationsfor the future of education illlthe province's schools, which aredivided into Catholic and Proteestant systemso

Msgr. Alphonse Marie Paren~

former rector of Laval Univer­sity, is chairman of the educatioliilcommission for this predomi­nantly Catholic, heavily FrencllAprovince.

$10 per PupilRecommendations of the comd

mission set up by the gove:rndment are expected to play a bigpart in what'bas been describedas the "evolution" or "revolu­tion" of education in Quebeesince the Liberal party undei'PreIPier Jean Lesage came ropower.

The Lesage government hnaset up 11 family allowance planunder which $10 per month IlJgiven for all children in schOlJXup to age 17.

. There ill little doubt here thatthe Royal Commission wiU rec­ommend' continuance of the ex­isting sYstem of confessionalschools. But it is not knowuwhat action it will take on ree-­'ommendationsgiven it ,fol' ~

third, i'neutrnl" system.

R. A. ,Wllc::OX CO.OFFICE FURNITUREoa Stodl fw 1iIl.e4l.U DeD_

t 'DESKS • CHAIRS', ' FILING CABINETS' ,• FIRE FILES " • SAFH

FOLDING TABLES• AND CHAIRS'

R. A. WILCOX CO." 22 IEDr:ORD ST.FAll RIVER, 5-7831

St. Kilian'sSt. Kilian Church Couple.

Club, New Bedford, has set Sat­urday night, Sept: 15 for a spa­ghetti supper and auction, to beheld in the Sl:hool basement. Theunit plaps an oUting to OstervilleSund~l)', Aug. ,12. Cars will leavefro~ the SChool at noon.,

Two Girls Volunteer ,For Mission Work

s'!'. JOI;)E,PH (NC)-Two grad_uates :fioo~ the College of St.Benedict here iIi Milmesota havevolunteered to work as lay mis­sionaries in Puerto Rico.

Judith Brandl of St. Cloud,Mimi., and' Kathleen Wenner­skirchen of Shakoppe,e, M~will serve as teachers at Htima­coo, a city of about 10,0Q0 in theArchdiocese of San JU~.

ENTER VILLA FATIMA NOVITIATE: Miss MaryMargaret Souza, left, daughter of Mr. and ~s. GeorgeSouza, and Miss Dolores Silva, daughter of, Mr. and Mrs.Joseph Silva,both of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel parish, NewBedford, have become postulants .in the Sisters of St.Dorothy' at Villa Fatima, Taunton. Miss Souza is a graduateof Sacred Hearts Academy, Fairhaven, and Miss Silva wasgraduated in June from Holy Family High School, NewBedford.

Concern For Chi Idren PromptsCuban Couple to Leave Home

PATERSON (NC) - "It was 'they were 'able to get an apart­the children who made a diffi- ment and Vazquez procui'ed acult decision easy." .. job. ,There, followed a tearful

, The decision' faced by Mr. arid reun~on with the children, wholIA~. Pablo Vazquez was'whether had been taken in by, Mro andor not to flee Cuba. Eventually, l\irs. ·Frank' Gaffney, parents ofthey did. '.six; , "

The Vazquezehildren, -:Pat- ThrQ.ugh. an interpreter, Vaz..ricia, 10, and' Pablo, 8 - had quez ,reported that while, Cubanbeen sent to, Miami several ch~ches are still open, 'fewet:weeks earlier and from, there lVlasse$ are b,eing said because ofwere pla<:ed in a temporary fos- the shortage 'of priests. Parishter hom,e in Pompton Plains, societies' meet Qnly irregularlyN.J. by Catholic Charities of the now.Paterson Diocese. Under the Castro food' ra-'

When Mr. and Mrs. Vazquez tlonipg program, each perSon isarrived in Miami from' the allowed five',eggs a'month, two~avaria suburb where Vazquex P9unds of chicken a month, andwas in the cafeteria business, 1~ pounds of meat every' twothey sent for' the children. But weeks. Powdered milk is avail­jobs and apartmentS were' so able only, through prescriptionscarce in Miami they were pre- at drug stores.vailed upon to tr)', -their lti<:k in Many. 0 the 1', eommodlties,New Jersey. while not rationed, -are in sbort

Through the ~orts 01. two llUpply and very expensive,priests" w 0 r kin g with the Vazquez said.Spanish-speaking in PaterSon , He said he was allowedlto take

three sults and his wife was al­lowed to take five dresses ontheir departure from Cuba.

Asked about money, he said''Ni un centavo" - not one eent.

":"GEOR(iE M~, MONTLEDaughter, '1 i, Attend~Plu~bin~-:'.Heating'Father's' Ordination ' ' Over 35.Yeara

hi S ' STE. 'ANNE DES MONTS of Satisfied ServiceAsk Cal. 0 ic. upport '(NC) - While his U':'year-old :806 NO. ""AIM',STREET

For Junior <31 Bills;, ': daughter looked· on, GastQDLOS ANGELs' (NC),,";'" The Thibault was ordained to, the Fall River: ,055-1491

Los Angeles archdiocelle;s' Com- priesthood here' by 'Arclib,ishop , ,mittee on Educa'tlon' has calleCi PaUl 'Bernier, Bishop: of, Gas~e:' '.~""'~~"'... ',,,-,,,,upon C~tliolic groups'~,to ask. Father Thibaul,t ..",:,as, m.,arned ~'D'EB'ROS'SE OIL"Congress for'.action on the ,'so,- to the former LOUise', Harvey. ,,,, ' ...called Junior Gl Bills forF~- :She, died' in 1951, 10 months·,' , , 'C'0 'eral .aid to education. .. after "their marriage, ~n.d four ',: ."'.'.' • __

The bills, several, of,'~cb d8Y.•S after ..~h~ gav:e ,birth to"" He·atlng O.ls ~have been introduced, in the their daUghter, LoUlse. . ... ...Bouse, but have not ye~" re,- " Shortly aIte,r,tqe de;1th ,o.f his:' .," dB' ,eeived any action, propose that wife, Father Thibault arranged \' ... an urners,• flat grant be given by the for relatives to care " for his' #' \Federal government to parents d1iuiJh,ter, then entered S't..Vic'7 365 NORTH FRONT STREET ~who can spend it for the edu- tor de Beauce Seminary to make , ...eation of their children at the his studies ,for the priesthood. , -' NEW BEDFORD __ai:hool of theii' choice. He completed his studies at the, WY 2-5534 ,

They are commonly known IMl Grand Seminary of Rimouski, ~ man ..

lunior Gl BWa. Que. .."-'''''''''~

I~ "T~e,~e an ",Opti.~~~~~~*i;~~<~:,,~"~":'To', Start 'Tra'ining C'hi'ldre'n'?':' ' .

, ' By AudrieY Palm ~iker

Two young women sat on the beach watching theirblissfully happy youngsters sift sand and pour water intobrightly colored buckets. 'The conversation shifted to chil.

"4ren. "is y'~ur little poy ~rained yet1" asked one mrther.!hen she .added proudly" seven and nine months of age.

Both of mme were out of It takes much more time anddiapers by the time they patience to train a child underwere his age." This is the a' '.:lar of age, and often babieskind of moment that ruinS an who seem perfectly trainedotherwise lovely day. S'ome backslide later' on. However,parents love' to for some mother-baby combina-play the "com- tions an early start seems topar i n g chil- work fairly well:. .dren" gam: e The later trammg IS begun,particularly if the quicker a child will learn.their offsprh' - 1" you aren't" concerned abouthave a slight changing diapers, and you aren'tedge. In our In a race with the neighbors,competitive so- it is probably wiser to wait un-eiety ,many fa- til your toddler is 20, months ofthers and moth-" age or older. Not. o~ly do olderers are inordi-; children learn, faster (often theynate!y proud of literally train, themselves ~ ~eariy accom- month or less) but they exper-plishments; they propel their ience littl~ emotional upset andchildren through weaning, toilet f~wer maJor setbacks.trQ.ning, walking and talking Recent research indicates. thatwith detetmined vigor and 15 to 19 months is, II poor timelittle regard for individual dif- to start toilet '. training. This isferences. a period whim ,toddlers are ex- ,

Mothers in the United States ploring and diSl:overing; theystart toilet training their b'abies hate to be confined. In a fewany time from a few '!V~eks of m?n.ths they ~li be moreage ,through: two years or later.~~mg to sit qUietly for a fewThere is no optimum age to mmutes.start but some- periods are One Tbing at II~ebett~r than others. More" im- Whenever ,you start, p;l'aiseportant 'than when YO,ustart, successes and ignore, failU!es.though,ia how you do 'it. : Children whp' h~ve accidents

\ ' right after, they've sat on'~e, ..Tak~ ,Longer ",,, toilet aren't being '0 r n e r y,

" ,~e ~aY you help y?~ ,cJi.ild they're going throulI1l a nc;>rmalachieve control of eliminatl(~n phase on the; way to completedepend!> ~ large part on yoW' control. Postpone training if you'o~~, feeI~gs an~ 'past, eX~i- .. are plannihg to move, if,a Ilewences. If you think, ~f toil~t baby is expected or any' othertraining as a' dirty job' to be major family adjuStment seemseompleted as quickly as posSi- imminent.ble, it may be best for you ~" Aner ,one thing ata time. Ifget an earq start. But how your baby is" in the process ofearly?, weaning, or learning, to ,walk,

No training does D\uch per- let h,im finish one big job be­manent good until your Child fore introducing another.reaches II certain level of bodily ~ Stay away from' using shame,maturity. He should, at least, or P4nishnieilt to,get trainmg re­be able ~,sit. up steadily with- suIts; they don't work and theyou't, yoUr'" helP'-:"something mOst - intr~duce b~d; feelings, that areba~les :.lle~mplish between e~remely' dif~icult to erase.

Archdiocese Uses M'odern" M'ethods.. ; ..' -

Of., Processing School RecordsCINCINNATI , (!( c.) - The The system includes a tabula-'

electronic wizardy of II~ data tor that prints entire lines atprocessing ce~tei has rep1aced the rate of 1,600 an hour; aold fasb).O!led, me th 0 d ilot sorter that handles 900 cards akeepiilg ',records in schools of minute; an interpreter 'that~e Cincinnati archdiocese. «reads" the holes punched in a

The center, one of the first of card and prints' ,the informA­Its kind in the U.S., ,is'tempc)r- tion in typescript, and a machineartly located in a wing of Mc- that duplicates the data' careis.AuleyHigh School h~re. It is Another benefit of the center,already mechanizing the records Msgr. Franer stated, is that itGnd files of a dozen archdiocesan gives high school studenis ex­high schools. ' ' perience in the operation of

Msgr. Wi~liam J. Franer, as- modern business machines. Un- Ball Patronessesslstant superintendent of schools der the direction of Kathleen Honorary patronesses for thein the archdiocese, said he ex- Aus'tl'ng, who 18' lOn,charge of the '

th t annual charity bali of New Bed_peets the. services of e cen er ce·n'ter'''' '0''.-..ratl·o"s," 'S t u den t 8 '

d " 1 Of "'- u ford ,Catholic Women's Clu'b, toto be exten ed soon to severa learn' to keypunch re'co"rds and 'd be held Friday night, Aug. 17 at

ether 'high schools, an even- to 'use the,' 'sorter, intetPreter C .tually,to the offices of elemen- , 'and 'other machines. New Bedford ountry Club, 111-

tar h ols and parishes ' ,elUde 'Mrs. LeoF. St. ,Aubin".Js:C ~f the center . Msgrr< As an, addi~ionalservice ,of ',Miss Jean McGinnis and Mrs.

FraneI' 'pretticted, will' lead' :tc( ",~, . data. pr,ocessing center," 'rr~nk W. Mlmori. Dr. RobertW.economy In Sl:hool adminlstra.. schools will ,be able to ~::ll nor~n and Henry J. Fanning Jr.tion as well as to greater. ac;; ,comp~ter. ,aft~r, ,quarterlYElJtll':'~U1 ,head.~e corps of ushers.euracy and uniformity in ,re'-' minatl~ns ~or, quick and ac~ura~ecords. "This sYstem saves· time determmahon of averages and

'\ for the individual ~eachers;,too,~ ,honors.he said. "Information has' to ,bewritten down only once;, afterthat the machines takes o,ver."

Page 10: 08.09.62

Building eontractor. Masonry'

.' ~ .' -..

.VICTOR.' .

FL:E.U.R.ENT. .. ~ . - '. - . .

Close 'Watch.. .

The Adventist Church, henoted, supports an "independent,cOIl1p.etitive approach" to Chris­

.tian organization. '~Independ­

ence from state or ecumenical:control is b~tter for everychurch," he said. .

Asked' what he thought the.council could.a~hieve,Dr. Beaeh.·replied that he hoped it would,generate a spirit "of understand-'ing which wouid avoid intoler-

.ance of m'inorities."Dr. Beach commented that his

church .would 'observe -the eeu'­mencal council. closely.. Hi.s son,Dr. B. B. Beach, has already re­ceived his press accreditationfrom the :Vatican. Dr. Beach wassecretary of. the 49th Quadren­nIal Conference of the· AdventistChurch, held here.

Notes AdventistChurch InterestIn Rome Council. SAN FRANCISCO (NC).

.Dr. Walter'R. Be~ch, world.secretary of the Seventh..Day'·Adventist· Church, says' Ad­

ventists will "observe and coop­erate" with the forthcomingSecond Vatican Council.

,: " '. '''We l~ok With.' symp.athY and·" understanding' on any effort that:' is put forth :topromote the

cause .of Christianity," Dr•.Beach declared, adding, .how­ever, that "no ecumenical move­·ment can be valid. unless thereis clear understanding on such:matters as. doctrine, education,service and teaching."

Dr.. Beach said that it would."compound the confusion" to.

. join in an effort toward unity~ when basic doctrinal differences'. remained un~ettled.

TI:fE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Aug. 9, 1962

Hope for School.Aid.in Recognition'Of Need for ,'Catholic Brains' '. .

to do so, and the reason is that,.'by and large, 'they object to'what' are thought· speCial favorsfor the Catholic Church.~'

Nevertheless, he adds, Ameri_'cans may in time do "more thanat present appears Hkely".in theway of aiding ·Catholic Ilchools,'

He comments that '.'the' Ame~­ican. people seem toagi~e·'thatbrains are the· most important .of our resources, and that Catb.­olic brains are as useful' as any .other kind." . ,

Moreo'!'er, Shuster' says" If .Protestant and Jewish" schoolsystems should grow' in size' andcomplexity, . they alsO may be a

· significant force in the' effortto win public laid' forcliurch~chools. ,....... . ,

"Should the day e:Ver dawnwhen' there will be'a jointJewish-Catholic':Protestant . de­mand' for pubiic .support of re­ligious education, the.' nationwill be in. for. a resounding de..;.'bate," he says. .-'

Church to CooperateWith New Regi-m~

LIMA (NC) -' Church,authl,l­rities in Peru wiil work in "har­mony .and unllerstanding" withthis country's new military re­gime, it was ann'Oimced by JliimCardinal Landazuri Ricketts,.O.F.M. ... .

Earlier, the Archbishop ofLima had ref r a (ne d ·from.making any statement regarding·the _~ilitaryjunta which cameto power July 18.

The Cardinal's announcementwas' made' two days' before hewas scheduled to officiate' 'at a·Mass and ·Te Dewn in the cathe­dral here to. mark the Independ­ence Day of this South Ameri-e'an ~ation.· .

Pope A~t~orizes.

New Indulgences'VATICAN CITY (NC)-,Pope:

.lohn has' authorized new indul:gences to' be gained by thosewho offer their sufferings, toGod.

The authorization was re­ported in the current issue .ofthe official Vatican publication;Acts of the'Holy See.

, 1'he piiblication' stated.that a~le~ary . indulgence .. may' bega,ined: un<ie!, the .'. ~s~al ~9ndi-.tions by those who In,the morn-:­mg' have off~red their sufferingsof hody or. soul toGo<!-, r-'i~hwhatever prayer they' .may ,choose.' " ' .. ,' .'.

A partial indulgence ·of, ..~days: may be gained by. t~Qsewho' on' occasion, with a contriteheart, devotedly ·offer. to . th~Lord their sufferings by means.of a pioUs ejaculation.

BOSTON (NC) - Public re­eognition that "Catholic brainsare as useful as any other kind"bolds, hope' for public aid, toehurch schools, according to aveteran Catholic educator.: Writing . in the' A, P a.nti cMonthly 'magazi~e, Ge.<>rge, N,Shuster says that getting public.ass i s ta n c e for U.S. church8Chools "will be as difficult asgetting to the moon" but is ':not

· iinpossible." ", Shuster, assistant to the presi,..,dent at the University of NotreDame and past president ofHunter College, is one of ,thecontributors to a special supple­ment in the August Atlantic oJl"The Roman Catholic Churchfn Ameri~a.", ' .'Other contributors includeProtestant theologians Rei,nholdNiebuhr and' Jaroslav Pelikan;Msgr. Francis J. Lally, editor ofihe Boston Pilot, political ana­iyst. D. W.· Brogan, historian.Msgr: Philip Hughes" theologianFather .Gustave Weigel, S.J.,8chola1'6 Oscar Handlin andRobert D. Cross, and author andeconomist ,Barbara ~ard. '.. ' Shuster, -in a'n essay on U.S.

·Catholic education; .maintainsthat if the· American' peopl~wished to use public funds to aid'Catholic. education, "ways andmeans would be found for doingSo," despite the ;illeged consti­tutional difficulties.. , Joint .Demand

But he says, "the fact. is that. the'A~erican people do not wish

Priest :'Give$ ]:'i.feTo Save ~ Boy",MONTREAL(Np)':'- A Fran-~

ciscan 'priest lost his own 'life·here while saving anine,..year-·old boy from·drowning:.'· :

Fa~her ,Tan'creqe 'B;lyard,"O.F.M: who was stationed at ·theFranciscan retreat' house 'ine h a'tea' u g u ay Bassin, waswadin'g in Lake St. Louis when'lie noticed the' boy in apparent·difficulty being carried out fromshore by a curre~t.

Although he was not 'a goodswi!JlrP.er,. Fatller Bayard went·to the boy's rescue a'ndsuc- . . . '. .' ..· ceeded . in . getting him turned' . MINOR BA$ILICA: An histor~c Pennsylvania chlli'ch,:back' to shallow water.' How- . the' Shdile :of the Sacred He~rt of' CQnewagolias 1;>een.de-,ever, the priest sank himself in 'chlred .a.minor -basilica ,~y .Pope John,. '~oCated, near Han.~me 20 feet of watei. . . over, Pa., the new basilica was 'the first parish church in: Father'Bayard's bOdy ~as're:';: . America dedicated to the Sacred HeartNC Photo. '. ,

oo\;ered'shortlY 'after,:but 'first:' .,,' .... '.' . " . ' .,.. :'aid .failed to rp.vive 'him; He was " '.' . .. . "... . '.. ,si years' old;'.' ,'.' ,....~.P~pe',:Naltles·Pe~1'I)s\yl~~".ia'Ch,-:rehCites~R~spon~ibiliti;s ':1 ~th".Mi~R~,;;BtJ.~~,i.:li.c~:: .!:~'.,·U~~ •.. '.; '.: " Ft-.I~:::::~TiE~R~~321

., " " .:. ." .. ' .', .HAfl,RISnVRG·(NC) ."'7' Pope, wer.e. retouched m,)~l by t:\\1~ ' .. " . ..Of CathohcDoctors .John lias declared the Ch~rch Of· .artists tra:ined in Ger.ma'iiY.. :' . ' hSSiSSiississsss%S%Sh

th~:~;~t~t'~~~~~; ~oct:*::~,"·,:~~.~~~~~~r~~~' ~o:e~f::L'~T'd&T~T~TdIlh+~~diIhT~T~T~TdDhTdirhT~T~T dlrbt.ail influenCe over their neigh." l;>as~ltc~,. a ~ls~1Ocb!lA sh,ar~d .b!: EI'··,.c. ' '. " '. . ' . ~'.bors that, extends,far, \>eyond o,nl~. 14, ~ther U.f? chur~h~s;... . ~, . Lie: Lt.·· 'd " iot L . :.' :.4 .their ~edical competence, an .B~~OP. George .:L,.~~ch ~~,; EI,.. 00 Wna, yo~ con .! WI n a 0 • ~.Irish· pishop told: Cath,OI!<;·dele-}~a.rns~urg .a ~ ~ 0 u n c e d. that. ..: . H'OM'"E",. ~gates to the British Medical As-' :. ArchbIShop EgldlO Vagnozzl,the. EI.... ~ ;sociation convention here. ' . Apostolic D(!legate i,n the :United' .: . .' ,. :.4

This' 'mearts,' said' Auxiliary' States, wil.lformallY a~nounce. EI .··IMPROVEME.....T LOAIIli...I, ~ '.Bishop William Conway' .of the p.onor m a cerell1<:my at the": 1:"11II I~ • :-4 :

·Armagh, tha~ Cathol~c ,doctors, c~ur.ch on Sunday, Sept. 2.. EI ~"c~hnot afford to .wear their ' 'rhe h9nor. ~as bestowed ?n.": ::.. 'religi<;?n lightly." .He urged 'the the chu!.ch!. B~sho~ ~~h_ saId,.. ~ ~ .delegates' to .take a particular' beca~se It IS. ~l~h 10 hlstor~ and . t"": . ::..responsibility ~n bridging the a.rt, the req~ll~tes f~~ deSlgna-, ~ ~ .truths of the mIcroscope and the t~on as. a m~n~r baslltca.. . t"": ~truths of Faith. ..' The . Apostol~c Delegate wl1l ~ ~ '.. ' . .' celebrate a ..Mass in .the,church ... t"":. ::.. .

. 'Th~re.ls· a great nee~ at the when he comes to 'announce the .' ~" ~ ..~!-,e~nt for men wh~ ~now ~he . elevation. officially. He wiilaiso' . ..: ~.l!m~ts.of. ~he area wI~hm WhICh. deliver an address. . ~ ~the .. sCle.nt~~ ·p.as a rIght to, be •. The new basilica was the first ..: :-4he.ar~, hmits Which, the best men: par,ish c~urchin ~merfca. dedi~ , ~ ~ .of sCI~nce have themselves been cated to the.' Sacred Heart of .. ..: :-4

·th.e ~l~st t<? x:eeognize," said ·J~sus. The firs.t' chapel was put'.' :~ ~BIShop. Conway.. up on the site in. 1741 and in t"": ::..

1768 it was headquarters of ·the- ~ ~,Support Bill to Bar Jesuit missions 'which embraced ~ Malee those needed REPAIRS ~ .

most of Pennsylvania. ...: . . .' '.' ~

Objectiona'ble Shows The first Catholics came to ~ IMpROVE - REMODEL ~ ,WASH,.J.N.GTO.N. .- (NC) ._. The' 9onewago; iIi souther~Pen~sYl- ...: '. with an. :-4'

vania, in. the 1720's from Mai'y- ....:9 ~ .:

~~~:~~~~tc:~~c~:~~h6~~~:lan~. I~ the '1740's, the!:w~~e ,.~ ',EAS)' TO PAY ~ LOW'COST ~ .lie ~en a~~ Women ~av:e bac~ed,' .~~~:~~ by. German Imml'" ~. HOME. IMplO-YEMENT 'LOAN ~',

Michigan Se~! Plans ~ ,bl~. de~lgned to ~an ob?oo<- '.:bi 1785, the congrega~ionbe", ,~ ," ~.New .High .Schoois. tlonable br?ad~a!lts .and fl1J?l! gan work on a large Stone ":::" " : '. '-at- ~'

from, the I>Ist~lCt,~\-~l~m~~a.. chur~h.It..was completedi~ 1787, ~. Makingnec~ssary ·r.e"air~_."'OW, win 'sav,e. you. from ~_.. ~ANSING (NC)':" Ground. W~lt~r. ,Mc.<\.rd.le., preSident ·of.· ;,. and IS tho~gh.t to be Jhe oldest., t:j1,. ,ha.,ving to, make 'mal'or repairs, LAT.EIP :..,will be broken' Sunday, .Sept. 9 th ' I t ld H C h . h t"": .. ~for .two~ new.Catholic high' . .e JI.1en s .cpunci " a. 'a ou~, ~t ohc"churc .of that material ,~, , l? 'schools in~ the 'Lansing area.' . D~stnct .of Columbia sutx:0~-still in ,this country. . . ~,,:,., ". . '" " ..:-4.

" .... ',' . mIttee .tpat: th~. bill .w0!-1ld con::' The church wa~ d~rated illl : ~., .:,,'. '~-M-E-=-,' ..- '. ~'· : ~e 's~hools"will \>e fi~~mced ~ribut~ : to. th~·· fight' '~~a~nst (the middle ·of.. the 19th. century '..:. .:' -... 'ft.~DIS.n.~ , , ~. thro~gh; ,a,. $1,700;~00 dlOce~n .Juv~n~le delinque~cy::Mrs,·:E.C.,.!'by Franz Stecher, one·of the ~ -....,. • ... -.:Ill ~~~d drive. Th~Y. :w111' Qe ,~rected' Moym~ap... f~e~l~~nt:: of... '; th~'i ~I)st talentepartists ·of the time ..: ftA. :04.uutially, ~ acc~rnp1?date ~'~' wo.mel} s·gr~lUp, ~ld ,tlie me~s... ,lnE.l!fope. Hismlmy large ~., ',' . . _;'::,' ~ "st,:,-del).ts.ea.cl1, but WIth a POSSI- ··ure (,H,.R. 9686).')Would, prOVIde, ,murals 'on the w.alls and ~iling,' ~.CENTER BANK-P . h' ',., 'd,W'II' .. 5ts'.",·· ,.', . ~.ble expansIOn, to 2,000 students."prot~tlo,n" f?r, young . people. . .,EI . ". . ..' '.' u~, ~Ie ~n. •',~ . . : .. ~ ". .9ne·school'will be named for" However; Robert Kneipp; Council Magaz:ine . ..: NORTH END .BANK~Cor, Acushnet,·Ave. and Coffin Ave_ ~,

Msgr. John A.Gabriels;· former legal adviser to the . District MADRID (NC)- . The first ~ , . ..: ." ,: ." '. , . I;;>' .

pastor of Resurrection parish, Commissioners, ..op p 0 sed the' issue 'ofthe magazine Concilio, ..: SC;>UTH E~D BANK-C;:or.Cove 5.t... Rodney French Blvd. :-4LansiIig; -the other for Msgr. m·easure. Kneipp ~said the bill"s first Spanish·publication de':' ~ ." " ..... .. . ' . • . ; ~ .Jo~n W. O'Rafferty, recior, language is so vague'the Com:" voted exclusively to the Second ..: '. Member Federal Dep~~lt 1~6uranc~ Corporation, ~.emeritus of St. Mary cathedral missioners would not be able to Vati~an' -'Ecumenical Council, ~ .' .' . r .', . .'. ~parish. Lansing, .know what exh;ibitions to ban. has. been published here. ~.l@'~~....~....IlJJP....~....IlJJP....IlJJP....qnp..,IlJJP....IlJJP....IlJJP....IlJJP....IlJJP....IlJJP....1lJJP~l

'0

Page 11: 08.09.62

653 Washington Street, FairhavenWYman 4-5058

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What About YOU?

... • •A Franciscan Sister!

'GIVING YOUiiSELF to 'aIlfe"'oompletely dedicated to

'the salvation of souls . . .through prayer,- work, sac­rifice arid joy . .. by usingYOl,i- talents 'as. 'a Nurse,Laboratory' and X-Ray Tech­nician,' Secretary, Account­ant, Dietitian, Seamstress,·Cook, as well as in otherhospital departments and in:a new extension of ourwork in the Catechetical and'Social ,Service Fields ...There Is No Grea~er Charityl,(Write-giving your alt<>----wVocation Director, 767·30tb Street,Rock [sland, Illinoi.. for furtherdetails of thla happ~ life.)

Retreat MovementCI:IICAGO JNC)-Some 2,500

persons are expected to attendthe silver jubilee national con­gress of the National Lay­women's Retreat Movement, tobe held 'hereAug: 17 to 19.

Laos CatholicsAwait ResultsOf Integration

VIENTIANE (NC)-Free­dom of movement for mis-'sionaries will' be one of the'tests of fair "integration" ofarmed forces and civil adminis-:trations under the coalition'government here in Laos. .

So far the country remains,d'ivided into areas controlled bydisthict armed forces. The uni­fication of these ~roops under a 'truly neutralist command is oneof ,the crucial tasks that the newgovernment has to accomplish.

Neither the communist - ledPathet Lao nor the anticommu- 'nists appear to occupy any entireprovince. Each force controlspatches in nearly every 'province.

Christi,ans SkepticalIn most of the areas controlled

by the Pathet Lao, Catholic mis­sionaries have been unable totravel freely or do their normalwork.

One French priest in southernLaos has been able to relllain,and work continuously in a dis- 'trict occupied by the Pathet Lao, .wh,o apparently have not inter­fered with him. They haveshown similar tolerance else':'where for a while, but i~ hasrarely lasted. '

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Aug. 9, 1962

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SISTER SISTERS: Sister Mary Jovita, ,left, shows mis­sion memento to her little 'niece" Suzanne' Guimond, asSister Mar{Marguei'ita'observ'es~The nuns are sisters andSuzanne is the dau~hter of S~ster Mary Jovita's twin sisteI:.

C~nadian Missionary, 77, RetilrnsTo Africa After Vacation at Home

, , QUEBEC (NC)~Fath~r6mer_ whitili he narrowly' escapedBeaudoin, W.F;; a' 77-year-old death forced ,him ,to return toCanadian missioner, has returned Canada to :repair his health. In 'to ~ica where he served for 1942, be was back in' Af!:"icanearly 50 years.' again.

Born at Roch l'Achigan., Que,;, In 1953, the Canadian mis-bec, he joined 'the White Fathers sioner' was named chaplain ofin 1904. Five years later, he "':88 the' African Sisters of Our Lady'ordained a priest at Carthage in of Good Counsel at Butale.Turiisia.· He came back to' Canada in

,When, ,he arrivEU at his first 1961 for a rest. But once his su- ­a~signment.inUga~d~.at the'm~s- perlors agreed, he went back tos~op. of HOlma, now m the dIO- the people with whom. he hadcese ~f Fort ,Portal, the chapel, spent so many years.and living quarters were mud .'h'bts. in, 1912, afire destroyed all

the mission buildings but' the' GRACIA BR·0'S.chapel, and, a' fe,w huts. TwoweekS later, a fi~rce, wi~d stormbattered 'the rest to, the ground.

, SeeiIlg that the mission build- ,ingS had to be mad~',of some.;.thing stronger than JI!.ud., Fat~er, .Beaudoin built his own kiln' '" 9make brIcks. He' dOUbled, as 'a,'bricklayer, earpe~ter anQ.arc'hl~

teet while looking ,aftertbe. ~=======C=====c.',spiritual 'and' cultUral "needs of ' "> •

a wide area., " ...-~,~,--'!".. ~,---"._-_ ..He returned to Canada in 1926.' 'A.' D. McMULLEN

for a three-year 'term as 'superior" '" 'I " 'of the 'St. Mathias'de Rouville . " ' ncoreSidence for Brothers. M 0 V E'R 5

Narrow Escape SERVINGReturning then to Uganda, he' , Fan liver, 'New, :a.dford "

served at' Mbarara, and Butiti: . '" '. ' ",'until 1940 when an accident in Cape Cod Area '

Acen&:, ,,Blesses Clinic AERO MAYFLOWER

DUBLIN (NC) - Archbishop TRANSIT CO. INC.John C. McQuaid, C.S.Sp., of Nation-wide MovenDublin blessed the new 'child WYman 3-0904guidance clinic ;ht Master Hos- 30~Kemp&on'St. New Bedfordpital here. ' ,

Memorial MassNEW YORK (NC)-A memo-'

rial Mass will be offfered iD St.John the Baptist cl)urch hereSaturday, Aug, 11, on the 19thanniversary of the" death "ofEdith Stein, Clerman :philoso:",pher, convert from Judaism and 'Carmelite ,nun. Father PeterJacobs, also a Jewish convert,'will offer the Mass. Edith Steinwas killed .. . the Nazis atAuschwitz concentration eampin World War IL

Seminf;lry :Allows'Home Privileges:.,

MANCHESTER' (NCj - TheXaverl!lD Brothers here hi Eng­laiid: have opened lljunior sem­inary which differs from ordi­nary procedure.

The semillarians at Marylands,big house in Manchester'i Vic~toria Park district, not only at­tend ordinary school at the near­by Xaverian' college but, theyare allowed to sleep ilt hom~

four nights a week. NormallyBUch junior seminarians go homeonly 'for 'vacations ,and, follow,-iinindependent course of studies.

A'ttend Dally MassThe 20 aspirants in. th,eMary- '

lands juniorate, however, do notlive the life of ordinary schQ.ol­boys. They hllveto attend ,Mass'each morning and get to schoQ~'

half an hour before class to dothe chores.

Theirbrealql are spent in,prayer, study and furth!'ll' chores,and they have all their' 'mealsat Marylands, going home afterevening prayer's at night. '

The boys must spend Fridaynight at the seplinary,\ The ~ther

thre'e nights they can ch90se forthemselves. They enter at theage of 13alld leave,foi'the novi_tiate four years later. ., , ,,' ,

The Archbishop preached atthe consecration of the MostRev. Sylvester W. Treinen as thefifth Bishop 'of Boise, Idaho.Archbishop Binz, in his ,sermonat the consecration, stressed themissionary role of all Catholics. '

"The missionary effort, 'the' By 'Chance'apostolic'striving of the Church, The, elder sister's vocationis first of all' a personal re- came about by "chance"-or thesponsibility, an fndividual re- intricate 'working of the wili ofsponsibility which each of us God. She was a student at Jesus- 'must fulfill and which truly no' Mary Academy in Fall Riverone can fulfill for another," he whe,n'a Marist missionary visitedsaid. Notre Dame grammar school,

"It is likewise a joint re-' attended by her brothers andBPonsHlility, how~ver, which can sisters. 'She happened to see a'be fulfilled' only by, theharino- leaflet the youngsters broughtnious cooperation of the mem- home. 'It crystallized her desirebers ,of, Christ in this gigantic' to become a miSSionary, -and di­enterprise," he'added; , " rected her to the Marists. . .

It was ~aturiil that her sister'Holy Competition' should follow her to the same

Archbishop Binz quoted Qi community. Sister Mary Mar':'1957 declaration of the late Pope, guerita has been 'a Marist 14Pius XII that the tasks facing.. years, her sister for seven.the ChurCh today are "too vast After 10 years,' spimt in' the 'to leave. room for petty disputes" Fiji Islands, ,Sister Mary.l\1;argue_about the relations between rita is in this country' to com­priests and laymen. plete 'her "second novitiate," a

He recalled that the Pope period of spiritual formation.'stressed both "respect for the She has no plans for ,future homepriestly dignity" and the "rights" visits. Sister Mary .rovita's visit'of laymen which the clergy mUst 10 'years hence will' be for the'"recognize." , same second novitiate. ' '

"We bishops and priests ean The iatte'r has- completed'keep the respect of the laity in nurses' training and will put her4lne way, and in one way only, skill to unmediate use' in the UVes are terrified, of lepers, four other sisters .-and four'an4 that is by full-:time 'se~- SQlom9flS; where !!he will work ,even those in whom the disease ',' brothers; One sisreris a twin of, 'effacing service of the people in widely-scattered villages with has, been, arre~t~. Ex-patients Sister, Mary Jovita.of God," Archbishop' Binz de- emphasis on midwifer1Y and i~';, are apt to be 'exned'!.ic!m society H~~ do ihe ~~~bers 01 theirtlared. ' , strU,ction to mothers'designed to ,and', their o:vnf~i1iesand large farniiy f~labout the sis-,

'ite called on bishops, priests 'cut'downthehighinfant'mortal": "ther~fore' ?a.ve, il() ,m~,of' tersthey Are unlikely to'Seeand I,BYmen to "enter into a holy ,::' ity rate in the iSl~qds. " makmg "a lIvmg., .. again in -life - except for thata~d zeaious' 'cQmpet'iiion, 'each I Aid ,Lepen -Toaid them the Marist Sisters fleeting glimpse 10 years fromwithin his ,O",{11 prop.ersp.p,er~ Sister,Mary, Marguerita will be' have encouraged craft work and now?' "'to build up the Body of Christ':1 returnm'g to,fa~iliafSc.enes:Her .. sewi~g. ProdiJc~ are, ~ld ~ Sist,er Mary, Marguerita's ait-. '

, activities in. Fiji in~u'de DUrs-" tourIsts, ,''Who 40n!t seem' afraId 'swer Is simple. "They know, weiD.g dispenSary'labOratory alld, of leprosy," added Sister Mary entered religion to go to' the'ph~:rinacy'work: oooking;'care('of - Marguerita. ' missions.'" 'of th~ chur~h and clerking in the: .The sist~rsareetaughters,of,lep,rosarium C9-oper!ltive store~' Mr; and Mrs. Peter I;;evasseur of

~hesays that 'in Fiji the na-' ,Notre' Dame'parish. They have'

Prelate Stresses Sister Religious Plan South Seas Dep~rture,

Missionary Role Will Aid Lepers, Underprivileged IslandersOf All Catholics ' By Patricia McGowan

BISMARCK (NC) - Pro:moting the spread of 'the TWo Fall River sisters who are Sisters are sharing an adventure for Christ in theChurch is an "inescapable South Sea Islands, ,For one :there may be no return to her homeland, for the other. thereministry" for all' Catholics, will be but one, 10 'years hence. The apostles are Sister Mary Marguerita ,and ~ister MaryArchbishop Leo Binz of St, ~aul, Jovi4l, both Marist Mi&sionary Sisters. Thursday, Sept. 6, they will sail from San Fran-Minn., ,said here. cisco for a two week journey .

"For all of us, working for the to the Fiji Isla:nds,:- where 'spread of Christ's kingdom is' Sister Mary Marguerita.will:not a luxury, not a hobby, ,not 'return to her assignment at;a specialty, not, a pious p'astime," Fiji Leprosy' Hospital, on theArchbishop Binz said. "It is, our small is!and of Makogai.' ,inescapable ministry as the ser-vants of God and of fellow Sister Mary Jovita will have.man." two more weeks of sailing ahead

'of her,. She will be stationed onthe South Solomon Islands, 1800'

, miles from h~r sister."We don't expect to see much

of each other," said Sister MaryMarguerita with wry understate­ment.

Page 12: 08.09.62

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· bora1J.abY girL Mal' it helP lIOJ:De mother who Is In need."

But in Korea, the picture is bright. The Church has establisheda native hierarchy, and CatQolics in that llmd haye already doubledwithin' the past siX years. if that condition bad prevailed in theUnited States in the same period of time, our Catholics would·todily number 64 million instead .of 40 million. One explanationfor the Korean increase is that conversions are spearheaded by2,200 catechists - a method generally not uSed in the UnitedStates. '

Would to God that we tOok a Catholic view of .the world"seeing the starving people who" if they formed' a single file.

· would circle the co~ twenty-five' tiines; seeing ihe expulsionof 'the sPOuses of Christ from hospitals'; seem!:" at the' saine tln1e~the glorious flowering of Uie Chureb III Eastern,~ Wb3l

·sins we' have, to 'make up! What jUstification.we have to makefor our prosPerity!' WbM mei-its we· have to' pin for Our salva-'&Ion!. '. .... ," . ...:

By Mo~t 'itev~·Fult~nJ.Sheen; D. fi; ',/.:..··'.1:.· _ ~'There is nothing dies but something .. lives. ,and 1n«;~g

lives. but something, dies. till skies be fugitives." So It is ,w.· .the. cburch. Thedl'Y .Voltaire left the Chureb, Newman was

·baptized • • • For every Palm Sunday In one conntry, there' Isa Good Frlda.y in another. Consider the contrary attitudes tbai

·have arisen toward ·the Church in Ch~ Ceylon and KOI'eawithip the past. few weeks.

In . China, where the Church has been crucified, th~re ighunget and despair. A you.ng girl in. the Kwantung Province wrotet9 her aunt, 'a 'refugee in Hong Kong: ''Myfather "has to do 4,000 w:ork points to earnhalf the food necessary for life; I have todo 1,000 work points; and my younger Sister,350 points. That is -why there have been somany suicides among the sick. Recently,foreigners carrying food have been killed."

In Ceylon, the government hms madeplans.to eXpel all Sisters from governmenthospitals. The POor were eSpeciall7 bene­fitted by them. In fact, many people whocould pay for rooms. chose non-payingwards iIi order that .they might have thegentle care of the Sisters.

, . ' And .into whose' hands willthe.se sa~ifices-be dropped betterthan iIito th~h;inds'of the Holy Father, who bears the burdensof the world? .He has .founded The Society for the Propagation' of

· the Faith for just suqh a purpose '-::, to aid all missionaries,' allareas, all peoples equally. YoU ba"e not learned to be happy untiiy:oJlhaye learned to sicrifi~:' Start now- --:. in' your office, 1iI'ithyour neighbors, by yourself - and: resolve to send the' fruits ofyour. sacrificial love to' the. Pontiff each month~

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,God 'Love :You' '.

, This same confidence..was ex­pressed repe_a\edly' in the yearsthat followed, especially whenthe. Popema~El his. ~Up1eroWlappeals for prayers and penancefor the suCcess of the' council..' , " "

. ,,'. . Chief BusinesS ..

At' the b'eginiIing, neither 'the'Pope ~or anyone ¢llie had a'clearidea of what the couriCiI wouldinvolve. The general motivationof "the 'light of great· example".was born: in his conversation WithCardinal .Tardini. Then, as' the'bishops' of i the "world 'weresending :in their suggestions, the

.Pope also began to formulatethe 'principal objectiv.es of the­council in his discourses.

"It is Our~ intenti~n to Con-venean ecumeniCal council todeal' with' questions of greatestinterest,'to:' the· welfare Of theWliversal ChUrch," .nc··· saIdApril 27, 1959; .

The cou~cil's "chief b~~ineSIJ'will concern the Increase of theCatholic Faith and therenew8lalong right lines of the habits of

.Christiat,l people. in the adaptingof ecclesiasUc3I discipline to theneeds and conditions of the p~­sent time." .(Ju~ %5, 1~~9)."The Church will bring itselfintO step' with inodem times:"(July 29•. 1960).

SET FOR BAPTISM: 'Al­most ,th~ entire. populationof Popokabaka, ~e Congo,turned out to witness .theBaptism of .Mfumu ltenga,first chief of the Yaka tribe

. in' the J{wango area to be­come a Christian. Nt Photo.

. Ti'uttis, ~ New FOI'JDS.

His first reaction after an­nouncing .bis intention. pUbliclywas to place his trust in' God.After revealing his intentiQ'n tothe ·cardinals. assembled attlieBasilica of st. Paul Outside theW~lson Jan, 25, 1959. the Popetn,en' went out to teU the com­munity 1 of Benedictine' monkswho .staff the basilica about ·the .cOuncil. He told them:

i'The Lord 'must help Us be­cause We .are trying to do Ou.rbest for the good of the. Chris­tian people'. .' • the new Popehopes to· bring' to' 'th'e attentionof the' whole world the ancient

. ti-uths reflected 'iii new forms."

12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Aug. 9, 1962(;.,;. .,....._ .......,.......,..;,,;;.~,.....:.-..,....,;..""!.....,..;....'!"""-.....:..."i.'..,;,.""...;,.;;,.......-.....,.'.....1...._:..;,.~....:..;..~""";...>.::..";'~'~""--:

'~~~~~ff,'M~reau/$ ·8~@®r~p.hy

ShQw~ ·lr'iumph· of 'Fttlilu.reBy Rt; Rev~ Msgr. John S; Kenll'iedy

'file triu~phof faiiure, so ofte~ se~n in the lives ofthe saints, is exemplified in that Of Father Basil AnthoriyMoreau, who established the religious -congregation of theHolv Cross. His story is 'unfolded by Gary MacEoin inFather M.o rea u (Bruce.' boded ill. The ~ld bishop died,$3,50), whIch, after ,a some- and Father Bouvier sUcceededwhat hesitant start, finally him. .hits a good pace,and.ends There was !10 open breach1IllP strong. Since the religious: be' "V e e n him. a~d . Fatherof the Holy Cross are well' Moreau, but. the two were atknown through-' .o,dds in their views, Bishopout the United, Bouvier was not personally sym-States, the book patQetic t.> Father Morea~, andshould attract as the latter. sought -R~me s ap-interest. .How- p~oval o~ his foundati~IlS'. theever some may bishop mterposed· oJ>]ections.jUdg~ it unduly Then, suddenly, Fa~er Moreau.critical of Fr. W~~ ejected from the seminaryEdward Sorin staff, which was generally. in-f 0 u n d e r of terpreted as. signalizing theNotre 'D am e . bishop's lack of· confidenc~ inUni~ersity, a him. . ,eolleague of Fr. AsSigned AbroadMoreau and, in But conflicts and setbacks didsense an adversary. Controversy not deter· Father Moreau. Heis bo~d to spring up on this kept' his groups iq eXiste~ce,point. .' ." secured permission for them to

Basil Moreau was born' m take vows as r.eligious, built anorthwest France'in 1799" the mother church iorthem, repe\lt- / . Council Aims·n· inth of 14 chiidren.· edly petitioned Rome for ree- .

. h' h 't' Continued frO,'m Page OneFirst the lad attended a Ig - ogm Ion.· .school ina toWn 60 miles fiopm In addition to school work, . papacy. It happened during onehome. Then he went on to the. his: priests gave. missions" iil of hiS regularly scheduled .con­diOCesan seminary of Le Mans, France, and' theY,the. brothers, . ferences with· the' late Domenicolately , re _ established in an .and the sisters' accepted ass~gn- Cardinal Tardini, former Papalabandoned monastery. He was .ments',abroad.. The:fIrst f~reign Secretary of State, sometimeordained in 182i,' and was Sent post taken was' in Algiers; :fol- late .in1958. .to :St. Sulpice, near Pads,; t9 lowed by others in J'oland, Gan- . ,The Pope r~ed that he WaJJ

maJ,te'special preparation for' a ada, and Bengal,° . '. ':' worrying 'over'· the seeminglyteaching career. He was with The .one destined to _be .most futile' attempts goiilg on' in 'the

. the Sulpician Fathers two years.. celebrated fu la~' years was world to·· attain peace, and' he.' Sembiaty Instructor .. '. that in the United states.. The· was puzzling over what· the

. Upon his return to the di'ocese,·· Bis~op' of Vi~ceI!nes, Indiana, Church eould" do. He. washe was assigned as an instructor. requested.F.ather Moreau to send' thinking that the Church should'at· the minor seminary. ·In all, . him .8' few. ,brc:>thers 'to: do . set .an example and was' tryinghe. sPent 13 years as a tea~~er of teaching, arid in 11!41 three S1:1ch to decide in concrete ,terms whatcandidates for· the diocesan ~ere dispatched. They were ac- this example should be. Then; aJJpriesthood. A f~o~. ~ember co.mpanied by' a. brother tai~or, he recalled:of 'tl-' . seminary staff was F!lther a 'brother·.carpenter, and a bro- . "our soul was suddenly en­"'ohn Baptist Bouvier, who was ther farmer. But, ~ost signifi-~. . . t i h d lighten~d· by a great idea thatto pfay a fateful ro'e in F,~ther cantly, thee x p e·dl. 0 n '. ~. occurred"to Us .in- that moment.Moreau's life in the decades Father Edward Sorm as do One solemn .and binding wordab; d. . superior..... . came to Our lips. our voice for-

Father Moreau had it 'in mirid . Father Sorin mwated it for the.first time _.... org~"';"'" a triple community,: Father Borin's story Is practi- .WI ...-- - .a c6uncil!"comprising priests, brotherS, and cally an epic in itself. The manGun:.. Their work woUld be edu - was a genius. H_e came penni1e~~tion, and they would condl1ct int" a Wilderness, and, in a fewit on every level,·using methods ye~rs' had a university charteradapted to thene}!ds of the age; and launched the scliool which

Moreover, they wo~ld. be was to become the great Notrethoroughly and expertly pre- Dame of the' twentiethcenturj'.pared for it, as well as carefully Under his dauntless guidanceformed in the religious life. the &y aDd chancy start on 'theGiven the forbidding conditions 'frontier resulted' in plienomenalprevalent and the absence .of accomplishment. But friction;.resources, this seemed an im- and even estrangement, grew be-possible dream. tween him and Father ·Moreau.

Becomes Superior 'For Father Sorin operated en-But Father Moreau made it a , tirely. on his own. initiated new

reality. Little by little, the triple projects without aut~orizat~~n.

community came into being. contracteq 'large' and w~isorile­First, there were the brothers, debts, .. and drove his FrenchactUally established by reorgani- superiors to extreme a·nxiety.zation of a commu.nity alreaay Mr. MacEoin attempts to 'ex­extant. From their house at plain the differences. betw~nSainte Croix came' the . name Father Sorin arid Father MoreauHoly Cross. Then a"'jrroup''''of by stressing' the former's en­priests gat~ered' about ··Father. thusiasm for' the '. United StatesMor-eau. . ..... .. . and his conviction that 'the HolyE~entually the It is t E! rho ad' Cross congregation .)9h~.U1.d fo~get

emerged, beginning 'with helpers' "'Europe and concentrate i onin "the domes~ ·work -of the in:.:..'" Airierica:'h'is 'De~g sep.t her~. assti.tutions set up' "by Father ,: i supefior when.very. young ~nd

Mv_eau, later growing' into·: a' without. seasoning .~n· the reHgi­tea$ing order. Of "each of" the . otis life; the sloWness of cdin­three' branches, . Father Moreau munication" between' the 'oldwas'superior. "',. ..' world and the new, and so on.

All had headquarters .in I.e Removed From OfficeMiu~s. where he continued hts" C'At' any rate there' is no doubtsemlll,ary teaching. But t~en that Father Sarin hild' h1~ch' tocame . a development, whIch do~ wjth the .doWnfall of Father

Moreau. Suffice it to say' that,Fren'ch TV Network· when finally the congregation.

Pia'ns C;oun·c.o•. Se,'-.oe·s-' .' WaS'approve,rbj Pi~~ :oc, ",henits-'numbers were groWing, its

MONTREAL (NC)-A mecial 'houses multiplying, its. effortsteam of the Canadian. Broad- succeeding " 'splendidly; . Fathercasting Corporation's 0 French Moreau~:respQD:sible 'COr it allnetwork is i~ Europe' preparing aDd bearing·all iis:chief burdens.a weekly televiSion series on' the himself -::-:was removed .~Qni. of­Second Vatr~an CounciI. ."" fice, in 1866, in liiSgracefuFfash-

Leading Churchmen and laity .. ion. . '. - '. '.' '.m France.; Belgium.' Holland; Until his death in' 1883, heGermany and Italy. noted for kept busy giviIlg missions andtheir' writing and study· of tlJ,e retreats, not indulging in re­council, will be interviewed' on .' criminations, but forgiving his .the 'purpose and possible .themes traducers and concentrating onof the council. . , prayer and labor to perfect him-

The team will spend seven self and prepare for' death. Itweeks in Europe preparing the was only 'later that .the· congre­aedes; to be known as •A gation made formal amends byl'heure' du C.oncile." (At the declaring its debt to him andHour of the Council)~babUitating hi& rep~tatioA.

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Page 13: 08.09.62

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'Catholi~' Paper Pays Tribute To Rayburn- I"

, WASHINGTON (NC) ~ A;n . fice.editorial f~om the Steubenville' The editorial, entitled "Amell''';Register, newspaper of the Steu_ ica ,Will Miss You; Mr. Sam,'"benville, Ohio, Diocese, is in- ,was placed in the Congressionslleluded ina book of tributes to' Record by Rep. Wayne L. Hay's,the la,te Speaker _of the House of Ohio. It was written by Msgr.Sain Rayburn, issued' here by Joseph P. Kiefer, editor of thethe Government' Printing Of- Register.

Liberties CouncilPITTSBURGH (NC) - The

Catholic Council on Civil Liber­ties will hold its annual conven";'tion in conjunctio{l with, theconvention here of the NationalCatholic Social Action Confer­ence, starting Thursday, Aug.23..

ELECTED: Don a I d R.Stautberg of Cincinnati waselected president of the Na­tional Catholic Laymen'sRetreat· Conference a.t theorganization's 19th biennialconvention in Portland, O~,NC Photo,

,Sees Religious.Unity Nearer

, ST. PAUL'(NC) - A priemclose ' ,to preparations for theS~cond Vatican Council saidhere, that the world today 'isseeing a "surge" toward ,rell~

gious 'unity. ' 'Father Tho m a sStransky~

C,S.P;. an American _priest now ', working in Rome, with 'the See-_ .retiiiiat for Promoting ChristianUnity, said such trends, "mustbe enouragedand promoted."

"The. Church is' facing thef~t ,that there is a growingm()vemerit for 'Christian, u{lity-...; for the perfect visible and, in­visible. unity G<?d wants," 'de­claredFather StranSky, whosework 'involves communications

'with English _ speaking 'non­Catholics in co'nnection with thecoming council.

Change of AttitudeHe told a convocation at the

College' of St. Catherine that"the built-in logic of our timesis making more real the truththat 'God created 'aU men thatthey., might live together. inpeace'."

The Church's new willingnessto listen to criticism from' non­Catholics represents "a greatchange of 'attitude," he said. '

"The - Catholic Church is theone church of salvation and allgraces come' through it," he'said. '''But when we look at,Protestantism we muSt try tosee what is Christiim and, there..fore, Catholic • ~ .to

StadiumCleaningTo Build Hall

Je~uit Colleges GetPublic Health Gran'ts'

'WASHINGTON' (NC)---:ThreeJesuit universities" Share innewly 'announced Public HealthSerVice grants - totaling almost$30- miUion ,for the constructionof health research facilities.

The School of Dentistry of the.. University of'I>etroit received a

grant of $175,000 to iw.prove its. dental, and 'biological research'facilities. St. Louis Unlversity

. School- Qf Medicine was given'$16,01; for completion of itsneurological research labora­tories.

Marquette University, Mil­waukee, received two grants forits School of Medicine: $15,591for medical research equipmentand $59,708 to remodel researchlaboratories and purchase addi­tional equipment for its depart­ments of pharmacology andpathology..

--~

Spani~h Bi,shops AskFor Social Justice' ~MADRIP(NC)~TheBishops

of Spain have appealed to labor,management and the governmentto -' draw on Christian soCialpi-incipleli in _working for a bet­ter life for all people.

"We must all'strive to elevatethe social consciences - of ourpeople until the level of lifehere reaches that which Chris­tian tradition demands to helpin the construction of a betterworld," the Bishops saId in apastoral letter..

Nuns Control TownDs'Fire' Alarm System'

BREAUX BRIDGE (NC)Whenever there's a hot time in'this Louisiana town of 3,303population, it's the nuns who·blow the whistle .;.... the fire'alarm whistle, that is.

The town organized an , ex­eellent volunteer. fire depart­ment. Then the problemw:aa'where "to locate the fire' alarmwhistle: It had ,to 'be someplacewhere someone always was at'home,. ' so , the ' 'easy-~o':arrive"'atanswer was the 'convent ,of 'the'Sisters of the Most Holy' Sacra-ment. ;'

Now' 'phone calls, J,'eporting a'fire go directly, to the convent.The 'nuns determine in whatsection of town the fire is --lo­cated, ,then sound the' alarm.One whistle is atop Ule fireengine house to 'serve one sec­tion of town, another on toP ofa business, building for the othersection. If there's a .large fir~,.

both whistles are soUnded. '

MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - Vo~­

unteers fr.om Assumption par:ishhere are cleaning up after Min­nesota Twins' baseball games toearn more than $24,000 this sea­son for Ii new parish hall.

Their 0 rg ani z a t ion was­dubbed,: the "Bloomfield Men'sClub," since the Twins' Metro­politan stadium and part' of theparish are located in Bloomfield,Minn: It consists of 10 teams 'of

,40 ;'olunteers each. Each team isassigned' specific clean-up daysduring the 'Twins' 76"gatneshome schedule: ' ,

The club includes business-

Ch ch Reopens men:, , doctors, lawy,er$" serviceur, "_,, station operators; machinists and

Aft St bb- '- even housewives ami teenagers.-:er, a Ing,: Their, work; which.is ,confinedWASHINGTON (NC) - St: to cleanin'g'the stands, takes an'

:peter's' chu!Ch _he!,e, was re- average' of three -' imd - a - half~pimed '. ',a~ter . ,.'~rec~,ncfliati,on".· ho,u~s 'after every game.ceremomes were conducted, fol-lowing the.'stabbing of a woman CatholicVeteranin.' the ch'u!.'cp. " , . , .

Auxiliary Bishop Philip M. Ho 'A t ' tHannan 'of' Wa$hington per- no~ 5 ronau, Sformed the cereni~;mies required PHILADE;LPIIIA ( NC) -by 'canon law' "if there is America's seven, 'astronauts andhomicide, injurious a~d serious- U.S.' Sen. TIiomas J. Dodd ofspilling' of blood," In a church.'. Connecticut wili receive special

Mary: 1.9,u Kosterl~tsky, 45,' awards Saturday, Aug. 18 'at theadministrative, aide to, Rep: 27th' national convention ofFrank Becker of New York, was ,Catholic War Veterans" here.choked, stabbed nine times and The presentation of the Celticrobbed -of $7 by a man in the Cross Citation to the astronautschurch where she had gone to and an Honor Et Veritas' plaquepray. to Senator Dodd as' an out-

The ,church on Capital Hill standing' American will' high­is a popular place of worship for light the fiv~-day convention,members of Congress and their; ,beginning next Tuesday.staffs. The convention's keynote ad-

dress will be delivered by Msgr.,(Rear Adm.) George A. Rosso,Chief' of NaVy Chaplains.

'Woman of Year'At a joint session of the vet_

erans a'nd their' ladies' aux~li,aryWilliam J. Driver, deputy ad­min~strato!-" 01 the Veterans ad'­ministration, ,will address the,conve'n!ion.,At _the same'~ssion,U.S.-Sens. Joseph S. Clark 'andH\lgh D. Scilttof: Pennsylvania'and, Gov. ,David, L. Lawrencewill 'greet the delegates.

The auxiliary will pre~nt an Publish, Two Catholic~ward to Ml'S. Virg~nili Becker W kl' . V·of., Stickney, nL, as i'Catholic' ' ee leSl11 letnamWoman of the Year." ': SAiGON: (NC)-Two Catholic

Mrs. Becker, mother of; 15 papers have just been launched'chiidrEm, has 'campaigned 'for' 'here, after' about 20 years duringdecent literature on newsstands. which there were no Vietnamese

C'atholic 'newspapers.The first issue of Song Dao,

which'means "Living (Our) Re­ligion," a four-page, tabloid-s~zeweekly, appeared late in 'June.It is ,e.dited by laymen, mostly

'former Jocists (Young ChristianWorkers); "now members ofWorkers' Catholic Action, with

, some professors assisting.On July 1, Thang Tien, which

means "Onward;" came out as aweekly -paper. Edited by FatherPham, van Tham, it was, foun~ed'about five years ago as a month.;ly, review, which later became

, a fortnightly.

Cites' Council's Potential :to' Effecf',Colla,boratoion With Non-Catholics

NEW YORK (NC)~The head also 'Stressed that' the' Octoberof _the Holy See's Secretariat for' council will nl)t be a "unionPromoting Christian Unity says, council," but an effort' by the,the' forthcoming ecumenical 'Church to strengthen its imiercouncil could take two' steps :00 ,life to prepare for eventualen. urage actual collaboration union. 'with non-Catholics. Greatest Obstacles

Augustine CardInal Bea said Asked what are the greatestthe council ,could encourage obstacles, more than 500 visitsmore "ecumenical discussions" from non-Catholic leaders saidamong schol~rs and cou!d favor' that "there is, above all, an im­collaboration by' 'Catholics and mense accumulation of misin­Qther 'Christians' in . civic and terpretation, . of resentment, andGocial life. of misunderstanding between

"Think of what' a wonderful separated, Christians." .thing it would be if Christians of Another obstacle, he said, isall confessions would work in' "the unexemplary life of manyclose harmony for international Catholics." He commented thatpeace; for the achievement of "our separated brethren are nothuman rights of .minority groups attracted to us when they see usand racial groups; for disarma- immersed in pursuits that con­ment; for the social progress of tradict the vaiues of the Gos­developing nations, said the pel."prelate.

Prepare for UnionThe 81 - year - old Cardinal,

who is a Jesuit, made his com­ments in an interview reported,in America, weekly magazinepublished here by the Jesuits.He was interviewed in Rome byFather Eugene C. Bianchi, S.J.,a member of the Jesuits' SanFrancisco province.

Cardinal B¢a, a biblical scho­lar and onetime confessor, toPope Pius XII, heads Ii secre­tariat which keeps non-Catholic .bodies informed' of activities re­lated to the Second VaticanCouncil. .. Although he talked about pos.­

sible council steps to, furtherChristian . union; the Cardinal

Page 14: 08.09.62

PRINTERS

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some of· the surplus wheatwhich, as a gift from theAmericari people, arrives here

,as flour to be made into nour-ishing nbodles and bread forthousands of hungry refugees.At the Bishop Ford Center alohe3,000 pounds of noodles 'are dis­tributed daily.. Cadet~Rottnal1 if! PlU't of' ate;iID. of 13 U. S. air cadets whospecialize in Far East politics'an~ st6ppe.d, off in Hong Kongon a tour that might be calleda p~st-graduate 'field trip' tostudy cold war tactics in thePacific l!l'~a.

'They Have Spunk'Befor~ they l~t, Father H~w- '

ard Trube, M.M., diiector of thecenter, ·.invited- the cadets to dis_tribute' three-pound packages ofnood~es to a long queue· of refu-

. gee 'children' and adults. With:outthis help th~y would have goneto b.ed that nigli-t hungry.'

': Co'~ented one' of the cadebr.. "You'~e got to ~ee it to b~lieveit·. It's; am~zing. 'Not just .thene.ed and the conditions underwhich tl,1ese people. rrianage,'tos~vive; but· their' . ,Courage.YO,",'ve got to hand it to them:'­they SU!'e', have spunk!"

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Bishop Ford Center to provideas manyrieighborliood refugeechildren with. a man-size 'mid­morning snack.

, . ."It even' tastes like Kansas!"

he add~wi~hagrin.

Ba~k' horrie in Downes,' An­~ony Rotman, his cUI~ grows

wheelchair; "you know rm notout ringing doorbells' for goodSt. Anne."

He prefers to credit the Mc­Culloch family and h!s pastor,Father· Frederick J. Delaney,for. the growing interest in St.Anne. '

Jerry's devotion to the saintstems from four trips to theworld-fanlOus shrine·'of St. Annede Beaupre' in Quebec. '

" ,'.... ." _~' .. , ! J. ')\ •

Although these did' not pro-duce a p~ysical cure~ ~hey dideffect· a codi.pletecharig~' iil ;''his' .'outlook o~ life - from abjectdesPair' 'to a. philosophY' rootedon the virtues of faith, hoPe andtrust in Divine P~ovid~ri~e. , ,

He dreams of one 'day organ­i~ing a.' train pilgrimage, to thefamed Canadian' shri~ com­posed of people right ~orri his .own. parish and the Pontiac'Mich., area. .,

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~ducatoll'S Schedule'Wo~ld Meeting

WASHINGTON (NC) - Morethan 100 rectors and presidentsof Catholic universities in--nianyparts of the world are expectedto attend the triennial meetingof tbe Federation 'of CathoiicUniversities, to' be held at 'theCatholic University, of Americahere in, the first week of Sep-tember, 1963. '

The' gathering will mark thef~st time that the federation has ,....met in the United States. Pre'"viot!,s.' meetings were held in.~io' de Jan~~o iIi 1960 and in·Paris 'in 1957.. The federation'was establish~ iJri '1949.

Mass ~or Victim~BERLIN (NC) -More than

2,000 young -Berlin Catholics at­tended a Mass offered here forvictims of the Nazis. The ,Mass

·was 'sponsored by. the Berlindioce;>an 7~uth organizatio~ '.

14 ,THE: ANCHO~":7Diocese"of,FaIlRiver;-:"Thurs., Aug.,9;1962

The scene was 'laid in New York City and the time,was the early 18408. The plot was to organize a tax-sup­

v ported system of public schools which would be in fact Pro­testant schools. Prayers, 'Bible readings,' and thinly-dis­guised sectarian instruction· '.. '., ' .' ,"

ld II b. d "'t'th' . ,ship in what was' becoming the.

wou .a e aime a.,' ,e m~. Catholic ner,:ve-center of theculcatlOn of sound Protes- nation; none felt better equippedtant doctrine and the forma- than he to supply it.tion . of the .sound Protestant Bishop Hughes' (Archbishopmind. The "Public School Socie- after 1850) was rough-hewn, big,

' .. ty" was 'estab- powerful, impulsive. 'He' was.lished to pro~ ·.capable of Black Iri*, w~ath

:. mote the pro- an~ towering 'Irish rages,but·• 'gram, enlisting he knew his people and they

· the support of loved him with a passionate· the ministers love. When he t hun d ere d,, and tho s e whether 'at ,them or for them,e k n 0 w'n as the the very walls trembled.

backbone of the.:-. Reacts. to~lf;ltcommunity. It. :", Th~ ·'scli'ooL 'C(>ntroversy was ~

'was confidently .. his first public testhlg. Con~anticipated that . fr{jnted with. a'. plot·to. destroy'·within a few .!he faith' ofh~s. children, 'he ' . ", ..

_~ years all the. . . , . , J;'~acted with characteristic "'igor R~~~IVES, BOOK,. VISIT.ORS: ;FranCIS Cardmal Spellman receives a copy of "WO., li.ttle Irish Catho)lc ~pys:.aIl4. <:>r.· " " . . ." .,. ,.', ffl!:l:LO, :the. Story o~ t~~ Camp, FIre Girls," during an audience with ·Cornelia Dul'Qss,

gIrlS of N~w York: w~uld;,!?e- . . ;There. c~!1ld .be ,no ~~eetmg. of . .: left, ..and JI'I~ndy, MorIarty 9f Larchmont, N.Y., official hosfesses of Ca'therine Borda andcome staunch Evangelicals•.,' " ~I.lnds betw~n ~~e .P~gots of the Charles Ferrug'a f 'MIt' Th' 't' . I" d 10 d' ... ' .. ' .

· There was little . that •,.wasPublic School Society, who' de- <::> ' , ...... ;. 1 0 ... a. a. e recep IOn c Imaxe a - ay VISIt of' the young student'novel in this for .. the·:~rish'im- . ~pise4 him and his people, and' essay prI~e wm~ersofa NAT9-swnsored contest. NC P~oto. " ... migrants. They had 'experienced an· Irish prelate' whose blo()d. .... . <-

substantially the·. samel:.ing·was ..up. So it came·.to a contest AGI ~.d :'1 R f .· back on the Old S,oouJ:lder':t\1e,: .of.··~orce, of vote. against vote, ,. " Ir' ~a et.$':" nsn..ect - e ugee Centerpaternal aegis ·o~·.ih~: Brit~s..n, ;'politicii'm against po!iti.'cia~. rCrown. . : . ,.' ':.,..' ,H.:!lghes lost, butth~loss ·was HO~O'KONG ' (NO):;~'

There' the National Sch()ols . actually his victory. TI1e,mani":· .1'Don't .tellMom, but' it's as·had been set up for the' manifest pulators ~n Albany realized' the: . '"purpose of converting the Cath- pot e n t 1 a} of ,the Ca.tholic good as she.oakes.'! This'waS

olic youth to Protestantism. The strength, and Gove.rnor William'. the. considered 'vetdict>of.• teachers were' to be selected on Seward cannily:- reco~nized in:, Air Cadet Douglas' Rotman ot·· the basis of their loyality.to the. Hughes a po~er to ~ ass~aged:' Downes,. Kan., after "sanlpling'be&1; principles of the. Refornill'-...,: So a compromise was arranged. one of the i,500 rolls baked daily.· tion and the vigor of their Anti::-:. '. Unjust 'Compromise' " here 'at ·tl:1e .j,\4:arYknoU·Fathers'Romanism. " ',It was the' Cqmpromi~ of

Even the Queen's Colleges for leaving the· public schools to . . . .high. education were to play ~he secula~isIIi, ~~hJle the Bishop' t:lan~ic.a,·"p,p~d...' ..V.. eteran's 'B.. ackyard l

same game, perhaps with a trl.fl~ inaugurated; the Syste~ of paro-more subtlety. ,:' chial schOoJ~ throiighout his .','No~en.a..,··~:T.ak.es.. Place on' Schedule' .

. Hierarchy strong,. . ' . I?iqcese, Qf' course ,the 'word·But alas for the .deep~sH.ai~ ':secularisJD" was not used, and, WATE~FO~O (NC)'~ 'Jerry

plans which so often gQ agl¢y.. probably would ·not .h,ave:: been Farnall's'.' ,"backyard" '. novenaThe Crowri thought to deal.,with·· well understoo~ if it had been,. went· off on schedule again thisa crowed people without leader':' ~or were its effects pUiirilyfore_. year.' . '

·ship, and found that it ,,!~s' uP; ; ~eeQ in those l~ng-distant and '. And there "were quite .a fewagainst the' massive strength o~ , somewhat more mnocent days.' new 'faces among the neighborsthe revived Catholic hierachy.· '>. Bishop' Hughes failed.then, as. and:parlshioners' of, Our ·L!i.dy

More powerful even ·that t!te . Catholi~ le~der~ip. basfa'ned.. of' the'La~esparisii lnthis· eloquence of Daniel O'Connell,' ever since,.to: convince the.' npn_.,.Michigan' community' to Share: the determination of the Irish Catholic community' that·the· this annllal devotion with. the: bishops that the schools woul<;l compr{)m.ise, as asoltition;' was 42-:-year-old World War II vet­.not ,become anti-Catholic pro- unjust. " ,,' eran who is 'both blind and'paganda centers carried the day. . It may have been that he did paralyzed.

Quietly, gradually,' the whole not try very hard. His own mood .Begun in 1957 as adevotion ofthing was dropped. The schools . and the. temper of the ~imeS the Lawrence McCulloch familyremained,' but to fulfill their were ~e!ther of them. propWous (his sister's family,- with. whompurpose of education" nqt., of for slttmg down and talking' Jerry has lived" for almost 20'.

.mass-conversion.. In time~ . iri~ , over the wh{)le question in an' years),the .novena s~on outgrew"deed, they. came to. reflect the atmosphere of sweet reasonable- the 'house and was transferredmind and heart of the p'eople to ne~. Th~ Bishop had' made his' to the back, lawn; near a per~an extraordinary degree, as they pomt, pIcked up his marbles, ,mlment shrine to the Blesseddo today. .a~dwent off. to plaY'in his own Virgin. ' .

. Catho!ics Timid sch~olyard.. The novena closed at ~New York 10 the, '~Os'of. the . Read History Backwards Lady of the. Lakes church with

last century had precIOUS bttle Now, exactly 120 years after solemn Ben e d. i ct ion of' thein. the wa~ of Cat?o~ic leader- the New York. school contro-. Blessed·Sacrament. .ShIp. Inarbculate, tImId, ground versy, the. Umted States Su- ." .' .down by harshest poverty, the preme Court has. equivalently Confmed.t:9 hIS wh~elc~alr

· Irish formed the lowest stratum proclaimed secularism the offi- most (If t~e bme, Jerry dIsclaImsof society. cial dogma of the' American any credIt for·the .growing num_

What could such an unor- state-supported schools. ber of peopl~ attending the'ganized herd do L O ward off the In .the bable of tongues which novena' each year.threatened danger? Or ~ho has' resulted;,. i~ bas 'been said Visited Shrinewould speak of them. agamst that the ongmal' blame lies " .' ; ,,'the wealthy, the well-born the squarely at the door of Arch-' In this OUtfIt, he. sayseconomic a~d social maste;s of bishop John Hughes: It is a laughingly poi n tin g to ~i~_"the .land? clever ruse, with enough plau-:' . r-----..~...~~-...;.-~---

Well, his name was John sibility to al1~w it to pass;'·in the~Joseph Hughes, Bishop of New opinion of ~he Uninformed, asYork.' factual. ' . '

Powerful, Impulsive .The;e i~ .o.nly one thing wrong'He was born in County Ty- . v.:Ith It; It IS a ~ase of reading

rone, Ireland, in 1797, but came hIstory backwards.....with his family to America in~one'of the early waves o{migra­tion, Educated and ordained at

· St. Mary',s: Emmitsburg, heserved the Church in the storm­

" racked Diocese of Philadelphia.until named Coadjutor to the.ailing Bishop Dubois. •

By 1842 he had succeeded as'Ordinary of the fastest-growingSee' in the New, World. None

:'saw more clearly than he the, ,necessity for d~namic leader-

~,

Relates Archbishop' HughesU

Role ~n School.Controversy, By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D. D.

Bishop of Reno

Page 15: 08.09.62

. , THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Aug, 2, 1962 1-5

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Page 16: 08.09.62

\.

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serving in the Cabinet at thesame Ume. '

Maurice J. Tobin of Massachu­setts, who was ' Secretary _01.Labor from 1948 to 1953, servedin the Cabinef with Atty. 'GeLJ. Howard McGrath of· RhodeIsland from Aug. 24, 1949 to Ma"27, 1952. '

:dcGrath then left the Cabinet. and was succeeded in the post ofAttorney General by anotherCatholic, James P. McGra~eryafPennsylvania. Tobin and Mc­Granery served together fromMay 27, 1952 to Jan. 21, 1953.

These Occasions marked thesecond and third times tWo cab­inet members of the Cathollef<.ith 'served simultaneously.

Walk Long DistancesTo Attend Re~reat '

AZANGARO (NC)-Over 250volunteer I n d ian catectysts,many from Peru's remote anddistant Andean· mountain vil-'

.1ag.es, gathered here for a three­day retreat.

"Each day siarted with aMass followed by conferences,lectures and discussion groupsin the Quechua language._ Thisenabled the men to reviewteaching methods and exchangepossible solutions to particular'problems," Father Richard' C.Frank, .M.M., of Sioux ,City,Iowa, reported., Most of the catechists were

poor Quechua farmers who jour_neyed long distances, oil foot. to.attend ·the ·conferences.

Invites 'Little Boys'To School Reunion

ST.- JOSEPH' CNC)":"A reuili~afor pupils of St. Benedict's

'School for Little Boys, whichoperated here from 1897 to 1937,is being planned for Sunday,A~g. 12:. About 35 gra(le sChool boys

,came yearly to the boardingschool, which was conducted bythe Sisters of. St. 'Benedict whenthey were running the academythat preceded the' present' St.Benedict's College here in'Min­nesota.

Sister Marie, ,head of the col­lege Chemistry department from1914 to 1932, and now retired.has spent most of the past' yeartracing them. "We had 715 boysover the 'years," she said. "We'velocated 502. We know 130' aredead. We waQ;t to find the re­maining 83 so they can join inthe fun." / .

Serve in Cabinetfor Fourth Time

L,utheransto PrayFor Council Success

HAMBURG (NC) - A Pro­testant bishop here in Germany

. 'has urged parishes in his dioceseto pray for the success of thecoming ecumenical council.

Lutheran Bishop D. Karl.Witte of Hamburg asked Ipastorsto have their congregations re­cite the following prayer:

"Dear Heavenly Father, Thouhast given us the bequest of ThySon and His priestly prayer thatall may be one. Therefore, webeseech Thee, bring togetherthat which is separated, healthat which is bro~en, awaken inall Christendom bold -courageand religious trust in Thee forthose things which seem impos­sible for ,mankind. Therefore webeseech Thee for the council·ofthe Roman Church, hold swayover those who gather therewith Thy Holy Spirit. Help Thyeternal Gospel to illuminate thehearts of Thy servanL and openthe way to recognition of Thytruth."

SHINTO PRIEST: His Holiness Pope John XXIII'standsbeside Dr. Shizuka Matsubara, a Shinto priest, durlngan.audience at the Poiltiff'ssummer residence at Castelgan­dolfo, marking the first time a Shinto priest was received.by the head of the Oatholic Church. NC Photo.

Two Catholics- SimoultaneoL;lsly

WASIUNGTON (NC)-WhenAnthony J. Celebrezze took of­fice Tuesday as Secretary of theDepartment of Health, Educa­tion and Welfare. (HEW), theoccasion marked the fourth timethat two Catholics held cabinetportfolios simultaneously. .

The other Catholic. member ofPresident Kennedy's 'Cal;liriet ishis brocher, Atty. Gen. Robert F.

, Kennedy.In March, 1933, when Presi­

dent Franklin D. Roosevelt· wasforming his initial Cabinet heestabli!'hed a precedent by nom.inating two Catholics for. Cab­inet posts at 'the same ,time-'James A. Farley of New' Yorkto be Postmaster General andSen. Thomas J. Walsh of Mon­tana t< be Attorney' Geneial.

Walsh died on· March'2, 1933,. while' en route to Washington,before 'he could take office.Farley remained in the cabinetfor seven and a half years.

First InstanceDuring this period President

Roosevelt appointed Frank 'Mur:"phy Attorney General, and, heserved with Farley from Jan. 17;1939 to Jan. 18,. 1940, when he(Murphy) was' named associatejustice .of the Supreme Court.This was the first instance 6ftwo Catholics serving in theCabinet simultaneously.

When Harry S. Truman wasPresident, there were two occa­sions when two Catholics were

£Mo...

Page 17: 08.09.62

ARTHUR J. DOUcn

THE ANCHOR- 1962 17Thurs., Aug. 9,

HATHAWAYOIL CO. INC.

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Italian Cnty HonorsRelief Agency Head!

TRIESTE (NC) - The FarEast director of the U.S. Catho­lics' 'world wide relief agencywas honored here for his chari­table activities 'in behalf ~refugees.

Msgr.' Joseph J. Harnett ofCatholic Relief Services-Na­tional Catholic W~lfare Confer_ence received the 14-centuryseal of the Trieste communefrom Mayor Mario Franzii. Thesilver seal was used until 151fJin recording public deeds.

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Prayer Ru~~~gWASHINGTON (NC)'­

Bishop James A. Pike of theEpiscopal Diocese of Califor­nia told a Senate committeethat the Supreme Court has be­gun "the secularization and de­consecration" of the nation.

The Bishop, a one-time lawyerwho is a member of the SupremeCourt bar, appealed to the SenateJudiciary Committee "to adoptan amendment making it clear.that the First Amendment to theconstitution is aimed at forbid­ding the nation from having anofficial religion, not at keepingreligion out of civic life."

,Redraft ProposalThe Senate Committee is gath_

ering testimony on proposals toamend the constitution clearlyto permit recitation of prayersin public schools. Proposedamendments were introduced inCongress after the SupremeCourt banned recitation of aprayer in New York publicschools.

As he had done in a July HlSan Francisco speech, BishopPike suggested the First Amend.ment be redrafted toprohibH"the recognition of an estab- ­lished church of any denomina­tion, sect or organized religiouDassociation."

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Pope John LaudsAlt'ar, Choir Boys

VATICAN CITY (NC)-PopeJohn told an international pil­grimage of choir and altar boysthat they perform a 'real apos­tolate because you take part inthe most sublime action of thepriesthood," the Sacrifice of theMass.

Pope John made a special'point of addressing the boys'pilgrimage at the general audi­ence in St. Peter's basilica. I:Ienoted that from its earliest daysthe . Church has encouragedyoung. boys to .take part in aspecial way in the liturgicalfunctions of the Church.

The Pope ~xpressed the hope:"May the $pecial habit that 'youwear during !!llcred functions befor you a constant admonishmentto live in the grace of God andto serve Him worthily and gen­erously.,"

, The Pontiff also said that inserving :"at t.he altar the boyswork for personai sanctification.Besides studying the li.turgy,ceremonieb, chant and diction,servers should also 'Pursue an in­tense spiritual preparation, PopeJohn stated, "so that merit for

, your souls may become constant..ly more valid,"

ENJOYFARMFRESHMILK

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Catho,lics Up 50,000SYDNEY ('NC) --,.:. Catholics

in Australia number 2,168,517 ina total population of 10,500,000,aeeording to the Church's newOfficial Year Books-for 1962-63just published. This is an in­crease of more than 50,000 overlast year.

Chapel for Homeless'Men on Skid Row

·PORTLAND (NC)- Volun­teer workers have completed achapel dedicated to a "hobosaint" which will serve thehomeless men on Portland's skidrow.

The chapel is dedicated to st.Benedict Joseph Labre,' wholiv~d as a' pilgrim - beggar,traveling from shrine to shrinethroughout Europ~, living' onalms, and spending long hoursbefore the Blessed Sacrament.H~ ~as found dying on the

steps' of a church in Rome in1783, and was canonized in 1883.The~hapel is located in theBlanchet House of Hospitality"which serves free meals to sev.­era. hundred I~en each day inthe Oregon city'S skid row dis-trict. '

Declares ,World,Faithful LookTo U. S.Church

PHILADELPHIA (NC)­The Church in the UnitedStates today has a respon­sibility for the Faith all overthe world, Archbishop EgidioVagnozzi,' 'Apostolic Delegate inthe United States, said at the

,consecration of Most Rev. GeraldV, McDevitt as Titular Bishopof Tigias who will serve asAuxiliary to Archbishop John J.Krol of Philadelphia.

Th'e Apostolic De~egate wasconsecrator of the new Bishop,who had served for a decade asa secretary, in the ApostolicDelegation in Washington.

"The episcopacy in 1;Qe UnitedStates is really first class,"Archbishop Vagnozzi asserted."The Bishops in the UnitedStates are first class Bishops.They are devoted to their work.They are very loyal'to the HolySee. They are great leaders andorganizers. Today the Churchall over the world is expectinghelp, from the hierarchy, .fromthe clergy and priests and fromthe people of the United States.

Great Responsibility"I think that is a tribute to the

efforts made by the Bishops linthis country and a credit to the

'clergy and people," he empha­sized.

"Certainly, the United Statesis a country of great resources.But there are other countrieswith great resources and noneseem to have been so successfulin exploiting these resources asthe United States of America.

,"Toqay the Church in theUnited States has a greater re­sponsibility, not only for theFaith in this country, but for theFaith all over the world."

NEW BEDFORD

273 CENTRAL AVE.

WY 2-6216

BLUE RIBBON'

LAUNDRY

Workers to DedicateLabor to Creator

'CHICAGO (NC) - One hun­dred fifty lawyers, doctors,steelworkers and I bricklayerswill dedicate their labor to Godduring a LabOr Day Mass' atChicago's Holy Name cathedralon Monday, Sept. 3. .

Wearing ,symbols of theirprofessions and, trades, theworkers will m-arch in proces-,sion to light candles at the main·

.altar of the cathedral.

DONALD THORMAN

Announce PlansFor CfM Me~t

Over 500 couples from theNew England area, including

-many from the Fall River'Dio­cese, will attend the second bi­ennial convention of the Chris­tian Family. Movement at New­ton College of the Sacred Heartthiscweekend.

Giving the keynote address onthe theme of the convention,"Mater et Magistra," Pope JohnXXIU's encyclical, will be Don­ald J. Thorman of South Bend,IJ:1d., author ·of "The E~erging

Layman," current Catholic book,of the month. '

Special. convention. guest. willbe Most Rev. Thomas J. Riley,Auxiliary Bishop of Boston, whowill speak at an 11 o'clock Massfor delegates Sund,ay, Aug. 12.The MasS will be preceded by ageneral session in Chapel Hallof Newton College. Speaker, atthis sessjon will be Rt. Rev.Francis J. Lally, editor of ThePilot, Boston Archdiocesan news~paper, ~hose topic, is "PuttingGod to Work,"

Convention speakers includeRt. Rev. Philip Kenney of Tilto'n,N. H., who will open the conven­tion at 8:15 tomorrow 'night andRt. Rev. Paul Valente,' FamilyLife Director of the BUffalo,N. Y. Diocese, and Rev. RolandNormandeau of Portland; Me.,wh9 will speak on Saturday.

The three-day convention ofpanels' and workshop will close,Sunday afternoon with a finalbleSsing and renewal of marriage

Mission Gets. 'New' ChurchParish 80 Miles Away

last truckload arrived the crewwas ~dy to start putting thestructure together.

Since .the mission was estab­lished about five' years ago, theGlenmary Fathers have rentedan. old gas station building foruse as a church. When the lasttouches are put to' the "new"building, half of it will be usedas Ii chapel and ~he other half f()reatecbetical classes and' socialevents.

OhioFrom

BLUE CREEK (NC) - Onepal"ish's old 'SChool -building il!lanother parish's new church.

Men of st. Joseph's missionparish in. sparse!Y.-settled B\ueCreek have been nailin~ shingleson the, roof of the frame ~uilding

that will serve as their Dewchurch and all-pu1'pt)lle building.

Only some two months ago thebuilding stood on the groundsof Our Lady of Grace parish,Cincinnati, about 80 miles westof Blue Creek.

A chance remark led to thetransfer. Father, Charles J.Schreibeis, pastor of Our Lady ,of Grace, was telling a, groupof priests about the new schoolunder construction at his parishand mentioned a frame structurethat· he wanted removed fromthe grounds.

"I'll take it," volunteeredFather Richard Steinkamp, as'.:,sistant to Father William Bow,who administers Holy Trinityparish, West Union, and itsmissions at Blue Creek, Peeblesand Manchester. Father Bowand Father Steinkamp are Glen­mary Home Missioners.

Dismantle FrameRecruiting a group of men

from the Blue Creek area, notall of them parishioners of St.Joseph's, Father Steinkamp be­fian daily trips to, Price Hill.Each l'Iight for nearly threeweeks the erew returned toBlue' Creek with a truckload ofdismantled frame structure.'

Meanwhile, 11 concrete blockfounqation was I3id at the siteill Blue Creek, and as soon ~ the

Sponsor CoursesFor Journolists

UTRECHT (NC) - The Cath­olic Union of Dutch Journalistsand fue Dutch Catholic SocietyO! Newspaper Publishers wiiljointly SJ?onsor two courses forll"eport~ who will, cover t~e

Illoming ecumenical council. 'One course will be for Catho­

lic n'ewsmen. the other for non.­Catho1J.ics. They will. be eon­ductecl by seminary professprs,lncluding Father Frans Baars-:­rna, who will be an adviser ofthe Dutch Bishops at the oouo­eil.

Newark ProvidesPension SystemFor Lay Help

NEWARK (NC) - Arcn­bishop Thomas A. Boland ofNewark has announced a"fringe benefit" program forlay employees of archdiocesanparishes and agencies and of'institutions under the auspices-'of religious communities.

The program, which the Arch­bishop called the basis for futureexpansion of employee benefits,will provide a pension, life in­surance and a disability benefit.Enrollment will begin in theFall.

Archbishop Boland said theplan makes it possible for thearchdiocese to more fully realizethe goal of the Church's tradi­tional social teachings.

"The more recent develop­ments in the insurance industry,"he said, "in .offering a varietyof group insurance plans en­ables 'us to gather all units to­gether and bring the advantagesof the greater number to theindividual. ' .

"By our plan, provision ismade for our dedicated lay em­ployees to continue a becoming'standard of living, even in re­tirement, 'in accordance with theencyclical of our, Holy Fatheron 'Christianjty and SocialProgress.' Further, they will en­joy benefits beyond the provi­sions of law in the event of sick­ness or aeeid.ent."

The Newark program will bein the main non-contributory.Its basic benefits will not befunded out of employee's salarydeductions.

Newark, in establishing thepension system, is following thelead of 'other dioceses in theUnited States.

Page 18: 08.09.62

, ' ,

, , '" Continued from Page 0ne, .'. . i, '

suppress the life which growswithin her.

, "But it is~ot permissible thatthis ,subjective aberration beturned inte a moral idea of lif~;into a moral principle. '

'Love Chooses"Homicide is never an act of

kindness. Love always chooses

. Gets Grant, to StudyEarthqua~e Patterns

CINCINNATI (NC) - FatherEdward A. Bradley, 8.J., seis­mologist at Xavier Universityhere, has received a $23,749grarit from the Air Force Officeof Scientific Research to studyearthquake patterns of the geo­logical formation known as theCincinnati Arch,

The '''arch'' is a subterraneanrock-formation stretchi~g fromthe ,Great Lakes to Tennessee.In one', phase' or' his research,Father Bradley will be seekingto fix distinguishing marks ofearthquakes 'a n d manmade,blasts. '

life and never death.' The in­stinctof prese'rvation urges manto face any kind of motivation'as long as he can keep his life.Love for those dear to' one leadspeople to make sacrifices and'toward a sublime dedication top~eserve :'.s, long as possible ti.J.e 'weakest breath of life.

"From the first moment of his. conception, every human being,has all the rights inherent in' ahuman being. There 'is' nothingwhich can justify his direct andvoluntary s4Ppression, not eventhe purpose of~aving the life' ofthe mother.", The commentator added:, Life Sacred"

"Human life is sacred and an, respect for human'life disappears

whEm' one tries to draw a line of'distinction between itS differentth'eological phases or thegravit,,'of its infirmity. This would openthe way to any kind of decision,any kind of crime. It.is logicalthat one would be tempted toextend the application of such a,vague 'and indefinite principle00' ,all people of all ,ages' whohave been affected by mental orphysical incapacities,"

, \

o m, famil,~,

'Moral Law 'Forbids Abortion

. ;,- .". .....Name: " •••••• 0 ..

. S~reet. ~ •••••••• ~:. ~ '••••••••••••

City : ...............•••.... :, Zone , .. " State , ' .( ,l\NNU","L MEMBERSHIP.....,O individual, $1 0 Famll" "

PERPETUAL MEMBERSHIP-o Individual, '20o Family. $100

,~'l2ear &st(nissiollS~FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Pr••ld.nt, U.,r. Jo••p. T. 1;0•• 'Nat' Sec', I

Selld all commulllcatlo... tOICATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION

480 Lexington /(~e. at 46th St. New Yort( 17it-l. V:

',',': ,,; YOUR- CHANCE TO JOIN "", ',THE 'CATB9LIC, NBAB :zAsr ,WELFA"k. 'ASSOCIATIOK ".. Pope John'1I mission-aid socletj for the Near anel Middle'".a.l. ,Thanlul to 70U, who read this column, we build' chapels, ,,sohools" elinies, and dispensaries., In 'countries l,ike Jordan,Syria, Egypt, Gliu, 'and. Lebanon.' ,w'e trahi 'prlei~ and Sistenfor, minion" work iIllraD; Iraq, -Eritrea, 'northern ,Ethiopia,

, and southern India ~ : ". ,Waf to' join!,Simply fill in' this form,and, return, ~t ,to as. TIi. 'splrltua. benefits you will neelyeare bicaleula'bl,e.

Dear'Moosiinor: ;. ", ..:.' ..... -.~ - '.

".. '~:Pl~a~ e~roll '0 1M

ERITREA: GOD·JiID THE ABCs, IN ADENGOFO, ERITREA. NOT ONE CATHOLIC IN 50 .KNOWS HOW TO READ OR WRITE. The reason?, ,ADEN·

GO!"O has no school ••. ' In 'ETHI·OPIA generally, (ERITREA Is partof ETHIOPIA) 4-million childrencan't go to school-because there aronot enough schoois available. Thoresult. sad to say. is ignorance, su·

'perstitioD. filth. disease .'. • OUI!'priest in ADENGOFO struggles wUInthe' problem. "With a liUle help."he writes, "we ean bring these peo­ple'into the 20th c~ntury. We camteach tbe )'owigsters bow to read', and

7Zt Hoi} Fathtr'I.Mirsion AiJ write. ~e can teach the grownupo, for tht Orimra/ Chura, !~' baslo needs:-eh,ld-oare, hygiene. nu·'

trition,'sanitation." ••• The future of, the Chureh in a mlssiomeOuntfy like ERITREA rest. with ,the laity. An educated ,1~Uymakes that future seeure ••• Can we, help, build the school IE!!ADENGOFO? Without help from us, the school wl,1 neverbe built : • , 4· laborer In ADENGOFO earns only seven ecntDa day-less than SOc. a weeki The 'home' he lives in, with hiswife 'and, children, ui a one-room hut made of mud, with dirODoor, thatched, roof,' DO windows. Be has~'t sufflt'lent oloth­ing. scarcely enough ,to ,eat •.• T. build !l school for the vII·lage will cost only '2,9DO-Iess than U eos~ for one classroom

,la the U. S. A. The vlllal'ers ,will ,do all the work, under ourparish priest'!! direction. Can you spare $1, $5, $10, $50,

, to belp get this school started? •••' Perhaps ,.ou'd like to make'this' school 'your lifetime gift to the mlsslo~s-to. erect It aIRby youi-seif in memory oly~ur parents or a loved one. If 80.'write to us now . '. • Or perhaps you'd like to give the roolf'($700), a classroom ($500).' or som~ of the equIpment ($250) ,•••There is no excuse today, for ignorance or filth. Without ourhelp, however, these y~ungsten. are doomed for life ~ I.·nOl'ance, and 'hopelessnesS. Please help, us to teach themthe ABCs!'

A RECTORY, MADE, OF MUD'OUR PRIEST IN ADENGOFO is a 10nelY,zealous man. His

mud-hut rectory has 00 windows. no electricity, ,not even',sanitary facilitl'es: He, carries' water' f':Om a: ,nearby atre"m. ~

aooks his food outdoors over an open fire. He stays In, 'ADE~GOFO, unpleasant as it Is. becauSe ADENGOFO needs a

prIest ;" .;. The house he jlBeds to'live in will cost $2,200-a: 'surtple,- permanent structure, with kitchen, bedroom. and office., We'li ,dig ~' well for hini. If PQsslble--:prov!dB, 'too, some type, Gt artificial lighting." .... Wo~·t you help? The $1 in your" 'pocket 'Is' tw.o .weeks', ,pay ,~. AOEN(;OFO. ,. Tliis prIest 11 liv-

'Inll in:"tl1. mud. 'W. 'don't' wan,t ,to'leave him there., ,:: '. . ... . . : .,.. .

"

$

COUNCILFATH~n: St.Cyril, ~rchbishop of Alexan­dr-ia who died in 444 openedthe third ecuInEmfcal councilat' Ephesus, June 22, 431.NCPhoto.'

,lay,' :Ap()s~oiate", ,

" ,

Serving the Saverand Home Owner

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Where i~ IPAV$ to get together

THf ANCHOR-Diocese ~f FaIt River-T,hurs., ,Aug.,9,196~. ~~ .. ' .' . I .

Dis~'id~nt' Mi,.ority,',P,roblemFor 'Labor Union' Offi<tB@~S

, By_Msgr. George, G. HigginsDirector, NCWC Social Action Department

18

'Signs on Roads, MADRID (NC) - Mass sche­,dule posters, giving the locationof the nearest churches and thehours of the masses, are beinginstalled at the approaches toSpanish towns and at strategic'points on the roads for the bene­fit of ,motorists.

, The International Association of Machinists ~ one ofthe nation's largest and most responsible unions - expelledtwo of its members' in 1958 for publicly taking a positioncontrary til that of the union on the subject of right-to-work legislat,ion. The two tempted to penalize any of their,members, Cecil C. Mitchell members who, for whatever rea­and' John' Mulgrew, ,cam~ sons, jump the traces and pub­paigne<:l publicly in 1958 for ticly break with the party ·line,a proposed right~to-work la)N in ' 'In, tbis connection, union of­Ca'Ufornia. The lAM opposed th.e ficials would be well advised, I1 a w, w h fc it ' think, to give serious ,attentionW 0 u 1d" h aveto'a scholarly sitidy of the unionoutlawed the' security issue by Professor Paul

'union snop. " E. 'Sultan of Claremont Gradu-Mitchell' and, ate, Scho,oi in a recent 'sym-

M u I' g r t. w posium entitled' "Public Poli~y',appealed to the ' and Collective Bargaining"courts for rein- (Harper and Row, New York), "statement and By no stretch of the imagina-damages'. Their tion' can Professor\Sultan be,original 5u i -t characterized as a union' baiterwas 'rejected in 'or a union'buster. He is a com-the' - Superior petent 'and fairminded studentCourt .in Los ' of labor-management relations

.. .A:nge,les, buf the judgm~nt' of' who will not perinit his sym- ,this Court was ':reversed by the pathy f,9r the cause of' tradeState'Court of Appeals, and the unioriism to 'blind ,him ,to the'Supreme\Court of California de- ,need for protecting the rightsdined to r,eview ,the case; '" of individual union members;

Shortly thereafter the lAM Legitimiz~ Dissent ",'belatedly' decided 'to call it quits.' He is not opposed' to I the unionThough the Association had pre- shop as'such. If the m,ajorityofviously announced that it would the worl~ers in a given bar­carry Hie case all the way to gaining 'unit are in favor of thethe U.S. Supreme Court, law- union 'shop and can'persuadeyers for the union announced a managem'ent, to sign a' shopfew weeks ago that the organi- agreement, well arid good.zation had decided to waive its But unions, he says, are, "goingopportunity' of doing so. to have to make greafer! efforts

, 'Wise Decision ' to satisfy not only the majority,The union was, well advised to of the work force, but the 'pecu­

l~t well enough alone;, for there 'liill'interests of 'dissident nlinor­is'little doubt that 'it would have ities.'IA special effort will havesuffeted' anoth~r"defeat :- and,' to be 'made, he .contends, "if notwould' ,have' received' a lot 'of, to' "institutionalize,' at' least ,tounfavorable' pUblicity -, if it legitimatize, dissent.~' ,had'been reckless' eno~g~ to. ap- 'This is something' ,for unionpeal to the U,S. Supreme Court. officials to' think about very Ch'u rch inSpa,in

I am opposed to-right-to:,work seriously. Idon'tbliu:ne them atlegislation, but I am -delighted all for opposing' right-to-work Coritinue'd from Page One,that the ,lAM, has been reverse<:i, iegislation, but they will be de- Foll~wlngth~:c~rbi~g of thein' the Miichell~Mulgrew-case: 'luding themselves ..if they begin 'strike it was disclosed, thatMitchell and Mulgrew may be to 'th.ink that the'y' can," with ' , , C' 'h" I'· k"several militant at 0 IC wor ­dead wrong about right-to-work impunity, 'use' the union' shop 'as ers had been' placed under de,..legislatiori, but, whatev:er their a means of, bringing' disside~t tentiori 'or deported from' Spainmotives for, differing with the members into line in the field during the strike.union on this issue, they were of ' political action. ' ,

h . It is in the light of theseclearly within' their rig ts lU events that' the' Archbishop of

dO;;g:::~ union's disciplinary Catholic Sc'hools Valencia's letter is regarded asaction against them had bee'n ' " , clearing,the air of erroneous as-

th t th D b'Ie' -t sumpti8ns about the specific'supported' by e cour s, e OU e apaci Y role of' the Church in relationdoor would have been thrownwide open to all sor,ts of a)btises, LQNDON (NC)-The Catho- to the State: ,and even the best of unions (and lic, community of England and ',Archbishop Olaechea sai,d, that "

,the lAM is one of the best) Wales' provided some 50,000, "priests do n~t now command,might have been tempted to en- more ,places in its schools since nor ever did wish to' command

'fol.'ce a strict, party ltne on' aU' 1945 than all other de'nomina7 in Spain" or 'anY,where, except ~',its members ')n the' field of poli-' tions combined: "in the field of their divine mis- ,

. tical action., ,The 1961 report ,of the Minis- sion and i~ no oUi~r.", .' 'Seh~huly Study' trY of 'Ed'ucationpublished here, He -.poiritea out that "the

...-. , ,Riglit-to-work '1~gislation'. ~ ,indicated, that ,Catholic'school 'Church of ,Spain speaks 'by',not the. only" political issue OR pi,aces ,Jiicre!,lsed by i~8,OOo hI meiu\sof, pastoral' 'letters of the_ 'whicl1'" 4!f1~rica~ 'unio~" ,have,. :the'>,postwar period; while the' bishops: '. : 'arid :has" not'failed. ' '

f, taken'iJ.:.IJrm pJ)stti9n.:,T~ey' i,eel qh~r<;h' 9£ En,gl!1ild:'increas~ itS to'let its voice ,reich 'the' other,'just as,st!,?rigly a,bpl.!t ~,~u~l?er ,facilities by ,75,~90 and other '5,0 V ere i g ri 'imd 'iridependent "o( other iSsues, ~nd, if the,courtsvoluntary'bodies by 14,720. 'pOwer.';'were to give .them any encou,l'- a: r. Cunni~ghain,' secretar7agemeOt', 'they mig~f ~,:Sorel, of the Catholic Education COlIn...

. . ' -I.,." . cH, said 'that th'e figures ·"show,'M:a'ry.k~oll'S~.mina'ry' I'the extent' of the', sacrifices

, ' ~hich Catholics have made." He ,'Continued' from Page One ,:',Host to 'Schola rs , , said ,that the Catholic school their missi~ri.'"to btiiid a world"MARYKNO~L(NC)~Lead.ing , system has doubled its capacity of more'aM,more justice" wherebiblical, Scholars from many since 1950, 'but that "a great deal there will' be "re'spe'ct for the:,parts' of the countrY will take remains to be'done." , . sOul arid respect for the body."part in ~he 25th general meeting The report also showed that He 'called upo~ w'o r k i ii. g ,

, of the Catholic Biblical Associ~-, in 1961 Catholic schools, obtained, youths to group themselves i~ ;"tionof ,AiUericil'; tQ' be, he~d' a~,:' , st~te 'grants totaling $12;320,000 'lay movements where they, C~Rthe Maryknoll Seminary, ,he.re and ano,ther '$3,640,000 ir:t loans. ' 'discuss, their environment, em';'beginning Tuesday, Aug. 28. This compar,ed with $3,640,000 in, ,pio~ing the universally known

Among 'those addressing the grants and $560,000 in loans to Cardijrt formula of' "observe,meeting will-be Father' Robert' tli.e'Church of England schools judge,act" to apply Chri!ltianNorth, S,J:, of Marquette Uni- and $3,640,000 in grants and principles to problems of 'theirvers{ty, Milwaukee, former di- $1,372,000 in loans to other vol- daiiy life. ' J

reCtor of the Pontifical Biblical untary,schools.Institute in Jerusalem; Father

"Barnabas'M. Ahern, C.P., of thePassionist seminary in Louis­ville, Ky.; and Father RaymondE. Brown, S.S., of St. Ma.!"y'sSeminary, Baltimore,

Page 19: 08.09.62

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,Ask C!a rrificationOf Private SchoolTextbook Plan

PORTLAND (NC) - The,Oregon Supreme Court hdbeen asked to make, clearwhether nonpublic schoolchildren can continue to usetextbooks lent them by publicschools untU all court action Oft

the controversial issue is fin­ished.

Attorneys for both parochialscnool pupils and the PortlandPublic School Board have filedpetitions seeking clarification ofa stay of mandate issued by thestate's highest court fol~owing

its ruling that the 20-year-oldpractice of lending textbooksviolates the Oregon constitution.

Under Oregon law, tax-paidtextbooks, selected by publicschool authorities, were lent toall children in "standard" ele­mentary schools or in gradeDseven and eight of "standard"secondary schools. To be ac­credited as "standard," a schoolhas 'to meet several require_ments set by the state.

Sehool Board Disagrees

, After the State Suprem~

Court's ruling and its later stayof mandate issued because of anappeal of its decision to the U,S.

,Supreme Court, State Atty, Gen.Robert Y. Thornton ruled thatparochial school pupils couldcontinue to use the books untillegal, action was completed.

However, the Portland SchoolB<lard disagreed. The board,acting on advice of its attorney,Grant Anderson, held that boob:smllY not be lent to parochialsch,ool children next Septembel".

, When attorneys for Ivan Carl­son" an intervenor representingthe parochial school chifdren,filed their petition for clarifi­cation with the state's highcourt, the Portland Scnool Boardalso,' filed one expressing itilviews.

C, 'fH£ ANCHOR...:. 19Thurs., Aug. 9, 1962

SUMMER STORE ' HOURS

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, ,.: 'wYIDO. 7:'93M :,

Amendment 'back into the Con:'stitution," he said. "It is not try:'ing to make America dry agaiii.It is not trying to make total ab-'stainers ,of all Catholics even."

For Bigh,er Virtue

He pointed out that theChurch has 'always taught thati'noderate use of alCoholic bCv­'etages is morally unobjectiori­able and added: "The CTAU isnot trying 'to be more Catholic'than the ~hurch.''' "

He said the Catholic who be~comes a total abstainer "is notavoiding something that is evil,but is surrendering somethingthat is good for something thatis better. He is acting in the in­terests of a higher virtue."

Father McAndrew said theabstinence union feels that the"drinking situation" in the U; S.',~is getting out of hand."

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MAKE-UP ARTIST: Sister Mary Geneva,a memberof the Drama·Workshop at Clarke College, Dubuque, Iowa,practices making up a star as part of her training in prepar:­ation for producing and directing school plays. The "star"is Jeanne Flor~an, senior drama 'major. NC Photo.

:Abstinence Unio-, Asks Campaign:PHILADELPHIA (NC)':""­

The' Catholic Total Absti~nence Union' has called for acampaign in Catholic schools

'and youth organizations to pro­,mote total abstinence amongyoung people.:

,The CTAU made its appeal Ina resolution adopted at its 90~

annual convention, which hearda report that there are now sixmillion' alcoholicS in the U. S.

The union recommended thatthere be more emphasis in biol­ogyand hygiene clases on the,dangers of abuse in the use Ofalcoholic bev.erages.

'The o:rganization also 'went Onrecord as favoring administra­tion 'of the total abstinencepledge to children at Confirma­tioa The pledge taken on this'occasion would be binding until'their 21st birthdays.

"Father Miles M. McAndrew;8.S. re-elected president,' in "astatement' on the aims of' theCTAU, stressed that the organ- ONE STOPiiation is "not a prohibition ", ' , SHOPPIN'G' aNTER ,"movement." ,

'''it is not trying to put too 18tJi.' .. '. .' .

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Finest Variety ofSEAFOOD

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Grant to UniversityPITTSBURGH (NC) - Du­

quesne University's school ofpharmacy has received a $10,000grant from the Atomic EnergyCommission to conduct a studyin radio-isotope technology edu­olics.

The Angels moved on to Chi­cago after the brief two gamevisit, to the Fenway and tomor­row night they begin an extend­ed home stay which will findthem there until Aug. 26. Duringthis homestand they'll entertainall the Eastern clubs-Baltimoreexcepted - and Chicago. TheYankee series, a three-gameaffair, will highlight the Angels'quest for league honors.

Whatever happens, the sea­son's liound to be a success. Theclub finished ninth last .yearand nobody, figured them forcontenders this time around.Yet, under Skipper Bill Rigney,for whom we have the utmostregard, the club has kept paceand must be considered a pen-nant threat. v

An all Los Angeles serieswould have one decided advan-,tage at that. With the time lagbetween here and the WestCoast, we Easterners would havean opportUnity 'to catch a goodpart of the telecast of each gameafter the working day. Improb­able, you, say. Maybe. so, butit's certainly within .the realmofpossibillty.

Urges Party SupportFor School Buses

"DES MOINES (NC) -'T\V6: Spokesmen representing Citizensfor' Educational Freedom urged

, Iowa political parties' to supportlegislation enabling p r i vat e

:'school children to ride oil. pub­:~ school buses. ,..'" .". ,Stanley Rooda and Mrs. ValI. Doering mad,e the r~quest inappearances before pem~ratic

. and Rejlubli~~.,party pJ,atformcommitt~, meeting 1)e~.Clti­

zens for Educa~ionalFreedom isa nonsectarian organjzation ofparents seeking equal. educa­tion~l rights for, public and pri­vate school children.

The U.S. Supreme CoUrt-held in1947 that private school pupilsmay ride on public sch~l buses.

Pro Football

The College All-Stars gave theN.F,L. Champion Packers a goodrun for tLeir money for a halfFriday night. The pros exploitedthe Stars secondary to a farethee well, however, to win goingaway. Angelo Daberio (5-9) andJohnny S'exton (I~-l1) ,just

,couldn't cope with the Pacl,l:ers'rangy ends, Max Magee and, RonKramer, to say nothing of.flanker back Boyd Dowler (6-6)who piayed catch ,with ,BartStarr. ',The stout College line, effec-

, lively contained the pros, how­ever, and this, in jtself, was ofno small significance in that thePackers ground ganie is reputed­ly the best in the N,F.L. Profootball makes its '1962 deb,ut inthis area Saturday' night inProvidence where Mike Holo­wk's Patriots are scheduled tomeet the Oakland Raiders' 'in thefirst pre-season exhibition tilt

, for both clubs.

Drive Tops Goal}tANSAS CITY (NC) - The

sem.inary building fund cam­paign. for the Archdiocese ofKansas City has rep 0 r tedpledges totalling $4,330,651.40,topping the minimum goal of$3 million.

eyoOpens

'Suburban LeaguePlayoff SundQY

By Jaek Kineavy

The CYO Suburban League is scheduled to lautich itsan-inclusive post season playoff series this Sunday witha full slate of games carded. It is likely that pennant win­ning Guidos of New Bedford will draw a bye in the initialround of the double elimina­tion competition. We trustwe're not being prematurein crowning Manager FredWard's nine but the club took a3J,2 game edge over intracityrival PerfectionOil into this thefinal week ofthe season. Per­fection wouldhave to sweepall four of itsremaininggames w h i I eGuidos 'wen twinless to bringabout a tie.'

The earlier" than usual con­

cluding of league play will serveto provide adequate time for thedouble elimination round" robinwhich is patterned after the Col­lege World Series. All teams willparticipate, regardless of theirplace in the final standing. It iscontemplated, but not yet offi­cial, that the first division clubswill be paired off against the 5th,ilJth and 7th position teams.

CYO Record

hi. CYO Intermediate play, st.Patrick's of Fall River hung upo record third consecutive Citytitle taking tWo straight fromHoly Name over the weekend.Th~ champions will now marktime untii their diocesan oppo-,nents have been determinea .. St.J?atrick's will meet the winner ofthe Taunton-New Bedford seriesilo~ the diocesan title and an un­lP~ecedentedthird straight cham-pionship. '

The Fall River Junior Legionclub, Zone 9 champions'went to~he State semifinals before bow­ing to Somerville which' now isoontesting ,Milford for the titleond the right to'represent Mass.in the Regional playoffs. CoachRay Billington's club 'posted aneJIcellent 1'1-3 record for theC2ason, two of those ,losses com':'me ~ the hands of Somerville.

Uwas pretty much the samemoi"Y, second verse, of the, highcchool clash between the teamsli'epresenting two great baseballelties. Somerville oUsted Durfeein the .Ec;u;tern ~ass. Tourneybehind the solid pitching of aceBob Taylor who authored thetlil"1rt win over Stafford Post Insix games of playoff competition.

Good BtttIncFall River hit well throughout

the series. They reached Taylorfor 11 bingles on ,friday, andfound Amenkowiez for the samenumber on Saturday. Unfortu­nately, the, Somerville Illdstreated Stafford' Post's hurlers• little' more harshly aI:1.d the:\,e~lay the story. ' '

This was the furthest advanceby Fall, River .~n State, ~egioncoD\petition ~ince, the faJDous '57combine Which ultima~YIl~nt

two 'of Its illustrious membersInto' professionaJ, baseball. Bothhave, made g099 prqgress. TomArl'll.~ ,is a slll.rter with theGiants' Triple-A\ club' at Tacoma,while, catcher Russ Gibson iscoming along with Mel Parenll'sYork, Pa. team, the Red Sox'Class A Eastern League affiliate.

Those who expected the LOsAngeles Angels to take theplunge are still waiting. Thecastoff assortment which camenot via the heavenly route butthrough the draft and the astutetrading of General ManagerFred Haney has hung in there allthe way and after Monday's vic­tory over the Sox now findthemselves just 5:1h games offthe pace and l:1h games out ofsecond. '

Page 20: 08.09.62

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs\, Aug. 9, 196::

IFe~~an ·First' S~ogan of 'Diocesan School at Attleboro

.........

AIR VIEW 'OF BISHOP FEEIlAN 'HIGH SCHOOL IN ATTLEBORO

"Of course we have a history! Feehan High has become Feehan Communion Sunday; On, , S·· this' Sunday the students' wear· a reality. Our Feehan:First in Sanctity, Scholarship; ports- \ the, distinctive Feehan uniform

manship' is ~pulsing, vi~rant slogan." It was with" such to Mass' in' their parish church· enthusiasm that the 'se'cond diocesan coeducational high, and receive Holy Communion· school opell:ed -its doors on . for a stated intention.The'school is dedicated to, the " " t' Sep't. 6. 1961. Supp'orted by The first, annual retrea ,was

. memory of the Most Rev. D;mi~l conducted by Rev. John P. Dris-' the financial pledges offam- ,F. Feehan, ti'.D.,' second bishop coll,assistant' general manager'ilies from the 12 parishes of of the Diocese of Fali River. A of The Anchor.'the Attleboro Area, the Most ' beautiful ,portrait of BishQp 'Basic Course

· Rev: James L. Connolly, D.D. Feehan, painted by Mother St: Rev. Patrick j. O'Neill, Dio-undertook the construction '0£ ,a ,Everard, R.J.M.o~ Fall River, cesan superintendent of schools;modern educational plant.: Land has been hung)n the' main lobby . Very Rev.' ThoinasF. Walsh,was cleared in June 1960; the : of' the' /iluditorium J?ui~ding., . dean of the Attleboro area, and

: cornerstone' was ble~sed ?n Nov. Spiritual 'Growth priests of the slirr~>unding :par;'11, 1962. - , . 'Since ,the' spiritual:'growth: of 'ishes, have been most generous

Despite one of the coldest . the student is one of ,Feehan's in offering their services for theWinters in :history, construction first aims; emphasis is, plilCed . spiritual needs of the students.was continued, and the school 'on the teaching of religion "and The curriculum is so organizedopened as scheduled in Septem- participation ·in ,activities that as to provide a two-year basicbel'. The formal dedication of ,will provide for' the right atti- 'course for ali students. Speciali­the building was held on Jan. 6, tudes ,in modern living. The zation'of'subjeCts' will take place1962 - a day rich in memories ,patron of the school is the Holy ,bi the' 'junior year and seniorfor all interested in Feehan. Spirit, to whom special devotion year when students will ,elect

Accommodates 1,000 is encouraged:_subjectS that will meet the re-The school buildings are of - ,The school'was ,formally, de- 'quirements, of their', future

the finest in the state. The dicated to the Sacred Heart of plamiing.- functional layout of the class- 'Jesus' on the 'First Friday ()£ College preparatory, scientific,

room building, with chapel imd 'June. The re.,.dedicatio,n will be general 'and busine~ c~'rriculumconvent adjoining, makes for ,an, annual event.,The' Holy' Sac- are' in the planning.. Homeeasy accessibility. The gym" au- rifice of the Mass is offered on 'economics will be offered to the

, ditorium, locker rooms, cafeteda' the First Friday 'of each' month students as', an elective. Alland band room are located, in at Feehan. Each of the students 'freshmen were given courses inthe second building~ is enrolled in Mary's League, a developmentaf reading, persona-

The' school,while built for society formed to honor the lity andgrowtll and chorus.800, will readily accominodate feasts of our Blessed Mother and Students' elected chorus, li­1,000 students. Present trends it plans speciaf 'emphasis upon brary club, cu~rent events clubindicate that such planning was the May Procession. and' dramatics. The school wascertainly' a good long range The fourth Sunday of each accepted for affiliation withtechnique. month has been set aside' as Catholic University in March.

HERE WE COME!: Strolling to classes at Feehan are the nuns who taught the fresh­men. 'From l~ft to right, Sr. M. Rochelle, Sr. M. Urban, principal~Sr. M. ,lncarnata, Sr.M. AngeIlca; Sr. M. Anarea and Sr. Marie Katen. .' ... ' "

Students .. took ,part ,in nationalLatin examinations, NEDT andC.U. program.

'Guidance ImportantGuidance 'has assumed an im­

, port~nt ,role,in the, curr,iculuin~A home room guidance programwas carefully plalme<i'and found

.. to be mOst' beneficial. Studentsare encouraged to discuss teenproblems with the variouspri~sts 'av~il~bie; the principal,

, or members of the faculty.A 'vocation' guidance' file has

. been 'set' up''in' the guida~ce of-fk'e. A' testing program of - a

- 'comprehensive nature has been.. initiated' so that the students', educational' potential and \Toca­',tional aptitudes, 'are available'to the g,uidance' coullselors. ,

The Feehan Frolic, in March,was the one big drama'tic evellto~ thp!ear. A play t:hat centered

'on the St. Patrick's Day themeprovided an opportunity to thedisplay, ofa great deal of tal~nt.

The Library;' Club proved to ,be it very active' group. ,Circula­tion and Service" 'was promptand efficient. The library' is oneof the school's special projectsand has' expanded' admira1?lyduring the first, year. Various

'organizations in the Attleboroarea have pledged financial helpin building the book collection.

Social A~ii~ities ', Student government is one ofthe strong, feat)Jres of Feehan.A Student Council elected bythe students has been most ac­tive. Assisting the faculty Inevery way possible, the councilhas proven its, worth on numer- .ous occasions. The council hassponsored the social activitiesof the year.' ,

Many assemblies of an in­'structive as well as recreational'type have been held. The Val­entine Dance' was a social andfinancial success.' The barbecu'eand square dance cn the parking

'lot was voted "tops". At theDedication, Open' House 'andConvention students served, ashosts and hostesses with thefaculty.

Close relationship with theparents has been urged. Parentshave been invited to school to

. talk with the teachers at theclose' of each marking period.

Feehan Flash, a school bulle­tin, has been 'published by thefaculty to keep parents alertedto activitie's and policies. Parents

'have ex'pressed appreciation forthis particular '''Feehan First"item. ', The school has been enrolledin many professional organiza­'tions on state and nationallevels. ''. . 'Athletle Jltogram

Since the sChool',' philosopb7

a~ms at "the deve~opment ,of the'whole man,'" sportsmanship ,iSl

held high. A basketball schedule· was setup arid while there ,was, no team on J aJl. 8, the first game, of ,the season was played on

Jan., 18, and it was' a Feehan., victory. With that spirit the sea­· sOn was launched. '· ,MI'. ,Phil Norton did an ad-· mirable job as part-time coach.

Mr. Homer Roy caine in as· baseball coach and had his "ups'. and downs" with the first Fee-

han ,team. Golf' -instruction,· ,square dancing,. volley ball and, soft ball wer,e .included in the· Sphng athletic' program. .

Bigger and better teams are ~'the immediate planning. Mr.

Chet Hanewich will be athleticdirector and head coach of foot­ball; Mr.. Joe, Hughes will l>e

· head coach' of ,basketbalL The'athletic field is now becoming

an actiIality. . ''" Students had a few field ,trips

- to Mount St. Rita in Cumber­land to take part in the FatimaPilgrimage; t~ Bay View, to, en-

· joy Shakespeare; to the; Museumof Science and the Museum ofFine 'Arts in Boston.

Summer studyActivity We~k (last week of

',schooi) proved to be a first that· will be repeated annually. As­

semblies, Honors Day, fieldtrips, and lectures proved to bea worth while way of closing theschool year.

Sister Mary Urban, R.S.M.,principal, holds an M.S. degreefrom Catholic University andhas had special g u i d, a n' c etraining at Fordham. She hasbeen a "Feehan First" from thebeginning. The faculty has thesame spirit despite a hard firstyear. This Summer the entirefaculty has been involved in

· Summer study.Sister Mary Andrea, M.A. from

Boston College in English, isat Georgetown' University forGerman. Sister Mary Angelicais finishing at Boston Collegefor M.A. in Latin.' Sister MaryKateri, who will open the homeeconomics department at Fee­han, is at Regis College, inhomemaking courses. Sister

,Mary lncarnata is working ona grap.t from National ScienceFoundation at Creighton Uni­versity in chemistry. Sister MaryRochelle ,is beginnin'g 'Master'swork in music at Catholic Unlv.

Like true daughters of theirbeloved Foundress, Mother MaryCatherine McAuley, whose phi­losphy of education containssome outstanding lessons, 'theSisters of Mercy are eager tomake Feehan High one of the

· best educa'tional institutions, illthe Sta~, '