19
., '>tl. ; " Catholics Praise Kennedy's Order On Housing Bias Catholic reaction to ident Kennedy's order bal'- ring discrimination in Fed- erally aided housing mingled praise for the order with cau- tions that it does not solve the problem of segregated housing. The among Catholic specialists in interracial justice and community relations was that the executive order is a valuable first step toward end- ing housing segregation, but that much more remains to be done. They also stressed that Cath- olics have a duty to work for integrated housing, both by edu- cational programs underlining the immorality of segregation and by practical action aimed at creating integrated neighbor- hoods. These reactions followed the 'President's announcement that he had signed the long-awaited executive order discrim- ination in housing built or pur- chased with Federal assistance. Messages of congratulation were sent to President Kennedy following his announcement of the hOusing order by the Nation- al Catholic Conference for Inter- racial Justice and the New York Catholic Interracial eoun.. clJ. in the Diocese until struck him very early in life. Because of the rigors of the New England clime, it WM judged best by doctors that it his devoted service to his Di- vine Master was to milder climates should be found and so the young priest startecl four decades in God's service Turn to Page Twelve athletics. He won AU-America honors on the gridiron and re- turned to his high school after graduation from Holy Cross .. teach and coach football. When Leo many months b.- Tum to Page Fifteen Bishop Gerrard Celebrates Requiem for Father Smith Following a Solemn Pontifical Mass of Requiem cele- brated Tuesday in St. Mary's Church, Taunton, by the Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, V.G., Bishop of the Dio- cese, the Rt. Rev. Francis McKeon, pastor of Sacred Heali Church, Taunton, eulogized the life of the late Rev. James E. Smith as one of suffering. Monsignor Mc- Keon said "that only a few months of good health were en- joyed by Father Smith following his ordination in 1922 and then followed oW years of obedience, dedication, submission and c0- operation to the will 01. God". Father Smith was educated at La Salle Academy, Providence, St. Bernard's Seminary, Roches- ter, and St. Laurent Seminary' in Canada. The native of Taunton was or_ dained by the late Bishop Feehan in 1922 and then served the school in 1960, he had been athletic director since 1947, the post he held at his death. At Holy Cross Shields was a varsity football and track star. He received the Lawlor Medal for excellence in scholarship and Rev. Edward J. Mitchell The Second Vatican Council, so recently launched into the sea of history by the man who wears the Fisherman's ring, was this week steered from what seemed to be a threatening storm by that same wise navigator, John XXIII. The Holy Father's interven- tion is temporarily shelfing the debate on the Source of, Revelation was regarded here as one of the most significant events of the Council to date. The course which led up to this action, and its far-reaching consequences are worth a closer analysis.· As reported last week, the decree-draft on Revelation (which many felt to be the work of an ultra-conservative prepartory com.. Turn to Page Thirteen Honor FormerCrusader Star A.t Cape Field Dedication Religious Liberty Firm Principle Of Catholics WASHINGTON (NO) Two Cat hoI i c spokesmen, speaking at interfaith meet- ing here, stressed that U.S. are firmly committed to the principle of religious lib- erty. Assurances to this effect were voiced by Msgr. John Tracy El- lis, professor of Church history at the Catholic University of America, and Father Edward Duff, S.J., of Weston (Mass.) Turn to Page Fourteen The Bar ns tab I e High School athletic field was formally dedicated to the memory of the late W. Leo Shields and renamed the Leo Shields Memorial Field at cere- monies preceding the Falmouth- Barnstable football game on Thanksgiving. Shields, former out- standing student and athlete at Holy Cross .College, Worcester, a native of Osterville and 1932 graduate of Barnstable High, died Aug. 22 of this year. Before becoming assistant principal of UNVEIL LEO SHIELDS MEMORIAL: Participating in the ceremonies at the new athletic field in Hyannis in honor of the late outstanding Holy Cross athlete and scholaT are. left to right, Donald Nickulas, Julio Renzi and Caleb Fraser. PRICE 10e $4.00 per Yem Pope John's Guiding Action Lifts Council Fathers' Spirit By Mollie McGee Sweeping through Ecumenical Council meetings in St. Peter's this week came the wind of change. Spirits seemed to lift when the controversial project on Sources of Rev- elation was relegated to a special commission for review and the next agenda, that on communications media-radio, television and press - brought the modern world on to the .. ... > j\@ floor. "x;?\ The same day the new dis- 't;I,::;'j cussions started, laity f';. ; ..... t1 appeared the tlll:e at ..t< a Councll meetlllg. Bishop '. Giacinto Tredici of Brescia, '.: ." r.. •• ; .. ':;i It.aly, his 60th. an- .. ';: mversary of priestly ordllla- tion, with the Mass for the Council Fathe1'S, had received permission to in- Tum to Page Ftftee#' ''This new theory would have us believe that religion is only a private matter - to be con- fined to the ,home and the church; that society as such, the state and the government must be purely secular, the states- man cannot ad as a believer; that he must be free from a judgment higher than the will of the people or the plCrty." "This concept is alien to OUI' American principles. and tradi- tions," the Bishop concluded. "It a real danger to which the people must be alerted". has been sent back for re- working by a special committee. The third schema - on com- munications media - is being prepared for final vote by the appropriate committee which has been asked by the Fathers to shorten the document after it was approved in substance by the Council members. The Fathers are currently dis- cussing the fourth schema which is concerned with union with the Eastern Orthodox Churohes. This is one of three projects oPo unity. The other two are on the theological basis for all· unity, and the reunion of Christendom. Natiunal Leaders ApprnveReligion, Race t:onference CHICAGO (NC)-Nation- ai of Church and hnve hariled the up- ,'oming four-day National 'ollfl't'CXleO on Religion and to be held here starting \ItuIl'!ay, ,1]110. 14, as a potentially "'l:ljOi" contribution to solving 'eiw rnce problem. ",'I\(, conference will bring to- ",-t!w\" 800 clergymen and l!u'n representing more than (iI)';l'Impu for discussions of the 'olt- oj' religion in dealing with Iillhlpmu of racial justice. '\'h" conference will adopt a ··,,'.:ttPill0i1\$ of conscience" rep- a consensus among ::U,'nding arid will also )(0.11:';;' :: series of action re- C for dealing with ,::",;' ·;('.';·c'egation. ':. \\,":.\ be the first national .'. '1 ;.'d'; (;"nvened jointly by all it,' i'l;,;jUi;> faith groups in the U.s. The convening bodies are the' Department of Racial and Cultural Relations of the Na- tional Council of Churches; the ':'::)('i::ll Action Commission of the HynaHor,ue Council of America; ;\ld the Social Action Depart- 11H'lIt of the National Catholic Wdfare Conference. American Reliance on God Under Secularist Attack (NC)-Secularists are subtly attacking the in the United States of reliance on So warned MUl'lt Re'V. Bishop Ernest J. Primeau of Manchester, N. 11 talk here before Americans living in the Eternal City. Btl said the idea of public aeknowledgement of social :::'iwllden.ce upon God and to Him, so tra.- (, "ioHnl in American history, ill :. ,clerf,oinlt subtle attack b1 a cecularlstie concept of. v:,)L 6, No. 49 © 1962 The Anchor The ANCHOR foO: River, Mass., Thursday, Nov. 29, 1962 Discussions M'crve More Rapidly :'iWME - The second session of the Ecumenical Coun- begin Sept. 8, 1963, instead of May 12 as was· .y·('viollsly announced. The session will likely continue early December of 1963. Pope John made the de- :'(-;10'1. t4) change the date ·'xl\('". many prelateR, espe- dally those from distant were unhappy over '"d.' llrm;pect oi returning to .a.lIn1l' d rrreat expense and for only !icven weeks during a busy p<:'riod. . MC'unwl1i1e, many Bishops, in- duel in!; most Americans, have IlskC'd fo!' a vote on the schema ",-latinr; ro the Liturgy which "as bC'en discussed and revised. ','his WUB the first schema or llubject debated by the Council Fathers. ThC' sCoCond schema - on the fonln 0'1 Divine Revelation -

11.29.62

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memory ofthelateW. Leo week steered from what seemed to be a windofchange.Spiritsseemed to liftwhen formally dedicated to the '"d.' llrm;pect oi returning to ident Kennedy's order bal'- ring discrimination in Fed- erallyaidedhousingmingled are. left to right, Donald Nickulas, Julio Renzi and Caleb Fraser. ,t ..t< ;';i:'i~ a Councll meetlllg. Bishop '. t;"Af'tt.%~ Giacinto Tredici of Brescia, thecontroversialprojectonSourcesofRev- School athletic field was YorkCatholicInterracial eoun.. L~

Citation preview

Page 1: 11.29.62

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;~, .,'>tl. ;

"

Catholics PraiseKennedy's OrderOn Housing Bias

Catholic reaction to Pr~ident Kennedy's order bal'­ring discrimination in Fed­erally aided housing mingledpraise for the order with cau­tions that it does not solve theproblem of segregated housing.

The cons~sus among Catholicspecialists in interracial justiceand community relations wasthat the executive order is avaluable first step toward end­ing housing segregation, but thatmuch more remains to be done.

They also stressed that Cath­olics have a duty to work forintegrated housing, both by edu­cational programs underliningthe immorality of segregationand by practical action aimed atcreating integrated neighbor­hoods.

These reactions followed the'President's announcement thathe had signed the long-awaitedexecutive order barrin~ discrim­ination in housing built or pur­chased with Federal assistance.

Messages of congratulationwere sent to President Kennedyfollowing his announcement ofthe hOusing order by the Nation­al Catholic Conference for Inter­racial Justice and the NewYork Catholic Interracial eoun..clJ.

in the Diocese until illn~

struck him very early in life.Because of the rigors of the

New England clime, it WM

judged best by doctors that ithis devoted service to his Di­vine Master was to contin~

milder climates should be foundand so the young priest starteclfour decades in God's service

Turn to Page Twelve

athletics. He won AU-Americahonors on the gridiron and re­turned to his high school aftergraduation from Holy Cross ..teach and coach football.

When Leo many months b.­Tum to Page Fifteen

Bishop Gerrard CelebratesRequiem for Father Smith

Following a Solemn Pontifical Mass of Requiem cele­brated Tuesday in St. Mary's Church, Taunton, by the MostRev. James J. Gerrard, V.G., Au~i1iary Bishop of the Dio­cese, the Rt. Rev. Francis McKeon, pastor of Sacred HealiChurch, Taunton, eulogizedthe life of the late Rev.James E. Smith as one ofsuffering. Monsignor Mc­Keon said "that only a fewmonths of good health were en­joyed by Father Smith followinghis ordination in 1922 and thenfollowed oW years of obedience,dedication, submission and c0­

operation to the will 01. God".Father Smith was educated at

La Salle Academy, Providence,St. Bernard's Seminary, Roches­ter, and St. Laurent Seminary'in Canada.

The native of Taunton was or_dained by the late BishopFeehan in 1922 and then served

the school in 1960, he had beenathletic director since 1947, thepost he held at his death.

At Holy Cross Shields was avarsity football and track star.He received the Lawlor Medalfor excellence in scholarship and

Rev. Edward J. Mitchell

The Second Vatican Council, so recentlylaunched into the sea of history by the manwho wears the Fisherman's ring, was thisweek steered from what seemed to be athreatening storm by that samewise navigator, John XXIII.

The Holy Father's interven­tion is temporarily shelfingthe debate on the Source of,Revelation was regarded hereas one of the most significantevents of the Council to date.The course which led up to thisaction, and its far-reachingconsequences are worth acloser analysis.·

As reported last week, thedecree-draft on Revelation(which many felt to be thework of an ultra-conservative prepartory com..

Turn to Page Thirteen

Honor Former Crusader StarA.t Cape Field Dedication

Religious LibertyFirm PrincipleOf Catholics

WASHINGTON (NO)Two Cat hoI i c spokesmen,speaking at interfaith meet­ing here, stressed that U.S.Cathol~s are firmly committedto the principle of religious lib­erty.

Assurances to this effect werevoiced by Msgr. John Tracy El­lis, professor of Church historyat the Catholic University ofAmerica, and Father EdwardDuff, S.J., of Weston (Mass.)

Turn to Page Fourteen

The Bar n s tab I e HighSchool athletic field wasformally dedicated to thememory of the late W. LeoShields and renamed the LeoShields Memorial Field at cere­monies preceding the Falmouth­Barnstable football game onThanksgiving.L~ Shields, former out­

standing student and athlete atHoly Cross .College, Worcester,a native of Osterville and 1932graduate of Barnstable High,died Aug. 22 of this year. Beforebecoming assistant principal of

UNVEIL LEO SHIELDS MEMORIAL: Participating in the ceremonies at the newathletic field in Hyannis in honor of the late outstanding Holy Cross athlete and scholaTare. left to right, Donald Nickulas, Julio Renzi and Caleb Fraser.

PRICE 10e

$4.00 per Yem

Pope John's Guiding ActionLifts Council Fathers' Spirit

By Mollie McGee

Sweeping through Ecumenical Councilmeetings in St. Peter's this week came thewind of change. Spirits seemed to lift whenthe controversial project on Sources of Rev­

elation was relegated to aspecial commission for reviewand the next agenda, that oncommunications media-radio,television and press - broughtthe modern world on to the

. . ... > j\@ floor."x;?\ The same day the new dis­f~'; .~~. ',..~,~:., 't;I,::;'j cussions started, C~tholi? laityf';. "'\;~t ;..... ~t>~\ t1 appeared ~or the ~ll'st tlll:e at

~,t ..t< ;';i:'i~ a Councll meetlllg. Bishop'. t;"Af'tt.%~ Giacinto Tredici of Brescia,'.: ." r ../:i;<;~ •• ;..r.~':;i It.aly, celebratin~ his 60th.an­/'~..';: ::,;>~~j mversary of priestly ordllla­

_,.~1liillil~':S~:..":,@Jl tion, with the Mass for theCouncil Fathe1'S, had received permission to in-

Tum to Page Ftftee#'

''This new theory would haveus believe that religion is onlya private matter - to be con­fined to the ,home and thechurch; that society as such, thestate and the government mustbe purely secular, the states­man cannot ad as a believer;that he must be free froma judgment higher than the willof the people or the plCrty."

"This concept is alien to OUI'

American principles. and tradi­tions," the Bishop concluded."It represen~ a real danger towhich the people must bealerted".

has been sent back for re­working by a special committee.

The third schema - on com­munications media - is beingprepared for final vote by theappropriate committee whichhas been asked by the Fathersto shorten the document after itwas approved in substance bythe Council members.

The Fathers are currently dis­cussing the fourth schema whichis concerned with union withthe Eastern Orthodox Churohes.This is one of three projects oPounity. The other two are on thetheological basis for all· unity,and the reunion of Christendom.

Natiunal LeadersApprnve Religion,Race t:onference

CHICAGO (NC)-Nation­ai It~ud~!'8 of Church and;itA{~ hnve hariled the up­,'oming four-day National~ 'ollfl't'CXleO on Religion and,~i.al'l·. to be held here starting\ItuIl'!ay, ,1]110. 14, as a potentially

"'l:ljOi" contribution to solving'eiw rnce problem.

",'I\(, conference will bring to­",-t!w\" ~ome 800 clergymen and;;;~, l!u'n representing more than(iI)';l'Impu for discussions of the'olt- oj' religion in dealing withIillhlpmu of racial justice.

'\'h" conference will adopt a··,,'.:ttPill0i1\$ of conscience" rep­'''';('lItii'~; a consensus among

~f'II;C' ::U,'nding arid will also)(0.11:';;' :: series of action re­

C :1"\i\l:"'l~;:tiOns for dealing with,::",;' ·;('.';·c'egation.

':. \\,":.\ be the first national.'. '1 ;.'d'; (;"nvened jointly by all

it,' i'l;,;jUi;> faith groups in theU.s. The convening bodies arethe' Department of Racial andCultural Relations of the Na­tional Council of Churches; the':'::)('i::ll Action Commission of theHynaHor,ue Council of America;;\ld the Social Action Depart­11H'lIt of the National CatholicWdfare Conference.

American Reliance on GodUnder Secularist Attack

l{'O~1E (NC)-Secularists are subtly attacking the~",~dition in the United States of reliance on ~d. So warnedMUl'lt Re'V. Bishop Ernest J. Primeau of Manchester, N. H~~iJ1 11 talk here before Americans living in the Eternal City.

Btl said the idea of publicaeknowledgement of social:::'iwllden.ce upon God and:)~:lil~u.tion to Him, so tra.­(, "ioHnl in American history, ill

:. ,clerf,oinlt subtle attack b1 a):Jr(~l.v cecularlstie concept of.

;}:~ch.~tyo

v:,)L 6, No. 49 © 1962 The Anchor

TheANCHOR

foO: River, Mass., Thursday, Nov. 29, 1962

C~jJuncil DiscussionsM'crve More Rapidly

:'iWME - The second session of the Ecumenical Coun-\:ii~ begin Sept. 8, 1963, instead of May 12 as was·

.y·('viollsly announced. The session will likely continue~)lroI'ITh early December of 1963. Pope John made the de­:'(-;10'1. t4) change the date·'xl\('". many prelateR, espe­dally those from distantqrt'a~, were unhappy over'"d.' llrm;pect oi returning to.a.lIn1l' d rrreat expense and foronly !icven weeks during a busyp<:'riod.. MC'unwl1i1e, many Bishops, in­duel in!; most Americans, haveIlskC'd fo!' a vote on the schema",-latinr; ro the Liturgy which"as bC'en discussed and revised.','his WUB the first schema orllubject debated by the CouncilFathers.

ThC' sCoCond schema - on thefonln 0'1 Divine Revelation -

Page 2: 11.29.62

FORTY HOURSDEVOTION

Mass OrdoFRIDAY-St. Andrew, Apostle.

II Class. Red. Mass Proper'Gloria; Creed; Preface ofApostles. Tomorrow is theFirst Saturday of December..

6ATURDAY - Mass of the. Blessed Virgin for Saturday., IV Class. White. Mass Proper'

Gloria; no Creed; Preface ofBlessed Virgin.

SUNDAY-!Sunday of Advent.I Class. Violet. Mass Proper'No Gloria; Creed; Preface ofTrinity. -

MONDAY-St. Francis XavierConfessor. III Class. White:Mass Proper; Gloria; SecondCollect of previous Sunday;no Creed; Common Preface.

TUESDAY-St. Peter Chrysol­ogus, Bishop, Confessor andDoctor of the Church. IIIClass. White. Mass Proper'Gloria; Second Collect of pre~vious Sunday; Third CollectSt. Barbara, Virgin and Mar­tyr; no Creed; Common Pref.ace.

'WEDNESDAY-Mass of previousSunday. III Class· White. MassProper; No Gloria; SecondCollect St. Sabbas, Abbot; noCreed; Common Preface.

THURSDAY-St. Nicholas, Bish.op and Confessor. III Class.White. Mass Proper; Gloria;Second Collect of previousSunday; no Creed; ConimoJlPreface.

Teri'~a!fies VoteTo Combat RaceBio'§ by· Prayer'

CINCINNATI (NC}­Prayer and action to over­come racial prejudice anddiscrimination were pledgedby Franciscan tertiaries of fourstJltes at the sixth annual East­ern Regional Third Order con­vention here.

Some 275 delegates repre­senting more than 5,400 mem­bers in 35 units in Ohio, Ken­tucky, . Indiana imd Michiganvoted resolutions calling foi'support of proposed fair housinglegislation expected to be in­troduced in the coming OhioGeneral Assembly, and active

. participation in local CatholieInterracial Councils.

Keynote speaker was SisterFrancesca of Immaculate Con­ception Academy, Oldenburg.Ind., who called on her own ex­periences as a Negro to explainthe urgency of programs for in-

. terracial justice.. Christ's Tea.chings

The Franciscan nun -empha­sized the spirit of St. Francis ­"wHere there is hatred let mesow love" - as the best ap­proach to solving the problem.She said "it is up to us as Cath­olics, to judge all men by theirindividual worth."

Admitting that "a great dealof heroic work has been donein the past 10 years toward in.­tegration," Sis t e r Francescaadded that "we couldn't be satis­fied with our present progress."

"Ever individual," she said,"'must ask himself if he is livingfully the teachings of Christ."

New Bedford

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nation and around the earth."Af.ter urging that Thanksgi...

ing Day be observed with "rev­erence and humility" he added-

"Let us renew ·the spirit of thePilgrims at the first Than::s·:iv­ing, lonely' in an inscrut;blewilderness, facin,g the dark un.­known with a faUh born of theirdedication to God and a forti­tUde' drawn from their sensethjlt all men wer(~ brothers.

"Let us renew that spirit ~offering our tha:nks for uncov­enanted mercies, beyond ourdesert or merit, and by resolv­ing to meet the responsibilitie.placed upon us. (I ., ~"

Obse;yance•In

GEORGE M. MONTLEPlumbing - Heating

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album of inspirational songs and are working on a secondalbum of Christmas carols. The group consistH of 17 noviceaand Sisters of the Congregation of Religious of Jesus andMary under the direction of Mother Mary Laetitia. NC Photo

"We recognize, too, that welive' in a world of peril andchange--and in so uncertain atime, we are all the more grate­ful 10r the indestructible giftsof hope and love, which sustainus in adversity and inspire us tolabor unceasingly for a moreperfect community within this

was.lormed· to raise enoughmoney to start a church in Bed­ford.

The Mother Cabrini Society inProvidence started the campaignwith a donation of $500. MotherCabrini societies in Newport,Johnston and Cranston· assistedin the cause, and the money wasraised through various functions.

The B~dford parish has· al­ready purchased a site for thechurch, and the $12,000 fromRhode Island Catholics will giveparishioners' a running start ofconstruction of the church,which will begin in the Spring.

for Three Yeo r~

Engli$h Church

Show Gratitude to God

200' Pitch InTo H~lp BuildPROVIDEN~E (NC)-Neai'ly

200 Rhode Islanders attended abanquej here ~arking the com.

. ~~~~~ :::o:t ~~Ii~~~ ~i~f::~e~see. The. ~hur~ will be built inBedford, England.

Over a thre~year perioq theRhode Islanders have scrapedtogether $12,0Q0 to start thechurch, which Iwill cost about$75,000 when. completed andwill serve somel 5,000 Italian im­migrants who went to the Eng.lish city to ~ek employmentafter World War U. They nowhear Mass in a 'rented hall.

Their pastor 1s Father Angelo_J. Susin, who tas pastor 01 St.Rocco's church in Johnston, R.I.,belore being transferred to theEnglish parish. I

During a visit to friends hereabout three Ytiars ago he de­scribed the difficulties of hispadsh. I"

As a result, the Mother CabriniChapel Fund R~ising Committee

- I·

I

NUN'S CHORAL GROUP: The alto: section of theJesus and Mary Choral Group runs through a rehearsal inthe converted chapel of their Hyattsville (Md.) convent. TheColumbia recording artists have recently relJased their third

c . '., I

Asks Americ1ans.' . I

President Urges Reve reneeland,lor the fe~tility of our har­vests, for the strength of our lib­erties, for the Iiealth of our peo-ple. I

"We do so i~ no spirit of self­righteousness. We recognize thatwe can pass their legacy on t6our children ohly by equal toiland equal devdtion:

WASHINGTON (NC)-Presi­dent Kennedy has urged' Ameri­cans to follow the example oftheir Pilgrim' forefathers in giv­ing "gratitude to God" on this"day of national thanksgiving."He urged all to observe "this daywith reverence and humility."

In his' annual· Thanksgiving'proclamation, Mr, Kennedy said:

"It is fitting that we observethis year our own day of thanks­giving. It is fitting that we giveour thanks for the safety 01 our

Legoen of DecencyThe following. films are to be

added to. the lists in their .re­spective classifications:

Unobjectionable for generalpatronage: Constantine and theCross; Make Way lor Lila. .

Unobjectionable for adults andadolescents: Everybody GoHome.

Unobjectionable 10 r adults:'Trial and ErnJ·r; Sundays andCybele.

Objectionable ,in part for all:Sodom and Gomorrah (excessivesensuality); The Nude Qdyssey(paganly sensual and grosslysuggestive as to costume, dancesand situations).

Pre-eanaA Pre-Cana conference 101'

engaged couples is set for 7\Sunday night, Dec. 2 at SacredHeart School auditorium, FallRiver.

THE ANCHO!t-Thurs., Nov. 29, 1962

2

o

"

)

Dec. 2-St. John the Evan­gelist, Attleboro.

Our Lady of the Immac­ulate Conception, NewBedford.

Dec. 9--St. Margaret, Buz­zards Bay.

Our Lady of the Immac­ulate Conception, EastBrewster.

Dec. 16-S t. Ant h 0 n y '0 fPadua, Fall River.

St. Mary, Fairhaven.Dec. 23-St. Mary's Home,

New Bedford.St· Helena's Convent, Fall

River.

1ltE ANCH08

SOCond Class Postage Paid It Fall River,Mass. Published every Thursday at 410Highland Avenuel Fall River Mass, by thecatholic Press Ol the Diocese of Fall River.Subscrlptloa Drice by mall, postJlaili $4.00DIll ~w.

NecroiogyDEC. 1

Rev. Phillipe Ross, 1958, Chap..lain, Sacred Heart Home, NewBedford.

DEC. ZRev. Arthur Savoie, 1917, Pas­

tor, St. Hyacinth, New Bedford.Rev. Dennis W. HalTington,

1958, Assistant, St. Mary, Taun-.to~ .

DEC· 3Rev. John W. McCarthy. II.R.,

1926, Pastor, Sal:red Heart "allRiver.

DEC'. 4:Rev. Charles Ouellete, 1945,

Assistant, St. Jacques, Taunton.DEC}. 6

Rev. Joseph 1.. Cabral, 1959,Pastor, Our LadJ' 01 Angels, fallRiVf'

1

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Page 3: 11.29.62

Needof Sex

the adolescent's life is compli­cated by attitudes on sex he h~inherited from past generations.

"Part of his national inheri.­tance as an American is a certainPuritanism. Part of his spiritualinheritance as a Catholic is acertain Jansenism.

"Both of these attitudes implythat sex is dirty, bad, shamefulBut to the Christian, sex is goodbecause it is made by God. It issacred becl'luse it is concernedwith either giving life or com.pleting it in another and as suchit is a means of expressing love,"he said.

Father Knott maintained thata principal reason behind steadydating is that the home and par.ents are failing to answer thebasic needs of children, "to loveand be loved."

Warning of the perils 'of teen­age marriages, Father Knott saidthat one study has shown it tobe a major challenge for a youngcouple to maintain the stabilityof their marriage. This study, hesaid, reported that three of everyfour teenage marriages break up.

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WASHlNGTON (NC) - Themodern adolescent needs a real­istic, Christian understanding ofsex, some 250 clergy and laymenwho direct Catholic youth pro·grams were told here.

Father John Knott, director ofthe Family Life Bureau of theNational Catholic Welfare Con.ference, said that today's teen­agers are forced to live in a"sexual environment."

He added that they are beingthrown into sexual situations asearly as 13 and 14 years of age,often through steady dating.

Addressing the ninth NationalConference on Catholic YouthWork in suburban Arlington,Va., Father Knott said that adol.escents have "a need and a rightto understand themselves andthe growth of love within them."

Inherited Attitudes"Within this context," he said,

"the adolescent needs a realistictotal, human and Christian un­derstanding of sex so that hemight see it as another challengeof love."

The NCWC official said that

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Nov. 29,1962 3Christmas

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Miss Donovan notes that Oper­ation Doll won't wind up withthis first shipment to the north·ern-most state; so donations ofdolls or other toys will continueto be welcomed at Linden Street.

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A letter went off last week toFather O'Connor, telling him ofthe unexpected result of his talkin Fall River. His enthusiasticand grateful reply arrived infour days from Alaskan missionheadquarters in Washingtonstate.

On to Alaska

Be named two Jesuits as par­ticularly in need of toy dona­tions for their young charges. Sothe mission children of FatherNorman Donohue, Little FlowerMission, Hooper Bay, Alaska andFather Bernard McMeel, SacredHeart Mission, Chevak, Alaska

LITTLE GIRL'S REAVEN: Beverly Haggerty, amongeontributors, surveys dolls collected by Miss MargaretDonovan to send to needy Eskimo children for Christmassurprise.

1--- ._..II

I

I

Yankee SwapThe Women's Guild meeting

oX Immaculate ConceptioB, Fallritiver, for 8 Monday night, Dec.8 will take the form of a Christ­O1:IS party with a buffet to be,;:'fved in the church hall. Thec,weutive board i::; i!ll charge of:>.' "anr,em0LltB a n r1 announces~1 t::t. small gifts s h 0 U I d be':~"'I\I'~ht by mcmbern rOT a ''Yan··:,"~~~ g\Jvap."

Mission FathersNote Centenll1ial

WASHINGTON (NC)-Mem­'LJers of the U. S. province of ther;mmaculate Heart Missionersrnarked the 100th anniversary ofGae founding of their community&lunday.

Fat her Alphonse Rigouts,e.I.C.M., provincial superior,offered a Solemn High Mass inm. John's church in nearby Me·Lean, Va., Father FrederickrJIcGuire, C.M., executive secre·fury of the Mission Secretariat,[l clearing house of mission' in.iormation and services preached.

The Immaculate Heart Mis­ufoners, commonly known as theScheut Fathers (after Scheut, aC1!burb of Brussels, Belgium)were founded in Belgium in 1862O?l Father Theophile Verbist.

In 1865 Father Verbist andthree companions set out for:::nissionary work in China, par.~kularly in the barren valleys[';;j plains of Inner Mongolia.}lr-om 1865 to 1955, 667 Immacu­late Heart Missioners worked inf.~'C'e dioceses in Inner MongoliaOld northern China and wonDlOl'e than 300,000 converts.

Expelled from mainland China\Jy the communists, members of'ilhe community are now work­Un,ff among the Chinese in For.mosa, Hong Kong, Manila andI:ndonesia.

Operation DoU to Ensure

For Scores of Little'By Patri.cia McGowan

Dolls have taken over at 356 Linden Street, Fall River, the reg.idence of Miss Margaret)l'lonovalL They're headed for Alaska and they're going to ensure a merry Christmas for~cores of little Eskimo girls. Operation Doll got under way two months ago when Missnonovan sat in on a special meeting of the Celestial Igloo club, composed of supporters ofRev. Paul C. O'Connor, S.J.,..airector of Alaskan missionsfor the Jesuits. Fr. O'Connor:celated the story of an Es­T;imo child whose doll was butQ stick wrapped with u rag. He:;ave her a real doll and recalledecrll never forget the look in thatChild's eyes as I gave it to her."

The story stuck in Miss Dono.s.m's mind. Dolls aren't a neces­cjty like food, medicine c>r cloth.~ng, she knew, but maybe for~lttle girls they're even more:'lI1portant. As a first grade teach.er at the Dubuque School in Fall!liver she'd had ample opportu­:::'-ity to observe the place they:'.eld in the lives of her pupils.

Flood of Do~ls

She kept thinking about theDttle girl in Alaska. She told the:;tory to a few friends. Somehow:'1 reached the ears of the HolyfTnion Sisters at Sacred Heartsl'.:lementary School. They tooOought dolls were important<.:nd they told their primarycrade students about FatherO'Connor's little friend.

The children went home andf:1 many cases chose their veryQcst dolls to send to Alaska.'2hey flooded into Miss Dono­van's apartment, overflowed herr::ving room couch to tables,cnairs, the floor.

A high school girl donated hervast collection of stuffed ani.:=18Is. Other friends dug into at­Ccs, old toyboxes. The assem·\')lal'(e grew and Miss DonovanLnd her sister, Miss Mary Don­ovan, were kept busy refurbish.r-llg where needed and occasion­Cl!ly making a new dress for aG::>ll somewhat the worse formuch loving.

Although girls tak~ pride ofj?lace in tltis project, boys;:naven't been forgotten. Someiill'iends have contributed puzzles,boy dolls and games.

Page 4: 11.29.62

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I River, left New York Cit:;?Saturday morning, Nov. 24 ~route to new assignments illCanba-ra, Australia.

The missionaries participateDFriday in a depclrture cere<>mony a-t Kennedy Memorial HG£opital, Brighton. Cardinal Cus}n;,lng was officiating prelate.

With the Sisters from FaDRiver will be three other FraJPciscan Missionaries of Mary, 2f>osigned to hospital duty in Petal,ing Jaya, Malaya...!!'he group wiDspend Christmas at the congre"gation's mother hO\J!se in Rome.

Sister Mary St. :VIichael hatlbeen teachin~ sixth grade It)

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'pIe is unduly hypercritical basedupon reactions that are primari­ly . subj~tive.

"These attitudes spring :fromemotional responses that en­danger the security of the com­munity, state and nation. Weare living in an era," he oon­'tinued, "where there is unpl'&­cedented emphasis upon so­called 'civil rights.'''

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FUTURE JOURNALISTS: Michael Greene, managingeditor of the KJnsas City-St. Joseph Catholic Rejporter, dis­cusses newspaper editorial problems with high school jow-:.nalists attending a press workshop at Webster College, St.Louis. Delores l\>eSato, left, of Loretto Academy in KansasCity placed first in the news writing contest; Mary EllenFischer, center, Ialso of Loretto, tied for first place in edi-torial writing. N;C Photo. I

M.oralityLos Angeles Police. Chief Sees Threat

. To sJcurity, NcitionaD SurvivalI

LOS ANGLES (NC) - Lackof self - discipline and moralfibre in the UnitEk1 States is agenuine threat to internalsecu­rity and national Isurvival, LosAngeles Police Ohief William H.Parker said here.

He spoke on the "Decline ofMoral Values in American Lifeand its Implicatiohs for Catho­lics in the Social Welfare Field,"at a meeting of I the CatholicConference of SOcial Welfare,L.A., Council. '

He contrasted "ldedicatiOn topromote freedom within theframework of an orderly so­ciety," with. the "pall ()f com­munist control (wherein) the in­dividual become~ a facelesschattel of the sta~."

Pleading for respect for lawand for cooperati'on with lawenforcement age it c i e S, ChiefParker said: "Reluctantly Ihave been forced to the conclu­sion that the treat1nent affordedthe. police by the American pea-

Maryknoll NunsOpenNew Korean Hospital

PUSAN (N C) - AmericanSisters have moved an out­patient clinic from temporaryquarters into a new three-storyhospital building here.

Maryknoll Sister.s moved aclinic which they opened here in1949 into the ground floor ofa hospital building built withhelp from American Forces Aid

. to Korea, a program which hasgiven medical supplies to Cath­olic hospitals in Seoul and Bup­yong.

Only the ground floor of thebuilding, which was started in1954, is used now. The Sistersplan to have a 160·-bed hospitalin operation next Spring.

The Sisters had to close theirclinic here during the year ofthe Ko~ War but reopened itin 1951 as the ctnly civilian~ ill toe ~

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Scripture InstituteST. LEO (NC)-The first Sac­

:red Scripture Institute for Cath­olics in the southeast will beheld April 15 to 111 at 8t. LeQBenedictine Abbey here blnorida.

(g@D~~M@~

@~ ~O[?~U'

4. THE ANCHOR-':"'Dioce~e of Fall River-Thurs..N~v. 29, 1962

By IRt. lRiI.'lv. Msgr. .Jfoh.ll'il S. li(iI.'lll1Jtuil.'ldySome 30 years ago Abbot Cuthbert Butler published a

book entitled The Vatican Council. Though autl)oritativeand unusually readable, it attracted but modest notice.The Council was then 60 years in the past, and was com-monly believed to have been Newman's ordinary and frieI).d,

.the last of the assemblies of wrote then and later. Ullathornethe fathers of the Church' was a remarkable man, well in­Universal. A book about it formed, judicious, impartial.would interest specialists, and Ullathorne, along with ~

. . other bishops, lived at the Eng-perhaps tho~e ofanhquanan lish College for the duration oft a s t e s, but the Council, and hired a car-eould not be riage to take him to and from St.of practical im-

Peter's, where the sessions wereport for the held. The 600 to 700 bishops whopre sen t age.

participated oould be accommo-However, the dated in one of the .transepts ofButler book can the basilica, and it was there

~~2:~~:::~'~ f~~~~' that the Council chamber was. \\: set up.a wid e al' ,11- ."", , It was a general complaintence. The rea- ---.

that the speeches were too manyson is, ofand too long. The acoustics were

course, the fact ,'. r abominable, and straining· tothat the Second. .Vatican Council is presently catch what one after another In-sitting, and before it will ~ terminable speaker was sayingbusiness left unfinished when Its wore everyone down. OIle. bish­predecessor was abruptly broken op made an extended speech onoff because of the Franco-Pros- the necessity of brevity..sian War and the fall of the Close-Up of GiantsPapal States. A frequent speaker was Bish-

Abbot Christopher Butler has op Verot, originally of Savan­edite'd the book with a view to nah and later ()f St. Augustine,developments since its first pub- who drew from the presidinglication and it is now reissued cardinal many reproofs for theunder the slightly altered title prolixity, inappositeness, andThe" Vatican Council: 1869-1870 humorous cast of what he s~id.(Newman. $5.95 in cloth, $1.95 Among his suggestions wasin paper). that "it should be forbidden for

!Papal Infallibility clerics to hunt with guns, 'that'It runs to more than 500 pages there never may be exhibited to

of small print, but is so infor- the faithful people the disgrace­mative and fascinating as to ful spectacle of a man of Godhold the reader's close attention going about the roads and fieldsthroughout. It is, as Abbot "shooting birds and beasts.'''Christopher Butler remarks, As for the giants, we are"'not only a history but a criti- shown close up Manning ofque ()f the Council." Westminster, Dupanloup of Or-

It is also a brilliant portrait leans, Dechamps of Malines,gallery of the leading partici- Darboy ()f Paris, Strossmayer ofpants, and, in a way, affords an Bosnia, and many a not herinside look at the present Vati- towering churchman. In char­ean Council, in-as-much-as a acter, antecedents, opinion, theygreat deal of the pr.ocedure is differed markedly.. Both in andundoubtedly the same as that out of the Council they con-of 1869-70. tended valiantly.

The main question before the The freedom of expressionFirst Vatican Council was the permitted was practically limit­definition of papal infaUibility. less, although Pius IX did notThe bishops were sharply di- fail to make felt, even if onlyvided as to what should be done mildly, his displeasure within the' matter. Some favored a those pressing ideas at variancedefinition, others opposed one. with his own.

Among the latter were a group Landmark in Historywhich resisted a definition that The debate on infallibility be-did that did not advert to the gan on June 15 and ended onoffice and authority of the bish- July: 4. If what preceded it is wellcp, and another which con- covered in the book, this "is al­sidered a definition extremely most exhaustively reported. Andinopportune. the drama implicit and explicit

Feared Reaction in it is strikingly oonveyed.The inopportunists felt that The aftermath of the Council,

such an action at such a time including the allaying of most ofwould alienate innumerable pro- the earlier fears, the well nighspective converts. Besides, it universal acceptanee of the de­was expected to have unfavor- finition, and the departure intoable political consequences. In heresy and schism of the so­'brief, there was fear that a called Old Catholics of Ger­definition of infallibility would many, is adroitly summarized. .be taken as an assertion of abso- The Council and its decreeslute papal authority in the poli- have certainly been justified bytical realm. all that has happened in the in-

The extremists, at least out- terval. It was, and is, a greatside the Council, went so far as landmark in the long history ofto dec!are, in one instance, the Church. And this is aspen­"When the Pope thinks, it is did report of it.God who is thinking in him."

Piux IX first broached theidea of a Council in 1864. Itwas formally announced in 1867,with the opening set for Decem­ber 8, 1869. So long had it beensince the previous oonsiderablediscussion as to who wouln par­ticipate, a matter since settledby the Code of Canon Law.

Speeches Too LongIn November, 1869, the bish­

cps began to gather in Rome.Butler's account of what fol­lowed is drawn from manysources: e.g., from the officialrecords of the Council, from theletters and diaries of bishops,but principally from what theEnglish b ish 0 p,' Ullathorne,

Page 5: 11.29.62

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Public Schools HelpFire-Swept Parish

PATERSON (NC)-Two pub­He schools have come to the aidof St. Stephen's combinationchurch and school here, whichwas severely damaged by fire.

Officials of Public School 16have made classrooms availableto pupils of the Catholic school,and officials of Public SchOOl 15have offered the school audito­rium for the celebration of Sun­day Masses.

Commercial • IndustrialInst~tutional

Painting and Decorating

IN REFUGE: Our Lady ofCharity of Cobre has takenrefuge in the U.S. NavalStation at Guantanamo Bay,Cuba. Some 2,000 to 3,000workers who commute to thestation from communist Cubapray before her statue eachday. NC Photo.

UrS!e§) IDs@~@~ue9

Ora Social ~smu~~LOUISVILLE (NC)-A priest

called here for mere "dialogue"among churchmen to resolve dif­ferences on social questions.

Father Barry Rankin, C.P.,professor of dogmatic theologyat the Passionist Fathers' semi­nary, urged churchmen to "sub­ject interfaith social problemswhich seem to stimulate onlyrancor to quiet analysis in com­mon."

Father Rankin said such anal­ysis might show that many suchproblems are "more semanticthan real."

He spoke to a group of Prot­estant and Catholic seminariansattending a special seminaryconference during a state con­vention of the AFL-CIO meet­ing.

Father Rankin said church­men should seek "accord andconcord" by means of an "on­going social dialogue on thereligio-economic principles andpractices of society" both amongthemselves and with "labor andother segments of s9ciety."

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GHATKOPAR (NC) - Ahundred students from a Catho­lic college in Bombay havebuilt a road and a small bridgeIII this village.

The aroup of boys and girls,members of the Social ServiceLeague of St. Xavier's College,took part in a 15-day SocialService Camp here, 11 milesnortheast of Bombay, directedby Father John Macia, S.J., ofSt. Xavier's College.

The students also set up a dis­pensary with the help of a doc­tor who is a former student ofSt: Xavier's, distributed pow­41ered milk and con d 11 et e ddasses in child care, sanitation~d needlework.

The Social Service CampsWCl'C started nIne years ago byFather M.M. Balaguer, S.J., afmomcr rector of St. Xavier's.

Legion of MaryMembers of the Legion 01

Mary of the lra11 River Diocesero'Id their families will hold their'lnnual reunion at 'I Sundaynlp,ht, n~c. 9 in Mt. Carmel Alb­ditorium, New :aedIord. TbeIPro[~ram will include entertain­ment and community singing.Refreshments will be served.

Fr,. Lyons SingsFatheys Requiem

Rev. James F. Lyons, assist­Illl1t at Immaculate ConceptfonChurch, Taunton, celebrated aSolemn Requiem Mass on Satur­day in St. Joseph's Church, FallRiver, for hiD father, James F.Lyons, who died on Nov. 20.

Father Lyons was assisted byBev. John T. Higgins as deaconand Rev. Joseph 1.. Powers asIllUbdeacon.

In attendance were Most Rev.lames J. Gerrard, D.D., V.G.,and many priests and religiousof the Diocese as well as variousdelegations from both St. Jos­eph's Parish, FQ11 River, andImmaculate Conception Parish,'I'aunton.

Exile Says CubaFailed in CharityTo Neighbors

CINCINNATI ( N C ) ­Cuba fell to communism be­cause its people failed tolive up to their "historicalvocation for charity," a Cubane,.'dle said here.

Jose Gonzalez, former Cubanlawyer now teaching Spanish atthe College of Mount St. Joseph!here, told the college sodality:"We had developed tbe highest«t3ndard of living of any tropi­cal country in the world. But wewere paying little attention tothe eternal problems life brings- we were scarcely concernedfor anyone eIs:;!; we were un­charitable."

Patroness of Cuba is OurLady of Charity, he said, andunder her patronage the nationfought for freedom from Spain

'"'without h2.tred."When Fidel Castro launched

his revolution, the Cuban pel>­pIe supported him because ofthe politieal wrongs of th~

&tista regime, Gonzalez said.

Cbtll'cl'!. HaD Answer"Castro's revolution preached

hatred," he said. After Batista'had been ousted, the Cuban peo­p12 accepted the "cruel and il­legal punishment of Bati!,i;a'ssupporterg bec&use we had mll'­fered from him," he said.

"L3ter, thinldng to protectourselves and our own property,we failed to object when ourIlleighbors were treated unjust­ly," he continued. "We can de­:rive many lessons from whatillilppened in CUba, but the mainone is charity. The Church hasthe right answer - in the doc­trine of the MystiCal Body. Sheencourages us to live it intense­'ilY. It is based on love."

Page 6: 11.29.62

QFF~CiAL NlEWSPA~U:R OF THE DIOCESE OF fAll RIVei

@rheANCHOR

ByREV. JOHN L

FOLSTEI

* e •

When the COWl'.eil was an­nounced, we w€!re quicklytaught thM ~Is w.l)Uld be pri­marily the work ,I)f the lIIolySpili'lt. !Even last week ThE!Ancholl' showed thl&t a Protest­ant M i III i s t e r was vel')'much convinced tllLa.t the HolySpill'nt had already tipped Hillhand' iBn this Council. Nowwhy aln the excitement anellthe j/~gg @lIll prayer, penance",etc? l'1rs. G. M.

The "Rainbow Consistory" wc:Jheld at the Vatican on, March 2Q,1960. It is so-called because f~

the first time in history thewwere created Cardinals of vaR".l­ous races in one ceremon:;1.Along with four prelates of t:c.n"white" race there were ale;:)elevated a Japanese, Q FiIipi~

and an African prelate.It was an important preparer

tion for the Council in that LJreflected the true Catholicity dthe Church much as the CouncOis at present. \

Someone referrea:l to th:l"Rainb@w Consistor)'" recent­ly and said that it Wlll8 an im­portant preparation !YOI' tlwCouncil. What and when W~it?

sa.. llotliCl3Y's CIIlIrcll, Hal Bedford

Unfortunately, God uses lidalways the best materials to p1'()omote His case.He has foandfit to have thelittle and ordi­nary confoundthe great andthe wise. Why?vel' y possi'blyto show that itis He who isthe real powerbehind thescenes. Hefounded, equip­ped and with guarantee guide::Jthe Church to teach and work bHis place until He :;hall return.No doubt, we could possiblvimagine some betu~ way, bdthis is HIS way,

Now the Council is this ChurcI':lin action during some sort of [)crisis. The trouble is that wgare members of that Church an~

not fearless angels. It doesn'~

take much to realize that we ar-::Jimperfect. "-

Will thf! Bishop!1 have thecourage to face som€~ of the tre­mendous problems? Will theapatience, industry, and healthlast the whole wa:r throughf('How much easier it VTould be fa:?some Bishop to close his atten.­tion only upon his own dioces~

problems and just kEJeP the bo~

from ro c kin g 'too much!Sure, we have dedIcated me::m..But they still are me:ll. Will theyremain scholarly, pra.ctical, cakJiland spiritual? Will hlternatiom:::Lconflicts worry these' men of amnations and choke th4~ activity clthe Council?

But the Pope has pointed beven greater worriE!S. Are w-oready to accept whatever GOO'has pointed out for us right no~With no conditions whatever G::!?limitations on our part? Are woeager to quicken ow' spirit, dieout our imperfections? Will w-owholeheartedly accept the Mas­ter's instructions? Are we actu.­ally ready to hug our "separated'brethren" to our bos.)m?

Yes, there is so mu.cll to do GW

our part. This God s:hall not doindependently of our free Uyes'~

this we cannot do independentlyof His help. Therefore, we muctpray, pray, pray. Pray that Hoshall grant His grace and helpand ourselves stay awake aooready that His invitation not g::;unanswered. As St. Theresaoften said, "Work as though eTIdepended on us; pray as thoug:hall depended on God."

TUESDAY-8t.lPeter Chrysol­ogus, Bishop, Confessor, Doctoz.So the light and the salt to whichthe Gospel today compares theWord as it comes to us from the"doctors" (teachers) of theChurch are botli realities whichsharply affect the senses. Theytouch man immediately, provokean immediate response, unlesshe is blind or tasteless.

This is the job af the liturgyas teacher. It is also the task ofbishop or priest as preacher.George Santayana, whose pro­fession of unbelief is difficultto accept, says: "Catholic preach­ers at least are expected topreach the Gospel, and not somemessage new to the different op­position in successive times; anda mind sensitive to these influ­ences can therefore preach itmO,re usefully e * *"

WEDNESDAY - Mass as onSunday. Today's celebration ofof the Lord's Supper draws usfully again into the Advent sea.son and spirit It warns usagainst the "Christmas'" natural­ization of Christianity. The' tin­sel and the pines and the cribswith baby dolls which wealready see may indicate thelighthearted joy of man, hisplayfulness in the light of themarvelous fact that God' hasentered his sphere in so vivid away.

They may also indicate some­thing less praiseworthy: a deter­,mined human effort to escapethe deeper implications of thatJewish story, the moral responseit demands (first reading) andits otherworldly focus (Gospel).

gather all thingil up in ChristJesus.

The coming of the Word ofGod, a Word so much for manthat it comes as Man, a Wordso much of God that it is God, aperson of the Holy Trinity. Andthis Word establishes a "king­dom" (Gospel) of love and hope,of watchfulness (first reading) asociety of new men who mustsee all things in relation to ulti­mate destiny and consummation.

MONDAY-St. Francis Xavfiez,Confessor. This Word who comesto men, comes now to us through,words (first reading and G0s­pel). This is why the Fathers ofthe Council were placing somuch emphasis in their' earlierdiscussions on the liturgy ascommunication.. They are concerned that today

and every day at Mass the Mys­tery (the Son's human nature,

, victory over death, promise ofeternal life) sacramentally pres­ent should be present also to oursenses, should be impressed OIlour senses. This can be done byour hearing words we undes­stand and seeing actions (as wenas participating in them) which'have meaning for us.

'Th.nOUCfh.1the. CWuk CWith th.& Chu.nck, IBy REV. ROBERT W. HOVDA, Catholie Universifty

I

Fiist Business

ITODAY - Mass as on Sunday.The moral life and' the' moralstruggle, the effort to be good,are. not irrelevant Ito our sharingin Jesus' victory. For the wor­ship we owe' God; in answer tohis love already Iassured, is a'"spiritual sacrifice," the offeringof one's whole life to hiJil. inlove. i'

Mass is the sacramental ex­pression of a worship which in­cludes every hour and everyact-the good works, the knowl­edge, the patience knd enduranceof which the first: Bible readingtoday teaches· It is in andthrough the liturgy, the Mysteryof Christ made p~sent, that ourmoral failures (sins) are trans­formed by forgivehess and thosegood works (chari~) which Hisgrace makes' possib~ are trans­formed into Christl blessed deedsof merit. . •

ITOMORROW _, st. Andrew..

Apostle. The first readingteaches the nec~ity 01. minis­ters in Christ's Church, Howshall we believe, muess we hear,and how can wei hear unlesssomeone preaches the Gospel tous'! It is that simple. The hier­archical structure hf the Churchis not a humanly inspired chal­lenge., to that innatil capacity forbelief which is in man. It israther a necessa& service, adivine answer to I the require­ments of the human situation.

, I

MASS OF ST'I MARY ONSATURDAY. "Blessed are theywho hear the Word of God andkeep if' (Gospel)! Blessed arethose, in other wo~ds, who hearthe Church, who h~ the apos­tles and ministers of, JesusChrist as they speak (out of andin the holy community). Bishopsand pastors must guard againstpreaching human lopinion, andall of us must guard againstrejecting the Word, and turningdeaf ears for the Isake of ourprejudices and our Iconceits.

, I

lFIRST SUNDAir OF AD-'VENT. One translation puts therefrain of today's ~trance andoffertory hymns thi8 way: "Uponyou I have set my ~eart; in you,my God, I put my trust." Andindeed this is the rcifrain of bothAdvent and Christrhas time. Wehave confidence in,1 we have setour hearts on, the G:<>d who lovesso much that He 11as come andwill come again. :

And the "coming'1 to which somany of the teXts of our servicesof public worship I refer thesedays may mean either His In­carnation-coming lin history-'­or His coming to bHng creationto fulfilment at the Iend of time.It is really only one coming,anyway, which ~rsists evennow in the Churchrind in theChristian life as ~ attempt to

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Nov. 29, 19626

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall Rivet'410 Highland Avenue

Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151PUBLISHER

Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., ~hD.GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGI:R

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

Hugh J. Goldon

Don't Ta!k Religi®n?A Protestant weekly published in Switzerland has

praised a Catholic member of the federal government forhis "astonishing knowledge of his Church's teachings.'~

The paper was commenting on a speech of Roger Bon­vin, one of the seven members of the country's FederalCouncil, at a party convention. The paper said.:. "As Pro­testants, we are happy that there ~re men in ,our govern­ment who have more than just the ordinary knowledge of·religion and have a command of solid dogmatic convictions.We have in Roger Bonvin a member of our governmentwho tackles 'his job with Christian perspectives, with asense of Christian responsibility. Such men are needed inour government today."

This statement points up the desire that non-Catholicshave to hear clear presentations of the Catholic Faith andtheir good will in appreciating the convictions ,of Catholics.It is too bad that too many Catholics do not understand this.

Many times Catholics will boast how in a group, thesubject came around to religion, and how, when asked theChurch's presentation on some matter, they begged offas not being sure or in the guise of not wanting to hurt any­one's fe.elings by stating the doctrine of the Catholic Church.

No intelligent person is offended by receiving an ans­wer to his question. No seeker after truth is dismayedwhen he is told what the truth is. He might be surprised;'he might be enlighten~d in a way he did not expect; hemight take exception to rudeness or condescemsion in theway of answering, But if he asks a question he usuallylooks for an answer.

For a Catholic not to answer because of ignorance isto prick his conscience to find out. For a Catholic not toanswer for fear that someone will not like his answer isto fight against. a straw man that does not exist and isto insult his questioner. -

'Please and Thank YouThe English novelist and playwright, Arnold Benn~

once wrote: "During a long and varied career as a bachelQr,I have noticed that marriage is usually the death of polite-ness between a man and a woman." ,. The observation was a' keen one ;lnd remains-unhap-pily-valid today.

It is a strange fact that persons who are the, epitomeof decorum and politene~s toward total strangers-paperboys, store clerks, fellow bus passengers-often turn ,intosnarling animals within the home and exhibit frighteningrudeness to husband or wife, parents or children.

The person who would not dream of omitting a "Please"or a "Thank you" to a stranger or casual acquaintancedoes not dream of using these two phrases to those boundto him by the ties of marriage or blood. And yet thesephrases could probably do more to ease tension in a familyand to maintain an atmosphere of reverence for one an­other than any other single remedy.

Perhaps here is a valid application of. the maxim,Charity begins at home. Perhaps it can be construed aemeaning just that--a politeness, kindness, reverence andrespect are needed above all in the home and aloe called for,above all else, in relationships with husbands, wives, pal'­

ents, children, relatives.

Cheerful MediocrityA study completed by the Talented Youth Project of

the Horace Mann-Lincoln Institute of School Experimenta­tion has concluded that cheerful mediocrity, preferablygarbed in a football sweater, still holds a greater appeal forthe American youth than a brilliant arid serious mind.

The study discovered that even brilliant young menand women with a high potential for scholarly excellenceplay down their talents in order to become more acceptablein high school society.

It is unfortunate that the schools have not put a prem­ium of praise upon intelligence or, at least, the full de­velopment of the student's potential. And so the high schooleampus hero is still the athlete Oli the social butterfly. Thepresence of girls, the study also stated, since they attaehless value to academic achievement than boys, also detractsfrom the status afforded academic brilliance.

It is too. bad that in the schools' striving to produceall-round students, the student part is often downgraded.And it is unfortunate, too, that students of high schoolage want so much to conform that the standard they seekleaves out the attainment of the potential they may ha~e.

Page 7: 11.29.62

HO:S-OR POET: The famed American poet, RobertFrost, 1eft, accep:f;s an honorary doctorate of humane let­ters fro 11 Father Laurence V. Britt, S.J., president of theUniversity of Detroit. The 88-year-old Frost was cited asAmerica's unofficial poet laureate. NC Photo.

at the Orthodox, Leningrndseminary and his church's del~

gate to the World Council 02Churches, and ArchimandribVladimir Kotliarov, deputy chie1of the Orthodox mission !:.")Jerusalem - gave the intervievto the Soviet news ageneJNowosti.

.gJ

BERLIN (NC) - The workof the Ecumenical Council hasbeen praised by two RussianOrthodox observers at the Coun_cil in an interview publishedby the East Berlin daily NeueZeit.

The observers - ArehpriestVitali Borovy, faculty member

'!tiE ANCHOR-Dlctosc ct tdJ :ilver-'(hurs. Nov. 29,1%2 'It

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which he· is president, was jubi­lant at the news from Rome.

He emphasized in an inter­view that the decision to placeSt. Joseph's name in the Canonof the Mass was not a casual onebut followed years of urging byinterested gr.oups. Bishops andfaithful have been asking theHoly See for this and other

. honors for St. Joseph since 1815.In 1870, shortly before the ad­

journment of the First VaticanCouncil, 38 cardinals and 218bishops joined in a petition con­cerning St. Joseph. At the· sametime 43 superiors general askedthat he be named Patron of theUniversal Churoh. Pope PiWJIX responded by giving him.this title.

In 1S60 U.S. Catholics gath­ered more than 100,000 signa­tures of priests, religious andlaymen for a petition to in­clude the saint's name in theMass prayers.

On March 19, 1961, the Feastof St. Joseph. Pope John pro­elaimed him protector of theEcumenical Council.

In1petus to DevotionPlacing St. Joseph's Name in Canon of Mass

To Benefit Christian Family Apostolate

M@Il\l@I.!'$ Edl!Jc«:lih~rLOS ANGELES (NC) - Fa­

ther Charles S.. Casassa, S.J.,president of Loyola Universityof Los Angeles, received theU.S. Air Force's Scroll of Appre­ciation for furthering. the statusand goals of the Reserve Offi­cers' Training Corps at the uni­versity..

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WASHINGTON (NC) - Oneof North America's leading ex­perts on St. Joseph said herethat placing the saint's namein the Canon of the Mass willgive "great impetus" to devo­tion to St. Joseph and the HolyFamily.

This in turn will benefit thewhole Christian family lifeapostolate, according to FatherRoland Gauthier, C.S.C., direc­tor of the St. Joseph Research'and Documentation Center inMontreal.

St. Joseph's name will be in­cluded in the Canon of thel\(lass for the first time on theFeast of the Immaculate Con­ception, Saturday, Dec.' 8, as aresult of a decision by PopeJohn made public at the 18thgeneral meeting of the SecondVatican Council.

The saint's name will be in­serted after that of the BlessedVirgin Mary in the Communi­cantes. the third prayer afterthe Sanctus, and will come be­fore the names of the Apostlesand a dozen early martyrs. Thelist of saints' names has re­mained substantially unchangedsince the sixth century.

JtlIlbiRant Be NewsFather Gauthier, here to at­

tend a regional meeting of therecently formed North Ameri­can Society of Josephology of

FaU River Pari~h

Fac~s Busy SeosonOur Lady of Angels Parish,

Fall River,plans a busy season.The Council of Catholic Women

will have a Christmas fair be­ginninp, at 1 Saturday after­noon, Dec. 1, in the parish hall.The Holy Narne Society willsPonsor a ham and bean suppernt 6 the same evening.

Our Lady's Crusade for Peacenovena is held at 6:30 everySunday evenine.

The Council of Clltholic Womenannounces its first Christmasbazaar, to be held from 1 to 11Saturday afternoon and evening,Dec. 1. Booths will includeChristmas novelties, aprons, fan­cy work, homemade cakes andcandies, gr<::en thumb and Chi.nese laundry. Free drawings fordoor prizes will be featured.

The Holy Name Society willsp0;1sor n ham and bean supperot 6 the same evening in thelower hall.

Confraternity of ChristianDoctrine members will meet crt7:30 Monday night, Dec. :3 bplan a Christmas party for chil­dren attending catechism classes.Party is slated for 1:30 Sundayafternoon, Dec. 16.

Plans for a Christmas partywill be completed by the Councnof Catholic Women at 7:30 Wed­nesday night, Dec. 5.

Holy Rosal'y Society memberswill attend corporate Commun­ion at 7 o'clock Mass Sundaymorning, Dee. 9. Breakfast anda meeting wiD. follow~

WGf~S TakeoverOf 'ress Red's·First Target

WASHINGTON (NC)A reminder of the centralposition of a responsiblepress in free nations hasbeen issued by a unit of theSenate's Committee on the Judi­ciary in a collection of articlesdescribing how the communistsput free newspapers among theirfirst targets in the Red takeoversof 11 nations.

Writers who witnessed com­munist penetration and exploita­tion of the press give first handaecounts that drew from Sen.James O. EasUand of Mississippi,ebairman of the judiciary sub­committee, the comment that theBeds see a free press as a "pow­erful bulwark" against themand have been "ruthless" in ef­forts to destroy it.

A Cuban newspaperman re­lates that the Castro Reds beganby confiscating the propertiesand offices of newspapers fav­orable to the Batista regime.

Then the Castro forces turnedgradually on the newspapers

· which had supported their rev­olution. They agitated to pro­voke internal dissension among

· employees, applied economic re-· strictions, physically interferedwith delivery of the papers, be­gan accusing their editors ofeollaboration with Batista andfinally seWed the publicationsoutright.

The author of the Cuban ac­count claims many of the tricksused to destroy the integrity ofCuban papers are planned forother Latin American countries,even though their governmentsare not communist.

For example, one device is toplant numerous Red agentsamong the mechanical and edi­torial employees of a pUblica­tion. They launch a campaign ofagitation whose ultimate aimostensibly is to turn out themanagement ann give the paper'scontrol to the employees-whoare led by the communist agents.

Sen. Eastland contends in hisintroduction to the 100-page\lwoklet that Americans havecome to take the blessing of afrce pr~SG for granted.

He warns: "An attitude ofmind which regards our freepress as a God-given, irrevocablenatural right inclines towardc:lisref,ard of the influences atwork to corrupt and destroy thispriceless possession.

"We must not fall into thiserror at any time; and it is es­pecially dangerous to do so whenthe United States is threatenedas never before in its history."

Page 8: 11.29.62

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. Urges More SpiritualWork Among Negroes

JERSEY CITY (NC)-A pam,.phlet urging 'increal:ed spirituaJwork among Negrol~s has bee1:ldistri'buted to all the priests a1the Newark archdiocese bUorder ,of Archbishop Thomas A"Boland

The pamphlet was prepa~

by Msgr. Eugene J. 'Reilly, all.ministrator of Chri:lt the Kinf3(Negro) parish here. He saWthere are now 381,:U5 Negroeoin the archdiocese, l:ompared 1090,000 in 1940, and suggestOOlthat a convert progl'am be cal'->ried on among them by the COil';>fraternity of Christi:iD Doctrine,

'BeriedictineNunsBequeath. Eyes .

NAUVOO (NC)--The eyes cz(lBenedictine nuns at St. Mary',oPriory here in Illinois have beeDgiven a new lease on another<life. .

In the largest group pledgeever received at thE, Iowa LiornJEye Bank at the State Universityof Iowa, all 105 members of thoBenedictine community herepledged their eyes after death tothe bank for a person with im.­paired vision or for medical J.lEla

search.That, reports the SUI Eyo

Bank, is a record.Mother'Clarisse said the Nau.­

voo Benedictines had. beemaware of the prograin for severa1lyears. She related: "But las~

year, a friend, a donor, spoke <iIthe pledge of her ey,es. Suddenlyit struck me that thi.s was a real]charity we could ea~,ily offer OUi!'

fellow human beings."'Continue to DIl) Good'

Professed memb,ers of theeommunity signed p:.edges whichwere turned over 'to Dr. GlenPeck, a Fort Madison, Iowa,optometrist and a member of theIowa Lions Club whQ has treatedseveral of the Sist,ers. MotherClarisse said additional pledgeowill be coming from the com..munity.

"The Sisters," she noted, "arohappy to make the gift. Theyfeel glad to continul~ to do goooafter their deaths."

The pledges involved arrange,.ments with Iowa and I.1linoiohighway patrols w cooperate it:lrushing the donated eyes to loW{)

. City when the occasi:on arises.Only the cornea, or transp9J.",

,ent covering, is u.sed in thotransplant operation. But aUparts of the eye Ill'e used illmedical research.

I

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1St. Catherine's Fund RaisingCommittee, Fall River, will holda Christmas party Tuesday, Dec.• at White's restaurant and IIIsecond celebration Tuesdaynight, .Dec. 11 at DominicanSisters Convent, 3'1 Park Street.

,-

GOOD wnJL CLUB: Members of Good Will Club ofSacred Heart parish, North Attleboro, distribute holidayfavors to patiertts at Rose Hawthorne Home, Fall RiveJlt.With them is Rev. Roger LeDuc, moderator.

I ',,

..-.~ ..": -

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~IIJJ~ ILA~V iOllr li'lXIlE AIi\1IG~IL$ «:1XI11JJ~(c1XI ~B:,~~ ..

I CHRISTMAS~FAIROUf' .Lady of the. ~ngels Churc~ Hall

TUTTLE A.u>.DVVELLY STREETS :SATURDAY, DEC. 1-1 p.m.-ll P.M.-two BIG EVENTS

HAM AND BEAN SUPPER-Lower Hall-6 P.M.-99c•. I

Free Coupons Given For Many Bazaar Prizes I

f BAZAAR-1-H P.M.-Upper Hall-Free Admittance - r

• . Ample Parking . I r

Greeting Cards, Toys. Gifts, Christmas Wraps, 1j40velties,Fancy Work, Dolls, Aprons, Green Thumb, Delicacies

Anything ClInd Everything for Christm~sBRING COUPON BIELOW. ENTITLES BEARER TO MANY

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~

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How do they do it, these thou­sands of people? How do theymanage to send rosaries to themissions- "

First of all, they start with' asense of dedication. Their heartsare in it, quite soon, theirfingers.

The beginner's lrJ.t comes withinstructions, materials for 10rosaries and a special pair ofpliers (tbese are precision madeinstruments that,withstand harduse). After a 'few lessons, youcan make an entire rosary inless than an hour, they tell us.

The "pros," Mrs. Hughes andthe other groups, can recoup anyold beads you might have aboutthe house, can make them intorosaries that will be pricelessthroughout the mission fields.'

Moreover, they can repair arosary, precious for its intrinsicor sentimental value, .and returnit to you. Then i1 you want tomake a donation toward buyingmore supplies for rosaries to besent to the missions, to prisons,hospitals and the like, that isup to you.

If you want to :;oin a rosary­making guild, get in touch withthis column through your ownCatholic paper.

Total 1 Dedication. to GodCo-Foun,dress Asserts Secular Institute

labor Signifies Special VocationDistrict One Sets .CLEVELAND(~C)-The see- They follow various occupations

alar institute is al special voca- and in most instances remain inOpen Meeting tion-not a half-way stop be- the same surroundings in which

tween the world: and the con- they were before admission tlGAn open meeting for all affil- vent, the society.

late members of Fall River Dis- The observation was made "It is a life of total dedicationtriot One, Diocesan Council of '. here by Marie Elizabeth Von In the apostolate of the' market-Catholic Women, is announced Str' I. h hitachotmsky who WIt tea e place," Miss Strachotinsky said.for 7:45 Thursday.night, Dee. 6 Father Karl Dink~auser,S,J., es-at St. George School auditorium, tablished the SoCiety of Our Devoted to MaryBulgarmarsh Road, Westport. Lady of the Way in 1936 in Anonymity is not strictly corn-

Mrs. Napoleon Bussiere, 'pres- Vienna, Austria. I It received pulsory, she said, but it may beident of the hostess guild, will papal recognition in 1953 and better at times for a person'sbe in charge of the social hour~ now has some 400 members in membership in the society toaided by other parish guilds. 10 countries. It h~ been formed remain unknown to the world.

A discussion on Parent-Famn:- in' See in th' U Su"¥ mne s e.. Miss Strachotinsky pointed outEducation will be presented by ,Rev. Raymond McCarthy, D~ Miss Strachotinsky came here that a mem'ber may choose hertrict One moderator and Dioc- to help seven women form a own type of apostolic work, butesan Director of the Family Life . Cleveland chapter! She said the regular reports are given to theBureau. ' . ' secular' institute ~ an invitation group's directress, and members

. to single working women who contribute a regular monthly of-'~ish Sisters To Staff want to do more, ~ut don't quite fering to the institute in accord-

know the way.' ; ance with Jr-eans.

Clinic, School in Peru Total D~eation The society is dedicated to theDUBLIN (NC)-.Four mission- "It is a total dedication to God Virgin Mary and models itself

ary Sisters have left here on In everyday iife 'and work. If after·her simplicity, submissiontheir way to staff a new school secular institutes: were better to God's Will, her inconspicuousand clinic in Lima, Peru. known, .they would answer the life and her quiet work Miss

Four Missionary Sisters of st. needs and desires qf many single Strachotinsky said. .'Columban and another who.l6 women who want Ito help in thenow teaching at a' Mexican mlS- apostolate of the Church," shesion school in Westminster, Call- said. I'fornia, will be the nucleus of the She explained that membersstaff at a school and clinic in do not live a corrtmOft life likethe Condeville section of Lima. that lived in COIl-vents, but a

The school and clinic, 88 weB close sisterly eontact among allDS the Sisters' c(mvent, which Js stressed. I 'are still being built, are in a Each member has the obliga­parish founded by Father Fintan tion of a daily ordEir of prayer onCassidy, first volunteer diocesan stipulated occasions, regularpriest from Ireland to serve m meetings, classes, days of recoI.­Lima. Father CassidY, who'. lection and annual retreats, she .

.spen~ six y'ears in Lima, is now explained. 1 .

curate in a parish in 'llullamore, Nor do members wear a dis-County Offaly. tinctive religious ~arb. she said.

'THE ANCHOR..:...Diocese of Fall.Rlver-Th"'I~·N.ov~29,'19628

Jesus-Mary AlumnaeJesus Mary Academy Alum­

nae and Parents Association willhold a Christmas party at 7:30Monday night, Dec. 10 in theacademy auditorium, Fall River·

Thousands Find Rosary~~4aking..- '. .

Pleasant, Prayerful Hobby", '-- By Mary Tinley Daly~'Rosaries, broken: whalt to do with'" was the subject

of this column some time ago. Result of that was. a list ofplaces where broken rosaries could be sent,. thanks .to 'anumber of readers. These rosaries would be repaired andsent to the missions. Onesuch letter, arriving recent­ly, gives more detailed in­formation about Our Lady ofFatima Rosary-Making Club,snon-profit organization, incor­porated in theState of Ken­tucky. Writer ofthe letter Mrs.RobE:rt E.Hughes (EileenF.Hughes),9500Boyer Place,Silver Spring,Md., gives us aclose-up ofwhat a rosary­making g u i I dis. Writes Mrs.Hughes: "We (of her own guild)would be so happy to mend andput in first class condition anyrosaries that you or your read­ers would care to send. Weshould like to incite many ofyour readers to weed' out theirbroken rosaries for a worthycause.

"Our present guild consists ofalmost 50 members and we makerosaries, for favorite or foreignmissions, sending them for theeonversion of our neighbors aliover the world. It is such are­·warding hobby, requiring pa­tience and a deep desire to dosomething for Mary, our BlessedMother. We receive our suppliesfrom Our Lady of Fatima Ros-

. ary-Making Club, 1630 SouthFifth St,reet, Louisville 8, Ky.Guilds can be formed in anyparish wher~ a hobby is weI.­eomed."

Further eontact with Mrs.Hughes reveals that this is anabsorbing and heart-warminghobby, more than a "hobby" re­ally, this making of rosaries. Shetelis of collecting broken ros­aries, of making them from·scratch, both from supplies sentby the central organization andfrom beads that accumulate inyour jewelry box and ours, iebureau drawers, even in pocketswhen a necklace breaks '" '" .'

Learning to chain rosaries Issimple, Mrs. Hughes tells us,though it seems unbelievablyeomplicated to one who tries toretrieve a favorite rosary with apair of eyebrow tweezers. Yoaget the thing squinched togetherin one spot and it breaks manother.

Frustration to the' nth. Dwould be so nice to have a 'pieceof rope, knotted into decades,as the monks did in days of yore-or even go back to saying therosary on one's own eight- fio­gers, and two thumbs.

A rosary, however, a real ros­ary, is very important, in the'mission fields and at hometucked under a pillow, for sol­ace at night at home, and forhelp during the day. In the mis­sions, throughout the world ourpriests and nuns want to 'givetheir converts a something-to­hold-in-the-hand for the count­ing of prayers, to make the ros­ary more meaningful, to helpthem as our rosaries help us.

These rosaries are worn aboutthe neck, the missioners tell us,a sort of Christian' symboLMoreover, they are carriedthroughout life and buried withthose who have cherished thissymbol. . .

Mrs. Hughes of Silver Spring,Md., and her group, along withthe other more than 400 organ­ized groups in the U. S. aremaking strong, lifetime rosariesfor countless missionaries topass out all over the world:Morethan 100,000 rosaries are sent tothe missions annually.

7

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Page 9: 11.29.62

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!oj. fkGHf, ......

SHA Alum_,AJ!mlnae of Sacred' ......

Ac:aIIt:a:!Y~'PairhaY~ "p1aa .'Cla:Wmaa 4'.iDtiIer 'PUt7 lIIIoa""Idtht, Dee. IT and a'beaD~fw J1muary. Gnduates~iufetat:atiOl! of~ Gf n_or address of f-er stu...·are aslt'ed too eentllet Mrs. RonaldDeNello, Vieira Couri, SouIIa­DiIIdmoUlllL

Sucordium Club ,,'Sets Bazaar

'Annual Christmas bazaar aM1amily .upper 01. the SoitwJrd?Club CJif S8cred 1IeartaAea~t

Fall Rivei', wID be held from 1to 9 Saturday afternoon and eve•.me. Dee. ,I. ia the acadeDll"8DeW Mldi~ Supper .....will be from 5 to 7.

Parerda, relatives aDd.· friendsfill students are inYited. io~aCcording to Mra. Stanley Boche­....~t ehai:nnMt, mad IikLlIeeer Petit, 1lO-cbai:rm:an.

Boola. lIlGChen: 'IIrill 8pOMlJr ISbootits ..~ .W8I1k willbe ...cie.~ak~'the _. M¥'ance reservatioallfar SIolPP=" ma7 be made wuh:Mn. Bocheftek or wtftt MIL''nlamu DiN'l:acci,a supper cbaiI'.--

.ftiE,~ .'".. ThVrs., Nov. -2" '1t962

......-t • --;:_ .....__ 't.... - .~

:-t~- '·<·:--·"'-;2;;:: t;:iiil

Cardinal Plans' HomeFOr WCl~CJn:J Girls

1IOS'ro1If (1fC)-l&bat'« e-­..... OtSltlq, Aft!hbitlhop orBoston, said a ".-.. lIoIIM!l.. Cirls will n!pIaee tIiM!: .....dIoce8e"s "&MIle « tile GGII'4-, etJherd- .... Oduber, ~ .

'!lie ..... W!ll'e........... • '!'be CarlliMl said Ute J'l'o.ie£tb.r .. 9t. ftt • .MaIe Pw '"is «ate m_ 1IeeIIy _tl grea1elltCIIIIIt. wIIida .... I" ,. 1IIat I Imv.e eft'rsponsond........-tar. :ftIIIIiIie eu '1IiII'eEed that u.e .ew·~ ida........................ DIJt be -=o~ by walla.' &C Mllea;. _ cII,~·makett1DDk.."1IfIIenll . , ~ .... '. ~

St..Anne AlumnaeSet YulePIQI1S

GOLDEN WBDDING.: .~. Marie IleDe. U .....,stationed. at ViDa Aopstina .Aademy. Goffstow, N.IL.~ her pueatB. •• aDd Mrs, Alphoase'Dn"'haaJt,OIl pIdea wedding obIet faD£e. Family atteDded ... ofthulrqivhc at Hoke Danae Chtm:.....· Pall River. wJieNthe, wen ..med.. LaDis E. PMv..., wIlD JBIIDiedthe eouple. .... aDlOIIg of. Jaoaor at 1JreU:fMt re-ceptioL .

ParentS' Club Ups AttendanceBy' Cutting Down on Red Tape

POIDIAIID (BC>---'A ......._V"':iIl..One- eiI;rhM 1I(Ip!d .....nre •••8PJIIbA .. iIdien!:Jt ia ...........~ adIi,Dc'" t.Pe Ilt1111.81 'f;,.

',IIISAILIDN'S,GARAGE

2~Me. W s.nc.,653 W StNet. ,F........

WY 4-SI58

. ,

Page 10: 11.29.62

'.',': •... )

14 year old there seems no endand here's a new· crop of them;,five from Hawthorn Publishers,"one from P.J.. Kenedy. All theHawthorn books are $2.9&, th4JKenedy title $2.50.

From Hawthorn, the fivebooks form a new series foryqungster, Credo Books, / an­noonced as "stories of unusualmen Imd women whose lives re­fleet the creed in which theyeach foupd strength."

Subjects are Thomas More("The Conscience of a King" b.,Margaret Stanley - WrenchHFrancis X. Ford ("To FarPlaces" by Eva K. Betz); JoyceKilmer ("Pen and Bayonet" byNorah Smaridge); Paderewsld("The' Lion of Poland" by Ruthand Paul' Hume); and FatherHugh O'Flaherty " (OperatioD.Escape" by Daniel M. Madden).

Best written are "The Con­science of a King," whioh 'in­cludes a memorable descriptio.of st. Thomas More: "All hisfriendl, his family, and every­one he met, loved him. Fot 'lMJ'himself was loving, giving out,"'.always showing an eager inter~J

est ia; everYbOdy and every'"thing, interest that was notforced or false. He entered intethe ,lives of his friends, not in­quisitively, but an understandin,which .was like a fire kindlingthem, and 'him also"; and "TheLion of Poland." Paul Hume ill

Turn to Page Fourteen

FRo TRESE

I'L FAllEBH·

¥ul.tid.Books for Tots; TeensShou,ld' Gladden -All, ·Comers

- mE·ANCHOR-D.... FaltlWer-""""".Nev. 29,1962:

E·,· '1;~'~E·""'''R··.":g.... .. I ·0"'. :1'·. '_ ,: ~. ..~. ":. ,:,:~u;, . , _. -, ',~ ,

. " ~ , .

IoOks'or",ThOseOn 'TtlresholCi

Foul' 'Suggestions'"For Uncle John

'Fun

JOAN 011' ARC: In this stn1dng photo~ph 'of, st.Theres~ of Lisieux. she portrays'another ·It&int· Of· France, .Joan of Are, in a play written by herse!! forpresentatiollto the Sisters at the Lisieux Carmel. .

Books· by Missi.oners, Books forGive Two Sides of Life in Church

What to Give Priests, ·Sisters~nnual Probletn for -Faithful· Hasn't everyone got him OR OlIJ'hreeto ee* ~"-,.so __

IUs or her list-Uncle .John (or the Old rhYlJ)e. H~. lll'e thi-.'Aunt Millie) wh() halpo,Sitiv~I.,·boobabout tbo8e getting~:v

everYthing m1don whom one has .' for .life--.il ,~l<!. wo... · l1b. ' seriQ.u, ~ ~ ,long since' e3tbautiO' all gitt." eonaide.rtlttoll~~bit ·Patoenta' aiel . ,I.,.,; ,eJtUQ,l'eD~ f&N:weIl at Chr-istmas time, .with authors~ illUstrato1'8 and publishel'llgiving insptratiOntl. This' y.eaP,' edUeatol'll'.: ,:';' - '\ . conibiniB« to tempt parenta, uneles, aunts and indulgent friends· to extravagance in thei!"try a book. The acqulaitlve Uncle First la''tf'lllilhA"~t.~ lJeok purchues. And extl'8;vaganeehere is far more worth while than in ·the flimsy toy·John·can·.t ~ve ever.y n~ one In''W~ ,~.~ S.J. aIld department, for a good book will last indefinitely, while a well-illustrated and designedthat's come out, 80 yOu're bound J. Barry McGannon, P,.J. (}'ide••, ene: is literally a ,joy forever.to be on pretty. safe ground in .I5). A slim paperbllck, it.pacb:r;naking ,a choice. And, should a Ibt of sense into its 160 pages. To start with the littlestworst come to worst, book stores Dedicated' to a high school ones, Guild Press offers a.are as reasonable as an., other mothers' club,· it .. inainlY- efi. ba.tCh of new additions to theemporiUlM, about the' Dec. 2G rec~ to DlQthel'S 1ft their-- big -''First Botlks -fOr Little Catha-:crowd of present-exchangers. .- job crt guiding· and unde~stand- lies" series. At 35 cent. each,

Vatiean Werld ing their sons. these 'firmlY bound and c(dor~

With interest in Rome 'and the The next, book teaches by fully illustl;'ated Poo}ts for ~Ecumenical Couneil at its height, . negatiJn. In presenting ease his- dreD:' froJil four ,.ears old uP~"The World of the VaticanOl by to;:iel of '~lOl I)elinqu~nt Girls" a good value and obvious choiceRobert NeVille (Harper & Row" Rev. LeO J. 'i'rel!ll' studies com- &II stoeking-stuffers: '-$4.95) is apt to strike many re':/ mon elements in their lives and The n~ books are ''The Story"sponsive chords. In clipped Time- .attempts to show, by the iner. oi Creatiol),"'"Jesus Has Risen,"Life style (the author was for' view technique, what caused "Three" ;Miracles of .Jesus," "Amany years head of th()se mag- their antisocial behavior (Fide-., Child'll Home" and· ''The Childazines' Rome office) we read of $3.95). Jesus.'". ,recent Vatican historY, the life ' Bapp,.Marrlage For slightly older childreaof John XXIll, and the impact ' "Building a ·Happy Marriage" are the "Catholic Child's Read~

, ? the present Council can be ex.'::-' by Pierre Dufoyer (Kened." With·Me" series. One dollar.pected to have on Church oper- $3.95) is the w,ork of an experi. each and clothbound, they 1:00ation. enced marriage counselor and is. are good..value, a~ from GuiJ4.

Wonderful as providihg back- directed towardll engaged girls New titlElB are "I Go to School,",ground for Rome-datelined and young wives. '"l Go to ChUrch," "Our Blessed J()h1'l Hay and Arline Stronrstories in the daily andCathQlic The 4uthor gives an illumi- M'I)thel'" and "My-' Guardia. (Doubleday, $4.95). This is _press.' ~ . nating analysis of the male Angel." beautiful, spacious book, about

"It Is His Own ,Blood" by ViR- c~acter ~d'is notably realistic • Father Daml.. the discoverY of 'cape Cod na-'ce t P M C S J (B in his discussion of the ups and .n . corry, .. . ruce, Still from Guild are two boob ture by a group of childreR$3:75) is a guide for the laymaD. dC?WDS to. be expected in any :fOr older children: "Father 1lhrou~hout one perfect Summer.Wishing tiD participlite fuU., in' SIXTY SAINTS FORGIRLS':',laeket tftU8tratioJt fer .. collection of married ~. A worthwhile Damlen' and the' Bells" by Clune, Of Biographies 'the 'liturgy . of ,the Mass; It· storiea,of.girl &nd Woman saints byJ_WiDdham "Sheed,1f; Ward, ,$8.96)' . guide to . put in, the. ,hand8 01. Arthur' and ElIzabeth SbeehaD Lovel., photographs of the .studies the prqers of the Ordi-' ~y yo~nc'~oman. - . ($2.50) and "'file Apostles" by' children in the act of dis-nary and also provides back- Dlri'othy Adams ($2.95). "Fa*hercoveringthe wondel'il arouDdground material 0Jl the k~., " :,.', ,1'\.UIi....... of' '8' ks' Damien" 'is a l't'ltelling in simple the~ complement the simply-

~:s~am~ofp~~~giJ'OD,atber~::::y..d Story of St. ,Fra~,>" ,of Rom.. e Among ,~wijiP·&le~·,.'.:... ~'~Q~'n'" ::~;ge:rf ~:iS~~~:=k~ . :~~te~ ~~c:~~:e~g:i~l ::4'""l .... .-.,,-....uc0' ".. .... :rII 7~' and '"Phe 'Apestles" telh· aga.iD'~ to pore over the pictures,

pungent style: "No Qne will ever Del! 'L"# 'C· r "C~! .", f'- £.". .JJ ~ 'n1ee I Sinl" by BishoP tIIe•.toriee Qt, __I }.I.~. to learn, unconsciously, from thepretend that it will ever be'easy .U"fitS 'O··~fJxty. ir:,m;IIitl· or 'btr.. :tJ.erlin l~ Gqtlfoyle (Academy friends;.·, text, a~ simpl., to enjoy theto get along perfedl., with the 0 , ' , ~ Librar,' GUild,' $S.'7S) is a eol" "Prayers from the Ark" la ..· sight of other .,oungsters atpests and screwballs and dim- 0R,ee 'lI'-R a time ·the.t:e:,.waa .,~, 1', umed: Franeee And' she ~km. offlllSaYll:~ ·various· u:.. \llWsuai book for small poetry home with nature. .wits and barbarians at this • - , • • . . -, , jiec!ts of1ife'in· the United"Stafe8 lcwers-. By Carmen BernoII de· Of ~iographies for the' IG •world. But, Jlt, least. we' can, ill W'U Itahan 'and she nv~ 'in Rome. , .~ .,' / by the A'l1:iiliary Bishop of Sail GaztOw, translated by Rumer'Holy Q)mmunion, eons~iously, Franees·"did·JlOt 1ik&;'_ll,,),RWl't~·.ueh;··ffBeca~,"she said, J'raaeUce (probably the OnlY GoddeA- (Viking, $2.95), it .. a..... I p ed W' I

It's one of the g:lori~ of the universal Chureh that not only. ·does she embr~.n d~liber~t.ely,~DOun~ aU bitter. ~why should I be i'km; 'Y-.'QUi.~' .... 'pOOI'i?~ .SO., although she' prelate ie, .bear...·tbe lWn.e qt, a, .oHectfon of- n poems, each a "qve s . rOY. e, e comeMrts of people and interests, turning each to goOd account, but she's~lso gifted with I\.~- and' ~ostility; we C(!l~r.e- lived ill a Grand H01l8e .a-nq:h. .1dnIt~;dre'ssedin Velvet; magician.) ..B1Sltop GmHothf., pifeyer bY' ORe of the animalll ill ..

members who can write about shoes and ships a.nd sealing' wax with charm and good solve Hain to be,kin4er. ~d , .c'" " '. . • •. '.. • • ". '. '.. a'regular eotrl:rlbutet" 110 'i!be' ~,AA:'k.....m·Ple·',...~-. Praya.. of..'--- Ch'a'nge of Pa'ce at Yule .. . A dr d "'_ ......:.. co more pati~nt t()day; we Cl8ll.in~ and her',husb~'j~,J)ad., ;'~ ~'~hea ,and she had, 'Dloeesanpaper·.~'SllnJ'raneiseo;, '_ .J.I~ 'GA' .....

humor. Two missionary S!sters of this happ,..type are Sister Marie- n e U ~-' eur cerel,;c9mlPencf;t9,God iR.Chr,ist,Twen~-three:se"&D'" she.. , '_~'clothes and go and' To the im~nt:eratUreof Ox.... gives an idea Of ita charnl.: . . _ • ..,. .. '." '.. .til the ~hite Sisters and Sis- cll<l'd. -what should I do with ~ *rvW_ aP.~ ~9U ~ng o~J~.~ ~D. even i,l it~~a littIe.tirne/, 8.11 fetch the Firewood. and· Dli&,;" ''''~'':feedtDe' Chickens and, st. Franei$' Of Assi8i MiCh8el:"de Deal': God,~ tliTe' ~. time. . , .., ... .Marla del Rey of Mary~ it?"· .. ' ''-' eXPAASive' ~uv~pjr? . ~P·t, .be " the

an"·d. 'bapesrb·ta.,arl'a~e~.au

o'uri, .:r~.·-irns.~~.~.· thiD- in their Farm 'that'tha," .··~!"tlitIe;_, 'FowD. And she ;gave' ..BedOyere· add' '~ciS" Melf are always !lO drivent· ,.,When the" Christmas rush catches up' with you, tan

lmoll. An authority o,. the' ',"You can. let: $25 . Iia·' Hon« silly,," She took it,~ ~hanced ..... .,'" ...,.. ....u .-. ...' . . .", .......,<. 'c " ". .. . (Harpel' &'Row: $8). This '" a t'Make them understand' anevel)!ing off, put your feet up, and relax with a no\1el-'life and coming to economic, Kong mOliey for .it;" S""sald., it for her. . . ' varieclaequ~jntanee. Let us be 80' away' nearly ,at! her ~Y."thu,..:~." . _,;~,- to't~e,Poor.,',J. ftry· ,i,I 'abIe~C!raiOn of'Ute .that I can never lurrry; ; Thebookstore8are flooded with them, of, eour,se,. but here,.aile of African wQ.1l\8llhoo~,su,., ~'~~t ought .to.D8i.'¥ ·some b.il1l.·.~.. '~t's. 1M!;!,bel,.J~~bl~, j~,-~ P:~~l, .,.f~itW\l1 ~J'eader. that, -,' Now there w.,a Sp~'t1URl'~'....s..'~·waa this:' she famouS: 1'ife·-of~tie"t.tttlc!'::Ml"· :",Give-' me" tUne to eat:· t W worth f h' ~ . "M rte D'U b .. 1.-'tel' Marie du Sacre-Coeur has The woman d~d J1()t believe beU"V![l,91e" the old. ,w~lJ1aD:, y:o.:rapdI ;arr-2l.\9..t~.. ~." '.'.>' could see her Guardian An~l! . . ..'" .('. Man, eti1iY'erteiPWltb·1! ·)llotC>:i ,:. Give .~ tinie 10 plod. ~re_ 0 ..... aew~urs apIece. ·0· . r an ~ ...

Produced allab80rbing ~cc.o~ her. "Ab, no.", she.. ~~,ed. "It· mut~~~ ~ lwr."lf,,~?i~g: .Qff. ' ff,e ,~ke. Jill .. read~pout,: ~~. . . . . . I'. .<' .,j •. .' ..... gra~O'f'~~aYASidsijnd ,rq:we'me.t~ ., ....~; J. F. Po\V~(Doubleday,

Ot family life Qll 1;Jle Dark Con- ill only a 8OUVeml'." ~ar.i l:r,T ,Jet' k,~llu~~ted JJeJ'r.....Jt~d. ~q ~,&II"t!nte· •. "Well, OM.dAy·~~.,~,*",. ,t..,:JIt;tIe.OIiapel-ttltat, was fA- nt'll" reproductitiM' of pairitirlls"\if!~ , GiVe ·me··tbrte to thfrilf $4.50)" is the long, awaited' 1~ characterizations of memo:.ttnent, with~ial emphiisiil on. -Hyou're.' crazy.,.. , SillUl" lirld.. wJtt:!~~.t~~b~~·.Of..·,ellice..l1f~_.t.... I.i.g,~;y"Crcm:cj,,!' '~:Q.rg~nii"'·:how!e~.d.'bepn: to,~ _ 9if·~,""'Nunado, ap~ p~tin.'·~, fro.' J'r8neW ':~hi6'ln"Jr'f?" ,.t.!·l~ first novel by' tb~autho~,of. bel's of-i,he Church are gems of.M._ ,. f i'"' - i." .....h· .......... ' ......_- ..- p...C)""gra,l)~s, e'inft1"" .(NJ.,,,:!!,,!,, tion.,~"~Qd:"The.,,:Mah."in·t.bte' 'of":..~':m·a-,'P-.'"1e.. ~dO,' ', l.~-.a........-.... ".,....'. ·.IM-Id', .f_.·ti.··.•.es for. th.m....) .;Iife. ",. \ '. ~ '-';"A':?OSii.~gto'l.un:-uaa"L.'i:'''···~; many.sho..4-....+"".;~. 'aboutth"" style.. he~her .they. will ··bit..... rOle 0 women Dew· 111'_,,~ 8111_.... __w:you -'"'. j '''kef''',n'clici''~\'' sf" G :r. I sit· it. UnA '~., . .,..--.1 -~, . ~ eo" " -...... - ...- 1'1 lunl "" n "IMLum ... agreed 'with is another matt_,Africa ("Tbe House ~tandl. terac'1~.I.. t'eUPgI_cOf_waargayw'!.: ra7, ~t'~ u prove, sh.e had to do ill tbeh0U8e:.ani ~;time..>....t. _k to,the ChaPel-"" ..... ." . .' Church and her priests. It tells. ."A Wall "or San Se'bas·tl·an" '-

P_YIn.. IlA Here, ~otber of the type - ". ' . '" '.' ".~. . . ••. M ina' de Ber . ..L' "I

I'irm," Bruce! $4).. ". ." .orne dozen youngster.. "T~e Unfinished Society""'!'t: a~ ~~ her~ers~allover .~:ffoBtAeJlegiammg, beejU8e she ,ar .',,,known to Wh A." ",.. 1,," W· , ~.hti?". '()~'g~~e i;~tah~~~~ot;l:~ William H. Faherty, S.J. (Ac~'He~ book Includes st';'-dles ,CI\f .Blithe spirits indeed are DaD Herbert 'von Borch (Hawthorn, cUd. not lIke leavU!I'off m" the ....._, . , . . Engli~-8peak1nl readers for her " y . ren,.- ' ,At, ..... demy Guild Press, $3.95) is an..

-arrlage customs religIOn and 1- • . previ$US autobiographical book r~lig~oWi 'community. Tne opin- th f' st 1 L" ,;'perstition, .mod~ educati.oD.· Htbeen:·...~dk J~l tWheell~medeitonrasme~ $:4,50). ~'I $Il o.bjective stud., C#", Just'a$l!fhe 1lad gi}tro 'the .......,... the Fifth Time she "lte~ven by the Hems," h~ Happier p.eop'.?· i~n of llis brightness is appar- ~~~w~, i~o~~~ U:;dst~~y~

d st 1 ltu d """ V.J. - theUnItedStatesbywhatthe l.--.;I·"M. 'IV ,"'w.'····· f'TJa&tl'ttieGreenP" . offefJthe joUrnal. of a 30 da.,re- ent~ynotsharedbybisbrethren.Ul an~e ra cu. re, an _. (Doubleday. $3.95). I,'s an an- publishe!'$ .. call "$Il intelligent JIeatnl~ ummy ,.IJ.lu~. ~Jum . .~.~ . , . 1 . Ig y.ou In ''The Decllne of Pleasure- Fray Leon Alastray, missiQner"penetratll~g ,,!,alysi~ of th~ pla~, thology of Catholic humor, a and observant fareign~r." . gave me last mght h8e lest~4ll1 ita ,r' Itwu.her YOWlgest little Boy treat spent 1ft a French Domin~ (Simon and SChuster,· $5) Walter who demote hilll frOIl) roving re_ the Texas-Mexico border coun-01 ~e chIld In ~Ic.a. Her con· cheerful set of commentariel! OIl :Mr. von Borch, WqQington- who wanted herA'" ~ .'" ican convent. ("Vigil in the Kerr does a surgeon'sJ'ob on our' treat and misSion giver to an', try. The tribulations of theelusIons are op.timlstIc, .her style Ufe. in tile. Cllurch. . based . . d nt 10 G ' ,,>. SUn," OO~b1eday; $3.50.) assignment at an obscure re- priest as he faces hostile Co-JleQdable and informatIve.. I·.t'- a' bit ha..vy __ ~,,_ I...... ' . ,ew~pon e. rae!'· . PootFranees Mid. to ,Our'~:1.•'•. ~f.~ ..~. Itea'. Lolrd, to keep A ballet dan~rwhoptternpted unhappy lives. He begins "I am treat house. He slides slOWly manehe Indians, the "spirituai

... - -- ~.... n..... m~ newspap~.r, shoWs Ill· Otll' ·.....'1 b t h . 't' ,-' ...~--.... . .., ....- Trappi"'"'l..... lif· uh' t' gomg to start out by assuml'ng downhill and the r'eader I'S left·Jet-A&'e Nan .' s1~, but. that's prObably to))e "irila,!i.e," as .t ~pean ~roA!". eM .~pp ng, .u 70U .~.. ' O\V 1:. !J.,': "!'-. ., ;., .,","'~ ..... '.."" . e WI' ou sue- . - problems of his people, are"S fa' b Jet" by Sister ,~_ "'~ • _ '- .lo_:Jk· celil dde to ,:. breakdown ,in her that you are approximately... to ju,dge~ wheth~ he gains hu- woven into this book by the au-

a rl y expected and isn't Ukel.,.. ill ~o""·9".we~I-QoCll~n~ " ,. w.rhat's aU ngh't," said"·OUr "':'c,li01l 0IHt. ,eui. trO'On wW lng· h~a1tb,' Marina de Berg relat..... uilhappyas I am" alid for sunil- rom.... in the process.MaI'ia del Rey (Scribners, $5.95) hurt sales. Arnong oqntributors Tuna t.e P F urteea ~ h'l btl' .!:- :;.... _. Li.... IP ~D is' h i·~ thor of "The Destiny- of Moderaia a breathless bird's-eye view are the ever.durable G.K. CheS- '. age o· . . lIII' me W I e you ~ us rng"f. ,.'_uua8e. . in het,new book the spiritual c ive pages e exam nes the Throughout, Ppwers' rapier-·, Woman."of Maryknoll activities in ~~n- terton, Phyllis McGinley. Jean So Frances mended th~: ·G~(~and·~wentbMk. ,to the Chapel. refle<:tions she had during her' patient, diagnoses the ill, andganyika, Ceylon. the PhilIp- Kerr, Bruce Marshall, Cornelia Christmas. Book And 'there she J~aw her G\lardi... ·.~"_tirr.. ifttthautiful Shining, ~:~~~ month in. a secluded con- ::~~i~es. in all hUmility, trea$-pines, it 0 n g K 0 n g, Taiwan, Otis Skinner and several hauds- Gold Letters in her prayerbook: t&Jli8,,'W'Ofda~ f!Propterea benedixit te At the end she writes "This This is not a new book, Iia

'Korea, Japan and the Pacific ful more. Likely to please any· Relates Legend .. . - th th' t·t Deus in aeternum. . . J, J'oy I've received in such large e sense at It oesn't belongTrust Terrl0rY. one when tucked under his tree to the FatFall Riverites will be inter~ .._ a cure for the post-Chris"--s "The Flowering Hawthorn" b., Which means: "Therefore God,. b1~"'ou forever." measure, this certainty about· 1 crop. ut was pub-

..., ...- , J You this love teach m te llshed earlier this year. but it •ested in mention of several mis- doldrums. HUIJD Ross Williamson, il1~s- And those were the very Vf'.'~ Joi.anees kept going te say spre~d them abroad libe:al''', a book that belongs on the read-lIionaries from the Diocese, Brother Juniper trated by Clare Leighton (Haw- . ·1it....__ J v ing l' t 'visited by Sister iii the course of J'atherJustinMcCarthy.O.F.M. thorn, $3.50) reJiltes the leg~nd when she was in~ted alrtho":~~ .' . . United to Your fountain spring; " IS of every thoughtful maaher trip with the Maryknoll • no stranger to the Diocese. Of the coming of J'oaeph of Ari- "Why has- Qodblessed' me·?~!·,. .. "kedthe~Angel 141 thought may ~ fiQ9<!...~ entire. wor14 and :woman.Mother General to all the poin~ having lectured and given a JDathea to England. He Jni.lltn't like me ,oin.r away'"J,a~Him so ~ten."· . with thill :1'~0UI" .w~~e: ~~a.:d=~ ,liSted above. lightning drawing _ibition vthjlepr~eltingto the people "Because YOUwe:re ~'Ra . , " ~t .um~lW .Qth~rs that yoWl ..:'.:I.. Trapp••t autho.. r Father' ua..enA.,of, I., 1, that the

The journey toO~'eightmontM ~' here on.at least one occasion. Hit OIl Chrit¢rnasday, he prayed-fOr mindtG 'bein ·l~ted.. ,IP sah\." .' /j.•• ?. ,,' Ra~'::'''ond''''' Offer.:s...... "_~1. .. _" cour'- laek ofcont:;pi;ti;, is at the··and Sister'sllote'book and, DOMINICAN poET: Bro. "Whimsical' World ot Brother a sign t()'CODvln(:e 'them 01. the g '_:'&'1f¥ ,.. . , ", ,,- _ w.

eamera were obviously not idle Anton'inu8, Dominican lay JURi~' (DoUbleday, $1) .. a truth of hlit words, and the staff ·ifi.··:· .....,., ::., .('D...~.:~.e~o··..·.. ··reapJa·:i..Ycf. !t,n.·r~_." ~·:~tbM.f'nltJdt~. ~nt.~*:n.~::..L.D!.~·• single day. In kaleidoscopft brother at at. Albert'. Co~ collection of eartoo~ about aaJrehad·tbruet'1n-theg~nallu,,~ _u~. _JO~: I ...,....".....,....... ~ . ~A'" ... """"'-"-'1 h .......-ibe th _. b.... ~--~ 'bl F ancl __..- b......h ...._1_ took ....... _ ...lI ~~~, at ,etsht CaijIo:uc. whoSe. MUJ' shoUld be of God, but it is diIfi;,...;dso:n:s -;;;;or~ ofemi:io'; lege, Oakland, ,calif.. and ;~dr::~ ~~e ;;Uex~:il::t .;..1'''''' ...~auurlJi· unw· ·F·.Mm.··.,·. I'J', ~.~.,.,...A.O.·..... of testing fo\nid them .equal to e.ult ~ lee h.ow anyone wbo·qn,.tations, not omitting humorous former ··beatnik," offers CThe s~king gift for many and mal1J.' HawtbOrttl descended :fr~ •v. r'\~y~ . th~4C'eaaion., ." • .' > • , ~t. ap~ of 1$.....

anecdotes. su$ .asthe story of Hazan. ~ Holines4!l,' saying a rea,'der. _... -.at ~Stilrgrew'at Glastc)n.. _........' '.' ''''"-''.''~_'''''' .1:.-':~. ,L--', ~"..~ .. ' '.fb~e ill ~. _Ie of· Joan, • plating "the gOOd, the trUe, th.h 'lwo.. . 'U' bloo ... -. - ""0Ui1 ..-_. --.,.,. n."..... Who fOun.·d out that i.he. ~utiful" c:.ould end allYWhete• bus driver who stopped i. of the poem8 it eont&ins, "1 +'ypicltl Juniperlsms: he Jtu'.. buty .-onastery, and m ~., ' '...0.-:.:..::::.... '. " : ....;. .' .'''. '.'," ,•...;..•..•..' ,.,... . . b" t th .. t of' ~~~ .....te..,;.. b ~- to ff ... . 0 full h h Dei ',. ........1_"--_. d G'l-"'~b"- j':'c" _.-u . - '. .', !la.4¥.OdIlJPW,s di-ease; alwe:..""s \1.. a e "ee Vi"A&4!'V nee,.

v ... to ~~::CO~;.h t h~er - know that within. me . the ~:r a boU: ::t,8walf:m:: .'it"·-fu' x't bi-;; ~". _,,,,c'~" bladE hew _ :~~l\ .~~' yet ~t,ipu~ lJ,e't. Il{.lti;e . . SoW. Kerr haa done all of _.~g=:orro:';ed'lOaeents~ Christ ,tirs ana' straightens, at::'d:neel'" 01' ~avet ~;wen ;ith ltte.~_ ~;tbee~:r." :. ..'i/. .iQ~n~t49~j-' .' •.... , ; .." '; .'""" 1l1e as long -.. no!!llible, say as a service. ;fIe"bas pointed, In.a.. to buy the coconuts." steeling .the soul '110 aehieVe to' Churchgoers with "'See :10tl' ··.,Englld1tL . .J' ',·aW·..tOIle ~new~_' tile :~"" eYel7 other youngster around way that the most 1n'eliffious

IIi H.ong Kong she tells of all a vjctoryno poem can .eel.. :people next week: same time, ~ tale, half 'legend, half, '... '~'. ~.. . ... ".. '< ,heT.-wlU findaeceptable, to TrUth...JI... d hi.... . la ,.. ~.4-10 ,- l~ 1.. • ~_... '-- -..' , ,,~, ·i:......."'- ",,'. iJ'Jiere/is the accQunt of·; the He will. undoubtedlv lead DlQr__ Ia y w 0 sid e4 up lOt a bra'te, lio demon. de,n,T. 'Let srune p ce, '-.me sermon.· ....",_.' m.ov~g•.·presezr~ &I, _ pdnfuI .....p1\v.....-.. 'au ~. ,-"Mariknoller~ "My SOD k ill an th ' I' I 1.':' tiff Ga~ ruef!1lI'Y at a eheck, he' •• Willianisoi lhd beautifullY.. 'Ito'''' tbe._~ vJUh_,..-p~ts~ho discovered their all the way home._er!ca," she said. "Fall River, '. ese sea p OC.11U5 S . eJI ~. "It', the biggest eon:tr'lbu- -Illustrated. 'bJ' Cl8re Letgb~' , ~ftoQ.. ,. '0< • ,,,t '" , ,,: '~1 . ~w-bot:ll b. Was a ,~,gol- • Acquired ' an d .tho~ttUnJ'Massachusetts. He sent me this!' with my blOO<'l. I am dOu tioawe_.'.ver 'receiVed, 'but ·,.&Hcwooctoulrl~ eo_ *.and..o/.~,~etQr:wbQ leet ~. 'ii' khard'to iee ·ltow _• ",as $4- taped 10. E::hrutInM· with· them."·. ·...~....",....';GcJ•..,~",n,ti'i...._;.. ~,,·V"l':·~,,!;):'~·v'."........ ,"'IIIe.Bti7......,~ ~.....".,...~ .. Tl1m~,;p.... ,.......,.".,.,.. ; book.oaa.-iaU,-,io....'...... i;;..'

·Whalt to give priests and Sisters f.or Christmas· .hardly ranks with ~aj~r, pt"ol(lemstonironting.the Church, but just the same'it ~·be an annual and.pcutpiexing:probIem,for parents, friends, student.$ and parishioners. Book'S a~eoften the happy solution:to,$QC:h4ifficulties and a new and appropriate erop appeaJ:'S eaeh year., as surely as the ·Yuletideeaason. Devotees of the Lit-

" tie Flower can hardly help. J.ut rejoice in the la:te~t The­."sian volume, "The PhotoAlbum of St. Therese of Lisieux"(Kenedy; $12.5P). In meticulousaetail it reproduces and de­eeribes pictures of the saint fromthe age of three until the'timeet her death.

The illustration on tlrls pageet Therese a~ Joan of Arc in aeonvent play written by herselfis among the most striking.Otber pictures show her amongher fellow Carmelites at work inthe convent laundry.; and attimes of recreation and manuallabor such as haying. The un­.sual number of pictures of acloistered community is ac­eounted for by the filet thatCeline, Therese's sister, Made ahobby of photography and waspermitted, when she enteredreligion, to bring her equipmentwith her.

Spiritual Reading"My Life· with Christ" by An­

tlbony:1. Paone, S.J. (Do.ubleday, .".5Q) is subtitled SpiritualM~ltations for the Modern Reader.Arranged in brief sectiOIl&,. f~the running reader, ,so to sp~..-cl!. meditation incl.Udes a q.uo-

Turn to Page Fourteen

Page 11: 11.29.62

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The deh an becomJac richer, the pour_;~'~.WbiJe ... tlCJUJdlr7 has eDACh ...,. ........... sultmarine. ...... eo _.... .. 'of calldks. iDdicatfng te low , .......lmJllIt'''" .....,... ttl the poIII' ~ e(' .......

'began al 'Oar front door ana tnv~ .. _. '. I ....nIto they ..... etNk'tlle It not '1... _ tIIiae.t - ••'... greater tIIreat II .. .-ee tI. ...........b.

.............ft ..................... .... ....,. MiVI eer willi&! AM.... ..,. ...... Is Win" ..-.. wi8 ......~~ " GM.......-e ...~~_W 1 ...."._... 1De ....., ............

TJle psychologleal law :w4dch .... to be opeoatiac til ..'the world is no"" divided·1Dto two camps: u.o.e wIIo lM:k""'"thing and,' thoI.e who waat eveQ't1aiD8.Among thoee who 1edt ID87 be grouped 17out of 21 of u.e poorest c:ountries, widellcontain one-haIf of the world'. populatioR.Yet tbe.e poor countries halre oaly aiDe percent- of the world's total iDeome. On theodIer b.aDiI are tile ut rk!bieIIt countries iD.tbe world, wiSh l' per e-.t ~' the world'.popuIatioa and ill per ceat of'the worId'aiocome!

FrQDl a apiI'itul pOlDt of view, DO BI!IIl 'beeaa-e lie .. ridI. _ • 110 maD. ~.-•• _ paw. fa tile parable Gl! LvIte 1\II!Iad:~.,.:a~!'fda _ oace '" c:Io8led ill pwrple ......~ ....,. dar. AM tIlieIIe wu a ~ ..._ ........vaed. .... -ea, a.t_ ~, ..fIoom the erumba .. tell *'- the ddt ., ........tV te lift __ .. JIim; tJIe~ :............ "!'lIe .of 1Jaal -.ere tIIIel latw_.. ...... eftIT a.e olber __ .~,~" ....,_ "IIID'OW. '1'be 4tffeaeMe CIlat the DOor ...................... euaQ. 11M: rida IMiked 1Ih;1rt~ "'" _,~,,"... ill 11M: power of Ihe rietI _0 tit feecI ...'~ ,...-_~-__ the'Coapel .... 1--' ktae AI ..ra'&.

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Page 12: 11.29.62

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Father O'ConnorPaulist Director'Of Radio, Films

NEW YORK (NC) - Oneof the country's best knownjazz authorities is a tall,prematurely w hit e-hairedPaulist priest who has arrivedhere from Boston.

He is Father Norman J.O'Connor, C.S,P., jazz colum­nist, disk jockey and padre tosome of the country's mostfamous jazz musicians.

The Detroit-born Paulist, who'recently completed a stint asCatholic chaplain and NewmanClub director at Boston Univer­sity, has been named director o1lradio, television, and films fhrthe Paulist Fathers' communi­oations division. In his new posthe will develop the productionand consultant features of thedepartment while continuing hisown jazz radio programs heroand in Boston.

Offbeat AlIIOSooBl/,teA practiced defender of jlll~

and jazzmen, Father O'Connorhas devoted a good part of hiBpriestly life to what is possiblythe most offbeat apostolate inPaulist history _. incarnatingChrist in what someone hQfloolled "the underworld of jazz."

"Jazz has no morality," heemphasized during an interviewat the Paulists' offices here. "Ifa listener thinks jazz is immoral,it's because he brings to it re­membered associations, suoh 811a pretty girl in a slinky dress,undulating dancers or peopleover-indulging in prohibition­era speakeasies. The memorymay say 'immoral,' but the musieean't be. In itself, one musicalnote is exactly like another."

In addition to his jazz sho_here and in Boston, FatherO'Connor w r i t e s a weeklycolumn on the subject for theBoston Globe, has written forMetronome and Downbeat mag­tlzines, and is one of the foundereand directors of the Newport(R.I.) Jazz Festivals.

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MeanWhile, as Rome continuedto be drenched by its third weekof steady rain, Pope John keptup his busy pace as the' Shep­herd of the Second VaticanCouncil. He has been receivingln audience the bishops of thedifferent countries (includingthis week those from the USA),visiting sick cardinals, droppingin at the Roman seminary, cha~ting with silken-clad delegatesof a Buddhist monastery, andhonoring with a special stateaudience the political leader ofJapan, Prime Minister YoshidaIkeda.

Bark of PeterBack in the Council sessioDll

the, bishops are now discussingthe Communications Media, thatis, the press, radio, movies and

- television. The amended draft·on the liturgy has not yet cometo the floor for a final vote.

But for the time being theCouncil Fathers seem contentwith the calm seas under theship of Vatican II· And many ofthem are saying that their voy­age over the past six weeks hasgiven them "sea legs" for what­ever choppy weather the :futuromay bring.

A new wind of hope has sud­denly sprung up on the See ofPeter. Under its gentle urging,In unity and charity, the Bark ofPeter sails on.

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submit in due course the DeW

project for the examination andvote of the Council Fathers."

Informed sources gave tworeasons for the Pope's action:first, that to keep alive themuch-attacked draft would havebeen an anomaly, since a solidmajority of the Fathers wereagainst the proposal but forcedby the vote to discuss it; andsecond, that it would have beena practical impossibility to reachagreement on so unpopular IIproposal.

The reai significance of theHoly Father's intervention, Itwas felt, lay in the broader baseof the new commission, espe­cially the inclusion of the Sec­retariate for Promoting Chris­tian Union. The chances seemexcellent that Cardinal Bea, thehead of this new cabinet post inthe Church, will himself sit 00:the commission.

Pope Really BusYThe news of the Holy Father's

sudden move was received withenthusiasm In many quarters.Students of the Pontifical Bibli­cal Institute had special causefor rejoicing; for the moderntechniques of understanding theBible, which the Biblicum Bndother advanced school are using,received at least a temporaryvote of confidence. 'Until nowthe Biblicum has been underheavy attack for its progressivemethods of understanding andexplaining the Sacred Scriptures.

The following day, In what ap­peared to be a new lease on lifeas much as a scholarly event, ayoung German Jesuit defendedhis doctrinal thesis at the Bib­lical Institute before a packedhouse that included cardinals,hundreds of bishops, and thou­sands of priests and laity. FatherNorbert Lonfink, S.J. master­fully explained the "GreatCommandment" from the Bookof Deute.F6nomy, exemplifyingthe latest techniques in scrip­tural interpretation. His brilliantdefence was awarded a movingovation.

Holy Father's InterventionSchema on Revelation To Be

; __~_.c.......,.

CHAT OUTSIDE LORETO BASILICA: The Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop ofFall River, and Rt. Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros, diocesan chancellor, pause for a few sec­onds to discuss their observations outside basilica in Loreto. Msgr. Medeiros, pastor ofSt. Michael's parish in Fall River, is at the Ecumenical Council with Bishop Connolly.

Continued from Page Onemission) was sharply attackedby many Council Fathers as

,"out-dated, offensive to non­Catholics, lacking a pastoralspirit, too negative, and theo­logically one-sided." For threesolid days the big guns of the"'loyal opposition" were trainedon this decree-draft.

Vote to RejectNever were the good inten­

tions of the authors of thisschema questioned. The opposi­tion felt, in fact, that theselearned men had worked in­tensely to come to grips W!thwhat they thought to be thetheological dangers of the 20thcentury. Nonetheless, it wasjudged that the net result wasoffensive in tone and expressedeonclusions that all could notaecept.

During these three days of de­bate, scriptural and theologicalexperts held countless briefingsessions for the bishops on thelatest advances ln their respec­tive fields. As one bishopre­marked, "It is like going toschool all over again!"

That intensive schooling paidrich dividends. When, on thefourth day, the Council Fatherswere asked to vote on acceptingor rejecting the decree-draft, itwas rumored (L'Osservatore Ro­mano for the first time failed topublish the actual figures of thevote) that a very comfortablemajority voted to reject theschema. However, since the two­thirds majority required byCouncil rules was not attained,it seemed that the discussion ofthe controversial schelNl wouldhave to continue.

Unpopular ProposalAt this point Pope John

stepped In. Ruling that the pro­posal on the Source of Revela­tion be put aside, the pontiff(evidently wanting to avoid awarming-over of the sameschema) ordered that a specialcommission be formed to rewriteit.

The official daily bulletinspelled out the make-up of thisrommission and its mandate:"By the wish of the Holy Father,1:herefore, this Commission will'be composed of several cardinalsflnd members of the TheologicalCommission and the Secretariatefor Promoting Christian Union.It will be the task of this com­mission to rework the project onthe Sources of Revelation, mak­ing it shorter and placing great­er emphasis on the general prin­ciples o:f Catholic doctrinealready treated by the Councilc:": 'X'Yem and the First 'i1atico~

Cm.1.:."rlclJ. 'lL'hD ·~mm.~csic::'. t":ri21

J?ll'oblems fm- Society

~lic pointed to underlying'\V('oknesses within the schoolnYHtems which bring about earlydeparture from school and, inthe long run, bring problems toI:nclcty in terms of employmentinH('curity and thereby hinderfue progress of the nation.

"All the studies in the field,"he auid, "indicate that the youngr:':i',::l:,l drops out of school most­J;:;y because he does not findlIiI1enningful courses of instruc.­tion.'"'

Ere also noted that his observa­'i:fton did not overlook the factthat some drop out because they~ mot have the ability.

~~Iish Bishop Diesl,0~ .RLIN (NC) - Word has

lhec:n received here of the deathef Aaxillary Bishop Franclszek:g~X"[;xynski of Wloclaweh, Po­lC::i1cl. He was 69.

E1!,; cmperienc0S m a Nazi con­G"!t,'[ltiOI1 camp were the theme

r l;c~~» c;,G~;~: ~~':; ::~:~::J f~:-1

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Defends RecordAgainst Reds

CINCINNATI (N C) - '!'beNational Student Association isin l100 forefront of the worldbattle against eommunism, ac­cording to Dennis Shaul, 1960firoduate of the University ofW",t?C Dame, who heads the~troversial organization.

Shnul, a member of St. Vin­rent's parish In Akron, Ohio,und I) Rhodes scholar who justcompleted two years of studyin ~onomics at Oxford Univer­sity, cpoke at a leadership con­ference sponsored by the XavierUniversity stu den t council.Xavier and the University ofDayton are recent affiliates ofthe NSA, which has been underfire by extreme rightist groups,Shaul reported.

lli an interview, Shaul attri­buted the opposition by theseRroups to their dislike of cer­rom stands taken by the or­[\/:miDntlon.

Lists StandsNSA favors Federal aid to

education, ihe said, and was ancoX'ly supporter of independence~a Algeria. The association waseritlcnl of the House Committeeon Un-American Activities andau/'lgcsted that its work becurried on by the Senate Judi­~iary Committee.

Other stands taken by theNSA, which includes the studentooulll1:ils of more than 400 col­lcf,cs and universities, aboutone-third of them Catilolie in­stitutions, IncludEr.

Condemnation of melal dis­G'imination; opposition to theC~ regIme in Cuba; insis­~cnce upon the autonomy 01.West Berlin, and condemnationa1 ~e Hungarian government'slrestrictions on student thought[lnd octivity.

Shnul, who expeots to enterHa?vard law school next fall,kd ID group of American stu­~CI:lt"J who arganized anti-eom­Dumat demonstrations at the{C;O:Mllil1unist Youth Festival at~c1D!1ilki in the past year.

Useless CoursesCause SchoolDrop-Outs

SCRANTON (NC')-Lacltof meaningful \ instrUction~UUJlfSes is a main reason f()rf1~hool drop-outs these days,I"T:.mcis X. Quinn, S.J., seminar­ton ond author, declared here.

M ... Quinn, a student at Wood.ntoch: (Md.) College, is the au­~hor at the recent book, "The];·:thicul Aftermath of Automa­Hon." He spoke at a ScrantonChamber of Commerce meetingIn! the economic aspect of schooldropouts.

"Th~1 United States does notyet oppreciate that education.\llUHt be transformed from an ac­'i:~vity of childhood and early ad­<olcHC~l1ce to a lifetime effort if~hc country is to have the skillsxx-'quiTed for a growing economynnd strong defense structure,"1~K) r;~minarian said.

Page 13: 11.29.62

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Win ImB)!roveST. LOUIS (NC) - Music

in Catholic churches in theU.S. isn't at a very high levelat present but it is going toimprove, a noted~ Catholic musi­cian said here.

'l'his is going to be the casebecause the c h u I' C h g 0 e I' isgradually I' e que s tin g bettermusic, said FloI' Peeters, a Bel­gian composer and organist whohas written eight Masses andhundreds of liturgical and choralpreludes.

Peeters, who is the oganist andchoir director at M e c h e lencathedral in the Antwerp pro­vince of Belguim, is' appearingbefore Catholic and Protestantaudiences on a concert tour ofthe U.S. In St. Louis he gavea private conCEn before thefaculty and student body of theLutheran Concordia Seminary.

'Not, Very High'

"You know the, level of musicin the Catholic Church in thiscountry has not been up to avery high s tan d a I'd," saidPeeters. "But good religiousmusic in the Ullited States isgoing to be much better incoming years.

"And it must b<'l. I think we in. the Church have to do the verybest we can. We make our musicto sing to the Lord. So it shouldbe the best possible."

Peeters has built his liturgi­cal music around the Gregorianchant and is one of the firstcomposers of this century towin wide acclaim for his ef­forts in !his direl~tion.

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Pap«d AcademidanCOPENHAGEN (NC) - Top~

flight nuclear scientist' NielsBohr, who died at the age 'of77, was one ot the original mem­bers named to the PontificalAcademy of Sciences when PopePius XI revived it in October1936. .

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] 0} ~~@ ~1i(d)~~S'We Give Gold Bond Stampll'

I

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@lliJ@ rrtl'®ti' @~ ~fJ)@k~Continued from Page Eleven

them to consider their daughtei"as their "through-ticket toheaven.~

There is the life history of thefather of nine children, strickenwith paralytic polio, who livednine years almost completely im.mobile, offering himself to Godthroughout the long days andmonths.

All the stories add togetherto give a picture of what soulsin love with God can do and so£.fer for Him.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of fan River-Thurs. Nov. 29, 196~·

Continued from Page Elevenknown as critic who drew the ireof Harry Truman for his criti­cism of Truman's daughter'ssinging. He writes gracefullyand well.

Also by Eva Betz is theKenedy book, "Fanny Allen."

,Mrs. Betz is of particular inter­est to Fall Riverites as a nativedaughter. Her literary output istremendous and she also holdsa fulltime job in Catholic pub­lishing. Her new book tells thestory of Fanny Allen, one ofthe first American nuns.

st. OlafSt. Olaf of Norway is the

subject of "The King's Men" b;VAlan Boucher (D 0 ubi e day,$2.95). For boys 10 to 14, thisis a wild tale of battles andgore.

Also for boys is ''Book forBoys" by Leo J. Trese (Fides,$2.95). In chatty style, FatherTrese hammers home a numberof important truths. Using theframework of Knights of theAltar meetings, he puts his im­aginary youngsters in situationsthat call forth responses worthyor unworthy of altar boys. Mostboys, especially those who serveMass, will get a lot out of thisbook.

$WJ@®~~ti'~@U1l$ ~@r? ~®~fl®Q@M~Continued from Page Ten Godfrey Poag~~ C.P. (Bruce,

tation from scripture, a medita- $3.25); and "St. Ignatius Loy­tion on the lesson to be drawn ola" by Francis Thompsonfrom it and a prayer asking that (Academy Library Guild, $1.25).,the seed thus planted may grow "St. John of: the Cross" is aand prosper. This book will be straightforward biography of theespecially helpful to those hav- great Carmelite mystic which il­ing occasion to give spiritual ad- luminates both ,his ,own life andvice to the young. the times in which he lived.

Particularly appropriate at Msgr. Cristiani is lawwn as aChristmas time is a book devoted teacher and hagiographer andto St. Joseph and "Joseph the in this book he has added to hisSilent" by Michel Gasnier, O.P. laurels.(Kenedy, "$4.50) is a happy dis- In "Son of the Passion" Fathercovery. Poage commemorates the cen-

The author is a well-known tenary of the death of GabrielFrench scriptural scholar and Francis Possenti, St. Gabriel ofpreacher. In this book he has the Sorrowful Virgin. Nameddrawn on the Fathers and Doc- "patron of \Youth for the Univei'­tors of the Church, as well as on sal Church" by Pope Benedict'historical sources, but primarily XV, this young Passionist had ahe has gone to the Scriptures for life that began, in many respects,his prayerful appreciation of lilte, that of 3; modem.. youth..Joseph.' ,He was a popular teenager

He salutes the silent saint as known to his companions as "na model for the man of today, as Ballerino" and "n Damerino"an example of the contemplation the dancer and the dude.that is the wellspring of action. He recognized his vocation

A blueprint for achievement after some years of gay living CHOlll!~ jAT SHRINE: Portugal's Ambassador Pedroof the sort of life Joseph led is and entered the strict Passionist Theotonio Pereira,- right, completes arrangements for theoffered by Rev. William McNa- order, despite family opposition. American de~ut next Sunday of the' famed all-male Orfeonmara, O.C.D. iIi. "The Art of Then, "in the short span of five Ch' f th U' . CoBeing Human" (Bruce, $3.50). years, he achieved sainthood... . Oll" 0 . e I mverslty of imbra, Port.ugal, at the Na-"The saint is one who lives life not by doing extraordinary tional Shrme, of th~ Immaculate ConceptIon, Washington,to the hilt," declares Father things- but b~' dQing ordinary' with Msgr. 'Uhomas. J. Grady, shrine director. Looking onMcNamara; and he develops the things extraordinarUY well" is Mr. Day iThorpe, Washington representative of Freeidea of living as whole human His death carne as 'a result 01 Concerts Fotindation. NC Photo.beings in order to be holy. tuberculosis and shortly there- I'

He examines the building after his fame spread, and can- 'blocks of the spiritual life and it onization came in 1908. Father Re8~~ious liberty Firm ,Proncip"eis his achievement to make con- Poage regrets that he is-so little ~ I •templation seem not only a good known in the United States and Continued 40m Page One there is a cultural and psycho-but a necessary thing for every hopes that the present book will College and ~ormerly of st. logical irreconcilability betweenman who wants truly to live. help rectify this. Louis (Mo.) University, long- wholehearted belief in Catho­The abundant leisure time of- Not a new book, but a paper- time author and speaker on so- licism as the true Church andfered by modem technology is back edition of a very old one is cial questions. i . . .. an unstrained acceptance ofexamined with a view to putting 'st. Ignatius Loyola" by famous' They spoke at sessions of tllt! a society offering religious free­it to sensible, worthwhile use, poet Francis Thompson. A pref- 'first national ibstitute on reli- dom to all must have as its pre­and Father McNamara closes . ace by James Brodrick, S.J. cor- gious freedom ~nd public affairs mise the expectation that anwith a stirring plea to those re- rects some errors of fact made sponsored by the National Con- authoritarian' religion cannotsponsible for youth not to per- by Thompson, but concludes: ference of Chri~tians and Jews. adjust itself to a democraticmit them to wander in a rock "Wrong on many minor details Some 120 clergymen, educators, political order."end roll world when they could and attributions, he was glori- sc;>ciologists and! others attended "That expectation has 'beenbe alerted to great things. _ ously right in his general appre- the four-day meeting. nullified . . . by the perform-

Henri Daniel-Rops , ciation of the Saint." Msgr. Ellis, speaking at the ance of American Catholics"There is hardly a reference For magnificence of style, for opening session: of the confer- he added. '

shelf that will not welcome an ~nrlerstanding of Ignatius ence, declared that the principle'"'Daily Life in the Time of Jesus" that soars beyond pedestrian de.' of Church-State! separation is anby the great French scholar ,tail, this book is worth giving . integral "part o~ Catholic think-

. Henri Daniel-Rops (Hawthorn; having and reading.' '; ing in this coulltry." /$6). ' ' "In the, world society as we

. This is a study of the land and f@!f If@(l[]r l!l~~B@ find: it today, nothing is more

.people that produced Christ, to- . vital to the prin~iple of religiousgether with an examination of Continued from Page Ten ' freedom than that very separa-the "political, economic, selen- pages. Not quite so readable as 'tion," he said. I 'tific and cultural currents of soine similar studies that have Tracing the support of U.S.the time." appeared, it's nevertheless are-,' Catholics for rE!ligious freedom

The times of Our Lord are wardir-g book. . and Church - State separationmade to live for the reader, Mr. von Borch has quite a bit from colonial d~ys to the pre-down to such details as games to say about the romantic; office 'sent, Msgt:. Ellis! said:

. children played, the women's of President of the United States "What the Cktholic of 1962, 'habit of wearing small perfume but another new book, "Portrait would ask of hi~ fellow Ameri­

vaporizers in the sandals and of a President" by William Man- cans, of Protestant and Jewisheommon treatments for :najor chester (Little; Brown, $4.75), and of no religiOUS affili~tion isand minor ills. The author's rep- has even more to offer, mainly that they judge Ihis Church by'Oltation vouches for the accuracy about the present incumbent. 'its record. 'in' th~ United Statesof his research. Foll' Demoorats and not m Spain or Colombia

New Biographies His book is for confirmed 'or an!, other icountry whereA trio of biographies of saints Democrats sinee it breathes a Cathohcs form a, majority of the

are offered by as many pub- wholehearted admiration of population." Ilishers: "St. John of the Cross" John F. Kennedy. "He is many Father Duff told a later ses­by Leon Cristiani (Doubleday, men," declares MancLester. "He I sion that "the 'su~gestion that$4.50); "Son of the Passion" by is a patrician and n politician' fO) '.JIo 0 I. 'iRllLn

~ is both a field commande;, 1.Q)@li1l@(Q]O~frO!lili@ ~llllu@\l'@\!lT@U'~ @rru~ if®@[Ji)~ and a scholar. He shuns emo- Oblates of St, Benedict and

tional displays. yet h. is moved their friends wIll meet at St.by poverty, and when he is Vincent's Hom~, North Maiiilcrossed he is a Tartar. Street, Fall RivE!r, at 7:30 Tues­. "He is jocose, but under the day night, Dec. 4­

facade there is, though scarcelysuspected, a darl: vein of sadness.Although, he is astonishinglycandid no one can keep a secretbetter. Despite his intellectual­ism, he is disdainful of academ­ics. Despite his disdain for re­formers, he has a vision of, anda plan for, global freedom.Statesmen w:ho have spurned themob stimulate him, but noPresident has cultivated thecrowd so assiduously, and in himintroversion and extrovelllioncoexist."

Page 14: 11.29.62

1S

WY 3-2783

108 JnmenStreet

nenr UnionNewBcdford

THE ANCHO!'l-Thurs., Nov. 29, 1962

PiMV~('I lBocm t4ND MiSSAlA CHOiCe OF

FINE SINDINGS,$3.S0-$tj.7S.$G.SO.~ i 0.00.$' 2. 50

Brlclall?':ilion in WfliiO Leathor: $15

II your locol boof;~~o,o cannel .upplytou, Vlrilo 'or tlomo' of ncorosl doo/.,.

-aft¥j?1 THE:\\t.If:\1TREASURED·::::t~:::j

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GIFT

The KEYSTONEonke fEquipmei1t

S@l~~~lI'oom

Ni:W A~D USIECWood and Steel Desks and chairs:steel filing cabinets. loelcers. shelv­Ing, tablca. storago cabinets. onf"".wardrobe:J. ete.

BAR~ERO/S

PIIZA·PATIOIOUTE 6, HUnLESON AVE.

Near Fairhaven Drive-InItal"", Dinners Our Specialty

Service Oa Patio

H@~y N0Jme MenH@n«V8' MemoryO~ F~Mlm~er

NEW ORLEANS (NC)­More than. 700 Holy Namemembers attended the dedi­cation here of a shrine inhonor of Blessed John of Ver­celli, a Dominican who foundedthe Holy Name Society in 1274.

The shrine, built at a cost at$16,000 from donations of HolyName members in the NewOrleans archdiocese, is in St.Dominic's Church. The church'spastor, Father Edward L.Hughes, O.P., said it will be­come "a rendezvOUS for prayer­fullaymen" and "a new pilgrim..age attraction."

The shrine altar is made 01Belgian black marble with abr.onze and glass reliquary at thecenter. Atop tlle reliquary is 11

life-size statue of Blessed JohnVercelli, made of white Italianmarble.

The reliqual'y, which containsa section of Blessed John's walk­ing stick, was designed b.,­Father A. A. Zarlenga, O.P. Thestatue was executed by O. Pala­dino Orlandini of Rome.

Home madeCANDIES

CHOCOlATES

1SO Varieties

ROUTE 6 near

fatrhavGI'l Auto Theatre

FAIRHAVEN, MASS.

Dorothy Cox

o

Cath@IDlt TeachingCLOUGHJORDAN (NC)­

Junior ministers of the Metho­dist Church in Ireland aremaking a special study of Cath­olic teaching.

The program was announcedby Rev. Kevin McNamara, pro­fessor of dogmatic and moraltheology at St. Patrick's Collegein Maynooth. It is Eire's na­tional Catholic seminary.

much more favorable, with thisrenewed Catholicism."

Professor Cullman pointedout the main division betweenProtestant and Catholic faithsas: "What separates us is notthe positive elements of our re­spective faiths, but preciselywhat we feel Catholicism has inexcess and what Catholics feelwe are lacking."

Invasion of PrivacyIn his opinion: ''1 believe that

dialogue will move forward. when our Catholic brethrencease to look negatively on this'not quite enough' in that theyfind in us, that is when theydo not see it as somethingmissing as a result of arbltaryreduction, but as an inspiredconcentration."

"That is why we hail withgladness every proposal at theCouncil in either the liturgicalor theological field that aimsat such a concentration," he ex.­plained.

At Council discussions historywas made by the introduction ofthe communications project. TheChurch has never officiallyconsidered mass media beforeand a great step was envisagedwhen at the first session pro­posals were made for a perma­nent Church Commission onmass media and for an Inter­national Catholic News Agency.

At the second day's meetingon communications the key notewas struck by Canadian Cardi­nal Leger who said: "A newcivilization is rising" and it wasurgent to be concerned with thenew mass media so that theymay not be used to weaken ordestroy human and Christianvalues.

Stress was laid by severalspeakers on the role of laymenand their responsibility in thedifferent media for formingpublic opinion. Journalists, Pro­ducers, Directors and Artistswere mentioned as among thosewho should become. conscious oftheir power and duty.

It was pointed out that inthis field all Christians irre­spective of creed, could andshould agree to the spreadingand defending of fundamentalhuman and Christian principles.

One blow was struck byCouncil Fathers in regard tosearch for and publication ofnews: "Ju; to the right to in­formation, which all recognize,it was noted that the secrets ofprivate life must be excludedby reasons of justice and chari­~" says the official bulletin.

Avoids PitfaUsThat important project re­

~ting to ChI' i s t ian Unity,awaited with eagerness, has no~

y.z1 be0.!:l given a place on the

Continued from Page One

vite priests and laymen fromhis diocese.

These visitors left when thecall "Exuent omnes" cleared thebasilica 'for the meeting, yet oneCatholic layman l' e m a i ned.Seated among non-Catholic Ob­servers was Jean Guitton fromParis, who has. devoted his lifeto the ecumenical movement andto writing on the subject. Hehas taken part in many inter­church Informal meetings andPope John invited him as anauthority to join the other 0b­servers in their special sectioll.

Brighter ConditionsBy coincidence, but rather as

if sensing the change in atmos­phere, Professor Oscar Cullmanof the Reformed Swiss Evan­gelical Church, a guest of, thesecretariat for the Union ofChristians, held a Press Confer­ence that evening, to give astatement of the point of viewof non-Catholics attending theCouncil. Professor of Biblestudies at the Sorbonne and thenat the University of Basle, Pro­fessor Cullman became a friendof Cardinal Bea when he washead of the Pontifical Instituteof Bible Studies in Rome. Histalk was direct and encouraging,though he warned against overoptimism.

Speaking of the results of theattendance of Observers: "Avery tiny group compared withthe vast number of Christianswe represent" he said: ... "Wehave great hopes that the dia­logue with our Catholic breth­ren which is bound to beginafter the Council, and underconditions more favorlilble thanbefore will be shared by manyof our Protestant and Orthodoxbrethren who are not here."

Pli'incipal DivisionsHe spoke of the hopes the

Observers held in "the renewalof the Catholic church whichthis Council at IelllSt proposes toeffect." But he warned: WWemust not forget that thesechanges will take place insidethe Catholic framework and bebased on Catholic principles norcan we object to this to ourCatholie brethren, because itwould not be good ecumenismto nsk: them to become Protes­tantg or Orthodox. Still we mustface up to reality. Even if theprojects for reforms are passed,there will remain important dif­ferences between us and Catho­licism, even the Catholicism re­shaped by this Council. How­ever, those who hope for the re­newal know this, and that mw:J1:7 ilic dialogu'<l must go o~

cd co C::l ~ e~nd~UoJO

iI. .

;i~A'.;_. ._CLOSE TO HIS HEART: Bishop James L. Connolly greets members of the first Holy

Communion class outside the ancient basilica at Viterbo. The care and welfare of childrenhas always been uppermost in the pastoral work of the Fall River Ordinary. The Bishopis attending the Ecumenical Council in Rome. .

ShQelds Field

~U'@sierSi to Expand~QlW GM~rnea Work

FORT WAYNE (NC) - Cro­Diex- missionaries in Agats, WestNew Guinea, have added an ex­wnsive new area to their missiont<lITitory, it was announced at~'llie Crosier Fathers' U. S. head­Qlunrters here in Indiana.

The new territory includes ancrlditional 20 farflung villages= Q river patrol. The Crosiermissioners were already serving81 VllUages. U. S. members at'Clx; community work in the area.

lEl~ore the addition of the new0ITitory, the Crosier FathersW(::,",' caring for nearly 17,500r=::rl;!ves, about half of whom arc<r;rl~olics. They reported 1,700~ptlsms in the year endingZ::JG 1-

~onsecration Set(C!l,EVELAND (NC)-The con.­

~~~~?2.tiOD of AUxiliary Bishop­(1<::!~r;natc Clarence E. Ewell has;\ f;<'~"~;;~~;~I:;cl1 fill' F~i:;y, ID-',.,2"

5';.' ;' \ r~ J::z.~,=I".J Q;;;.tDai.~ ~~

Madonna StampIn New ZealandHas Brisk SaIe

AUCKLAND (NC)-Salesof New Zealand's specialChristmas stamp depictingSassoferrato's Madonna inPrayer are brisk, according topostal authorities here.

During the Christmas perioduntil Jan. 12 it will be the exclu­sive two and a half penny stampsold throughout the country.The usual stamp of this denom­funaHon will be withdrawn dur­1.;J!i this time. The Madonna6iwup was issued Oct. 15.

'.i:his is the third year NewZealand has issued a specialChristmas stamp with a Chris­tian theme. Previous stampsnav() shown reproductions ofold master Nativity scenes.

The innovation of the Christ­mas stamp came as a result afllie request of the Christian Fes­tivals Committee to postal au­thorities to assist their campaign'''l\'cc ut Christ Back into Christ­mas."

l1t0present DenominationsThe committee is a nation.

wid0 organization made up ofzepresentatives from provincial<ChI'istian Christmas campaign~mmittees. Both committees in:'clude representatives of the va­zious denominations-the Cath­olic, Baptist, Anglican, Congre­f,ational and Methodist churches,Associated Church of Christ,Salvation Army and the Evan­gelical Lutheran Conference ofNew Zealand.

nA large numl;>er of youth 01'­

eanizations take part in the pro­vincial committees-Girl Guides,Girls' Life Brigade, MethodistDistrict Youth Council, Y.M.C.A..Y.W.C.A., and the Cath<JlicYouth Movement.

<Contiued from Page One~l)Z'c his death suggested to theIceal school committee that the~edication b 0 u Ide l' for theschool's new athletic field be a:i!otivc one he little realized thefield would be dedicated in hi1lmemory.

The Rev. John T. Higgins, pas­00:<' of Our Lady of the Assump­tion Church, Osterville, gave theiJi1Vceation at the opening ofth~ ceremonies. Participatingclro in the ceremonies wereArnold Lane, School CommitteeChairman, Bar n s tab I e HighSchool principal Briah K. Con­1lM)r and Harvard H. Broadbent,Barnstable superintendent OIlcchools.

Assisting with the unveilingwere former football captains atBarnstable High, Donald Nicku­ks and Caleb Fraser of 1951,nnd Julio Renzi of 1948.

The plaque on the monu­ment reads: "Barnstable HighSchool, Leo Shields Memorial)J'ield. In memory of W. LeoShields, coach, athletic director,oosistant principal, 1938-1962."

Surviving Mr. Shields are hiswife, Margaret Hayden Shields,ond four children, Leo, Ann,William and Terry.

Page 15: 11.29.62

Q

Il"fl: ANC110R-Diocese of Fall River-;-Thurs, Nov. 29, 1962

... ----.

i

III

We ore proMd to htrJve hg~ f1l pait in the' constructionI

. @f tlh'~ new

St. Jean -Baptiste .RectoryFall' Riuer

__-'-~_=-- m ~ _

THEODORE LO~ANGER & SONSI .

Genewo@!· <tcntract@r404 N@s~ Rca~o New Bedf@rd

Cooper Road, Harmony, R. I.

ENTERPRISE .. LATHING & PLASTERING INC.

.,............................_--------------Engineering - Construction· Maintenance

276 Plymouth· Avenue, Fall River...

JOSfE[F>H Mo I MO~Hr€R A5$OC~ATES. I.

Arrchitects & Engineers. I -.

71 Washington Street, Providence-_-...---~-------.~-=---...",..."""""",~I -.="",.-.......,,~-----------I •

·GEORGE A. D.. ST. AUBIN cd., PAINTING CONTRACTORSI

14 Arll'owhead lane South Dartmouth Tel. WY 2-1874I!

---~~~~~~~~~~~---.....~-----------------CHACE ELECTRICAL CO., INC. -

MO~iAaDP SAND It GRAV~lROMAN TILE & TERRAZZO CO..

36 lfiandall Street, Providence

Suntile Dealers

Jo ~o ST. AQBrs~N· & CO., ~Nc'~ PAINTERS mDECORATORS

344 CO~JJlrt Street, New' BedfordG. F. St. Aubon, Pres.

""",,""""""===...,....------------It It.. wma.cox CO.

_ 22 Bedford Street, Fall River

Office Furniture

PLUMBfNG

S'illil ~outh Beadt Street, FaR River

Wa~ter E. Sullivan & Son

leves .G. Bernamrd & Son367 lEast Main Street, FaIR River.

WDINDOW SIliAiDllES - DRAPIERIES

iOlRAPIE~V ~A~Il)WARIE

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Page 16: 11.29.62

,.

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\

ern men can protect the dignityof individuals in the midst oftechnological progress and socialchange;' they can right the gra~imbalances within nations andamong them; they can recon­struct social relationship:! 'iIt.truth, justice and love'."

Most EffectiveViewed in this way, Father

Masse declared, Mater et MagilPtra is "the most positive anelleffective anti-communist docu­ment ever to come from thfJHoly See."

"Those who censure Mater etMagistra for not emphasizingthe communist conspiracy millllthe obvious fact that betweenPope John's plan for modemsociety and the Kremlin's schemefor world conquest no coexis~

ence is possible or even think.­able," he said.

CHRISTMASher a modern

FALL RIVER ELECTRIC LIGHT CO.~/1:fft~~~~JmJmlJm~,j;~m:ltI:f.'~t=:'jl.~~~J!/ifHIf:~;~,....~~~~~~~~~~~~s...~~~~~

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~

SHE'LL COOK RINGSAROUND THE RESTALL YEAR ROUND

Visit your local applicance dealer or theELECTRIC SHOP to learn first handhow an Electric Range can help you livebetter electrically! Inquire about $25.00wiring allowance.

• • .. The turbulent world of to_day and all its pressing problemshave become too much for themand they seek, if not escape, atleast an emotional release insome simpli~tic answer to all ourdifficulties."

The Jesuit editor said the en­cyclical offers no easy answersfor "the confused, the impatient,the angry," but it does providea solid program of Christiansocial doctrine.

He said it is Pope John"s teach­~g that with God's help "mod-

Open UniversitySANTO DOMINGO (NC) ­

The Catholic University namedfor the social encyclical ofPope John, Mater et Magistra,has opened its doors here in theDominican Republic two monthsafter its foundation by theDominican Bishops.

I?HE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Nov..29, 1962 17-----_.----

WY 7-9336Watch for Signs

r······..••••·..'• A FAMILY TitEAT •

• BAR-B-O CHICKENS iL:~~~~~:~V~• Just off Route 8•••• While out for a Drivet Stop 3t. this Del1ghtt\1l1 Spot

t~................

Tests of Educational Develop­ment. These show that the sen-­ior class at Holy Family, in com­parison with all other seniorclasses taking this test in theUnited States, ranked in the 94thpercentile· The junior, sopho­more and freshmen classesranked in the 99th percentile.

At Feehan High in Attleboroa Junior Great Books programhas been started. Leaders haverecently completed a six weekcourse at Catholic Teachers' Col­lege in Providence and will startthe groups officially after theChristmas vacation. MeanwhileFreshmen and Sophomores in­volved in the program will bereading the first selections. Forfreshmen, "Cyrano de Bergerac"hasc been assigned, while soph­omores will discuss "Pygmalion."

And the National Honor Soci­ety at St. Mary's High is spon­soring a contest for freshmen.Prizes will be awarded for the .most original essay, drawing orsculpture, the theme of whichmust be Father Debrabant,founder of the Holy Unioncommunity.

Powerful Anti-Communist DocumentFather Masse Lauds Mater et Magistro

BALTIMORE (NC) - Pope.lohn's social encyclical Materet Magistra was praised here asan antidote to "the virus offrustration" and a powerfulanti-communist document.

Father Benjamin L. Masse,S.J., associate editor of AmericaMagazine, said the encyclicaloffers "a confident, realistic anddynamic platform on whichGod-fearing men can resolutelyand hopefully stand."

Seck Release"Far from being overwhelmed

by the torrents of change, aswell as by the errors and dis­orders of the times, Pope Johnsees an immensely hopeful pos­sibility for apostolic endeavor,"Father Masse said in a lectureat the College of Notre Dame ofMaryland.

As far as the U. S. is concerned,he said, Mater et Magistra"could not have come at a moreopportune time."

He said many Americans havesuffered since the Korean Warfrom "the virus of frustration

1------·------

I

CLASS OFFICERS: Guiding student destinies at St. Anthony's High School, NewBedford, are, from left, Charlotte Parker, vice-president; Lorraine Belanger, treasure:t'1Roland Bedard, president; Denise Bellefeuille, secretary; Lorraine Denault, treasurer.

The school also received a giftof Indian arrowheads for thescience department from StephenRacicot, a freshman. The facultyand student body are gratefulfor the gifts.

And at Stang High the studentbody is eagerly looking forwardto the Christmas concert sched­uled for Saturday through Mon­day, Dec. 8 to 10. This is to beu joint production of the dra­matic club and the glee club.The dramatic club, under thedirection of Sister Marie deLourdes, S.N.D. will present apageant of St. Francis of Assisiand the first Christmas crib. Theglee club, under the direction ofSister Patricia Gertrude, S.N.D.will provide background for thepageant as well as their ownspecial concert.

The "dynasty issue" is head­lining the news in Taunton. TheO'Hearn sisters have successfullycaptured the top ranks in theirrespective schools· The eldestsister, Jane, a member of thegraduating class of '59, has beenelected president of the studentcouncil at Regis College. Mary,who graduated last June fromst. Mary's, has been chosen' aspresident of the freshman classat Regis. Youngest sister Joan,a junior at St. Mary's, was se­lected by her classmates as theirpresident.

The girls are the daughters ofMr. and Mrs. John O'Hearne of43 Prospect Street, Taunton. Asthe saying goes, "You can't keepa good woman down."

Government DayRepresentatives from the busi­

ness department of st. Mary'sHigh in Taunton attended theworkshop of the National sec­retarial Ass 0 cia t ion held atStonehill College recently. Thegirls who attended were seniors,Judy Morisson and Jean Grenier.

And at Holy Family High inNew Bedford a new type ofhonor and conduct system hasbeen devised for the students.In order to obtain first honorsa student must have at least 9Sin every subject. Second honorsmay be obtained only if a stu­dent has received an 85 in everysubject.

This term the following ob­tained highest honors at HolyFamily: Mary Cote, Donna Placeand Barry Harrington, freshmen,and John Finni, a junior.

At Jesus-Mary Academy thetop ranking student for the firstmarking period was Louise Dion.Anne Louise Grillo and LucilleRousseau filled second and thirdplaces respectively. .

Also at Jesus-Mary Academy,Claire Amiot will represent theAcademy at the State House inBoston commemorating StudentGovernment Day.

St. Anthony's High School inNew Bedford has recently dis­tributed the first. issue of theschool newspaper, the Essa. Ed­itor Richard Methia is also theteenboard representative of St.Anthony's for Extension Maga­zine.

The Essa staff will visit Rox­bury Saturday, Dec. 8 for a pressday convention.

The debating society at HolyFamily High recently playedhost to Boston College High's de­bating club. Two debates wereheld, Holy Family winning oneof them.

Junior Great BooksThe sodality at St. Mary's

High in Taunton is makinghomemade Christmas cards tobe sent to the residents ofMarian Manor as an Adventproject.

And at Coyle High in TauntonII social evening has beenplanned for Wednesday evening,Dec. 5 by the Coyle High SchoolFathers' Club. Proceeds fromthe event will be used for theinstallation of roll-away bleach­ers for the stage in the schoolauditorium.

Students at Holy FDmily have~ved results II).f the IQwa

~GG~ents in Diocesan Hi~h S(:~~xQj~~

@z:C'hcr Av~~rmd A~W@UDgo W ~@@frtm~

~n :rr~~~[f@Q-~~~ ~@B' e[}u[[D~G'lfiJG@~Advem b ~G time tv prepaR'e roll' Christmas. It is the

i,'c,:,:; ro "looh op and lift up youX' heads" says the Gospel,":~,;:? y"'OUl" redemption is at hand." Advent belongs to <Shrist­lir.L) Old Christmas belongs to Christ. "Put Christ back intoCl:::r::.jtmas" is D. current slo­ITDL.1 b many Catholic circles.1~C'1'2Jps it woUld be well toR{~ ~:'.e step further and putCt?icj back into Advent, forWi\t~i~ preparation duringtilt') r;::!3Son the feast of the Na­t1v':07 will take on ndded signJ..f(i.l·~~'i~ in our lives.

Advent WreathsA~ many of our Diocesan high

r":'?i:i~)nSpreparations for the feastc1 <l;~i:?istmos ore already under­,\.;ny. At JesulJ-Mary Academy inJ;'e~:: Jmver the Advent wreath iso1J.-,::~{.y assembled in the audito­PiE:". A program of prayer iscpoJ',;nred by the sodality andG?.::lF::icti out by the entire student~utly in connection with theli.:)~~:;i1g of the wreath each dayc'1; f2t:~ mornina nssembly.

'1t'2:~ro is 0 school Advent\v1f(C~'lli. ot Bishop Stang in NorthIIJ):.);r:mouth and this is also dupli­~K'd in many of the classrooms.And ct Mount St. Mary's in Fall1R\i"",'" the girls have worked dil­4;<:-ntGy to prepare wreaths forcvc?y classroom In the academy.

Bishop Regan.6.:1 Dominican Academy in

170m. River the juniors and sen­W:?fl viewed the film "Facts of.Pl:lxth" which was prese.nted inthe rehool auditorium. The hourlO:llf, movie noted and explainedoir,nifJIcant scientific facts whichoffe1' proofs of the existence ofGod and of mankind's generaliIo!th in II Supreme Being. Andat Mount St· Mary's the sodalityhOD n!!Tanged for a Sacred Heartsl?utzao to explain the Enthrone­men~ of the Sacred Heart to themu~cnt body during the firstweea m December. Meanwhile,t~w .Creshmen at Sacred HeartsAccd~y in Fall River are wag­!!1!f, a campaign to collect booksttl send to Bishop Regan in theIF'hmppines.

Sophomores at Bishop StangHir,'h School were received intothe sodality this month. Rev.JO"'.,eph Powers, chaplain at thecWool, officiated and gave arolli on the importance of theaodnHty.

'WbaUa Blast"[Jeered Hearts Academy, Fan

JItlvex, novice debaters tied for8ea)rn! place in a three round~ament at Saint Catherine'sAcodcmy. The topic concernedU.8. Foreign Trade Policy. TheliWvkes will debate once againC:i1 Jen. 5 at Mount Saint CharlesAcademy in Woonsocket.

OB Dec. 2, 3, and 4, the CoyleStudent Theatre in conjunctionwith St. Mary's High School isJll>.rcr,cnting a two act play en­fi~1eiJ "Whotta Blust." This is an<ll7il\ooal musical written byE?otbe.r James Madigan, C.S.C.,~:rindpnl of Cardinal MooneyHir.h School in Rochester, N. Y.~~ theme is essentially based1!lO::l teenoge life with songs, manyJt9 l!::1.:lmber, from the musicals:Bye Bye Birdie, Wildcat, ThelEldJla are Ringing and The Un­ciru{oble Molly Brown.

New AltarPorty-hours devotion was held

~~tJY at Dominican AcademyQ !:Ji:.o convent chapel. Each classl1t~M. a half-hOur vigil in the~opdwhich had been decorated'fV1t!tl flowers purchused with thegcncrous donations of parents&."lcll friends of students.

.i'1£t! at Sacred Hearts AcademyhJ. J?nn River, the students areecl1l~nbuti.ng to purchase a per­rntmcnt altar to be set up in thel'1XCllilit1>rium. The first Mass at theFL..rw altar has been tentativelyl!C~uled for the first Friday inZ=tr::u-y. Meanwhile the students..." {'-acuIty are grateful to Rev.

un J. McMahon at Cathe­Q:., ,::amp for the use of one.

1" ~han High School has beenth0 ~ipient of two gifts recent­Jl.y. §tanley M. Gower, Jr., pres­~'wt'1; of the Attleboro Trust Co.,ll>Yc.~-"Dted the achool libraryWJ!t:!', a copy of "Lost Worlds," aVDM2eation oi American Herl.­~;; eo. which portraYI the~ dvWzatioza. oi andent~

c

Page 17: 11.29.62

mas Shol~pers

MAS GIFT CA.RDSOUR

MAS IS A HOLYDAY, not just a holiday. It'ione gigantic birthday party-and the birth­day· we celebrate is' Christ's • • • Christmasis essentially religious • • • Christlll1as is the

I'h Christ-Mlllss ••. The gifts wo exchange~~J~. at Christmas-ought they n,~t be help..

' . .I'd' ful to Religion? . • • Relilrious gifts.~. are best because they do what Christo did. They feed the hungry in the~ . Holy Land (the Palestine refugees, for

instance), clothe the naked (the Be-t douins in south Jordan), instruCt the

ignorant (in Catholic mission schools).provide Mass and the sacraments forthe poor~st of Christ's poor (in pagan

Tht Holy Fathtr's MiJlion Aid INDIA, IRAN, EGYPT, IItAQ) •.•

fortht on tal Ch-.-l. Could any gifts be more selfless, more

, m 1fflTJ Christ-like? •.• Think abollt this be-fore you do your Christmas shopping. We can do all your shop­ping for you (by means of our CHRISTMAS GIFT (:ARDS), ifyou but say the word . . • The people who receive the GIFTCARDS you eell us to send, will know they're beneflltting spir­itually all year long. They'll know that somewherll,in theirname, Christ's work· goes on. You'll know, too, that--thanks toyou-human misery is not what it might have been .•. Whatmore could one asll at Christmas?

ARE ATTRACTIVE, ARTISTIC, INDIVIDUALIZED. Theymake it, easy for you to shop ... Simply select a gift from thosewe've listed below-and send us, with your donation, the nameand address of the person in whose name you intend the gift.We do all the rest. We send that person a GIFT CABD prompt­ly, explaining what you have done '... HERE ARE SOME GIFTSTO SELECT FROM: .o FEED A FAMILY FOR A MONTH. The Palestin.e Refugeos(Arabs exiled by the Arab-Israeli War of 1948) live in refugeecamps in LEBANON, JORDAN, SYRIA, and GAZA. They needfood, clothing, medicine, a place to sleep ... TO FEED A REF­UGEE FAMILY FOR A MONTH COSTS $10 ... As a token ofour thanks, we'll send you an Olive Wood Rosary from the HolyLand.o DON'T LET THE BEDOUINS FREEZE. Thousands of BE-

,DOUINS (tent-dwellers in the desert in SOUTH JORDAN1nearly froze to death last winter because they had no blankets.We can provide blankets for them at $2 each ... Mindful ofChrist, Who wa~ cold in Bethlehem, will you give one blanket,ten, or. more?o HAVE MASSES OFFEREQ FOR THE LIVING AND DE­CEASED. Our missionary priests will be pleased to offerpromptly the Masses you request. The offering you make istheir principal means of support ... We'll be pleased to sendGIFT CARDS, at your request.o DONATE AN ARTICLE FOR A MISSION CHAPEL. Foryears to come these articles will serve God and souls, in thename of the person you designate: VESTMENTS ($50l, a MON­STRANCE ($40>, CHALICE ($40), CIBORIUM ($40), TABER­

.NACLE ($25), CRUCIFIX ($25), STATIONS OF THE CROSS($25), CENSER ($20>, SANCTUARY LAMP ($151, ALTARLINENS ($15), SANCTUARY BELL ($5).o ENROLL YOUR FAMILY, YOUR FRIENDS, IN 'rHIS MIS­SION AID SOCIETY. The spiritual benefits are b:lcalculable.Families are enrolled as annual ($51 or perpetual (~il00l mem­bers. Individuals-both living and deceased-may be enro11ed,too. The offering fOt' Individual membership is $1 :!InnuaU or$20 (perpetual). .o HELP US-IN THE NAME OF THE PERSON YOU DES­IGNATE. - TO BUILD A MISSION CHAPEL, CI:'INIC, ORSCHOOL. We can build a mission school, for instance, for$2,500-what it costs in this country for one classrooml Send usyour j!onaUI}D, large or small. We'll earmark It for use whereit's'needed most-and tell you where it's being used.

~'l2ear5stOlissiOlJlSFRANCiS, CARDINAL SPILLMAN. Pre.ldem'

MG~• .IIo~O!'~ Y. aVoa.··~~·O Soo'r$BIilCl eGa aQCl=J!C~acoo 00.

~A'jj'If:IOI!.O~ W!UAQ ~6\m7 W~[lD6\I.'lO Ailg~iA,rD@&<3

4l@@ l!.o~o~~2®G\l A",o. @2 ~~frllil $);)0 ~o'W. 11~~ ~:?i~~ "if?'. ..__.'~~':"~""""",=~====~~~=,====<!J

Memo For

'..,. ~"........... ~"'.~.~.:_~~~-~.

Tl:GERS IN TOKYO: Father Robert C. Dressman, S.J.and John McKechney, S.J., talk with Detroit Tiger base­ball battery Jim Bunning, second from right, and MikeRoarke during a visit to the Jesuits' Sophia University inTokyo. The ballplayers, graduates of Xavier University andBoston College respectively, stopped off during their exhi­bition tour of Japan. NC Photo.

S']!. JOSEPH. I

FALL RllVER IA chicken patty supper and

bazaar are scheduled for Mon.day, Dec. 3 and; Tuesday, Dec. 4.The bazaar houts will be from 3to 9 and supper

lis slated for 5:30

.both evenings. 'A special featurewill be the gift of a $100· bondon a "money ttee." .

IST. CASIMllR, INEW BEDFORD

A parish misbion will be heldfrom Sunday, IDec. 2 throughSaturday, Dec. 8. Rev. HilaryPaszek, C.S.C. will conduct serv­ices in both Polish and English..Forty Hours ~votion will fol­low, Sunday, tprough Tuesday,Dec. 9 through 11.

ST. ROClRl, IFALL RIVER

Officers of! the Council ofCatholic Women will be host­esses for a me~ting set for 7:30Monday night, pec. 3 in the par­ish hall. A demonstration onChristmas wr~pping will befeatured and *ev. Reginald A.Barrette, moderator, will showslides taken at the council'.'recent <::hristmas bazaar:

HOLY GHOST[ATTLEBORO I

A Christmas bazaar is plannedfor tomorrow bight at 7 in the. IPortuguese-American Hall andwill take plac~ again on Satur­day, Dec. 1 in the afternoon and ....evening. iST. KILIAN, INEW BEDFORD

The Holy N~me Society willhold its annual ham and beansupper in thel parish han onSaturday.night between 5:30 and·7:30. The supper will be followed

. by a cake want.Tickets may be obtained at the

door for 99 cents.I

FOR ovml 42 YEARS

WE SERVE THENEW ENGLAND STATES

HQur'y or Flat Rates.7 DAYS A WEEK

SACRED HEART,FALL RIVER

Members of the parochialschool Civics Club have taken asa project the supplying of candyand fruit to children at St:Joseph's Ifome. .

The Women's Guild announcesits Christmas meeting for 8Monday night, Dec. 3 in theschool hall. Mrs. Rose E. Sulli­van will be chairman, aided bypast presidents.· Mrs. GraceMitchell will direct a productionof "The Unmentionables."

ST. AUGUSTINE,'VINEYAP,D HAVEN

Annual Women's Guild Christ­mas sale is set for Sunday, Dec.2 in the parish hall, with Mrs.Herbert Metell in charge of ar­rangements. Booths will includefancy goods, grabs and manyothers. Tea will be served from4 to 6 in the afternoon'/

Next regular meeting is setfor Thursday, Dec. 20 and willfeature the annual Christmasparty and gift exchange.

ESPIRITO SANTO,FALL RllVER

Planned for tonight, tomorrowand Saturday from 7 to 11 eachnight is a pre-Christmas bazaar.Mrs. Fl<lrence Labecki, Mr. andMrs. John Canario aD(~ a squaredancing group will be amongfeatured entertainers. Mr. and'Mrs. Joseph Medeiros, generalchairmen, announce that pro­ceeds will benefit the churchand school building fund.

ST. ANNE,FALL RnVER. The Social Group announces

a whist party for 8 Saturday·night, Dec. 1 at the parochialschool· A sale of handmade ar.ticles will take place concur­rently.

Girl Scout and Brownie troopsare in process of formation, withMrs· Roger Charest to lead GirlScouts and Mrs. Leo Bernier Jr.to be in charge of Brownies.Meetings will be held afterschool.

ST. FRANCIS XAVIER,HYANNIS

Ann u a I Christmas bazaar.sponsored by the Women's Guildis set for Saturday, Dec. 8 in theupper church hall. A Christmasfestival will be held concurrent­ly in the lower church hall, atwhich breakfasts, a spaghettilunch and a turkey dinner willbe served, in addition to snacks,available all day·

Planned for the next. guild.meeting is a pantry shower forthe Sisters of the Cenacle whoserve the parish.

The Parish Parade( .

OUR LADY OF GRACE,NORTH WESTPORT

The Council of Catholic Womenwill hold its ~nnual Christmasparty at 7 Mon~ay night, Dec. 3at Copicut Lodge under chair­manship of Mts. Marie Danis.Gifts will be ex!changed. Councilmembers and ~ll women' of thep,arish are reqJested to receiveHoly Communibn Sunday, Dec,3 at any Mass. IST. BONllJFACE,NlEW BEDJFORD

Rev. John O'Brien, SS.CC.,will conduct al retreat startingSunday night at 7:30 and con­cluding at an bvening Mass at5:45 on the Fdst of the Immac­ulate Conceptidn, Dec. 8·

The retreat ~s open to non­parishioners as' well as parish-ioners. I

CIHlURCHES • SCHOOLSCOMMERCIAL I

I

CLEANING CONTRACljORSComplete Building BANKS • BUILDINGS

Maintenance Service BUSINESS FIRMS • DEPT. STORESSS. PETER AND PAUL, Buildings Sand Blasted FACTORIES. ·H

1

0TnsFALL RIVER

The regular monthly meeting and Steam Cleaned INSTITUTIONS .!OFfICESof the Women's Guild is set for Bird.Proofiftg with THEATRES. FREE :ESTIMATES8 Monday night, Dec. 3 in the "Roost·No·More" Service Floor Waxing by EIe~,trlc Machinechurch hall. A social hour willfollow with Mrs. Robert E. Paul We specialize in cleaning. large and small industrial plants·lri New Englandas chairman, aided by Mrs. AI- and vicinity. All our Employees are fully insured against accident undorfred J. Travis. the Workmen's Oompensatien law. Also Public liability Insurance. AllIMMACULATE CONClZll"IrllON, our employees are bonded. t

NlEW BEDFORD ~"\"~:'" .,'.. , ..1',.' ," '~:'".'~~'.'~"i''''''(''-I~.'', .~.,t;:;~~The Couples Club will Bold its"""::;~·· ~~~:r;;:;i.\;:'~fi~\lc;;)"!';':;\9~ .

annual Christmas party Sunday, ',;;';'''.-... :=~~?~LS=,~~,y ·'IJZ£~'.'

Dec. 16. Chairmen are Mr. and c:::;:~~~~~~~~,·~,;~~~~~~~~~~~~..~'~~;~:::JMrs. William' J!\,. .

18 THE ANCHOR-Diocelie of Fait River-Thurs. Nov. 29,1962

.ST. PATRICK,FALMOUTH

The Women's Guild Christmasbazaar is scheduled for Saturday,Dec. 1 at the church hall. Mrs.Jean O'Connell is general chair­man, and features will include achildren's art display in additionto tables and booths that haveproved popular in the past. HolyName Society members, directed'by Raymond Knispel, will co­operate in the project.

SACRED HEART,NORTH A'I'TLEBOlltO

CYO activities for Decemberwill include a Good Will Clubmeeting at 4 Sunday afternoon,Dec. 2 and a meeting for allmembers at 7:30 Tuesday night,Dec, 4. The hobby club will meetat 7 Tuesday night, Dec. 11 anda Christmas party is set for 7:30Tuesday night, Dec. 18.

The Home and School Asso­ciation has been established inthe parish. A school library isin operation and will. be dedi.cated S~nday, Dec. 9, OJ) theoccasion' of the annual schoolexhibit.; The annual Christmas sale offile Ladies of. St. Amie Sodalitywill be held today, with a lunch­eon being served at noon.

ST. MARGARET,BUZZARDS BAY

SS. Margaret-Mary Guild willhold its annual Communion sup­per at 6 Sunday night, Dec. 2 atW:areham Lodge of Elks, Routes6 and 28, East Wareham. Msgr.Edward F. Sweeney, director ofSt. James Society founded in1958 by Cardinal Cushing tosend missionaries to Latin Amer­ica, will speak. His ,address willdeal with the inroads of Com­munism in the southern coun­tries. The public is invited andtickets are available from Mrs.John Enos, PL 9-4439.

ST. KILIAN,NEW BEDFORD

The Women's Guild will holda Christmas party at 6:30 Mon­day night, Dec. 3 at M and Krestaurant. In charge are MissTheresa Wooley and Mrs. DianaSpirlet.

ST. JOSEPH,·FAIRHAVEN. An Old Fashioned ChristmasSale will be held tomorrow andSaturday in the church hall withMrs. Joseph A. Saladino genera-lchairman. Handmade toy s ,kitchen items, children's cloth­ing, and other items will be fea­tured, in addition to home-madepreserves, cakes,. candies andpuddings. Handcrafted carpen­try pieces such as bookends,footstools and knicknack shelvesere also to be shown.

Hours are from 1:30 to 4 and., to 9, with tea to be served atthe afternoon sessions.HOLY ROSARY,FALL RIVER

The Holy Rosary Society an­nounces a Christmas dinnerparty for·5 Sunday. night, Dec. 2in the parish hall. Mrs. MaryCanuel is chairman.ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA,FALL RIVER

Annual Council of CatholicWomen Christmas party is setfor Sunday, Dec. 2 at White'srestaurant. Also planned for theholiday season is visitation ofshut-in parishioners.

ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL,FALL RIVER

A demonstration of floral ar.rarigements will follow themonthly meeting of the Women'sGuild at 8 Monday night, Dee. 3in the Catholic Community Cen­ter. Mrs. Rene Lariviere will behostess.

Page 18: 11.29.62

American Is Champion of Catholic~nternational Chess League

Bishop Stang and WarehamAnnex School Grid· Titles

passing game. Normally, n<Jt [)receiver .in I the Purple attaclt,Bob has been getting moreaerials in recent games.

Mittbl:<er and DavisSince the Syracuse game, he'D

had nine receptions, some vitl!llto Holy Cross scoring drives.

"If I'm clear, I'm sure a ft'\7passes will be coming my way.'although my usual job is to d~'..coy," Bob admitted.

Reflecting on his career, H:JI?­graves, a communicant of St.Louis padsh in Fall River. s2i<tllhe rated Bob Mittinger of PermState, now with the San DiecoChargers in the AFL as tIt2

toughest lineman he's come u:)against.

"He was a great two-way PCIi'­former." Ernie Davis of Syrc.­cuse he calls the best back.

"What he couldn't do with [)football." The one game he N~

members in particular was thoSyracuse tilt his sophomore yecl?That was one which Holy Cro:3nearly won. They had the Oronr,odown 6-0 for three periods' untl!lDavis and teammate Art Bake:?took over to steer the up-stataNew Yorkers to a 15-6 win•

Win Sole Aim"We came so close, but th"v

just wore us down."Now, however, it comes dm.-m

to the finale for Hargraves· AYl@more than anything he wants thoEagles Saturday. Wouldn't it ~o

fitting for Fall River's Hargl'av0[)to win the O'Melia trophy WO:.1

by teammates McCarthy anlJSnyder the past two years? "I''ilbe satisfied to win," is the wayHargraves put .It.

Fresh Native

Bay S~aUops

Maclean's Sea FoodsUNION WHARF, FAIRHAVEN

YOURS TO LOVE AND TO G'V~!

the life of a DAUGHTER OF ST. PAUL. Love Godmore. and give to souls knowledge and love ofGod by serving Him in a MiSSIon which illeS thecrea Radio. Motion Pictvres and TV. 10 bringHis Ward 10 souts everywhere Zealous younggirls, 14-23 years interested in this uniqueApostolate may write 10'

REVEREND MOTHER SUPERI01lDAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUL

50 ST. PAUL'S AVE. • BOSTON 30. MASS.

BOB HARGRAVB.

pre-game favorite becaJ,lse ofthe 7-2 mark they posted to HolyCross's 6-3, but Hargraves seesit as another Holy Cross win.

He looks for neither a high­scoring nor low-scoring game,but a tough one with HolyCross's superior backfield (hecalled it the best in the East)getting enough td's to offset theEagles' great passing arm ofJack Concannon.

"The key to the game will bethe defenses. If we can containthe Concannon-Graham passingteam and the bruising rushes offullback Harry Crump, we'llwin," he modestly speculated.What he didn't say is that he'sone of the keys to stopping thevery efficient Mr. Concannon.He and his fellow wingman willhave the job of stopping the Con­cannon rollouts and putting thedamper on his passing arm. All

.Bob would promise was his best,which is more than he could dolast time these two old foes met.

'If I'm Clear'Last Fall, he was like a

chained bear on the sidelines, acrusader without a lance, as he

. took films of the game for theH. C· athletic department. "Thatwas no fun," he said, "when youwant to get in there and mix itup."

As far as the Holy Cross gamestrategy is concerned, nothingfancy is planned. Hank Cuttingwill be stabbing inside, TomHennessey and AI Snyder willtake care of the wide runningand pass receiving departments,Hargraves himself could be im­portant though in the Holy Cross

By Lynn KennedySaturday's grid meeting

between Holy Cross andBoston College has doublesignificance for Fall River'sBob Hargraves. ,The senior endwinds up his three-year gridcareer as a Crusader and hopesto ,help the Worcester 11 to athird straight win over theEagles. That in "itself is some­thing because there aren't toomany players from either side inthis long and bitterly foughtrivalry who can claim to haveplayed on three successivewinners.

But, perhaps more important,Bob sat out last year's tilt withII dislocated left shoulder, aninjury suffered in the Daytonfray. For a guy who played 56minutes of Holy Cross's 16-12win in 1960, this was tough totake. Hargraves, son of Mr. andMrs. Charles 'r,. Hargraves of 66Oliver Street; would like tomake this windup a bangup per­formance, and perhaps put him­self in the running for the cov­eted Edward O'Melia trophy,annually given'to the standoutplayer on the field in this an­cient series between the twoschools.

Trevisano WinnerAs a player, the former Dur­

fee High standout is as steadyas they make them. Unspectacu­lar but workmanlike, Bob, a6' 2", 210-pounder makes morenoise defensively. A fiercecompetitor, Bob likes the tack­ling and blocking aspects of thegame. In fact, he jokingly refersto himsel! as the most unoffen..sive end in Cross history. He hasonly three 2-point pass conver­sions for '62 and not a touch­down over three seasons. Thishe calls getting points the hardway. But as for knockin~ downenemy sweeps and throwingcrisp blocks at opposing linemenor corner men, Hargraves is anAll-American to his teammates.

In the game against Connec­ticut last Saturday, Hargraves,normally a right end, was movedback into that spot. All seasonlong, he's been operating fromthe other side. The Holy Crosscoaching staff made that switchto favor Bob's left shoulder.Now, he appears back in tip-topshape, thanks to an off-seasonoperation, 'so will go Into nextSaturday's fray at the Heightsat the right end slot.

While at Durfee, Hargraveswon seven letters in three sports,captaining the Hilltopper foot..ball team his senior year andcapping his playing days forCoach Luke Urban with a tre­mendous all-round performancein· the Durfee's 18-12 upset offavored New Bedford High. Hissenior year, Hargraves wasnamed to several All-BristolCounty 11's. He was also a 'Top­perobasketball and baseball star.One of his most cherished honorswas being named recipient ofthe Donald Trevisano trophy, anaward given annually to theoutstanding Durfee senior line­man.

Eagles Favored, At Holy Cross, Hargraves has

confined his athletics to football,although he did catch for thePurple freshman baseball team.An economics major, Bob planson graduate ,school next year·He doesn't say this too loud onthe Worcester campus, but oneof the schools to which he hasapplied is Boston College. Hehopes to earn a Master's degreein business administration andeconomics. Law school is alsoan ambition with labor 'law theultimate objective.

Right now though, the likeableHargraves is thinking only ofthe Saturday head-banger withB. C. He shrugs off Holy Cross'sunderdog role.

"Being the favorite doesn'tcount in that game," he told ua.

The Eagles get the noel ..

Likes Blocking and Tacklingfinale Saturday for Fall River Crusader

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Nov. 29, 1962

Soh Hargraves of Holy Cross

Insure WorkersZURICH (NC) - The Swiss

Catholic Bishops have approvedan old age health insurance planfor housekeepers of· Catholicrectoriea and religioua institu­tiona-

Bishop John Peter Huibers ofHaarlem, the Netherlands.

On each anniversary of theorganization's founding, mem­bers of CALL are expected toattend Mass in their parishchurches and to pray for fellowmembers.

Beyond the obligation of pray­Ing for fellow members, CALLhas no other membership re­quirements. There are no feesand no expenses except the costof postage used in playing ehessby mail. The organization isopen to all Catholic chess play\­ers. Its headquarters are atGriekschestraat 46 b, Rotter­dam 7, the Netherlands.7-1 Record

AKRON (NC)-St. Mary High~ with' 0Dl7 46 bofs en­willed, dropped tile curtain OIl

LCOtball by closing out its .ea­[81 with a 7-1 reeord. St. Mary',won ita final «ame, beating st.!:1:anJa1aus of Cleveland by • 22-8IlOOI'e before 8,000 1ana

BOSTON (NC) - Albert J.llllnrdiman of Medford is the newt'Jorld champion of the interna­tional Catholic correspondenceC'l~S league--the CALL.

'rhe organization's initial let­ters stand for "Catholici ad Lat­runculos Ludentes" (Catholicplaying chess.) It now has mem­!J.cE'S in the Netherlands' (wherei(; originated), the United States,Spain, West Germany and sev­Gal Latin American countries.

CALL was founded In 1953,by F. U. J. H. Witte of Rotter­d:::m. It was given formal eccle­cEastical ~proval m 1955 by

By Jack Kineavy

A trem~dOtls leaping' catch by Attleboro co-captainN\'~ Barney put the underdog Jewelers on the scoreboardwf,~TI but 40 seconds remaining, and enabled the Cassidyf~~ to emerge with a thrilling 6-6 tie in their traditionalwf'S.~up against the Rocke- a virtual sea of mud on Thanks­tfc?S of North Attleboro last giving, yet both teams handledSc:-:Irday at Hayward Field. the soggy ball extr~mely well.'1'1"0. Big Red eame into the What was most amazmg was the[\r~e heavily favored on the punting exhibition by D~rfee's!:In,''' of their splendid unde- Klimka and New Bedford s Me-)\~lt:~ once·tied deiros. The. boys weren't getting"",.. " any roll, eIther. As a matter ofb,,,~,:ln Bti:~ord fact, the officials were fortunateDn;·; un

dar- enough to dredge the ball on a

~('17 rno e con- 1 f .fic;~~ions wit h " "-'';:;:'~ copup tte . 0 occfa.slolns

t· h to th~

AI ~;;ito's fourth J .: '0 u mg a ma ouc '"d - 30 yard ',i,}".... 1B62 season was the Southeast..,-~::~'s"'ot there "'-ii' ",". ern Mass. Officials AssociationuC,'_ JLI " '. "f<, banquet last night to which all'W::, every YC3- 'it..... "~ h' ·t d Th

. to b l' n ':' "~i,'!"'\' area coac es were mVl e. ef:n:::: OlCV... ~ d th d' t' fth"(; th i't rs t'" I» ' event was un er e lre:: lon 0

," ld C v Sl 0 " .' ~,.'.'~".,,' President Fred Kozak who'W1(';:r, success- 'I." i' ti d'xuHy de fen d \', , served w th dedlca on and lS-th':;.y shore of tinction throughout the ~eas?n.Bef... lnurels. However, the upset Elected t~,-,head theorgamzatlondl'::dlock left Bishop Stang in for the 1...03 season was Charley(" "..., e 'on of the top spot Mendell of Foxoboro.•.tb. pass SSl J ·t Cl .in (;he final standings and the _ esul ltSS1C

107" championship in this their ~ucats for the B. C.-H. C· gamefi .,'j, year of official participa- ~lS S~turday are har~ come by,..:"0 rIght now. A capaclty crowdelK'. will throng Alumni. Field in

J.~ isn't often that a league Chestnut Hill to view the tradi­btc1ts two undef<Y.lted clubs but tional clash between the greatthin is precisely what occurred Jesuit rivals. B. C. reportedly isin Rristol County this Fall. Stang being strongly considered forani North battled to a scoreless either the Liberty Bowl or thedcdlock on Nov. 3 on one of Gotham Bowl. One of the origi­those rainy Saturdays when onlynators of the Gotham Bowl isthe cleaners could win. Bob Curran, former Boston

A com pIe x championship Latin and Cornell grid star.sntl1atlon in Tri-County was Cold weather usually attendsresolved simply after all. Vic- this climactic game and a glancetories by Barnstable tl n d at the calendar makes this allSomerset over Bourne and the more understandable. OnlyCase, respectively, left Wareham last week Austen Lake, a Bostonwith a 4-2 record alone atop the sports columnist and former gridheap. The Conference champion official was reminiscing aboutis determined on a point basis the 1933 game, which was playedOlit<'1l the Capeway squad com- in zero weather on Fitton Field.g!iled 12 digits to edge Barn- Lake observed that no penaltiesstnble and Somerset by one in were called in the game, not be­~hc finn! standings. cause there weren't infractions

Most of the Wareham squad but the biting wind so blinded,:ere on hand at the Somerset- the ofticials that they literallyCnf-c game 01'\ Saturday and their couldn't see.C'1rhortations bore fruit as the And, of course, a warmReiders humbled the Cardinals, weather note concerns the recent2'3·7. Somerset has to be ac- trades made by the Boston RedImowledged the comeback team Sox which bring to Boston aQ!I the year under the guidance distance hitter in Dick Stuart, aof! first year coach Jim Sullivan. journeyman outfielder in RomanThe Raiders put together a 6-1.2 Meijas and a traveling reliefersenson after going winless last by the name of Lamabe. Final~mpaign. Their only loss was evaluation of th.e trades will, ofo 14-12 setback at the hands of course, hinge on the respectiveFalmouth. performances of the players in-

Wet Season volved during the 1963 season.Among other things, the 1962 However, the willingness of the

c~mpnign will go down in his- Sox to attempt to do somethingt<l7)" as the wettest in modem about improving the club is aD?~als. If nothing else, those of refreshing departure from whatus who were regularly exposed bad become standard procedure.to the elements al:e now l'eason- It used to be that the SoxclJly certain that w,e're sanfor- never traded front line playersL:cd. And If there's concern in because they felt that theytrtc land that this generation is were always giving up moret,,8S hardy than its progenitors, than they were offered. Thisthese critics haven't been OR may' prove to be true in theirmli1d to witness the faithful stu- latest .transactions but a secondc;:CFlt body rooting its team on division club has obvious inade­d.espite most adverse weather quacies that it must attempt wec:adltions. modify. Time will tell.

The Alumni Field gridiron Willi Bring in basketball.

Page 19: 11.29.62

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Nov. 29, 1962

when the president reminded anorator that "Time is money" orwhen the president chided thespeaker for "preaching topreachers."

Sometimes the humor, in­tended or not, is provided by thespeaker himself. One speaker,carried away with his defense ofLatin in the Mass, pleaded: "Atleast leave us the 'Kyrie'," with.out reflecting that the "Kyrie" isone of the few non-Latin wordsin the Mass. Another entertainedthe assembly with his discourse,complete with gestures, on theawkward moments encounteredin administering the Sacramentof Baptism.

are discussed today. in journalsand books without clarity ofideas and depth of study," asthe communique expressed it.

Suggestions for amendmentcentered on the project's allegedrepetitiousness, its length, itsalleged emphasis 011 the legis­lative at the expense of thepastoral, and "the failure tosuggest remedies for atheism,"to quote the Council co~muni­

que.

The thesis was drafted by. apreparatory commission led byAMredo Cardinal Ottaviano.

Augustin Cardinal Bea, S..J.,a Biblican expert, has been aleading exponent of renewingthe Church, with an eye towardimproving relations bet wee Il

Christians.

Pope John named the twocardinals to serve as co-chair­men of the special commissionthat will review the divine re­velation subject.

Cardinal ottaviani is presi­dent of the Council's theologicalcommission. The Pope said allmembers of the commissionalong with the Christian Unitysecretariat also would be mem­bers of the special commission.

. Its task is to find points ofmutual agreement..

No date has .been set for areport but it's expected thecommission wIll do its workwhile the Council is in recess.

Revelationon

Debated

Text

studies.Proponent,s 'noted seminaries

were awaiting precise directionsfrom the Council. on doctrinaland exegetical problems "which

Human Activity During CouncilReminiscent of Other Congresses

VATICAN CITY (NC) ­'There is a side-play of humanactivity at the Second Vati­can Council that is reminis­cent of congresses and parlia­ments around the world.o Each session begins with Mass,

I in a different rite almost every.day. The ancient tongues attestthe church's universality.

This is all a prelude to thebusiness sessions. These beginwith announcement of the listof speakers that day.. It usuallyruns about 30 names, but the fullroster is seldom completed.

A touch of humor sometimesenters in, as happened once

of1/ nfluences

Impact On

Favor Catholi~

News AgencyROME (NC)-Creation of al)

international Catholic newsagency at the Vatican, has beenproposed in Ecumenical Gouncildiscussions on communicationsmedia.

The bureau would coordinatethe distribution of the more im.portant and official documentsof the Holy See, in brief, conciseand easily understood terms."

Stressed was the necessity forthe Church to use various com­munications means to reach allpeoples more effectively.

Repeated agreement wasgiven to proposals for the estab­lishment of an office in the HolySee or for enlargement of thealready existing Pontifical Com­mission for Radio, Televisionand Motion Pictures.

Hope was· expressed that lay­men would contribute their ex­perience and technical knowl­edge in making the influence ofthe Church's teachings felt inthe press and entertainmentfields.

abstruse, rigid and immature.".They said it did not take

enough account of the growthof dogma, that it overlooked theproblems of salvation "prior to

VATICAN CITY (NC) - TheEcumenical Council is pursuingits study of a text dealing withthe sources of Divine Revela­tion, after defeating a motionto shelve the controversialissue.

The treatise came under fireduring· its initial presentation.There was agitation fur a red­raft.

Some of the objectors com­plained the text would treadunnecessarily on non-Catholicsensibilities. Others pointed upthe problems which an inflexibleand highly scholastic formula­tion of Catholic teaching on re­velation might create for theunity movement.

It was stressed that the Coun­cil must mark progress and notregression in the Ecumenical

EffortUnity

POPE JOHN GRANTS SPECIAL AUD~ENCE TO JAPANESE IBUDDIST MONKS, WHO ARE TRAVELING THROUGH ROMEI

Re~raftI

ISpecial Commission to Study Subject, During Winter Re'cess

IJ,"evelation," (as the Councncommunique phrased it). Theysaid the draftI text gave littleencouragement to scientific re­search in theo16gy and scriptural

j

Unity rProgrammovement, tMt it must be a DefenSe of the draft in sum­help and not l an impediment. mary was on the' need for clearly

,I exposing Catholic' truth at a

B••shopsl'Reaff•. rm time when it is threatened by'so many errors. The fruits of

'p' the Council, it was said, mustLoya Ity II to ope be the fruits of sanctity forclergy and laity, the fruits of

At Aud1rerice truth for all who honor the'name of Christian; but the fruits

VATIC4N1 CITY (NC)" will mature only on the tree ofBishops of the United States .truth."are unsurp~sged in their Proponents of, the substitu­loyalty to the Holy See, Pope tion move were turned down

'with the admonition that itJohn was told as he receivedthe 230-Bisho~ U.S. delegation 'would only raise new juridicalat the Vatican Council. questions not covered by Coun-

cil regulations.The pledge: was made by . A Council communique noted

Francis Cardinal Spellman ofNew York, wh~ acted as spokes- that the proposal to pigeQnhole

. the discussion barely fell shortman for the' ~oup.'They were of the necessary two-thirds vote.welcomed by the' Pontiff in an-. The first chapter of the trea­other of the Iseries of sp'eCial tise deal with the two foldaudiences he ,has been holding sources of revela~ion, scripturefor national delegations to the and tradition.Council. ~ Eleven participants spoke OR

Cardinal Sp lIman made these the general outline of the pro-remarks:] 0

ject during the session before"Allow me to thank you fer-

vently for th~ honor granted to. the tabling motion was put to a230 Bishops OL the United States . vote. Among the speakers wasof America to be recehred in the recently elected masteraudience and! to hear the in- general of the Dominican Order.spiring and illuminating words Rev. Aniceto Fernandez, OP.of Your Holirtess. '

''T,he Bishops of the UnitedStates, if they· cannot claim tosurpass their! most w 0 r thy

. brothers in (he episcopate ofother places in fidelity to thePope and to the Apostolic See,do not want Ito be second toanyone. I

"By means of my humble per­son they wish to place at thefeet of Your Holiness their re­newed promik of total obedi­ence, of fervor of the apostolatein their daily! labors and in thegreat sacrifices to be made forthe salvation iof souls, the de­fenseo! the Church and the ser­vice of the datholic Faith.

"May we beg of Your Holinessa blessing fori ourselves, for ourpriests and Religious, for ourfaithful and ~ll our fellow citi-zens." I

I

Pope John Gree~s

Buddist MonksVATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope

30hn received 28 Bud d h 1s.tmonks in audience here.

He addressed them throughan interpreter, Msgr. AntoineAnoge, M. E. P., eccIesiasti.calcounselor at the Japanese em­bassy to the Holy See.

The Pope weI com e d themonks, who were on their wayborne after ilttending-ceremoniesm the United States markingBuddhism's 70th anniversary in~hat country.

Pope John spoke of his in­terest ill Japanese history andparticularly in the history ofthe early Christian missionaryefforts there. He recalled thatmissionaries who went to Japanafter the persecutions stoppedfound traces of the earlier evan­gelization.

The monks later visited PaoloCardinal Marella, archpriest ofSt. Peter's basilica. Earlier inhis career he was the first apos­~lic delegate to Japan.

VATICAN CITY (NC) - Thecontroversial Ecumenical Coun­cil thesis on the sources of divinerevelation, has been referred toIII special commission for red­mfting,

The move ends days of sharpdebate on the theological issue.

As submitted, the revela.ti~:mtext was interpreted by criticsas an obstacle to Christian unityefforts. They contended that thedraft text "tread unnecessarilyon non-Catholic sensibiliti~s." ' -

Proponents s~essed that theduty of the Council is to-ilIusb'ate and safeguard Catho­lic doctrine intact."

The very title of the project,--The Sources of Revelation,"bas been the topic of debateamong theologians. .

The Council of Trent spoke ofII "unique fount" of' revelation.The tet-m, "two sources of re-·velation," came into use among

." CaLholic theologians in the post­Tridentine period, when theywere defending tradition againsta theot-y that· put all faith in theBible alone.

Critics of the draft text con­sidered by the Ecumenical€ouncil called· it "excessively