11.09.61

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POPE JOHN HONORS DIOCESAN WOMAN AND SEVEN LAYMEN DR. JOHN C. CORRIGAN PHILIP M. HEMINGWAY p Sit. She was born in Fall River and is a communicant of St. Mary'. Cathedral parish. Dr. Corrigan Dr. Corrigan, one of FaD ,1 River's most eminent physicians I specializing in internal medicine, .I is the son of the la te Dominu: and Helen (Cosgrove) Corrigan. 'Fhe Fall River physician, who is a member of the executive body which directs the operation of the Massachusetts Blue Shield, was born Dec. 12, 1904 in Fall River. Dr. Corrigan, a communicant of Holy Name Church in Fall River, is married to the former " Elizabeth (Fitzgerald) of Provi- dence. They are the parents of two sons, John Jr., a Jesuit novice at Shadowbrook, Mass., and Dominic, a Junior at Holy Cr()ss College. Mr. Fernandes MI'. Fernandes, who is presi- dent of Fernandes S,upermarketa, is the son of the late Jose and Rosa (Teixeira) Fernandes. Ho was born in Arco Da Calhepa, Medeiro, in the Azores, on March 12, 1923.. He is married to the former Anabelle Watson. They are tho parents of three children, Joseph DECORATION: .This is W., Marcia and Donna M. the medal of the Papa,!. MI'. Fernandefl served as lay Knights 'of St. Gregory. chairman of the 1961 Catholia Charities Appeal and he also di- Upper left is medal in minia- reeted the 1960 campaign for tho ture for evening dress, upper . raising of funds f()r the building right is lapel button. Ribbon of Bishop Feehan High School in is red and orange. 'llurn to Page The diocesan social worker is the daughter of the late William and Louisa (Gerrard) Burns. JOSEPH E. FERNANDES Bi,shop Connolly Announces Papal Awards In for Church Pope John today honored seven prominent laymen of the diocese by appointing them as members of the Knights of St. Gregory the Great, and the Holy Father, at the same time, honored a woman who has devoted her life.to Catholic social work by bestowing upon her the medal of Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice. Announcement of the, Supreme Pontiff's appoint- ment was made by the Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop of Fall River. The designations bring to 18 the number of men who, over the course of the years, have been awarded the Knighthood of St. Gregory the Great in the Dio- cese and it increases to three the number of women who have re- ceived the Papal award for sig- nificant church work. Those honored are: Miss Helen F. Burns of 61 Brow Street, Fall River. Dr. John C? Corrigan ()f 659 Pearce Street, Fall River. Joseph E. Fernandes of 26 West Main Street, Norton. Philip M. Hemingway of 1'2 Ash Street, New Bedford .. , Norman F. Hochu of'120 ern Avenue, Fall River. Dr. Clement C. Maxweli of State Street, Taunton. George M. Montle of Read Street, Somerset. Eugene F. Phelan of Oakland Terrace, Mattapoisett. Miss Burns Miss Burns, official social worker in the Fall River Cath- olic Welfare Office, has been con- nected with this Bureau for the past 32 years. Miss Burns, who started during the episcopate of the Most Rev. Daniel F. Feehan, second Bishop of Fall River, has done outstanding work as a mar- riage counsellor for the diocese. She is also in charge of child adoptions. Miss Burns' field of activity extends from Fall River to Taun- ton to Attleboro. PRICE 10c $4.00 per Year The ANCHOR A'" Anckor of tke Soul, Sure lind rirm-BT. PAUL For the third time in the history of the Fall River Diocese, the Holy See has honored laymen with papal honors, making seven members of the Diocese Knights of St. Gregory. The Order of the Knights of St. Gregory is a Pontifical Order of Knighthood founded by Pope Gregory XVI on Sept. 1, 1831, under the patronage of Pope st. Gregory the Great. The Order was reformed by Pope St. Pius X in 1905. The Order was 'established to reward meritorrolltS serv,iee . to the Church and religion. Knighthood was first granted to members of, the Diocese when the late James H. Mahoney, Sr. and the late John Duff Sr., both of New Bedford, received the hooor from Pope Pius XI in 1934. The second granting of the honor was two years ago whee Pope John honored nine members of the Diocese with the dis- tinction. The Papal Medal Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice is awarded the Holy See for outstanding service to the Church. It has been granted twice before to lay women of the Diocese, by Pope Pius XII to Mrs. Carolyn B. Manning of New Bedford, former national head of the Daughters of Isabella and by Pope John to the late Miss Isabel H. Dearden of Fall River, for over 30 years Secretary at the Chancery Office. Mills Burns is thus the third lay woman of the Diocese to receive this Papal reeo,gnition. Fall River, Meiss., Thursday, Nov. 9, 1961 Vol. 5, No. 46 © 1961 The Anchor Third Time for NORMAN F.' HOCHU DR. CLEMENT C. MAXWELL GEORGE M. MONTLE EUGENE F. PHELAN

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DECORATION: .This is W., Marcia andDonnaM. the medal of the Papa,!. MI'. Fernandefl served as lay Knights 'of St. Gregory. chairman of the 1961 Catholia Thedesignationsbring to A'"AnckoroftkeSoul,Surelind rirm-BT.PAUL 'llurn to Page Fourt~ OrderofKnighthoodfoundedbyPopeGregory XVI onSept. 1, 1831,underthe patronageofPopest. GregorytheGreat.The OrderwasreformedbyPopeSt.PiusX in1905. PiusXII to Mrs. CarolynB.ManningofNewBedford,former extendsfromFallRiver to Taun- Shewasborn in FallRiverand .I I

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Page 1: 11.09.61

POPE JOHN HONORS DIOCESANWOMAN AND SEVEN LAYMEN

DR. JOHN C. CORRIGAN PHILIP M. HEMINGWAYp Sit.

She was born in Fall River andis a communicant of St. Mary'.Cathedral parish.

Dr. CorriganDr. Corrigan, one of FaD

,1 River's most eminent physiciansI specializing in internal medicine,

. I is the son of the la te Dominu:and Helen (Cosgrove) Corrigan.

'Fhe Fall River physician, whois a member of the executivebody which directs the operationof the Massachusetts Blue Shield,was born Dec. 12, 1904 in FallRiver.

Dr. Corrigan, a communicantof Holy Name Church in FallRiver, is married to the former

" Elizabeth (Fitzgerald) of Provi­dence. They are the parents oftwo sons, John Jr., a Jesuit

• novice at Shadowbrook, Mass.,and Dominic, a Junior at HolyCr()ss College.

Mr. Fernandes

MI'. Fernandes, who is presi­dent of Fernandes S,upermarketa,is the son of the late Jose andRosa (Teixeira) Fernandes. Howas born in Arco Da Calhepa,Medeiro, in the Azores, on March12, 1923..

He is married to the formerAnabelle Watson. They are thoparents of three children, Joseph

DECORATION: .This is W., Marcia and Donna M.the medal of the Papa,!. MI'. Fernandefl served as layKnights 'of St. Gregory. chairman of the 1961 Catholia

Charities Appeal and he also di­Upper left is medal in minia- reeted the 1960 campaign for thoture for evening dress, upper . raising of funds f()r the buildingright is lapel button. Ribbon of Bishop Feehan High School inis red and orange. 'llurn to Page Fourt~

The diocesan social worker isthe daughter of the late Williamand Louisa (Gerrard) Burns.

JOSEPH E. FERNANDES

Bi,shop Connolly Announces Papal AwardsIn Recognition~"of L~bor for Church

Pope John today honored seven prominent laymen of the diocese by appointing themas members of the Knights of St. Gregory the Great, and the Holy Father, at the same time,honored a woman who has devoted her life.to Catholic social work by bestowing upon herthe medal of Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice. Announcement of the, Supreme Pontiff's appoint­ment was made by the MostRev. James L. Connolly,Bishop of Fall River.

The designations bring to18 the number of men who, overthe course of the years, havebeen awarded the Knighthood ofSt. Gregory the Great in the Dio­cese and it increases to three thenumber of women who have re­ceived the Papal award for sig­nificant church work.

Those honored are:Miss Helen F. Burns of 61

Brow Street, Fall River.Dr. John C? Corrigan ()f 659

Pearce Street, Fall River.Joseph E. Fernandes of 26

West Main Street, Norton.Philip M. Hemingway of 1'2

Ash Street, New Bedford.., Norman F. Hochu of'120 Ea~ern Avenue, Fall River.

Dr. Clement C. Maxweli of 1~

State Street, Taunton.George M. Montle of Read

Street, Somerset.Eugene F. Phelan of Oakland

Terrace, Mattapoisett.Miss Burns

Miss Burns, official socialworker in the Fall River Cath­olic Welfare Office, has been con­nected with this Bureau for thepast 32 years. Miss Burns, whostarted during the episcopate ofthe Most Rev. Daniel F. Feehan,second Bishop of Fall River, hasdone outstanding work as a mar­riage counsellor for the diocese.She is also in charge of childadoptions.

Miss Burns' field of activityextends from Fall River to Taun­ton to Attleboro.

PRICE 10c$4.00 per Year

TheANCHORA'" Anckor of tke Soul, Sure lind rirm-BT. PAUL

For the third time in the history of the Fall River Diocese,the Holy See has honored laymen with papal honors, makingseven members of the Diocese Knights of St. Gregory.

The Order of the Knights of St. Gregory is a PontificalOrder of Knighthood founded by Pope Gregory XVI on Sept. 1,1831, under the patronage of Pope st. Gregory the Great. TheOrder was reformed by Pope St. Pius X in 1905.

The Order was 'established to reward meritorrolltS serv,iee .to the Church and religion.

Knighthood was first granted to members of, the Diocesewhen the late James H. Mahoney, Sr. and the late John DuffSr., both of New Bedford, received the hooor from Pope PiusXI in 1934.

The second granting of the honor was two years ago wheePope John honored nine members of the Diocese with the dis­tinction.

The Papal Medal Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice is awarded ~the Holy See for outstanding service to the Church. It has beengranted twice before to lay women of the Diocese, by PopePius XII to Mrs. Carolyn B. Manning of New Bedford, formernational head of the Daughters of Isabella and by Pope Johnto the late Miss Isabel H. Dearden of Fall River, for over 30years Secretary at the Chancery Office. Mills Burns is thus thethird lay woman of the Diocese to receive this Papal reeo,gnition.

Fall River, Meiss., Thursday, Nov. 9, 1961

Vol. 5, No. 46 © 1961 The Anchor

Third Time for D~ocese

NORMAN F.' HOCHU DR. CLEMENT C. MAXWELL GEORGE M. MONTLE EUGENE F. PHELAN

Page 2: 11.09.61

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OldWhile emphasizing that she

did not minimize the seriousnessof juvenile delinquency, SisterAngela declared that both theproblem arid its solution are old.

"Parents will have littletrouble guiding their adolescentsif they maintain a home whichis dedicated to God; a homewhere an awareness of His' willis cultivated; where children aretrained very early in the virtuesof obedience and sacrifice; andwhere the emotional climate is aproquct of mutual Christiancharity," she said.

Sister QuestionsToday's CriticismOf Teenagers

CLEVELAND (NC)'-Soyou' think today's teenagersare the worst ever?

You'd have had a hardtime convincing the Egyptiallpriest who in the year 4000 B.C.wrote: "Our earth is degenerate.Young people no longer obeytheir elders."

In citing the Egyptian's lament,. Sister Rose Angela, dean at Ur­

suline College for Women here,gently joshed people who takean overly grim view of the "ter­rible, teenagers." -

AristotleTo prove her point further ill

a talk to the Catholic Federationof Women's ClUbs, she quotedwhat Aristo.tle had to say aboutGreek teenagers in the fourthcentury B.C.: .

''They are change~ble andfickle in their desires, whichare violent while they last butquickly over ... They have ex­alted notions, because they havenot yet been humbled by life orlearned its necessary limitation.

, They are fond of fun and there­fore witty, wit being well bredinsolence."

DAUGHTERS Of ST. PAUL.... ,... ibfa (l4-U) .........

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av. MOl'HD JUl'UIOI• R ...... Ava. IOSTON •• MAti.

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Catholic Digest Has750.000' Circulation. NEW YORK (NC).,..... CatholicDigest magazine, now ob~rving

its 25th year of publication, hasannounced that its circulation inthe U. S. has grown from 7,000in 1936 to 750,000 today.

.The monthly Digest pUblishes10 foreign editions in Europeand Asia. 11vo more foreign edi­Uons, in Latin America andSpain, . are planned for nextnext year.

Necr~logyNOV.1Z

Rev. James H .. Looby, 1924,Pastor, Sacred Heart, Taunton.

Rev. Bernard Boylan,. 1925,Pastor, S1. Joseph, Fall Rivei'.

NOV. 13Rev. Louis J. Deady, 1924,

Founder, St. Louis, Fall River.NOV. 14

Rev. Francis J. Duffy, 1940,Founder, St, Mary; So. Dart­mouth.

NOV. 15Rev. Daniel E~ Doran, 1948,

Pastor, Immacu1ate ConcepUon,North Easton.

Rev. Thonias F. La Roche, 1939, .Assi~rit, Sacred Heart, Tau~

ton.• l,'

Mass Ordo

ST. JAMES GUILD: Arranging for installation of newofficers of the Pharmacists Guild of st James of the Dio­cese are, front, left to right, Moderator Rev. Albert F.Shovelton, Chairman Norman R. Caron, Secretary Janice

. E. Nowak; rear, left to right, Executive Secretary TimothyP. Keating and Treasurer' ~estor Mesquita.

CSMC Sets World Catholic', .

Populati'on at 5.50 MillionCINCINNATI (NC) - Catholics throughout the world

total some 550,356,000, about 18.3 per cent of the globalpopulation, according to the Catholic Students' MissionCrusade. 'In the United States, CatholicS number 42,104,900,or 22.9 per cent of the total seven in.~ total population ofpopu.1ation of 183,666,000, of 30,000.according to the CSMC. The Tiny Andorra, located betweenU.S. Catholic population is Spain and France, is-the world'sthe third largest among the na- only 100 per cent Catholic na­tions of the world.' tion. All 6,000 of its people are

The figures are contained in listed as Catholics.the CSMC's 1961 World Mission Nepal has the smallest per­Map, which shows' in graphic centage of Catholic~600 in aform the distribution' of Catho- total population of 9,170,308-oZ'lies throughout the world. The _ .007 per cent.map was prepared. by Harold J. The Soviet Union is said toSpaeth: have 10 million Catholics in a

Other figures contained in the population of 215,000,000: They,CSMC tabulation include the make up 4.7 per cent of the total.following: -

Brazil Largest. Brazil ·has the world's .largest

Catholic population, with 62;134,­533-93.5 per cent of the total.Other leading countries are Italy,with 48,78~,515 Catholics; theU. S.; France, with· 37,553,940Catholics; a1'ld MexiC(),. with33,634,770 Cathohcs.

Among geographical regions,western and southern Europelead in the number of Catholics,with 187,323,090. It is followedby South America.. '132,396,000;eastern Europe and the SovietUnion, 56,400,000; North Amer­ica, 50,176,000; and 'middleAmerica, 45,023,000.

Seven in qreenJand. ,The country with the smallest

Catholic population is' Green­land. Catholics there number

THE ANCHOR-:-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Nov. 9, ~9612

Stresses Catholics Obliged_To Support Farrii~y Value~

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

"What has happenec,' to the Catholic attitude towardinfidelity? I'm an air-lines' hostess living in, a large cityaway from home and have been dating a Catholic youngman who geemed,very serious in his intentions, even to thepoint of taking me out tohave dinner with his Catho­lic parents. The other dayone of our Non-Catholicpilots asked me if I knew thatthe young man was married andhad severalchildren!' Whydidn't his par­ents or friendsgive me this in­formation? Arethey indifferent ,to .infidelity, ordo they thinkit's a joke? Idon't!"

Yo u r letterpoints up a .veryserious problem,Catherine, for your experienceis not as exceptional as it mayappear to some o( my readers.

Of course this situation is lesslikely to occur in small town!! or'settled communities in which'people are well acquainted witheach other's backgrounds, but inour highly mobile, urbanized-so­ciety, it is becoming increasinglyeasy to maintain convenientanonymity.

Under .these cjrcumstances,some young women do not dis­cover the real marital status oftheir acquaintances until theyhave become deeply involved,with the result that they eithercause a divorce, enter an invalidmarriage, or suffer a badly dis­illusioning. experience.

Immoral' AttitudeBut the real issue your letter

raise~ is the amazingly immoralattitude' of Catholics toward suchsituations. 'In your- case it wasthe callous indiffer,ence of theman's ,parents and friends.

In another case, with which Ihave had to deal recently, theyoung woman reported that shehad met some 20 married .andunmarr:ied friends of, the manwho had proposed marriage toher, yet· none of them had both­ered to inform her that he was"happily" married and had ,three.lovely children.

What has happened to. theCatholic attitude toward the sinof infidelity? Have Catholics 'be­come merelY.indiffe·rent, or arethey guided by' the mistaken be­lief that what others do in thisregard is none of their concern,and consequently that adultswho keep company must bemindful of the old marketplacewarning, "Caveat elPptor!" (Letthe. buyer beware!)? I believethat the immoral attitude we arediscussing .shares in both thesetraits.

IDdiffereDee to SiDIn the' first pla<;e, there is in~

difference to the' serious sin of.infidelity. This is oovious on thepart of the shallow Do'n Juansinvolved, for ,they know thatthey are·violating. a'sacred com­mitment, sealed by a sacrament'. . ,.

and binding for life under allcircumstances. But there is alsoindifferenc.e to sin on the partof parents and friends. _

They apparently do not regardinfidelity as a seriou,S offense,since they cooperate with theoffending partner by helpinghim conceal his marital status.

This is a pos~tive act on thefrpart. Normally, parents andfriends would mention a man'swife and children, or give someindication that he was married,during the course of a friendlyconversation.

'Sheer Hypocrisy'Together with this indiffer­

ence toward sin, there is also alack of concern for others. Theattitude seems to be, "I'm notmy brother's keeper. He's oldenough to know what he's up to,and the girl should be smartenough not to be taken in withhis 'line'."

This is sheer hypocrisy, for itis their' tacit conspiracy of silel}cethat makes it possible for thecheater to get by with his decep­tion, while the innocent party isbound' to be misled by theiractions.

Of,course they will argue thatthey do not want ~ run the .riskof offending this double-dealer.Doesn't this imply that they re­gard the sin as trivial or ac­knowledge no concern for thewelfare of others?

'Clever Game'How do such Catholics "'get

that way"? Constant, unthinkingexposure to a secular climate ofopinion that does not recognize'man's essential dependence onGod and his consequent obliga­tion to live according to God'slaws has gradually dulled theirChristian sense of sin.

They still profess belief in thesovereignty of God, in heaven,hell, and the last judgIJ;lent, andthe individual's personal respon­sibility to God for his actions,but these beliefs are no longeroperative in their lives.'

They may dislike infidelityand avoid it themselves, yetmodern society' has conditionedthem to regard it as a kind of.clever game rather than a cheapdeception and a 'violation ofone'a' word to God and partaer.

Urges Group SupportThe development of such atti­

tudes has seriQus implicationsfor American Catholics. As Ihave explained' at length whendiscussing the qualities neededfor religious survival in this sec':

- ular so~iety (The -AmericanCatholic Family, Prentice-Hall,1956), the Catnolic minoritY must

. not only know their family val..ues and hold them in high es­teem, 'they must. also providegroup support. in . living up to FRIDAY~St. Andrew Avellino,

. them. . . Confessor. III Class.· White.Individual Catholics will not Mass Proper; Gloria;' Second

long withstand the impact of Collect SS. Tryphon and Com~. secular views'if Catholics as Ii. panions, Martyrs; no Creed;

group thoughtlessly cooperate' Common -Preface.FORTY HOURS· . with. the maritally . unfaithful-.in SATURDAY - St. Martin 01.

DEVOTION their midst, thus giving'the im":: . Tours, Bishop and .ConfessOr.pression-' that'. infidelity ,is a.' III Class. White. Mass PrQper;

Nov. 12~t. John-the Bap"' minor. "6f£ense. -or a'matter 01. Gloria;'" Second Collect St..tist, New Bedf.ord. 'perso~al optio~!' _.' ,'. Mennas';.' Martyr; nO Cr~.

Our Lady~ of 'the Isle, . . Common Preface. . .Nantucket.. '. . t' '... .··'f .... · ,".": 'SUNDAY'-'-XXV Sunday· After ')

Nov. 17""":'St. Stanislaus, Fall e.glon,,~ ue.cen,cl Pentecost•.. '11 ,::Class: Green., River. .... The follo~i11g films are to be'·" Mass Pr,oper;(Collects,.Epistle

Nov.1g....:;..St. Anthony, Matt;!..' il4.,t;ied .to ~he lists in -their'.respe"c- :,. and Gospel of V Sunday afterpoisett; ',:. '. _~ive classi~ications: ,,,' . .... . Epiphany..). Qloria;.,. Creed;

St. Anne, New Bedford. . . Unobjectionable-' for g'Emeial.'· Prefaceo£ Trinity. ~'.', .:" -:St. J ohnJhe E~!1ng·e.list;. ..:: j>afrorizige: !'1'hE(' Comaricheros; .MONDAX'~St: Didacus, .Corifes:-

Att1eboro.~ '.0:.':- ".. .:. ':' MiQsilmmer Night's'Oreiun (ree:;' ._. sor. III .Class. 'White. MassNov.2&-:bur Lady.\)r:tIi·~Im- ,.. ·oIliJnen-d~d;as.s'u.p~ior.e~ter.t8in->':· P~oper;. Gloria; DO' Creed;

ni:aculate : Conception;"· men.t).;:'" '- ., . ,..:. "Common Preface.New BedforQ~:-:" .'.. .' t,Tnobjectionable for adilliS~and " TUESDAy---.:st.Jollaphat, Bishop

8t: . Margar~t,· Buz~ards adQlesc~ii.ts: ,Gun Street~·:,·:.'.· and Martyr. ':III'Class. Red;''Bay.. .' ,',Unpbjectionable for. adults:· " Mass' Proper; Gloria' no

Nov.2!J.:-:-St. Catherine's' Con";' Bachelor in Paradise.'·.' Creed; Common'Preface.'.vent, .Fall River.···' Change in classification: Prime. WEDNESDAY - St. Albert the

Dec.3-St. Anthony:ofPadua, Time: This film, formerly'classi- Great, Bishop, Confessor andFall River., . .' fied as morally objectionable for Doctor of the Church. IIISt: Mary, Fairhaven. all, is ,no_w condemned. A 'new Class. White. Mass Proper;

version intensifies the original. Gloria; no Creed; COmmonTHIil ANCHOR moral offense of the first version Preface. .

Second Class P08talre, Paid at Fan River. and it is also noted' that the dis- THURSDAY - St. Gertrude theMnas. Published every rhuraday at no .Highland Avenue. Fall River. Maso•. 'by tributor violated his pledge that Great, Virgin. III ClaSs. White.~hail ~~~~I,ie's;~~:~"ir~nt~i1c"[)j,,eoeDIQrl only th.e first version would be .Mass Prop~r; Gloria; DepOBtpaid ".00 Pel' year. ".. shown 10 the United States. Creed; Common Preface

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3

, Zi'iM1S N

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Nov. 9, 1961

C. Neil ConnorsReal EstateNEW BEDFORD

WY 2-4788

Pre!@~@s S~~ S~~i~~$

Towogod frseiullshspMAHIM (NC)-Valerian Car­

dinal Gracias, Archbishop ofBombay, said that Catholics havemuch to learn from their Prot­estant brothers who have im­bibed a truly Christian spiritfrom constant contact with theBible.

Catholics on the whole havebeen backward in studying theScriptures, he said in a messaget~ the new Catholic GospelGroup here in India. He said heis confident the new associationwill foster interest and enthusi­asm for Bible study among Cath­olic lay people.

Socio~ogist SeesReal.Opportunity.In Latin America

PHILADELPHIA (NC) ­A priest-sociologist said herethat the Church faces anextraordinary challenge­and opportunity - in LatinAmerica today.

"In a sense, the opportunity inLatin America is greater thanin any other part of the world,"declared Father Joseph Fitzpat­trick, S.J., of Fordham Univer-sity. I

The Jesuit priest spoke at a'week-end meeting on lay mis­sionary work attended by sev­eral hundred high school andcollege students, and.professionalmen and women..

'Panic Reaction'Participants heard explana­

tions of the Papal Volunteersfor Latin America program, theExtension Volunteers and vari­ous lay missionary societies. Themeeting was sponsored by Msgr.Martin J. McDonough, PapalVolunteers representative forthe Philadelphia archdiocese.

Father Fitzpatrick cautionedagainst a "panic reaction" toproblems of the. Church in LatinAmerica-Hthat unless we dosomething about the situationright away, there won't be anyChurch in Latin America."

"I think the wiser approach isto look upon tflis situation aspart of the universal challengethat God has given to the Churchat the present time," he said.

,. i

among 3,633 persons in 29 Jap­anese communities.

The results, Fides reported,show two major trends in regardto religion:

There is a veering away fromthe traditional values centeredon the family' and the nationtoward greater interes't in the in­divid!1al.

There is a minority of believersin religion among all age groupsunder 50, but many people re­gard religion as a saving factor

. in society.

(DrquicktlellNty"

~~S~HEATING OIL

~4VE MOt~EY ON·YOUROILHEATIse ctlll=.CHARleS.F.' VAItG'A5254 ROCKDALE AVIHUI,.'NIW·~.'~:.

Men's and women's styles willbe modeled at the ninth annualfashion show sponsored by Pre­vost High School Alumni Asso­ciation, scheduled this year for7:30 Monday night, Nov. 13 atWb,ite's restaurant. Milton J.Dunlop is general chairman.

ROME (NC)-New research hasoutdated ear lie r sociol9gicalstudies which indicated that theJapanese al'e a nonreligiouspeople who cannot be convertedto Christianity, according to areport in Fides, mission newsagency published here.

Fides said a new book, "Astudy of Japanese NationalCharac;ter," shows that Japan isturning toward a way of life in­spired by Christian ideals.

The book presents 'the resultsof a pool conducted by a groupof Japanese social scientists

~ew Study Shows Japan TurningTo More Christian Way of Life

'BAREFOOT BOY' NOW HAS SHOES: An Africanchild looks down unbelievingiy as he is fitted with hisfirst pair of shoes. Supervising the operation is Robert G.Mellen, a Catholic Relief Services program director in Af­rica. The so-called "Dark Continent" is being given majorattention by the Bishops' relief organization in distributingthe clothing and supplies collected during the annualThanksgiving Clothing Collection. NC Photo.Joins .Byzantine

Studies .GroupWORCESTER (NC)-Assump­

tion College here has become'affiliated with the Institute ofByzantine Studies, an organiza,.tion of Assumptionist Fathersdevoted to greater research inthe little known area of Byzan-:tium. _

Father Armand H. Des~utels,A.A., Assumption president, ap­pointed Father ~orges L. Bis­sonnette, A.A., director cof thecollege's foreign affairs programand former chaplain to Ameri­cans in Moscow, as the coordi­nator between the college and.the institute. '

Reconstructs lLifeAim of the institute, founded

by Archbishop Louis Petit, A.A.,of Athens, who died in 1927, ist" reconstruct the political, reli­gious, literary and artistic life ofthe Roman Empire of the Orientfrom the fourth century when it .became Christian to its disap­pearance in the Iflth century.

Since the death of ArchbishopPetit, the institute has been di­rected by Father Vitalien Lau­rent, A.A.

In founding the instituteArchbishop Petit, the first· As­sumptionist priest to b~come abishop, followed a· directiontaken, by .Father' Emmanueld'Alzon,' A.A., . fc)under of theAssumptionist. Filthers,.· w.ho in1862 was· commis~ioned by Pope

. PiUi IX f.9 .work fOl",tl\e :retu~n,ofschismatic Eastern'" churches ·tothe Cat~ol!c Faith.'. .!

Asks .Faithful ·Cooperate in ThanksgivingClothing 'Collection for World's Needy

"All of us are aware ofthe needs w h i c h exist ..._._.................. "4throughout the world and of

'the efforts of America tohelp the poor and the needyeverywhere," Rev. Francis A.McCarthy, diocesan director elf.the Bishops' Annual Thanksgiv­ing Clothing Collection said today, as he announced plans forthe 1961 collection to be heldSunday, Monday and Tuesday ofThanksgiving week.

"Any kind of usable clothingis desired," the pastor of St.Joseph's in North Dighton added."This year particular emphasisis placed on the need for blan­kets, men's clothing and workshoes, and clothing for infantsand chilldren.

"We have been asked to dis­courage the contribution of any­thing but usable garments andpractical .shoes in pairs whichhave considerable' wear remain­ing in them.

GratefuD te All"Our diocese has done a splen­

did job down through the years.I am certainly very gratefUl tothose who have made this pos­sible."

Through the cooperation ofpr'iests and people of all partici­pating parishes, last year's col­lection yielded 105 tons, an in­crease of seven tons over theprevious year's.

The National Catholic WelfareConference, responsible for theann u a 1 clothing collection,spends only half a cent per dol­lar to distribute items collected,Father McCarthy said. This isbecause well organized reqefagencies of the Church overseascooperate in the mammoth taskof getting clothing and shoes tothose in need.

This year's will be the 13thannual collection and will beconducted in the nation's morethan 16,500 Catholic parishes.

Dr. O'Brie.. HecidsPeace Ass.oc jcitioft '. WASHINGTON (NC) - Dr.William V. O'Brien, director ofthe Institute of. Worid Polity, atGeorgetown University here, ,Ita.'been elected' president of theCatholic Associatiol't. fur Interna-_', ' ..tlonal Peace," .. 0 '. ' ~ :

Dr. O'Brien'll election. ca'me , ,during the 34th annual confer-. ~ till • '&II~.ence of the CAIP. He succeeds ~~~~Dr. Charles M. Herzfeld, assist-~ant director of the AdvancedResearch Projects agency of the New England's Playground'

Defense Department. Plan Y~u; Dance Party

75 Years of Service Fashion Shows andCLEVELAND (NC) - The Banqu~ts

Society of Jesus is marking its"5th year of service in the Dio- at Lincoln Park'scese of Cleveland. The Jesuits MILLION-DOLLARnow operate the 1,130-studentSt. Ignatius High School, John BALLROOMCarroll University with 4,200 can ROLAND GAMACHEstudents, and two parish.es-St. WYman 9-6984Pau'ick and Gesu.

Consecrates Former~ashington Staff~r

ROME (NC)-The Papal Sec­retary of State has consecrated aprelate who worked under him inWashington, D. C., when he wasApostolic Delegate in the Un~ted

States.Amleto Cardinal Cicognani

consecrated Archbishop Emman­uele Clarizio in Holy SpiritChurch near Vatican City. The55-year-old Ar.chbishop wasnamed Apostolic Nundo to theDominican Republic;

The new Archbishop served inWashington in 1947 and 1948. Heserved at Sydney, Australia, from1948 until 1954, at Karachi from1954 to 1958, and at Paris' from1958 until his present appoint­ment.

Leftists InfiltrateArgentine StateUniversity ~osts

WASHINGTON (NC) -.­A priest-editor from Argen­tina says that nation's seC"u­lar universities have becomeeenters of leftist propaganda.

Father Augustin Luchia Puig,A.A., also charged that "Marxists,if not communists," have infil­trated high administrative postsin Argetntina's state universities.

"Leftists have profited fromthe revolution that· toppledP,eron to invade the universities,"declared the Assumptionistpriest, editor of the weeklynewspaper Esquiu. The 12-year­old dictatorship of General JuanPeron was overthrown in Sep-tember of 1955. '

"The revolution' oQened thedoor to liberty" bu~ perhapsit opened it a bit too wide," saidthe priest. "Marxists, if not com­muilists, have entered., Thesehave taken directive posts in thesecular univerisites to the pointwhere these universities havebecome centers of propaganda."

He pointed out, 110wever, thatthe same freedom has allowedCatholics to open three univer­sities: the University of Cordoba,the University of Santa Mada de100 Buenos Aires, and the Uni­versity del Salvador, also inBuenos Aires:

Catholic NationFather Luchia Puig said Cath­

olic schools in Argentina receivefinancial support from the statebut that such support is a smallpart of the tax monies devotedto education.

He explained that some prov-,inces, such as that of BuenosAires, fail to carry out provisionsin the provincial constitution forteaching of religion in publicschools.

·AI·gentina's constitution makesclear that Argentina is a Cath­olic nation, he said. It stipulatesthat the president must be Cath­.lIc and that the state supportsthe Catholic religion.

"We are working for the ful­fillment of the constitution," hel18id. .

"Those who are working forsecularization of all education inArgentina base their case upona national law which describeseducation as "obligatory, freeand lay," he said.

"In the spirit of the lawmakers,lay education did not mean aneducation that forgets God," heasserted.

Page 4: 11.09.61

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THE ANCHOR-Dio~ese of Fall River-Thurs., Nov. 9, 1961

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Meeta~g Planned~~a. Theo~cgac ns

The annual regional meetingof the Catholic Theological So­ciety of America will be heldFriday afternoon and evening,Nov. 24, at St. John's Seminary.Brighton.

The afternoon conference, be­ginning at 4, will be conductedby Very Rev. Kevin O'Doherty,S.T.D., rector of St. Columban's'Seminary, Milton. His topic willbe "The Institution of the Sacra.­ments."

The evening conference, start­ing at 6:30, will be on "MoralProblems in Business," ,and willbe given by Rev. RaymondBaumhart, S.J.,' Boston College.

Dinner will be served at 5:30.All priests are invited to attendas guest's of St. John's Seminary.They should make reservationsbefore Saturday, Nov. 18 withRt. Rev.. Lawrence J. Riley atthe seminary.

Move Freely

Noting that he was allowed titleave the country freely' and

-promised re-admittance, BishopReilly said foreign-born priestsexpelled by Trujillo are grad­uallY,returning.

"They are coming back witllthe full approval of the govern­ment. Immigration authoritietlare placing no obstacles in theway of their return," he I'e­ported.

Some of those expelled are i:aSpain and Canada, he revealed.Because of distance, it will taketime to restore the Church to itafull strength, but he was confi­dent this will take place.

. respect and confidence of groupswith the most diverse politicaloutlook."

The Churoh, he noted, isbeing "very oareful" not to ,be-'come identified with any of t'heemerging political groups.

"We are regarding with greatsympathy the efforts to establishdemocracy and we are going tobe most careful not to intervene

~ directly," he stressed." His hope is that the Churchwill have g,reater opportunitiesto help shape the Republic's des­tiny by 'offering the guidance o;fthe social experience it bas gath­ered throu~h the centuries, theBishop explained.

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Return Priest's BodyTo Native Canada

MONTREAL (NC)-The body6f Father Eugene Prevost,founder of two religious com­munities, has been returned tohis Canada from France wherehe died in 1946.

Father Prevost in 19Q1 foundedLa Fraternite Sacerdotale (Sac­erdotal Fraternity) for priests.Later he founded the Congrega­tion des Oblates de Bethanie, asisterhood whose work is to co­operate in the works of thepriesthood through prayer aridsacrific~

Father Prevost's body was re­interred in the crypt of the Cen­acle'St. Pierre, at Pointe du Lac,near Trois Rivieres, one of therest homes for' priests foundedby the ,:ongregation in Canada.

c.U. COIl'D Strlll«: toonWASHINGTON (NC) - Con­

struction has started in threenew buildings at the CatholicUniversity of America here. Thebuildings:--a residence hall formen, a residence hall for womenand a women's .dining hall-arescheduled'to be ready for use inSeptember, 1962.

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93~n,@p Reports Church Relations~fll1i)PW@VCtrng i!l1 Domo~'ican Repub~ic

NEW YORK (NC) - Church-State relations in theDominican Republic tuday are cordial, according to a Bishopwho earlier was a main target of anti-Church attacks. Priestsare~ returning freely and all parishes Sooft will be runningon a' normal basis, Boston­born Bishop Thomas F.Reilly, C.SS.R., believes. The:&!demptorist, head of theindependent prelature of San

.Juan de la'Maguana, was a chief·target of the anti-Catholic perse­cution waged by the gQvernmentin the year and a half before theMay 30 assasination of General­issimo Rafael Trujiilo., The Trujillo regime began aviolent campaign against theChurch after the DominicanBishops in early 1960 del1ouriced,the government's violation ofhuman rights.

Cordial AtmosphereThe regime expelled more

than 50 foreign-born priests andit organized mob attacks onprelates, especially B ish 0 pReilly whose residence was de­stroyed. He' and other priestswere forced 'to flee to another­city for safety.

·The threats were of such grav­ity they drew a protest from theUnited States in an official noteto the Inter-American PeaceCommittee ()f the Org.anizati()llof American States.

However, since the death ofTrujillo and the assumption ()foffice by President Joaquin

<Balaguer, "there has been everyeffort on the part of the govern­mimt and the Church to workout a cordial atmosphere' and asolution of all difficulties,"Bishop Reilly revealed during abrief visit to the U.S.

Keep' Hands Off"In general," he added, "some

questions will be deferred untilthere is greater political sta­bility in the Republic. But ap­parently the Church enjoys the

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HEADS DIOCESE: Msgr.Thomas J. Drury has beennamed Ordinary of the new­ly established Diocese of SanAngelo in Texas. The Irishborn prelate has been activein diocesan newspaper workin the Lone Star State.

Meefing'to 'ShowUnivEu-sal LinksOf Confraternity

WASHINGTON (NC) ­The close link between theConfraternity of ChristianDoctrine in the U nit e dStates and in, Latin Americawill be poi,nted up at the forth:'coming four-day congress inDallas.

The congress, starting Tuesday,Nov. 28 will feature simultane­ous English and Spanish forumsand workshops' for delegatesfrom the two branches' of theChurch agency responsible forreligious education' of, Catholicsoutside Church' schools.

The English sessions will stresscontinued development of ~he

U. S. cO'nfraternity, now markingthe 25th ,anniversary of ths cen­'tral office, the national CCDcenter in Washington." .

Almbst all U. S. parishes' nowhave CCD units. But the same isnot true for the Church in LatinAmerica.

Consequently, the stress in theSpanish sessions will be how toorganize and develop CCD units,an effort placed under a 'full­time director.in 1957-an Amer-.iean, Father James McNiff, ·M.M.

Spread ProgramAt the invitation of the Latin

American Bishops' Council, Fr.McNiff, a veteran of missionarywork in Chile and Bolivia, joinedthe headquarters staff of thecouncil in Bogota, Colombia.

The Maryknoll priests and theCCD in' the United States have

.worked closely to spread theconfraternity's 'program of usingtrained lay volunteers to teachChristian doctrine, 'an importanteffort in a hemisphere wherethere is only one priest for every5,000 Catholics.. As a result of their mutual,efforts, a group of 15 LatinAmerican priests will go througha two-week "cram course" inCCD organization and method­ologyat Inc!lrnate Word College,San Antonio, in mid-November.

'50~langu«!lge Rosary'1n1 Congo Cathedral

LEOPOLDVILLE (NC) - TheRosary was said in 50 differentlanguages at a special ceremonyin St. Anne's cathedral here inthe Congo'.

Each Ave was recited by arepresentative, 'of a different -na­tion or tongue.

classroom construction and op­eration, for counseling and guid­ance services and for other as­sistance to about 10,000 Cubanchildren.

Private Schools OutThe Federal government has

ruled out helping Catholic andother private schools which en­roll refugee children since it be­gan its program of· assistanceearly this year. ' "

Church-:State relations weregiven as the reason for the ex­clusion in July by William L.Mitchell, Commissioner of theSocial Security Administrationand director' of the Federal gov­ernment's Cuban refugee reliefeff~rts.

Mitchell told a Senate subcom­mittee that he and Ribicoff haddiscussed the matter of aidingCubans who attend parochialschools, but concluded:

"It appeared on the basis ofthis discussion that the sameconsiderations that were in­volved in the national contro­versy on Federal aid to parochialschools were likewise involvedin the Miemi situation."

, "Furthermore, many .of the ac­tivities of the, ILO strengthenand improve the democratiCbases of economic and social de­

-velopment in the newer and less "de..-eloped countries of theworld."

In its early days and for manyyears thereafter, the chief con­cern of the International LaborOrganization 'was the develop­ment of fair labor' standardsthough the adoption of recom­mendations as to legislationwhich might be enacted and con­ventions which might be ratifiedby member states.' '

Many ActivitiesTo d~te well over 100 iJ:lterna­

tional labor conventions havebeen adopted at ILO conferences. ,Of these, approximately 90 con­ventions have become operativeand binding upon the countrieswhich have ratified them.

These conventions deal with agreat variety of subjects, includ­ing among others, safety andhealth of workers, maritimeworking conditions, the eight­hour d-ay, collective bargaining,the abolition of forced labor andfreedom of association.

But since 1946, when the lLOjoined the United Nations fam­ily, the development of laborstandards and their incorporationin international instrumentshave been complemented byother economic and social activi­ties. The ILO's program of tech­nical assistance has becomevitally ·important.

During the early days of itsdevelopment, the -ILO suppliedwhat it then called "advisorymissions" to member countries

'which requested assistance iR, one phase of labor activitity oranother. However, before 1946that phase of the ILO's opera­tions was minor.

Experienced SpecialistsAt the present time the ILO

has approximately 200 technicalassistance experts at work inmore than 56 countries of Africa,Asia, Europe, Latin America andthe Middle East.

Upon the request of membergovernments, experienced spe­cialists are recruited from allover the globe and sent to theareas in need of aid. These ex­per'ts advise on a multitude ofmatters, such as' how to improvetraining of unskilled workers,how to conduct manpower sur­veys, how to increase produc­tivity in industry and agricul­ture, how to improve' safetyconditions and how to promotethe development of handicrafts.

Examples of the ILO's tech­nical assistance work will becited in next ~eek's column.

Gcve~~mentAid to ClUlborll Child~en. .

Excludes Pa~cchial School Pupils

College DedicationNASHVILLE (NC) -Aquinas

Junior College conducted by theDominican Sisters, Nashville'sonly Catholic college, will bededicated Sunday by Bi~hop

William L. Adrian of Nashville.At the same time the Bishop willbless the new Overbrook ele­mentary school here.

. WASHINGTON (NC) - TheFederal government will give$1.5 million to Miami area pub­lic schools next September tesupport education of Cuban ref­ugee children.

But it will give no assistanceto parochial' or other privateschools which have assumed theburden of caring for numerousCuban youngsters. About 3,000are iii. Catholic schools alone.

Abraham .Ribicoff, Secretaryof Health, Education and Wel­fare, announced the allocation of$1,596,000 in support to DadeCounty public elementary andsecondary schools. '

The funds, he' 'said, will beused to help reimburse DadeCounty for the cost of required

~l~_ ~f[(Q)~~~m @~ 1[®~h[fil_B~@~,A~~e~t['@ffa~~ V;t@~~w ~mp@JrY'@o1~

'By Msgr. George G. HigginsDirector. NCWC Social Action Department I

It was indicated at the 'end of last week's column onthe International Labo,r Organization that in the -nextthree or four weeks I would attempt to supply some factualinformation on the day-to-day activities of the ILO - anorganization which Pop eJohn XXIII wholeheartedlyendorses in his new socialencyclical, Christianity andSocial Progress, Mater et Magis­

tra. My purpose in presenting thisinformation istb demonstratethe usefulnessof ILO as an in­strument of so­cialprogress andalso to show.how importantit 'is for theUnited States tocarry its fullweight in thecouncils of ILO;

Organized atthe close of World War I andsince 1946 a specialized agencyassociated with the United Na­tions, the ILO, in a world whereinternational crises are the orderof the day, is continuing the job'it has done for 40 years--the im­provement of man's working an~

living conditions.Removes Threats

While the measure of accom­plishment of the United Nationsand its specialized agencies inthe political sphere remains de­batable, international organiza­tions like the lLO have unques­tionably had, a real measure of,success in economic and socialmatters. And success in thesematters cannot fail to removesome of the threats to peace forwhich we all so earnestly pray.

It may be that in these special­ized agencies, dealing with social_and economic matters on an in­ternational scale, committed tothe doctrine that improvement

'in the "have 'not" countries isbeneficial also to the "have"eountries and placing the "haves"and "have nots" in partnershipto accomplish these common ob­jectives, we have found the keyto creating closer and friendliercontacts between nations. ' '

In this way the InternationalLabor Organization can be ex­tremely beneficial in the devel­opment of American foreign pol­icy. Its importance in such a rolehas been, well expressed byFrancis G. Wilcox, former As­sistant Secretary of State.

Creates Understanding"It provides a unique oppor­

tunity for the United States toexplain and demonstrate the ad­vantages of American political,economic and social institutions-the American way of life.

"American employers andAmerican workers, as wel~ asgovernment representatives, havean unusual occa'sion in the ILOto 'create understanding of theU. S. system.

Page 5: 11.09.61

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sionary teachers had been cau­tious about trying· to convertHindu students so as not to an­tagonize India's government.Now, he added, the governmentitself is concerned about themoral and spiritual needs ofstudents.

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Make Greater Effort to Converlt HindusCLEVELAND (NC)-Mission­

aries in India are making. stronger efforts to convert Hin­, dus in Catholic mission schools,

Father Emmanuel Briffa, S.J.,who has spent the last 10 yearsin India, disclosed here.

He said that in the past mis-

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the influence of Russia. Studentsare sent to study, in Cuba eachyear. Maybe they will be in Rus­sia next."

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Sometimes U. S. lForgets .

"The United States is a won­derful country, but sometimes itforgets the little countries, whichcannot provide many economicadvantages. Ecuador. is a smallcountry with a great heart. It isthe most beautiful country inthe world. Now I know that Ilove it very much.

"It was important. to come toNorth America to learn about­the Church. I admire the powerof the Church here. Here themen as well as the women allgo to Communion. The first timeI saw this I became very emo­tional. In South America themen do not do this. It would bewonderful if other people couldsee this and know what theUnited States is really like. Ihave seen it and know that what .'I have heard is true."

It . will be 11 years beforeRicardo can return to his coun­try. "Twice now I have beenvery homesick. I would giveanything to have five minutesthere!" he concluded.

Stonehill SaysCombat Reds

atto

"As students we were a groupof idealists. Many important peo­ple in Ecuador's history weregraduated from our high school,so we are sure we. will be influ­ential."

Ricardo believes firmly. thatthe future- of his country lieswith its students. "The studentsare very powerful, the mainheadache of the politicians, andeven influence the forming oflaws. They boss an'd commandthe whole country. That is whythe Communist professors aresuch a danger.

"The greatest 'help the UnitedStates could be in fighting Com­~unism in South America wouldbe in training students, five orsix in different fields from eachcountry. In five or six years,they would be most powerful.Preparing students would be thecomplete solution, a wall. against

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Chanese Salute PopeTAIPEI (NC) - Free China

marked the third anniversary ofthe coronation of Pope J9hn andalso his 80th birthday with a TeDeum (Hymn of Thanksgiving;in Taipei Cathedral sung b)the Apostolic Internuncio, Arch­bishop-elect Joseph Caprio.

'l'IME TO RELAX: Ricardo Unda of QuiJ;o, Ecuador,I:matches ,time from vre-med studies to relax in Stonehilldormitory.. Lefto to right. Kevin Finnegan, his roommate;Unda; Gregory Mendonca; Dennis Cormier:

I can answer questions when Ireturn. Often students who stu~yin the United 'States don't return.This country is really a paradise,where everyone works', has goodclothes, nice hom,es, and they do

, not want to return to the pov­erty. No one can bla~e them,but I believe I have a responsi-'biiity to return and do some­thing wor.thy for my country. Ilearned this from my mother.She is a holy person.

Group of Idealists

. Courses Assist MenWith Late Vocations.

PATERSON (NC)-More than60 men have entered seminariesin this diocese in the past twoyears after taking advantage ofa program offered by the ~t.

John the Baptist Late VocationsSociety.

The society was establishedhere in 1959, under the patron­age of Bishop James A. McNultyof Paterson. It offers classes inelementary, intermediate andadvanced Latin for older menwho believe they migh.t have avocation.

Enthrone MaryknollBishop in Kor~a

INCHON (NC)-More than athousand Catholics packed St.Paul's Church here for the en­thronement of Bishop William.1. McNaughton, M.M., first VicarApostolic of Inchon.

Bishop McNaughton, a nativeof Lawrence, Mass., is at 34 theyoungest bishop in Koresa. Hewas consecrated in the UnitedStates on Aug. 24.

He heads a See of about850,000 people on the Koreanmainland of whom 24,000 areCatholics. One offshore island inhis vicariate is within sight ofRed-ruled north Korea.

Tremendous Education

In Ricardo's words, "rhe edu­eation here is tremendous. At theUniversity we studied 11 or 12subjects, and when I heard thatwe would only have six I thoughtit would be easy, that I wouldbe the highest in the classes. ButI soon found out that it is diffi­cult. Here the students know afew things very well, whilethere it is a little of everything."

The articulate young man oncethought of becoming a priest,"but I saw that I could do greatwork as a lay person, who canlIOmetimes influence people whoare suspicious of priests.

"While I am here I want tolearn a lot about religion so that

Young Ecuadorian StudentCountry Needs U.S. Aid

By Marion Unsworth..All of my work when I return will be with the Church. That will be the· way to really

do something for my country," says Ricardo Unda of Quito, Ecuador, who is nowattending Stonehill College. When it was s.uggested that this was a noble attitude, heanswered_ simply, "It's honesty. It's citizen'ship." Ricardo, Stonehill's first foreign stu­dent, is a freshman, and isstudying the pre-medicalcourse. Hoping to specializein cardiology, Ricardo feelsa doctor can do a lot, both inrelieving human suffering andcombating Ecuador's rna j 0 rthreat, Communism, whose in­fluence he himself has experi­enced.

In Ecuador, the young manbelonged to the Social ChristianParty, and was a member of theCatholic Institute, a group ofyoung students who assist thepoor according to their abilities.Ricardo worked with the Sistersof Charity at a Catholic .hospital,while students studying engi­neering, for example, might helpin erecting houses.

...Jalf and Half

"Everyone has to accept thefact that'Ecuador is half-Catholicand half-Communist. Much ofthe propaganda and infiltrationnow comes from Cuba, and manyof the professors are Commun­ists," the student explaintrd.

"Many students, realizing theprofes~ors expect them to goalong with the Soviet line, do soin order to get their degrees, butos a member of the CatholicAction group, I decided to pro­test. The only result was that Icould not get good marks. More'than 75 students in medicine alsohad to leave the University."

Thus it came about that Ri­cardo investigated the possibilityof coming to the United States.He calls his coming somethingof an "adventure".

"One of the reasons I camehere was to learn English, whichI started to learn working inCatholic Action at home. Ofcourse I am first learning to beIII man." He arrived last Summerand worked in New York.

How did he come to Stoiiehill?"'MY best friend in the U. S., thedelegate from Ecuador to PaxRomana, has a friend in Sta",­{(lrd, Conn., Owen Carrol, who isa graduate of Stonehill, and hesuggested I try here. I receiveda tuition scholarship, and workas a general assistant for roomllnd board."

Ricardo says he ·realizes tha:the must receive scholarshipseach year in order to remam for·'my family cannot affor.d tosend me even fivE.. dollars amonth. They cannot. But I willwork next Summer," he addedhopefully, "and perhaps I will .make enough so that I will nothave to work during the yearllnd can spend more time on mystudies."

Page 6: 11.09.61

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'Worthwhile'Recipes'

... By Rev. John R, Foister ...St. Aathotoy'. Cflurch. "'ew - eclhwa

THE CONFITEORSt. Peter's is in a blaze M

glory. '\ Silver trumpets splitthe air to announce the alto­

rival of the ,Holy Father.Excitement spreads like a tidalwave: Orientals in their saris,Africans in their own flowingand colorful robes, Europeans icthe dark suitsand black veils,Americans inthe i r Sundaybest, all - IW

matter how sup­posedly digni­fied or reserved,-, jump, clapand cry outtheir "Viva".

Slowly, ,t h eHoly rather iscarried dow nthe longest aisle in the greatestchurch of Christendom. Sudden­ly, allis still. Not a soun'd dares

'break the religious silence.' ThePope, great as he is, the highestof all' Bishops, the curate ofChrist Himself, publicly andopenly confesses that he too­like us-has willfully 6ffendedAlmighty God. He beg~, us topray for him. (r

Dramatic? Yes, but so veryreal. Your own pastor and curatedoes the very same thing dayafter day for you. "-

In the early centuries, thePope would simply prostratehimself on the floor before theaItar. There he would silentlypray in preparation for thegreatest of man's actions - theSacrifice of the Mass.

Humility and PenanceLater, possibly because the ex~

citement surrounding a PapalMass is so dangerously absorb­ing, the Pope wrote down asample prayer: 'one which wouldreflect the penance and humilitywhich should precede such adignified office.

The'first such' prayer.was verysimple. The Pope would addressAlmighty God and falling before~is Divine Mercy, he wouldenumerate some'of the sins thaihe had committed (and been of­ficially for-given for in the Sat­rament of Penance). Soon thisdeeply personal and privateprayer became a public mani­festation of humility and pen­ance and at the end o{the prayer,the Pope would ask the peopletopl~a~ pray for him.

Adopt PrayerSurely, someone who would

honestly live and pray such aprayer would be, with the helpof God, best disposed to offer thegreat Sacrifice. So quickly,others who were privileged tocelebrate Mass also adopted thispreparatory prayer. They did notrepeat it word for' word but usedit as a type fOl' their OWIl.

prayer.From 1184 on, the prayer had

many developments. Cisterciansfired with the piety of St. Ber~nard, insisted that Our Lady bementioned in the prayer. Othersinvoked a number of saints.Others, pursuing another ex­treme, insisted that every possi-

,ble type of sin be mentioned.Soon the prayer ran' the risk

of becoming only a superficialdevotion and no longer a realpreparation for something SQ

• very important. The same in­'sistence on personal tastes wasthreatening ruin for many of theChurch's ceremonies and prayers.

Slight VariationsThe Council of Trent attempted

to put some order and reason illthe many existing ceremonies inits day. Finally, on July 14, 1570,,the Roman Rite became fixed aca definite rite. From then on;there would be one way to offerMass. This manner of celebratingMass spread to the Europeancountries and thence to the col­onies and among the many cere-'monies, a definite form of theConfiteof' was decided' upon. yetthe Church made willing con­cessions.

Those Orders which had been,using one particular rite for twohundred years were allowed to

"c:outinue, its use. Other Order-s, TWn' W Page SeveR

Vocations PromotionDrive Os Success

ST. PAUL (NC)-More than$300,000 was raised in the 1961

'campaign of the Opus SanctiPetri, a religious vocations pro­motion group.

Richard G. Donovan of theboard of active assoc.ates wId ameeting of 50 district chairmen'at the University of MinnesotaNewman Center the total was anincrease of $33,000 over the 1960campaign and $90,000 over the1959 drive. '

Bishop Leonard P. Cowle¥administrator of the archdiocese'reminded that the organizati~was formed by the late Arch­bishop William O. Brady of st.Paul. He said: "In its three yeaNit hils laid a solid foundation.Promotipn, o¢ vocations is aneeessity." ' "

TUESDAY - St. JosaphatBishop, Martyr. The reason f~the Christian's ready.. access to,the Father is the priesthood ofthe Son (Epistle). Such familiar­ity and confidence "would be'blasphemous if it were not Hisgift. Some of the llrguments wehave used,in defending the prac­tice of pr~ye,r to the saints shouldbe reexamined. How often hasone' heard it said that meetingGod in prayer is like visitJng ahuman dignitary and that there­fore it is to be done throughchannels and subordinates? The·liturgy. is our school of prayer,and the only mediator is Jesus 'our highpriest. '

WEDNESDAY-St. Albert theGreat, Bishop, Doctor. This doesnot do away with ,prayers of in­tercession to the saints. Quitethe contrary. But it does placesuch prayers in proper perspec­tive. This type of prayer is nat­h,ral W the Christian because 01.his acceptance by God throug,hthe Saviour's work of redemp­tion. It is not the cause of thatacceptance bu't its result., I donot come to God's grace throughAlbert" as great a saint andteacher in the Church as he was.Rather it is because of God'sgrace that I have more than amerely human communion withbim.

MONDAY....:..St. Didacus, Con­fessor: The same prayer patternis clear even in M;asses honoringthe saints. such as today's cele­bration in honor' of a corifessor.of·the ,Faith. ~ometimes it may

, appear as if we approach God byway of 'a complicated ladder ofintermediaries. Many people out­side the Church have, in factprecisely thi's' notion of Catholi~

,religious life. Exactly the op-posite is true. It is in God thatwe find our bond of unity withthem and it is in Him that 'we!lourish our love for them.,.

Need Gas NowCLEVELAND (NC)-Prepara­

tions began this week for a dioc­~!la~ 'synod to 'be held next year~n the Cleveland diocese. Thelast synod was 'heI.d' in "1882.

/

~ 'Thnou.'1~ th£ Waf... With tlu. ChWlch ']~_BY REV. ROBERT W. HO~DA. Catholic Un~~.rsitY .

.;: ." ':

'How's' That

TODAY-Dedication of theArchbasilica Of our Saviour. Sothe Church, in the, Catholic view,is not a building, not a temple,not a shrine, but a community.The community may celebrateits worship in homes, as in theapostolic age, or in the marvel­ous creations of Byzantine andGothic periods" or in 20th cen­tury churches which properlyemploy the architects and artists

'of our own day. But whereverthe Eucharistic celebration takes

, place, it is the commilnity whichis primary. The Epistle speaksof it as the holy city and theGospel points 00 the uniquenessof Christ's presence in that com­munity, of faith.

TOMORROW - st. AndrewAvellino, Confessor. Today'sGospel parabl~ .of the ,watchfulservants again uses the event ofa common ,meal to describe sal­vation. This is the classic symbolof ll,>ve and brotherhood, a sym-

. bol which our formal 'banquetsand family dinners enable us toappreciate even in our age of~unches and snacks.

SATURDAY - St. Martin ofTours,' Bishop, Confessor. Thepersonal light of the saints andthe functional light of the priest­hood both exist for the good ofthe whole body, the community.Just as no one is made holy forhis sake but for God and as wit­ness to God; so no one is markedw1th a priestly character,whether that of ,Baptism andConfirmation or'that of the min­istry in Holy Orders, except toempower him to enter into or tolead the brotherhood in its com­mon pra~er and its sacrificialmeal.

25TH SUNDAY AFTER PEN-'TECOST. (Collects and Scrip­~ure readings today are from theMass for the 5th Sunday afterEpiphany; the rest of the properfrom the 23rd Sunday after Pen­tecost.) The' Epistle's' final in­junction about doing all thingsin the name of Jesus' and givingthanks to' God the Fatherthrough him not only affirms the,Gospel truth that He is the onemediator between God and manbut also indieates the basicstructure of almost' all theprayers of the liturgy. Theyc:areaddressed to the Father and theyconclude. "through Christ," "illthe Spirit." ,

This is no mere formula.Whatever riches our doctrine ofthe communion of saints andmutual intercession has added toour praY,er life, that life mustalways return to prayer to theFather through Christ as to itsnorm and center.

ANCHOR

Religion,Club

f+~'®The

Service

A recent copy of the magazine, Social Welfare, pub­lished in Singapore fOr Malayan youth listed the seven''sins of modern society, sins as prevalent in the We"'t 11'" i1'\the East where they were pri'nted.' "

These defects in society are:,

Politics without principle.Pleasure without. conscience.Knowledge without character.Wealth without work.Blisiness without morality.

)Science without humanity.Worship without sac~ifice. ,These sins reflect the weaknesses 01' ,human nature"

weaknesses rooted in original sin and encouraged by thematerialism that' surrounds men. PeOple are more inClinedto ,good than to evil,_ and ~ore inclined to ease thall tohardship. There is always ,present the temptation to take'the easy way out, especially if there is also the prospectof getting away with' such an action-in this life, at anyrate. ~ ,

And that is what is the prime concern of those' givento those seven sins. Their concern is for this life. Powernow; pleasure now; know-how now; money now; successnow: advancement now; even-God forbid-the consoli­dation and conscience-stifling power of religious' ceremonial 'now, •

These men-,and there are many of them-live as ifthere were no God. They are, in effect, not believing butpracticing atheists. No wonder that the late Cardinal

-Suhard of Paris accused modern man of the great sin' ofatheism. '.,

And these practicing, atheists have convinced them­selves that they' can outwit both God and man in 'thispresent life, and wil1'be able to 'outwit their Creator in thelife to come, that is, when they think of the Creator andthe after-life. They believe that by a perfunctory fling atChurch attendance, an outward show of 'respectability, aconviction that as tpey'age the'ir former sins will some­how lose their damning power in the mere' extension oftime--that by such tactics they can wangle their way, asthey are accustomed to ,maneuvering on this earth, intoheaven' itself.

The Scriptures tell us that it is a "terrible thing tofall into the hands of the Living God." No one 'would wishto make God a God of fear. But He is a Just GOd-and Hisjustice will not be defeated by a ve:peer of respectability ora show of religion~ God reads the hearts of men. And thosewho indulge il). the seven deadly sina of modern society'willreap the just judgement for their aCtions.

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVERPublished weekly by The Catholic Pre~s of the Diocese of Fall River'

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

PUBLISHERMost Rev. James L. ,Connolly, D.O., PhD. '

GENERAL MANAG~R ASST. GENERAL-MANAGERRev. Daniel F. Shalloo. M.A. Rev.' John P. Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR' '.Hugh J. Golden

An associate editor of The Christian Century" a non­denominational Protestant' weekly, has called Americanchurches little more than service clubs.

It would Qe unkind to tell Mr. Martin E. Marty teHspeak for himself," but it might be said that some of thechurches have brought the, title on themselves.

The proper subject for religion i6 God. Since theProtestant Reformation, the emphasis, has shifted in manJ'of the non-Catholic denominations to man. And once manis the center of religious concern, then quite naturally theehurch catering to his needs becomes a service club. ,

Man's well being, man's health of body and mind amisoul, man's convenience--these begin to take a pi-ioriqrover the facts of God's existence and will. "

No one says that man is of no concern in religion. Butthe emphasis m,ust be on God and the things of God. And

'only when God has supremacy and priority does man enterthe picture as, His creature" His child.

A shift of ,emphasis, however slight, is' enou'gh todistort and throw out of focus every truth of supernatuPalreligion.

If enough men realize this-if, enough men build UJtan awareness of the supremacy of God. in their lives- 'then the distortion will be corrected. And men will be led toseek God-to seek the "image of the invisible God"-JesWlChrIst living on in His Church.

Page 7: 11.09.61

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THE ANCHOR­Thurs., Nov. 9, 1961

Noted Jesuit EditorGets Campion Award

NEW YORK (NC)-5ome 380I)ersons gathered here to' paytribute to Father John LaFarge,

• S.J.. for many years one of thecountry's' leading Catholic au­thors and editors.

The occasion was presel)tationof the 1961 Campion Award ofthe Catholic Book Club to the81-year-old Jesuit.

Author of several books,Father LaFarge has been on theeditorial staff of America mag­azine for 35 years. He is also oneof the founders of the CatholicInterracial Council movement.

'f

!

Attleboro YouthPlanning Social,For Saturday

A gigantic hay ride hasbeen planned in this area

. under the joint sponsorship"---, of the c.Y.a. councils of St.

.1

' Joseph Church, Attleboro, and ofSacred Heart Church, NorthAttleboro. The hay ride had ori­ginally been planned Jfor themembers of the host parishes.Under popular demand, a wel­come is now being extended toall C.Y;O. members of the Attle­boro Area.

All area C.Y.O. members whowish -to attend must make reser­vations as soon as possible dueto the shortage of wagons. Res­,ervations may be made by call­ing CA 2-5356 or MY 5-6310.Each member may bring a gueSt.

Dance FollowsParticipants will meet at

Sacred Heart Church Saturday,Nov; 11, and will 'leave thechurch grounds at 7:00 P.M. Adance is scheduled to follow inthe Sacred Heart Parish HallDoughnuts and cider will, beserved.

Members who have carriedout the planning of the hay rideare Robert Almeida and DonaldCardin, presidents of the hostcouncils, and Paul Guertin andLinda Ouellette, CD-chairmen ofthe executive committee. Chap­erons for the evening will be theadult advisors and assistant ad­visors of the Sacred Heart coun-cil. •

~ ~

• ' A FAMBLY TREAT " •i BAR-ll-Q CHICKENS!

• .ROS~lAWN •• FARMS"~t1U Washington St., Fairhaven ~.. Just off Route (l

: 1rY 7-9336 .

• Watch for Signs• While out for ~ Drive• Stop f{\ this Delightful Spot. \)' ,

eluding St. Mary's Cathedral InFall River, are living monu­ments to his genius. '

There were 3,500 communi­cants at St. Lawrence's' in t'heyear of its erection. Its territorycovered the whole city andadjacent towns.

For many· years after thededication of St. Lawrence allCatholics in New Bedford wereunder Father' McMahon's juris­d i c t Ion. Father McMahonlearned Portuguese to communi­cate with his Portuguese pa­rishioners but the Rev. Joao I.d'Arvedo came to St Lawrencein 1869 to assist Father Mc­Mahon' until. the. founding of St.JOhn the Baptist Church in 1871.

Three French priests' alsoassisted Fat,her McMahon in at­tending to the spiritual needsof the 'French-Canadian parish­Ioners ti n til Sacred Heart

,Church was opened in 1876.(To be continued)

A.W. MARTIN \SCRAP METALS

: 'WAST'E Pi\PER - RAGS,

1TRUCKS AND TRAILERS fOR I

PAPER DRIVES

ICHURCHES' SCOUTS and I

. CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS' I- lOBO .'3nawmut Avenue

~ ,New Bedford WY 2-7~8

ST. LAWRENCE CHURCH, ~EW BEDFORD

BOWEN'SFurniture Store

'JOSEPH M. f. DONAGHYowner/mgr.

142 Campbell St.New Bedford, Mass.WYman 9-6792

HEAOQUARTERSFORaJLONlA\AND

TRADmoNM fURNITUII

WEAR·'ShOes That Fit

"THE" FAMILY SHOE STORE"

JohnlsShoe ·Store

95 PLEASANT STREETfait River . OS 8·5811

paid for, and $13,300 in the<thurch treasury.

In' May 1865, he .purchasedfrom the heirs ()f Washington T.Walker the house and lot andanother lot in the real' f.,r$6,700. The additional purchasescontained about 20,000 squarefeet. The house was moved 30feet west to its site on' SummerStreet and ·became Ute rectory.

The eornerstone of the churchwas laid Dec. 1, 1866 by BishopWilliams and after four yearsthe edifice was opened for pUb­lic worship on Christmas Day1870. The church was called St.Lawrence's in honor of FatherMcMahon's patron sairit..

Granite Church"The church was, built underthe direction 'of Tho'mas Murphyof New Bedf)ord.' Its materialwas fine granite quarried from .Sullivan's Ledge on HathawayRoad in New' Bedford. St. Law­rence's, 'When completed, be­came 'known as one of the finestchurches iri the Boston Dioceseand today is regarded as one·of th'e most pleasing in the FallRiver Diocese. Total cost of thechurch when it was built is said,to have been $150,000.

!twas the first in the Dioceseto be built entirely without pil­lars. Its stout side walls hold upthe massive roof.

Architect :of the church wasC. P. Keeley, the most widely'known and successful Catholic,church, architect of his day.Practically all cathedrals of theDioceses of New Engla.nd, in-'

Pr.eaor of St. Lawrence, New Bedford,First Catholic Church Erected in Diocese

Coniecrate QuebecTo Christ the King

QUEBEC (NC)-Premier JeanLesage and Mayor Wilfrid Hamelconsecrated Quebec province and _city to Christ' the" King in St.'Sacrament Church here on theeve of the feast.

An hour of adoration preceded'a dialogue Mass' whic,h was at­tended' by 'hundreds from allpaCts of the City; , .

Arcbbishop Maurice Roy ofQuebec, Primate of Canada, inhis sermon deplored that theworld today wishes to regulateeverything through instinct,fashion or social convenience. Hesaid the true Christian must havethe courage to saY ''No'' ,to theforces of evil, ,to show that he is·B man of faith ,and that his lifeis governed by the teachings ofthe Gospel and the Church.

Fan .River K.CoNovember activities 'for Fan

River Council,' Knights ofColumbus will include a Massfor deceased members at 9..Sat­urday morning, Nov. 11 in St.Mary's Cathedral; a memorialservice and coilferring ·of thefirst degree Monday, Nov. 20; ameat pie supper and social Sat­urday. Nov. 18; and a rummagesale sponsored by membera'wiV'eS Saturday_ Nov.....

Nex. Pastor

The next pastor of St. Mary'swas ,Rev. Patrick Byrne who ar­rived in 1843. He. was succeededby Rev. James Maguire. FatherMaguire repor'ted to. his bishopthat he had a "lawless crowd"in his congregation. BisbopFenwick next assigned the spiri_tual welfare of New' Bedfor4Catholics to Rev. Thomas Mc­Nulty.

On Dec. 16, 1853 Rev. HenryE S. Henniss succeeded FatherMcNulty. During his 'adminis­tration the second St. Mary'sCburch was enlarged andpainted and he. acquired a rec­tory. Foreseeing the need of a 'larger church to aceommodatehis rnpidly growing flock, FatherHenniss in 11.856 bought land atCo,unty and Hillman Streets, the'present site of St. Lawrence's.Total cost of land, and the resi­dence thereon was in the 'vicin­ity of $5,000.

Civil War Interferes. ,

Plans for the church we~e

drawn in 1859 but the outbreakof the' c'ivil War caused tem­porary abandonment of theproject.

The Rev. Lawrence StephenMcMahon was the incumbent,in 1869, when the present St..Lawrence Church was, con­structed.

When Father McMahon ar-,rived in New Bedford, he foundthe original lot containjng· 20,- ,0.00 square feet on the cornerot Hillman and County Streets

By Avis C. ~berts

Probably few Catholics in the Fall River Diocese are aware that the first Catholiechurch erected within its confines was a rude little chapel at Allen and DartmouthStreets, New Bedford, now the site of the Aubertine Funeral Home. This was·the Churchof St. Mary, predecessor of one of the city's most imposing Catholic edifices - St.

-Lawrence Church, now lo­cated in a block bounded byCounty, North, Summer andHillman Streets. Also in' theblock: are Holy Family HighSchool; Holy Family GrammarSchool, the rectory and an addi_tional former homestead usedby the high school stUdents, theKempton House, which togetherwith the Sisters' convent atPleasant and Campbell Streets,make up the physical property.of the parish. .

The first church was built in1820 at a cost of $800 and wascalled St. Mary's. It was con­structed under direction of Rev.Philip Larissey, an Augustinian.It was dedicated in 1821 byBishop Cheverus and BishopFenwick in his diary mentionedit regretfully as "the pitiful littlebuilding."

In 1849 that first church wassold and the little band of NewBedford Catholics bought theUniversalist Church' at the cor­ner of Pleasant (then Fifth­Street) and School Streets, for$3,000. 0

Worthwhile .RecipesContinued from Pap 8k

were permitted to mentioD u..name of their founderl in theConfiteor and also to make minorchanges in the Mass' ceremonies.So, we have Fall River's Domin­icans, New Bedford's Franciscans,and Portsmouth Priory's Bene­dictines all using this one prayerwith slight variationS. .

Bite 01 Confiteo!'The preparatory ceremony to

Mass was not one' in which eachperson would withdraw intohimself and proclaim himself asinner. It followed a particularpattern and 'the knowledge ofsuch a pattern puts meaning inour own prayer. The Confiteorended with the appeal for othersto pray for us.

Later, 'two other prayers wereadded: the Misereatur (May theLord have mercy) and the Indul­gentiam (May the Lord grantus). The first of these prayerswas simply an answer to the ap­peal for prayers; it is in fact, aprayer for the person who hasjust publicly confessed. Pay at­tention next Sunday: the pastorcoJ;lfesses and asks you to pray;'you pray for him; you confess;'he prays for you.

Now it seems that this shouldbe the end of the Confiteor andfor centuries it waS;. But then theIndulgentiam came into use.This was simply to show thatthis public confession of sin's wasnot a Pharisaic ceremony butsomething very real.,The priestwould therefore borrow a prayerfrom the sacrament of Penance.

Generosity of GodIn some plac~ the priest

would turn toward the peopleto recite this prayer; in othershe would put on the stole (which

che carried in his hand until then)ant!! with the sign of the Crosswould recite this absolution. All •this only to give the ceremonymore meaning. But it must notbe thought that this public con­fession would replace the Sacra­ment of Penance. On the con­trary, many places made it ob­ligatory that the Celebrant {andothers) first receive Penance be­fore celebrating (and participat­ing in) IVlass.

This was only a true reminderof the generosity of God Whohad previously forgiven all seri­ous sin., But if the rite was sin­cere it was, of cour~,a trueforgiveness of venial (not griev­ous) sin and of willful imperfec­tions.

But our prayer did not springsimply from the Mass. It waswidely used as a preparation andpart of 'the Sacrament of Pen­once. The penitent would beginthe Confiteor. When mentioningthat. it was through his fault thatbe had sinned, he would thenmention the sins hE: luld aduallycommitted. Then he would fin­ish the prayer.

Favorite JPra)'01l'

The priest would take up theMisereatur, the IndulgentiamDnd the required Form of theSacrament. The prayer also be­came an introduction to the ad­ministration M. the Sacramentsof Holy Eucharist (outside of'Mass) and of Extreme Unction.It would prepare one for the re­ception of the Apostolic Blessing.

It became widely used' in theBreviary and made up the nor­mal Catholic's night prayers. ,Itremains today a meaningful partof 'the Church's Mass, Sacra­ments "and ceremonies; and ofcourse, a favorite ·prayer for ailCatholics.

Use Chureh· PatternIn praying it privately, we

must remember the humility, the'contrition and the God-backedconfidence that must accompanyit. As a preparation for the re­ception of a Sacrament, weshould pray ..it in thot ~ontext.

At Mass, we should remember itsspecial form or pattern whichgives it an added richness andmeaning. We should not simplyrecite our private brand' of theprayer but we should' pray it sathe Church has officially set itup: '

1. The celebrant confesses; we'witness silentl7

2. We pray for him (Misere-'atur)

3. We confess; he is our wi~

ness4. He prays for us5. The final prayer (Inclul.­

gentiam).(Next-Hail. Boll' Queen)

Page 8: 11.09.61

......:

,", "

President's WifeSupports Bazaor, WEST MEMPHIS (NC) - Acoptribution by Mrs. JacquelineKennedy, the First Lady, insuredthe success of the post officebooth at the annual bazaar of St.Michael's parish here.

Mrs. John E. Franchere, Jr.,in charge of securing gifts forthe booth, took a chance andwrote to Mrs. Kennedy for adonation. She specified the giftshould be not more than 50 cents.

Sure enough, a package camefrom the White House. All dona­tions were wrapped in unmarkedwrappers. The word went outthat Mrs. Kennedy's gift wasamong the parcels so the auctionproduced more revenue than thestand realized at past bazaars.

P. S. Mrs, Kennedy's donationwas a steel engraving of theWhl'te House. '

Monks Print ChristmasCards Early"for 1962

ST. BENOIT DE LAC (N,C)!f­The monks of the Benedictinemonastery here in Quebec areprinting their Christmas cardsearly-about a million of them,not for this year but for Christ­mas, 1962.

The cards are a source o:trevenue for the abbey, which isnoted alst>' for L'Ermite' cheese,a specialty of the Benedictines.Another source of abbey 'revenueis an 'album of long-play recordsor. Christmas carols, produced bythe Old Abb.ey Quarter, a Bene-

'dictine group. "

.":. : ~'" ~ ".:;~. ".

;

;>-i , ,_I GiV£lIIoFRESfi ~OUSTt'-A PAC~GE,,; .;, ~a~os Penest C,.koo ood: 'Lobster ,RO'ns

'. ~,'.:PuCEc YOuR DUn '. _ R£IGHBOmmou GROm

. t. ~ .-

Building Contractor/ .. .

, ,Masolftlfy

VBCTOR

FlEUREMT7 JEANETTE STIlEET

FAIRHAVEN, wy 4-7321

Basis fur Rullnc

I¢ w,ss' pointed out that Brlndapparently based his opinion on'a ruling made 60 years ago byNew York high courts. The caseconcerned several nuns whowere emploYed as public schoolteachers. The courts' upheld III

r-e:fusal to pay the nuns their

'Honor Bishop TonightBishop Connolly will be hon­

ored' tonight at the' annualBishop~ Night of New BedfordCatholic Women's Club. Dinnerwill be at 7, at the ,New Bed­ford Hotel,' followed by enter­tainment.

. sS%%S¥%%%%%%g"$$%S%S%%).;

.) D~BR~~~E OIL

) Heatl'oml«!j ©aB;~ @ IJ'iHdl ~M{[Il'll@IT~

" "'" ~.r~365 'NGRTH FRONT SletEliTDAY OF RECOLLECTION: -High Schoo~ Sodalists ,of ~ NEW BEDF,ORD ~

the Queen of Peace Sodality of the Diocese gather a,t. ~F)i.,. , ' WYman 2·5534 ~edral Camp Retreat House for a Day of Recollecti~

8'

Two 'Prospective Brides Learn, ,

Plf~«:~UC~~ S~d]e 0)* M~ ~~o~g®By Mary Tinley Daly ,

Hope, that which "springs eternal," - is present atour house, doubly, these days. Hope chests, we'mean. Twodiamond rings are sparkling on left hand ring fingers:those of Mary ,and Markie, the latter just since the last"At Our House"- column was the "cedar chest." Every girl,writ~en. Markie's fiance? probably until World War I andYoung pro Rafal Falkiewicz a great deal later had a cedar-the doctor-nurse combina- chest into which she stashed her

"dot" bit by bit. 'tion. As a practical sidelight,we note that we have now lost 'lI.'radition Persiststwo ex per t Later, those heavy, small-dis h washers. encompassing cedar chests were"You shouldn't replaced by brides of the '20'sgej; a diamond, and '30's with hope chests ,ofdull ish' by,various sizes, lighter in weight.dunking it in Prospective' brides of that eradishwater!" were frankly in the business

So, like the world.traditional say- More "boughten" items went NEW, WINDOW: New Connick stained glass windowin g Gf "too into the hopechest as each pay- in St. Lawrence Church, New Bedford, depicts Our 'Lady asman y chiefs day the brides-to-be spent part Q f P hId' Ch' t Ch'ld d 1 h' Stof their lunch hour shopping for ueen 0 eace 0 mg' rls I an a so sows .and not enough 'F"1 t f P . hhousehold items. Their mothers, Joseph, thus symbolizing Holy amI y, pa rons 0 arISIndians," w ehave two who still in the old tradition, were Grammar and High Schools. Window 'Yas gift of Mrs. Norawill wield only the dishtowel embroidering, tatting, crochet-E. Kenney, in memory, of Joseph T. Kenney. Organ of.This leaves, of course, the bath-' ing - building up household" Ch h b 'It d ed t . d to

goods for their daughters. urc was re UI ' an rearrang 0 expose wm ow ' 'ing•.~f the dishes to Ginny and'myself _ Ginny not yet own~ My own mother was, One 01. view.ing a diamond,' I wearing an 'these 'loving people with cleverengagement ring that has been fingers and a generous heart. New York State:: Official's Opinion,engaged in so many battles 01. That box that came to OUl' house c'

dishes that it, sparKles in spite' from' the midwest ,home was 'Threot'ens' School, TV Pro',g'ra'm,'of its humble tasks'.' filled with beautiful things, ,

Back to hope chests, the, t'hen.;. most Of which were 'her own SYRACUSE O'iC) ~ 1\n "off 'salary on' the ground that theand-now of such treasured items handiwork. Most of these itet1lil the cuff" opinion expressed here state prohibited payment of pUQ­accumulated by prospective are still lovingly used. by the at~rney fQr the New York lic funds to aid' a religious com-

Present-day hope' chests, 'at State Education 'Dep'artment may' munity-. ', brides. I t h' fThey date baCk, of course, inw east a our OUIle, al'e a ar cry jeopardize an educational tele-

antiquity when the "dowry" O'l' from this~ ". , vision course in, French for"dot" was "property which the Nevertheless, in Mary's room grammar school students in thewife brings to the husband as and in Markie's, remnants of the ' state.'I ~her marriage portion." anclEmt "dowry" tradition per- 'The situation concerned Sis-

In v,arious countries, vario,us sisto These two, 'to. whom a ters of St. Joseph and Sisters ofeultures, this "dowry" - hope tableclotli was just something on St. Francis, who have appearedchest to us in 1961, - has in- which to eat now know sizes, in their religious garb on the TV

,eluded everything from art' to kinds and are becoming discern- programs which are beamed intozebras. Back in Old Testament ing shoppers~ Towels are not public as well as private schools.days,' we note that' Rebekah just something to ,use after a At a meeting of the New Yorkbrought to her new home female bath: size, color, quality are State School Boards Associationslaves from her father's house- important matters. here Mrs. Lawreqce T. Wilson ofhold; Othniel received ,from his Blankets, bedspreads - ali Hamburg, N. Y., asked' if it isfather-in-law Caleb a field of ~ose "taken fur granted" arti- legal for nuns in religious garbsprings; and Solomon from Pha- cles they have 'lived with for to appear o~ TV programs inraoh, l:tis father-in-law, a city. years - are now' appraised for public schools. ,There are other instances of the their beauty, ,their wearing Charles A. Brind, education'gifts being camels, ,cattle and qualities, and their con! department counsel, then deliv-handwoven ,linen. Thus 'the ancient tradition ered his personal "off the cuff"

In our own country in the continues as young women pre- opinion. He answered: '''As atearly days, the "dowry" or "dot" pare to leave their family ,home matter of law no course can bemeant an exchange from family and establish their own. taught in public schools by ato family of acreage,' live- These hope chests are, in ~ person in re,ligious garb. Thisstock, or whatever. It included, small way, a symbol of the ~,.. applies whether' the 'teacher isparticularly ,from ,the bride.'s . tiiluing' stream Gf life. ' 'actually in the classroom Ol'

family, complete household ' comes' through 'on a televisionsupplies of linens, often accum- Diocesan Coundl Pions screen...·ulated from the time the mid- dowife, announced; "It's a girl!" Boord ,Meetin'g Sun y

Nowadays, things are differ- The Diocesan Council cI.ent, though remnants of the Catholic Women will hold a'time-honored customs, still pre- board meeting at3 this Sundayvail. ' /afternoon at the CYO lDIUi,

Up to the early days Gf this Franklin Street" Fall River.eentury, girls started their hope 'Officers of the Fall River ,dis­chests when they had nothing trict Gf the council will bebut hope. Needlework classes hostesses, headed by Missincluded the tortuous' embroid--Helen Chace 'and Mrs. Jamesering of towels and pillow caSes, O'Brien..tablecloths and napkins - even Mrs: Gilbert Noonan, Diqe­of dishtowels .:..... always with the esan president, will preside andbride's maiden name initials. officers of all districts will beWlio knew what the future name in attendance. ,Cooperation with •would be? Catholic Charities will be d!s-.

Along about that time came cussed.

\

o

Page 9: 11.09.61

FRESHER FLAVOR HOOD' COTrAGE CHEESE

9

~r.'is..,,,

. ,8

.....u_a_I_II_e1_a

Are You Wearing APretty Hat?

It's

~'.SOV....rfl Hew EnglalMl·.LDre-at MIA"-Y Pa.ldon StoN

134 SOUTH MAIH sTim. FAll .'V!R

Alumnae to MeetAlumnae of Dominican Acad­

emy; Fall River, will meet at 7:30Sunday night, Nov. 26 at theschool.

Fa" Rivei' DistrictHeads to Meet

Fall River district of the Di­ocesan Council of CatholicWomen will hold a meeting forpresidents of affiliates at 7:45Thursday night, Nov. 16 at HolyRosary parish hall. Each presi­dent may bring one alternatewith her, according to an­nouncement made by MissHelen Chace, district president.

Members of Holy RosaryWomen's Guild will be host­esses for the session and Rev.Raymond W. McCarthy, districtmoderator, will be· among thespeakers.

To Make ReportOn Workshop

Sister John Elizabeth, S.U.S.C.,principal of Sacred Hearts Acad­emy, Fall River, will speak at acommittee meeting of the NewEngland Association of Collegesand Secondary Schools to .beheld Wednesday, Nov. 15 inBoston.

She will report on an evalu­ation workshop held at Benning­ton College at which she repre­sented the Sub-Committee onEvaluation of Independent Sec­ondary Schools of the New Eng- ,land Association.

She will also assist in review­ing reports of visiting commit­tees who have evaluated schoolsin recent months and in recom­mending these schools to theparent committee for Associationmembership. .

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Nov. 9, 1961

COTrAGE CHEESE• •• fresher because if. New En.gfan4',!G8Iell uUerl

providing rides to non-publicschool pupils will be denied theirshare in the state's $3,000,000 ayear transportation subsidy.H~ declined to say how many

school districts provide the con­demned transportation. But Jo­sepb Craven, counsel for theDenver archdiocese, later esti­mated in response to a questionthat fewer than 100 parochialschool children would be· af­fected throughout the state.

Commissioner Hansford saidhis department's ruling to putnon-public school children offthe buses was prepared afterconsultation with Atty. Gen.Duke W. Dunbar.'

The U. S. Supreme Court hasdealt with the constitutionality01. carrying parochial school:pupils oil tax-paid buses on sev­eral occasions, each time holdingthat such • practice does notviol6te the Federal constitutioB.

You enjoy a flavor as crisp and clean as a bright Fall daywhen you make this cottage Cheese and pear salad a partof -your, meals. Hood Cottage Cheese is great in sa1ada,casseroles - or as a side dish in place of starchy vep­'tables. ,Your choice of large or tJ1D8I1 curd at your etoreor door! Brighten Fall mealtime with am. Savor favorite.

Parochial PupilsSchool Buses .

FRESHERFLAVOR

no head covering while workmgin the home. OutSIde, they weara modern blue hat, and in Sum­mer, may go bare-headed.

Candidates may be 1'1 to 30years old, and unlike the LittleSisters, widows who no lGngerhave family responsibilities mayjoin. Candidates ,may seek ad­mission at' local homes of 1IheUttle Sisters.

Rules AgainstRiding Publ ic

DENVER (NC) -Coloradopublic school districts have beentold they cannot lawfully pro­vide bus rides for children whoattend parochial or other privateschools.

Dr. Byron W., Hansford, StateCommissioner of Education, alsoannounced that districts whichdo not abandon tthe practicv of

SCHOLARSHIP BAL~: Members of Regis and TrinityClub of Taunton at their second annual Scholarship Ball,benefiting the Rev. Francis McKeon Scholarship Fund. Leftto right, EmmettWellwood, scholarship committee chair­man; Miss Mynette Briody, club president; Robert Menard,treasurer; .Miss Anna Maguire and Miss Mary Murphy,committee members.

D of I RegentMrs. Dante Cremonini, Saga­

MOl'e,.is newly elected regen.t ofMother Cabrini Ci·rcle, Daugh­ten of Isabella. With herwtlllIer'Ye Mrs. Charles William.s.vice regent; Mrs. James Boles,recording secretary; Mrs. John .Ariagno, financial secretary;Mrs. Earl Dwyer, treasurer; Mrs.Pet.'~.~

Little Sisters of the Poor, FormLess-Strict' Rei igious Community

CLEVELAND (NC) ---: 'l'he,Little Sisters of tbe Poor, whooperate homes ror aged through­out the world, are organizing theOblates 01.' the Little 'Sisters ofthe Poor, a new religious com­munity. '

The Oblates live in communityin the Little Sisters' homes, dosubstanUally the same work,help in caring for the aged, buttake solemn promises !or oneyear instead of vows.

Separate QuariersChapterB have been formed in

at least six cities of the· Balti­more province - Cleveland, Bal­timore, Cincinnati, Philadelphia,Indianapolis and Evansville. TheBaltimore province has 18 homeSfor the aged and includes Ohio,Indiana, and most of the Easternseaboard, but not New York and

·New England.In each home where a chapter

is formed, the Oblates have theirown quarters where they live acommunity life w~ich is separatefrom that of the Little Sisters.Their superior is the local su­perior of the Little Sisters' homein which they live. '

The Oblate rules are not asstrict as those of the Little Sis­ters. They may visit home once amonth and stay over night ifthey wish. Pennission for morefrequent visits home may begiven by the Little Sisters su­perior for sufficient reason, suchas sickness in the family.

Modern GarbThe· Oblates make solemn

promises - poverty, chastity,and obedience - for one year.The promises are renewed eachMay 1,' Feast of St. Jose!>h theWorker, their patron. '

The Oblates do not changetheir names when they join theoommunity. They retain their'family name and are referredto as Miss or Mrs.

'l'he Oblate habit is a plain,modem blue dress. They have ablue veil for chapel, but went'

Sister ReturnsThe St. Stanislaus PlU"ent­

Teacher and Alumni Associatioliwas commended by Bishop COIl­nolly on their tenth awi!veJ'8al'yand gave the Bishop • donatioatowards the support 01. NazarethBall, Fall River.

The affair was furta- bright­ened at the return from Rock­ville 'Center, Conn., 01. SisterMary Vianney, C.S.S.I'., whobelped to organize the P.T.A. tenyears alO • tile Fall BaverIC~

Baby .Blues N~t Uncommon;Here Are Ways to Cure Them'

, By Audrey Palm RikerThe birth of a baby is a thrilling high point in family

life. But a let down follows any emotional peak. And todaythere is increasing recognition that new mothers oftenexperience brief' periods of depression. Such "blue sPells"are rarely serious and sel-dom last more than a day 01' need considerable encourage-

. ment and support from husbandstwO. Just as there 18 00 and families as well as a minl­single cause for baby blues, mum of 'responsibility and de.there is no single remedy. cision making.New par:ents can better handle Food Importantth e s e unex-pected t b Poor or erratic nutrition. Nu-len t fee~nu; tritionally, the job isn't over

wh thg when the baby is born. Mothers

en ey un-derst,and some need even more of the sameC1f the inter- good, balanced diet and regularrelated physical meals that the doctor presc.ribedand psycholog- in ~regnancy.

1 1 ..- Discomfort. The temporaryca ,causes ~~r . .the bodily discomforts that some-B~ times follow births are often

.... y chan:gd. es. overlooked as sources of tension.

.... any eepmen tal and The~e ~re a wide v~riety ofphysical chan-" medications and treatments wges are telescoped into a few relieve most of them. Ask the

doctor.days. The return of the uterus The isolated family. Followingto nOl'mal and the arrival of the birth of a baby, countlessbreast milk are but two of the foung fumiHes are alone. Inmany complicated body changes these days of mobile families,• new mother experiences. helpful maiden aunts or even

Feeding difficulties. Breast proud grandmothers are., rarefeeding is a highly desirable luxuries. But young families canway to feed a baby. Bwt the and do help one. another. Dis­first few days often are diffi- courage company, but never sayeult. 'An inex'perienced mother, "no" to a friend or neighbOr• sleepy, Indifferent baby and who offers to bring in a ~eal,• slowly increasing milk supply' make a day's fonnula, take anmay cause anxiety. Simple per- older child out or do the shop­severance and competent med:f- ping., ,eal assistance relieve most of Talk it out, ha~ a good cry,these concerns. Bottle fed ba- read an entertaining book - anbies, too, sometimes display sim- these are p~oven remedies tollar problems. chase the blues. If they persist

Disappointed expectations. or get worse, consult your doc-First-time parents may harbor tor.barely conscious expectations ofhow their new baby will loOkand act. Unprepared to meet alIQualling, red-skinned mite witlh• large head, bowed legs, and a'receding chin, they are evenmore disturbed by unpredictablefeeding 'schedules and night­time. vigils.

Mother's ba JIIleIi: &eM

Change in role. During preg:.nancy, particularly the fi.rat one,the expectant mother &I thefocus of attention and concern.But following baby'. birth shepromptly takes a back seat and18, all at once, expected to be acompetent and attentive mother.New roles aren't learned soquickly and so easily.. Guilt feelings about indif­

ference. It takes time to learnt!l love a baby. Some highlymaternal women claim they feel• rush of lo~ and warmth foreach baby even before birth.Many others admit that deepaffection grows only gradually,day by day, in the interactionof feeding and caring for thebaby. A new mother sometimesmust be patient. Love will come.

Physical fatigue. New motherseren't invelids but they do needa minimum of two weeks whenthey do little but care :l'or them­selves a~ their 'baby: They usedto get. this enforced rest in thehospital, but today it isn't un­usual for a mother to returnbome in twenty-four hours.

It is ridiculous to tell a'mother of four to take two napsa day but even sne can lie downto feed the baby or snatch shortrests with her feet propped up.Outside help may be a luxurybut it: is quickly repaid by ashortened convalescence and abrighter outlook.

Mental fatigue. It takes atleast six weeks for the body toreturn to normal. EmotlQnalrest, too, is essential. Newmothers feel dependent and

Page 10: 11.09.61

"The Catholic's obligations ofeitizenship do not end at thepolls," he stated. "They beginthere. Teachers, executives andbusinessmen have a positivemoral duty to support, maintainand strengthen our civic, cul­tural, scientific and religious in-

. stitutions."

Re said Catholics can help dis-, pel misunderstandings pertain­

ing to faith and morals, papalinfallibility and the civil statusof the Church in the U. S.

Urf~~~ Cgifh@~;C~

Be«:@m@ Acfl'Bveha C@MmMll1atfy

BROOKLYN (NC)-"TheAmerican Catholic has avery special obligation toenter actively into commun­ity activities," the chairman ofthe Foreign Claims SettlementCommission of the U. S. said ata breakfast here of the FourthDegree Knights of Columbus.

"We have much to give," saidEdward D. Re, "and we are dere­lict in our duty to the degreethat we separate ourselves fromother people--our fellow Amer-icans." ,

10 THE ANCHOR-Thurs" Nov. 9, 1961

WEST HARWICH ELECTION: Officers of ,Holy Trinity High School of Religion,West Harwich, are, left to right, Elaine Rose, secretary; Neal· Hanlon, vice president;John Ormond, freshman representative; Patricia Ford. president; Pamela Hunter, fresh-,man representative; Peter Ford, treasurer. '

Catholic AgencyAids HurricaneHatt8e Vi~tnm$

NEW YORK (NC) - Theworldwide relief agency ofU.S. Catholics has sent thou­sands of po~nd8 of driedfood, c:lothing and medicines tothe British Honduras to assistvictims of Hurricane Hattie.

Auxiliary Bishop Edward E.Swanstrom of New York, execu­tive director of Catholic ReliefServices-National Catholic Wel­fare Conference, ,said that 5,000pounds of clothil1g and a thou­sand pounds of antibiotics from'the agency's warehouses wereflown from New York to Belize.Honduras, via l\(Iiami. , ,

The Bishop also disclosed thatthe SS Yucatan was en route tothe stricken capital with 92,016pounds of dried milk and 90,000pounds of dried beans from CRS-'NCWC warehouses.

In addition, 225,000 pounds offlour were loaded aboard the SSIrazu in Houston, Tex'" and areexpected to reach Belize aboutTuesday.

CRS-NCWC is the only volun­tary agency, operating an ap­proved relief and welfare pro­gram in the British Honduras.

It'sFARMFRESH

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ST. MATII!lIEU'S.lFALL RIVER

A parish penny sale is plannedfor Nov. 4, 11 and 19, all Satur­days. Next regular meeting ofthe Women's Guild is Monday,Nov. 27. Mrs. Vincent Letendrewill be chairman.

ST. AUGUSTINE.VINEYARD HAVEN

The' Women's Guild will 'holdan afternoon tea and Christmassale early next month. Hand­made aprons will be featured. Araffle on a fruit· cake will beheld at the Thursday. Nov. 16meeting.

Mrs.' Edmund Hickey and MissBernice Lopes are in charge ofthe altar this month.

DRY CLEANINGand

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HYANNISAMPLE PARKING

NOTRE DAME.lFALL RlIVIER

Teen-age parishioners will at­tend a whist party tomorrownight in the parish hall and arealso invited to a skating session-Friday, Nov. 17.

.The Council of Catholic Womenwill hold a cake sale Sunday•Nov. 19. Finals of a photographycontest are scheduled for Mon­day, Nov. 27. Members will at­'tend an open district meetingTuesday, Nov. 28 at St. Michael'sparish. .

The unit will cooperate in asale for the blind from 1:30 to 5Thursday afternoon, Nov. 16.Miss Jeannette Dupuis is incharge of arrangements.

The aimual Christmas party isslated for Wednesday, Dlc. 6 'atWhite's restaurant. Continuing'projects of the group include acandy sale and a plate sale.1ll0LY NAME,IFALL RIVIER

Under. co-sponsorship of theHoly Name Society and Women'sGuild, the annual bazaar will beheld from 1 to 9 Saturday, Nov.'18 at the school aUditorium.'

Features will include a snackbar, gift items, dolls, stuffedanimals, toys and grabs. Alsoamong attractions will be ...aChinese laundry and countrystore. .

A Mass for deceased mem­bers of the Women's 'Guild willbe celebrated at 8 this Satur­day morning. All members areurged to attend.

VISITATION GUIi.B.EASTHAM

Members will meet at 8 tonightat the home of Mrs. EdwardBenz, Wentworth Acres, North'Eastham.

.SEGUIN.Truck Body Builders

Aluminum or, Steel .944 County St.

NEW BEDIFORD. MASS.WY 2·6618 .

ATWoo·bOIL COMPANY

SHE l·LHI;ATING OILS

ST. ANNE'S.IFALlL RIVER.

The Social ,Group plans a whistand pre-holiday sale for Satur­day, Nov. 18. A Christmas partyis set for Sunday, Dec. 10 atWhite's restaurant. Next regularmeeting is 8 Wednesday night,

. Dec. 6 in the parish school.

ST. lLOmS,lFALlL RiVER

A Christmas supper and salewill be sponsored by the Women'sGuild Tuesday night in the par­ish hall. The supper will beserved at 6:30 and the sale willfollow immediately. Contact Mrs.William 'Lynch' of 183' OliverStreet for supper tickets. Mrs.Thomas Standish and Mrs. JosephMcGrady are 'in charge of ar-rangements. '

ST. MARY'S.NORTON

The Norton Catholic Women'sClub will sponsor a TurkeyWhist on Nov. 16 at 8 P.M. andhave high hopes St. .Mary's newhall will be finished in' time tohold it' there. If not, the party'will be held at Norton HighSchool Cafeteria. Mrs. VangieFonseca and Mrs. DorothyO'Malley are co-chairmen of the'affakThirty-two 15-pound tur­keys will be aw.arded.

ST. MARY,MANSIFIELD

The Catholic Women's Clubwill hold its regular monthlymeeting tonight in the parishhall at 8 o'clock.

Mr. Thackery, a handwritingexpert, will,conduct the progrfUDof entertainment.

~CULATE CONCEPnON.. BREWSTER AND DENNIS

The Holy NaJne Society haselected the following committeeheads for' the year: Paul La­Brecque of Brewster, Park 0'­Connors Jr., Dennis, and HaroldEllis, Pleasant Lake, St. Vincentde Paul Society; Viarren Doe andRobert Crowell, program; Her";bert Montgomery, James Coogan .and Mr. Doe, youth; Arthur Bar­onousky, marshall.

. Beginning. next month, theSunday following the meetingwill be regular corporate Gom­munion Sunday.

S8. PETER AND PAUL.lFAlLlL RlIVER

The Women's Club will spon­sor a turkey whist at 8 Mondaynight, Nov. 13 in the churchhall. Mrs. William F. O'Neill,chairman, will be aided by Mrs.Noel T. Harrison, co-chairman.

The parish school will holdopen house from 1:30 to, 4today.OUR L.A\DY OF MT. CARMElL,NEW BEDFORD

The Women's Club' will spon-'sor a mystery ride for guestsand members Wednesday, Nov.15. Mrs.' Priscilla Santos andMiss Evelyn Pimental are mak­ing arrangements. A Christmasparty will benefit the Sisters ofSt. Dorothy at the parish con­vent. Monthly corporate Com­munion will take place at 9:30Mass this'Sunday morning.ST. JOSEPH. •FAIRHAVEN

New officers of the CouplesClub are Mr. and Mrs. AnthonyE, Rose, presidenfs, Mr. and Mrs.Ernest N. Dion, vice presidentsand treasurers; Dr. and Mrs.Denis D. Brault, recording secre­tries; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A.Saladino Jr., corresponding sec­retries; Mr. and Mrs. Paul E.,Despres, publicity chairmen.·OUR LADY OF ANGELS.FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Womenwill sponsor a turkey whist Sat­urday, Nov. 18.ST. JOHN BAPTIST,CENTRAL VILLAGE

The Ladies Guild will holdits regular mee!jng tonight and',plans for a .bazaar' to be heldSaturday, Nov. 18 will be com­pleted. The bazaar, ~o be· heldfrom 2 o'clock on, at the churchhall will feature a boiled din­ner ftom 5:30 to 7. The unit'smonthly whist will take placeat 8 Saturday night, Nov. 11,also in the church halI. .

NEW CHURCH: The' New St. Hedwig Church, New­Bedford. will be dedicated and blessed next Sunday afte...noon

BLESSED SACRAMIENT.FALL RIVER

Slides of African missions willbe shown at the Council of Cath­olic Women meeting 'slated for'1:30 Wednesday night, Nov. 15 inthe church .hall. Proceeds of acollection will go to 'Rev. RobertSevigny, O.M.I. to assist himwith Christmas plans. Mrs. Juli­ette Fay and Mrs. Claire Magnoare in charge of arrangements.ST. JAMES,NEW BEDFORD

Msgr. Noon Circle will meet at'7:45 Wednesday night, Nov. 15in the lower church hall. "Margothe Magician" will perform andMiss Mary E. Foley and Mrs.Lawrence Foy will be in chargeof the coffee hour following.Members may bring guests.ST. MARY'S.NEW BEDFORD

The Women's Guild will servea potluck supper at the Monday.Nov. 13 meeting, which will alsobe the annual Men's Night. Thefilm "Operation Abolition" willbe shown after the business ses-

. sion, The meeting will be' heldat Polish-American Vets Hall,Acushnet Avenue. Mrs. LionelMartin ,is supper chairman.ST. JOAN OF ARC.ORLEANS

The Women's Guild will holda turkey whist at 8 Thursdaynight, Nov. .16 in the school hall.Mrs. Emilien Perreault is chair­man. The annual Christmas ba­zaar will be held Saturday, Dec.9, also in th~ school, with Mrs.Irene Bessom and Mrs. JosephineHorton in charge.SANTO CHRISTO.FALL RIVER

Saturday, Dec. 2 is the date setby parishioners for a family hamand bean supper. Servings willbe from 6 to 8. Mrs. Ann Faria.chairman, announces a meetingof helpers for, 7:30 tonight, in thechurch hall. '

Page 11: 11.09.61

..ANCHOR-Diocese ofFen River-Thurs., Nov. 9, 1961

ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION: A two-<Iay observance markedthe 60th aimiversary of Duvernay Council of the Society of St. JeanBaptiste. Events centered around Sacred Heart Church, North Attleboro,which the Council was instrumental in establishing. Top left, left to right,Adelard Ringuette, celebration chairman; Mrs. Joseph Chabot and Mr.Chabot, who was honored as a charter member of the Council; Romeo

Villemaire, Council president. Bottom left, J. Henri Goguen, nationalpresident and featured speaker; Bishop Connolly; Rev. Roger D. LeDuc,curate at Sacred Heart Church; and Rev. Joseph S. Larue, pastor andCouncil chaplain. Right, 'Adelarq Canuel, ticket chairman; Edward Ring­uette, Council director. Charter member Mr. Chabot is the father of threepriests, two o.f this Diocese, and a Sistell.

Says Denial' of Civil Ri91htsWorst Form of Subvers~on

"The Family ThatPrays TogetherStays Togethe";'

Attlebor&-South AUlebol'OSeekonk

THE

FIRST NATIONALBANK

I NEW !BEDFORD

The' vocation authorities willmeet the superiors of all reli­gious orders and congregations.They will also study use of mod­ern promoting methods.

';01 COUNTY ST.NEW BEDFORD

WY 3·175-1

INDUSTRIAL OilS

HEATING OILS

,TIMKEN

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Sales & Service

Experts to Study Priest S~ortag~VATICAN CITY (NC) -The

Church's vocation experts willhold their first international'congress in ROlne in Decemberto study ways to solve the short­age of priests and Religious.

The meeting, Dec. 10 to 16,will be under the auspices of theSacred Congregation of Reli­gious. ~o date bishops and Reli­gious superiors from 26 nationshave announced they will senddeleg'a!es.

A U. S. authority on YOClltions-Father Godfrey Poage, C.P., ofOhicago - has been called toRome to help officials of theCongregation of Religious planthe congr~ss.

Fund GrowsPHILADELPHIA (NC) -The

building fund for the new Acad­emy of Food Marketing at St.Joseph's College here grew $80,­000 within a 48-hour period. ,Asoup company gave $50,000 tothe fund, and within two daysa paper company gave $30,000.

HATHAWAYOIL CO. INC.

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Former LeaderRevisats Scene,Of Coac~ing

SAN ANTONIO (NC)Dwight D. Eisenhower re­turned to St. Mary's Univer­sity here to pay his firstvisit in more than 45 years.

The former President first be­came associated with St. Mary'sin 1916 when stationed at ForiSam Houston.

The university, then known aaSt. Louis College, needed a foot­ball coach. Eisenhower acceptedthe assignment which was of­fered to hirn by his commandingofficer, a friend of, the collegeoperated by the Society of Mary. 'He was coach for severalmonths.

Ike revisited the institutionduring a whirlwind politicaltour in Texas.

The .General of the Armieswas made an ex-officio memberof the board of governors. Hegave a short address, over thecampus radio station, KSTM.

Then he posed' on the frontsteps of the university for apicture to "be placed alongsideanother that has been a featurehere since' the subject rose toworld prominence - an agedsnapshot of a young lieutenantstanding on the steps with hisyoung bride, Mamie.

Annual memorial services fordeceased of the Iron Battalionand the dead of all wars will beheld at 11 this Sunday morningat Blessed Sacrament Church,2492 South Main Street, FallRiver, where Rev. Alfred J.Gendreau, pastor, will celebrateMass.

Participants will form a paradeat Shove and South Main Streetsto march'to the church. Follow­ing Mass they will proceed toNotre Dame Cemetery wherereligious and military ceremo-'nies will be held at the grave ofMsgr. Osias Boucher, formerIron Battalion chaplain.

Refreshments at Blessed Sac­rament hall will close the event,which will be the seventh an­nual pilgrimage and 42nd annualmemorial service sponsored Ii,.Jron BattaUoIiveterans.

Veterans to HoldMemorial Mass

tant fronts if we erode at homethoseo principles of human dig­nity and human rights that mosttruly give us our strongest ideo­logical stance vis-a-vis the com­munist world menace..., '

''Those who wor.ry so much,about communistic subversion athome might ~ell give equalenergy to the task of makingdemocracy come true here for allAmericans," he continued.

''The most dangerous subver­sion for America is that whichdenies in practice here at homethe human dignity, liberty andopportunity that we prbfess inour conflicts with communism."

Charity Tax E,xemptTORONTO (NC)-After pro­

tests by church leaders, thethree per cent sales tax recentlyenacted in Ontario provincewiH not apply to items IlOlQ _charitable baZ8Qnl.

WASHINGTON (NC)-Americans who concentrate 'onRed subversion at home should give equal energy to ex­tending civil rights to all U. S. citizens because denial ofthese rights is "the most dangerous subversion." Thisopinion was expressed byFather Theodore M. Hes­burgh, C.S.C,,' president ofthe University of NotreDame and a member of the U. S.Civil Rights Commission.

The Holy Cross priest wrote inthe current issue of the Amer­ican Alumni Council News onissues that should concern 'themodern alumnus.

He said the "true crisis" todayis not Red activity overseas, butwhat Americans are doing athome to deepen and extend theconvictions of human dignity,and rights which are the founda­tion of democracy and the basisof the American image abroad.

"A deepened moral fiber athome," he wrote, "would greatlystrengthen our cause abroad,which must seem incomprehen­sible and ridiculous in view ofrecent headlines: Freedom fight­ers backed by American arms inLatin America, Asia and Africa,while American arms stand idlyby watching American ,freedomfighters beaten bloodily byAmericans in Alabama."

Father Hesburgh, president ofthe Association of AmericanColleges, wrote that "the truecrisis of our day is not what thecommunists are doing in Cubaor Berlin, but what we are doingat home.

"We do little good combattingcommunism on foreign and dis-

Page 12: 11.09.61

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When the Soviets infiltrate a country and establish a Communistre«ime by force, the United states is then bound to protest 01' actor' fight to maintain the status quo. This, impledi1ltely, puts us onthe side of reaction. The missionaries, to the contrary, believe inedu~ating native clergy and a native elite to 'eventuaUy reformgovernment according W- the principles of justice and order.

,The more we study Communist techniques. the more we seethe value of The Society t<or the Propagation 01 the Faith. Khrash­ehev Is like a man with a hose who Is sprlnll:line a garden. Heshoots troubled water on, the street8 of Korea, then on the Dowerprdens of Form_, then on the dry'land 01 Jordan, driving theWes&em world era.,. with his diverslonal'J' tactics. The'Soele&7lor the, Propagation 01 the Faith haa a world plan. to-to serveall peoples all over- the world. But by Bendlne all alms to aeenkaD source--the Holy ~her-It eliminates dive"sionary orspasmodic! or unequal giving. as when eaeh decides for himselfwhere his alml will frO.

There are 569 religious communities in the Church. MllD7 ofthese are on the Missions. For Americans to aid only American mis­sionaries, the French to' aid only French' and Germans to aid onlyGennan missionaries is to destroy tile world plan. The Holy FatherknOws better than anyone of us where the needs are----he and tm,Church alone have a world pl'8l'l. It is an honor to lit into It, as youdO when you contribute to The Society for the Propagation of theFaith.

GOD LOVE YOU to a Grateful Sallor ,for $25 "Please acceptthis small" ofte'ring for the Missions ill thanksgiving fOl' a reeentadvance In ratiDJ'." .•. to Anonymous tor $5 f4JD thanksgiving toilL Bathilda lor a favor received." ••• to Mrs. G. D. 101' $50 "..am an eighty-slx-year-old mother, grandmother and l'I'eat grand­mother to a family of forty-six. and my heartaches 101' helpleababes." '

The ten' lette1'8 of GOD LOVE YOU spell out a decade of theRosary as they encircle' the medal originated by Bishop' Sheen tohonor'the Madonna of the World. With yoW' request and a cOl'res­ponding offering, you may order a GOD LOVE YOU medal in an,one of the ,following styles: ,

$ 2 small sterling silver$ 3 SJl1all 10k gold filled$ ,5 large sterling silver$10 large 10k ~Id filled

Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to it and man It to theMOIIt Rev, Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of the Society fOl'the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue. New York I, N, y ..or your Diocesan Director, ·RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE,368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass.

By Most Rev. FWtoa J. ShMII. D.O.There are three ways of dealing with underdeveloped eoun­

tries. The American Foreign' AId Polley general'ly believes iaworking froin the top down-from' government oWcials to hungrystomachs. The Communists believe in working from the ,bottom up-from hungry stomachs to the overthrow of governments. OurmiSSIonaries work from the outside to the inside; they feed ~hungry and then elevate their souls to self-determination of theirnatural destinies.

There are also several philosophies of 'giving to the under­developed people of, the world. The AmeriC8ll polley Is economieaid; the Soviet policy is economic aid withpsychological indoctrination In order toproduce world .imperialism. What a chaQgewould come over the world If ali UnitedStates foreign aid to underdeveloped coun­tries were given through Catholic andProtestant missionaries Instead of throughpoliticians. Thelle mill8ionaries live with thepeople, speak their language, share theirpoverty., love them unto death and bringto them the only real antidote there Is toCommunism - a Christ-like 'heart, thMwould die for virtue and truth rather thanbe a slave to the Anti-Christ of Com­munism.

A WAR D RECIPIENT:Thurgood Marshall, a lead­ing NAACP- legal officialwho has been nominated fora Federal judgeship, hasbeen awarded one of, the six1961 Thomas' J. Croweawards of the Chicago inter­racial Council. .

Use 'Bruta" TacticsAgainst Family Unit

CHICAGO (NC) - A veteranmissionary charged here'that theChinese communists are using"brutal ,and evil" methods toundermine Chinese family life.

Sister Mary Lelia, back in the'U. S. after 10 years in HongKong, noted that traditionallythe Chinese have had a high re­spect for the family.

''The Reds have perpetrated a'crime in destroying decency andloyalty," the Maryknoll nundeclared. "Today the Chinesecommunists separate wife fromhusband and children from par-'entS. They teach the little chil­dren to spy on their parents.and to tell tales which will en­danger'the lives o(tbeirmothe~

I!::~,~!~.:'t~.. ·.u~ .. u~ fl..: ".

12 ~ THE ANCH")~,-Diocese of ,Fall ~iver-Thurs., ~~v. 9, 19~1

Pictorial 'His~ory of Church '.Is 'Informative, Incisive' ,

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. Jo~n S., KennedyVery few' Cathohls have anYthing' even faintly

resembling lln adequate grasp on the hisWJ;'y of the Church.This is deplorable, for many reasons. An obvious one is

: that the lack of such knowledge leaves one unprepared toanswer common objectionsbased on history which iseither faulty or misunder-'stood. Another is that thetrue history of the Church, darkand bright. chapters alike, strong­ly testifies toher divine insti­tution and pro­bection. A thirdis that theChurch has, inthe past, weath­ered crises evenworse than thatthrough whichme is currentlystruggling andwhich is almostins u P P 0 r t -'ably discouraging and deprell8ing• the uninformed.

But conveying sufficientknowledge of the ,histol")< of the

'Church to the generality is 00easy task. Few people are going

'118 read multi-volume works,or"'wen a one-volume summary.

One would say that, save for aeertain factor, Edward Rice hasfound an ideal solution in hisThe Church: A PiCtorial History(Farrar, Straus and Cudahy.'10) . The certain factor is, ofcourse, the price. Ten dollars isa lot of money for a book whichdeserves to be in wide circula­tieR.

Text ExcellentIt is not excessive when one

lIODsiders the make-up of thebook. This is a large and hand­lOme volume, with hundreds of.illustrations drawn from many19urces and sharply reproouced.

As a picture book, then, this isllCImirable. But the text il notmerely a commentary .on thepictures. It has a distinctivemerit of its own. It obviouslyrepresents a great deal of read-:­iDg and reflection, and containlconcise and compendious writingot. no mean order.

As to proportioning, though inmain this ill excellent, one mustquestion the propriety of givingvery few pages to the centurieswhich have elapsed since theReformation. This part of, tl)e ,history of the Church is indubi­tably skimped, and one is aston- c,

Ished that it contains nothing of

the development of the Churchin America.

Has Balance, FaimessAn instance of the author's

balance and fairness is affordedby thP. section on the MiddleAges. This period he neitherdenigrates nor whitewashes. .

Its great merits and greatshort":comings are both empha­sized. 'Characterized by "primi-,tive housing conditions, dirt,supers~ition, and ignorance ... ,plague, famine, witchcraft andexploitation by rapacious war­lord," still it produced "a civil­ization whose art, llterature,architecture, mystical and theo­logical speculation have neverbeen surpassed." ,

Swift. Careful JustleeTwo features of that ,era about

which its devotees are silent andits adversaries are extremely ~

vocal are treated on two pages,one haaded "The prevalence of 'Cemetery Offici-alwitches," and the otm,r' "The, 'plight of the Jews." To each sub- Performs W'0'rkject Mr. Rice does swift but

careful justice: ·Of' Rell-gl-onHe shows that the so-calle4 .witches often were "the .pagan DETROIT (NC) _ Thedescendants .of older cultureswhich had never been converted Archbishop of Detroit .hasand held on tenaciously to pre-, told U.S. Catholic cemeteryChristian religions." , directors never to lose sight

Readily admitting ,:that the of the fact that they are engagedtreatment of Jews was ofteR in a work 'of religion:atrociowi, he yet points oUt that ArchbishoP John F. Deardenthe Church wal constantly con- spoke to more than 225 members

.. cerned about the enonnitles in- of the National Catholic 'Came-fUcted on this people. tarT Conference gathered here'

Objectl... VlewpoiM " for the organization's 17th annu-Mr. Rke is frank about' &be al convention.

evil conditions in Christendom, "You are occupied in a workand the rank abuses in the ' of religion. Do not ever'lose sight

, Church" priolI' to the Reforma- of this fact and bring io yourtloB. ' work the dee~ religiol,lB moti~

It is litt4e wonder that' Pico vations that your Faith can givedella Mirandola wrote of Leo X,' you," the' Archbishop told dele­"If Leo leaves crimes unpunished 'gates at tm, convention banquet.any longer, God Himself will . "In the nature of thing" heintervene," ,and that St. John

.Fisher said, "If the pope will not ,warned; "it is ,quite possible thatGod i fi 4 frequently you are so occupie,d

reform the Curia, w 11 n with material things that youmeans ,to do it." forget' the spiritual reality that

This in fine, is an informative,incisive review of the Christian underlines, what you are doing."centuries, the viewpoint objec- 'Rooted In Faithtive, the writing good to superb, The prelate urged cemeteryand the graphic material abun-. officials to remind themselves ofdant, often brilliant, and superior the', significance of t~ir workin presentation. and "to see that your, relations

'Salnt,Benediet', with others are such that theyAdvises Church The wizardly camera of Leon- understand that the reverentard von Matt is still employed as care the Church gives the dead'S k African' cUnningly and stunningly' as is rooted in the deepest andpea , ever" as can be seen in two new strongest, conviction 'of our

BOSTON (NC) - An author books 'for which he is chiefly re- Faith."and magazine director said that sponsible. One is Saint ,Benedict, In another session, Msgr. Ed­if the Church is to propagate and the text of which Dom Stephatn ward M. Kinney of the Madison;expand in Africa it must "speak Hilpisch; O.S.B., has supplied Wis., ,diocese, who is president of-

• African." (Regnery: $7), and the other ,is the' conference, discussed howAt the present time the Church The Coun'cils, which contains an families can keep up the burial

Is identified too closely with the essay by Father Burkhart plots of relatives:European influence, -which Mi'i- ,. Schneider, S.J. (Regnery. $7). He said it is more sensible tocans increasingly are rejecting, The Saint Benedict is the lat- spend funds on maintenance ofsaid Alioune Diop, recognized as est in the scintillant series which the burial place than in a rashone of'Mrica's foremost Catholic ha~ ab;eady dwelt on St. Francis of flowers' and other funeralintellectuals. of Assisi,St. Ignatius Loyola, costs at the time of death.

Diop, author of a number of St. Bernadette, St. Pius. X, and "'.J.:he. cemetery," he said; "isbooks on Mrica and director of .. others. ,,0 a sacred place second only to a.the French language magazine Of' its 230 pages, 124 deal with' church and money should bePresence Africaine, spoke at the the saint's career;. a few are used here to keep the holy place

·-eighth national conference of the given, to ,depicting the world beautiful. 'U. S.' National Commission for into which ~enedict steppe~ ~d "The ce~etery should be athe United Nations ,Eaucational, the evolution of monastiCIsm symbol of the passing from lifeScientific and Cultural Organ- before his time, and the rest. ~re /' to life" he said.ization (UNESCO). devoted. to ,the growth and VICIS- '

Outlines Program situdes of the Benedictine orderDuring an interview, he out- and its Offshoots down to the

lined a two-point program for present.the Church in Mrica: 'The Councils'

Greater encouragement of , ' The high points in the life ofAfricans to join the priesthood the saint,.born about 480, are hisand the appointment of more retirement to a hermitage inAfrican bishops and cardinals. youth, his founding of monas­He, noted that while this already teries, and the writing of the im­has begun, much still remal!s to perishable and tremendously in­be done. He remarked: ''The fluential Rule. These, togethertime must come when it will he with their setting and impact,possible for an African to be the are simply and clearly set forthpope." in the limpid text.

The necessity fOt' an, under- 'Tm, Councils ill mostly pic-, standing of Mrica by the leader- tures, although Father Sclmei­

ship of the Church, whieb he der'. introductory essay ilrated as' more important than packed with well-ordered factsincreased African repreSentation and shrewd general observations.in the hierarchy. Diop said that It gives an exact idee of what amany Mricans who do not DOW' council is, why it occurs, whataccept Christianity would wel- it accomplishes, and sketches thecom, the Church if its message circumstances and yield of thecould be brought to them ill several councils down to the'

:".Africao terms. , .", &a,YaticaaCounc~"

(

Page 13: 11.09.61

@011. IaURN5~S

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BEFORE YOUBUY - TRY

PARKMOTORSOLDSMOBILE

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R.S.M., moderator of the Mountclub, will accompany the girls.

B.U. ConferenceIrene Megan and Mary

O'Hearne, co-editors of Corona,St. Mary High School, Taunton,yearbook, attended the BostonUniversity Scholastic Press As­sociation Convention, held annu­ally for editors and staff mem­bers of scholastic newspapers,magazines and yearbooks atB.U.'s School of Public Rela­tions and Communications, un­der the auspices o~ the NewEngland Scholastic Press Asso­ciation.

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The art appreciation class, un­der the direction of Sister Mary.Adrienne, will tour the Museumof Fine Arts, the Isabella Stew­'al'tGardner Museum and theAgassiz Museum of ComparativeZoology in Boston. -

JournaHsm Conference

Journalism Club of Mount, St.Mary Academy will attend thesecond annual Scholastic PressInstitute day at StonelYll Col­lege. Copies of the school'snewspaper; the Mercian, will beenteted in competition withother high school newspapers,including. Shacady News, news­paper of the Sacred HeartsAcademy, Fall River.

Stonehill's program will in­clude background presentationsand workshops in all phases ofjournalism. Outstanding featureof the conference, to be held onSaturday, Dec. 9, will be theappearance of professional jour­nalists to conduct sessions and toailsist conferees with specificproblems. Sister Mary Flora,

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SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS: Elizabeth Donnelly, left, is the School-President atthe Dominican Academy in Fall River: Other "offiCers are, left to right: Patricia Ellen,treasurer; Dianne Rochfort, secretary; Barbara H~rt, vice-president; Michelle Gariepy,class president and Mary Rose DuPont, student council.

Forty members of Our Lady ofthe' Sacred Heart Sodality ofBishop Stang High, North Dart­mouth, attet:lded the Queen ofPeaCe Sodality. Union Day of.Recollection at Cathedral Camp.

Prefects of the' boys; and girls'units traveled to Boston for ameeting with Sodality Unionrepresentatives of New Englandat Boston College High School.

, The monthly meeting of theKnights and Handmaids of theSacred Heart was held thismorning at Stang High. A dis­cussion of the Encyclical Haurie­tis Aquas was begun by a mem-ber of the faculty. '

. Tomorrow, a solemn Mass winbe offered for the Holy Fatherat the North Dartmouth co-edschool. In the afternoon, theStudent Government Assembly

. will take place. The courtesy,attendance, and stUdent govern­ment banners will be awarded towinning classes, and the covetedspirit cup to the class amassingthe most points for cooperativeprojects..

Marian PlayersMarian Players, drama club of

the Academy of the Sacred'Hearts, Fall River, will presenta Harvest Minstrel on Wednes­day, Nov. 22, in the school audi­torium.' Interlocutor is Ann Tur­ner; end men, Susan Shea andBrenda Shea; comedians, ,Kath­leen Beaulieu and Nancy Card,in.Susan Nune and' Eleanor Edgettwill present solos.

Skating PartySophomores at, Sacred Hearts

Academy, Fairhaven, are spon­soring a roller skating party atLincoln Park on Friday, Nov. 10,from 6:30 to 10:30. Tickets willnot be sold at the door, but mustbe purchased beforehand frommembers of the cla~s.

Sodality Union Day'Judith Borges is organizer and

in charge of sales. Louise Sicardand Carol Oliveira prepare p~b­

licity. Chaperones will be Mr.and Mrs. Manuel Borges, Mr. andMrs. Reginald Chandler, Mr. andMrs. Manuel Oliveira, and Dr.and Mrs. Palll Sicard.

Most' College Admisisons, Officers'Approve Reasonable Participationh1 C@",co.a~Q'Bc~k~Jr A~tavgU'o~~

By Jl)alrnnel .'D'. ][)elalrney

In a large number of our best colleges and universities,only one out vf three Ol' four who apply are admitted, or sosay statistics. Many admissions officers, however, leaveyoungsters with wrong impressions when they quote onlythe size of their Freshman '

writing. This testing will be doneClass and the numher of ap- at the school by Tuesday, Nov.plications which were re- 21.ceived. The number who The plan of the test is to ad­applied, minus the number in the minister composition, problemsFreshman Class, does not give us to coll~e-bound students, to se­the number who were rejected. cure several examples of free

James P. McIntyre, Admis- writing and to compare resultssions Committee, Boston College, with that of free-writing exer­emphasizes that to appraise the cise'S. Composition writing prac­situation realistically, it is neces- tice is of particular value tosary to find out the number who every student.were accepted in order to get the Girls at the Mount attendedcorrect number in the Freshman an assembly for Catholic YouthClass. Multiple applications Week. The Sodality presentedforce colleges to accept more scenes depicting the differentstudents than they actually want. times Our Lady appeared to

Mr. McIntyre also points out, young Catholics and asked fo-r"We should also make distinc- prayers to convert Russia.tions with respect to the type of Lay Responsibilitiesprogram that applicants want. The need of the lay apostle inSome curricula may be oversub- the world was the topic of ascribed and cause a greater rate discussion presented by Rev.of rejections. These rejects might Edward C. Duffy, St. James Par­have been acceptable to the col- ish, New Bedford, to the studentlege of this choice in a program body at Holy Family High, inother than the one they wanted. that city. Dividing the work afWe have yet to,find a good stu- the laity, preserving the -workdent who was not acceptable to with souls already accomplishedso~e good college." and, conquering new souls in the

Aet~vities Important name of Christ, Father Duffy toldthe students, "The work of the

To be' cOnsidered favorably by Church is - SO great, that the'colleges, it is important that high needs cannot be met by. religiousschool students participate in alone; the laity must activelysome co-curricular activities. participate in the spr.eading ofMost colleges like to accept the Faith." The discussion wasyoung men and women who have sponsored by the Sodality of Ourdemonstrated that they are able Lady.and willing to contribute togroup efforts. Catholie Youth Sunday

However, when some appli- . Prevost High School, Fancants submit inordinately long River, presented a get-togetherlists of outside activities, .colleges for students, sponsored by thecan reasonably, suspect that 'these school's Sodality. Organized vol­applicants did not devote suffi- 'leyball and basketball gamescient time and effort to their were -played, refreshmentsprior obligation, school work. served, and music provided by

Considering the other extreme, the Corvairs, Prevost orchestra.it cannot be said that somebody Rosary devotions at Notre Damewithout activities would be ex- Church concluded the afternoon.eluded. Some applicants in this The school library is present­category favorably impress 001- ing a book fair with 1500 paper­leges because they had to work 'backs having been' made avail­after school to help with family able to the students. The booksexpenses. Invariably, these stu- include those of the reading pro­dents have demonstrated qualir gram and others to supplementties like responsibility, industry required readings.and initiative, which are highly Christmas Concertregarded by most colleges. Coyle High _of' Taunton has

Girls' League scheduled a' Christmas concertAt the Bristol County Girls' . for Sunday, Dec. 17..The Coyle

Athletic League meeting at Som- Band, under the direction oferset High School, the Academy Brother James Roos, C.S.C., and

• of the Sacred Hearts, Fall River, the Glee Club, directed by'took over the official manage- Brother William Babbitt, C.S.C.,ment for the year. Sister John will combine for the event.Elizabeth, SUSC, is president, The annual Coyle AlumniMrs. George E. Snyder, SHA Dance is scheduled for Thanks­physical edu.::ation instructor, giving night. Music will be pro­secretary. and Miss Mary Mc- vided by the Coyle Swing Band.Gowan, physical education in- The results of the intra-squadstructor, at Mount Saint Mary round robin tennis tourney are, .Academy, Fall River, is treas- in the winning orders: gold divi­urer. sion-William Floor, sopliomore,

The schedule for basketball is Brian Fitzgerald, freshman, andnow in the inakin~. By agree- John Doyle, sophomore; bluement of the coaches, the league division-Jol3epli Wade, sopho­will operate on a two-division more, John Cummings, sopho­basis. The Eastern Mass. Division more, and Kenneth Povrers,comprises Apponequet Regional, senior.Stang, Dartmouth, New BedfordHigh, New Bedford Vocationaland Westport. The Western Divi­sion includes Case, Dighton­Rehoboth, Dominican, DurfeeJesus-Mary, Mount St. Mary,Somerset, Taunton High, andSacred Hearts of Fan River.

Courtesy WeekThe student' council at Bishop

Feehan High, North Attleboro,is sponsoring courtesy week, acampaign for teen-age courtesy.A poster and essay contest fea­ture the movement.

A delegation from Feehan'sphysical science classes haveconducted an inspection tour ofthe Attleboro Water Dept. Stu-dents learned how their watersupply was procured, purifiedand pumped ,to various parts ofthe city.

.' Composition 'Festing ,. '.Among the participants in the

College Board Research Programin Composition Testing.will be 60 &150 complete Boner-BurD~juniors and seniors of Mount st. or Furnace Vnita. ,EfficientMary Academy, Fall River. low cost beatl!ng. Burner and

Composition Testing is to de- fuet 011 sales and service.'termine tlle effectiveness af ~ . Stanley Oil CO., Inc.rious objective and "semi-objeo- ao Mt. Phulurt SUedtive types of questions all pr~ .. Redipi'd WY 1I-2tG'J

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Page 14: 11.09.61

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.Papat 'Honors 'for·.·'D'i.ocesan .:Member:sContinued from Page One . Peter & Paul's Church' in 2all

·Ai~leboro, 'IlOW iin 'its 'first"Year 'of ~iver. ,lopera'1ii1!m.Dr. ~Ma;xwell, who 'earned 'his

In addttion, me iis at -representa- 'doctorate'at lForcJhmn ;'(lJn1versity,.tjv;e of.the inter,natrlonal ,bureau 'l'eceived 'lin 1honm-ary -degree.of ,the ·economic .commission )for . 'from 5tonEfuH.'1 'Col~ege ,'in 196'1..:La,tin !America. He is dl .member He iisa 1llember'df fmmacula'tG<of ,st. Mllryls iParish .in.Norton. Conception·,pa'l'is"h ;m'Tawtton.

lMr.. JIlmningway '!Mr. MOn&!e' . .1VFr. Heniingway, 'who~tes ..Mr:. Montle, ,it well~wn 'Fall

!the ··Hemiingway 1BI'othel's Initer- .River tPluiribing.andilieatiGi.oon­·Sta'te '!I'ruekmg (Company, is tthe, tr.actor, was :born :in .Fall 'Riv.er!father 'Of 'six 'Clil''1iJren, ~our ~ls ,on "MarCh:31, 1890" the.son lof~e'Rnd two \bqys. ' ' . ,ilate,cRarJes ana Anna ;(KirineaD)

·Mr. 'Hem'irTgway is ·fll-e 'Son 'of lVIonUe.,. "'the 'lltte. JosePh 'and A:nna .A communicaDt Of 5lXhomas'fCi:!'£frey) Hem'ingway. fie was :Mor.e ,par.ish in' .Some.r.set, .he .is',born February 17, 1897 'in 'New .married· ito >the ;former :DoralEedlfOO1d• .He :manr.ied ,the .:former T.atreault..Bernadette Vaillencourt.' '!Mr. P'helan

In June 2960,·Mr. :Hemingway " Mr: phelan,.onecof '.Bristol'received, 'an 'honurary ~egree'County:s .mone,promineitt !bank­from Stonelilll .CoHeg~. , ' 'jngofl'.icia'ls .JB J.rea'imra- .of ..the

His cni1aren ai:e: Philip M. :Til'.. .New ,Becl."fOr.d ,and Acushnet ..co-Theresa, Wincemt, .Bernadetite, ,6per.ati-ve .Eank. ..Joan and Patricia, who is now . TIle 'New .Bedford it 1ibancierSister :Mau Bernadette of t"he .has lotig ,held ,a p:r.oriUnent :Place'Order of .the Sacred Hearts with .lin .the ,St.. V:incem,t .de JP,a'lil1 ,80- 'the mdtherli"ouse 'in ·Fairhaven. <ciety.activ-.ities Jin.!New Bedford.She is now staticiri~d in·a con- tHe ser.vedas ·chairnian fdf ',thevent in Canada..., '. , "1956 Catholic Charities Appeal.

'Mr. 'Hemingway is 'a, commnni- 'Mr.'P.he:Ian was iborn Tn Newcant of St. Jamespaiish, in Bedford on April 3; 1901, the'senNew Bedford. . ,. . of the late John' R~· and' MaTY'

" ~. Hoehn, (Galli'gan) Phelan'. He' was mar-Mr.. Hochu, a Fall River' real- tied to 'the late Agnes':l\1:' ~upre.

tor, 'has !represented!the Diocese . ~. Phelan h~s two chIldren,'0'£ "Fa'll 'River "in 'many 'transac- . :'L0tnl?e .and MarIe..tions. , .He is, a cO~~':licant o~ 'St.

He was born "on Oct. '22, 1908 ' A:nthonys jparIsh.. 'MattapOIsett.in Fall .!River, the ,SOli ',of Mrs.' , ..... '. "Berthe (Marlen) Hochu :~nd' the lBUS1RJides ~SSQJl~1S~e ..P..i.er.re .Hochu. ' . .. .',

to~~~'~~m:~::~:n~:~~ ·:In'Oklfiilhoma ".'they ,ane ,the ;Parents lof Sheila· :0KiL:AiFfIDl\1I2\. ICITY (CNC)-'Ho'chu, ,a :graaua1:e IStudent ;at . 'Whether 'or iDot 'Students (of St.Boston lColl~ge... ]P.liilip Ner:i~Cll'th"(l)lic 'sohoci1 con~

NIr. :Horihu :is:a ;member (of Ithe' tinue lto xide ;public ~oollbUBesImmaculate).Conc~ption;parish'in 'ito :classes TIIlay be '(decided hereEall'River. ' lIleXt·"iWednesday.,

1Dr.Max.w.ell > JDistrict ,J:1;1dge 'GlenO. :llilornis,i}D 'MU' ..Gimrt of ·wll.o jl'eEused Itllis w-eek 1to iissue a':: r. . ,ax~: ;presl . '. : ttemplll'aTY iill~nclii~. 'm::dered

Bmdgewater ,State ,TeaChe:s C~l- lthe ,Midwest, ,City· :SChool :'Board, lege and a TI.eader :10 1Jhefuilil .of tt ' 'lbefo 'biim ' th t '."education., -w.as,bo:cn ,llan. ~21i; ;.,t~pe~ , re, .~_ ~n t a,

1898·;ro 'T.aunton; :th.'e:son ,of :the (a e. 0: ;,"':.'~a.uhse.til'~"";t ~_~1 t ~. h d dear. 'Iin(C jpOI:~ 'OTucr.S 0 .. moW<:' ......a e'lC .ar .an .. ",0, e:, \ ar- ,sued :at <tliiit ;mme. 'periter) lMax.well. ','" , ' ....._.__tim· . ,......~.:n: .,"D' ... '. 'Th"T!t n t' ,~"'=U! e,......., .....ocesan ..aoar..

:' e aUIl!,on ,e uca o,r 'IS, a cot' liducationlhas :aSk-ediits at-br.other of Rev; Joseph, ..Maxwell; 'to" , ..._' "'- ;ti'''' .., I'S II .i' , "a' f ,'H "I ,me,y '"' ....,ves ga.e , e ..ega

. .., ,ormer.preSI ento. o..y illllPec1:S U:nvolv.ed. n.:was· notOn.oss;and lBolirton. (College. He dS lkn . 'beth' ,.... d'·. . ,a ph f t"h 'la'te'oM g 'Ge g own·w. er ,.....e, :l.ocesann~ ew'? e ,s r. or e 'flchool 'bolll'd ·wOu1d enter' the

C. Maxw.e~, fp:r;mer ,pastor tfif 'SS. ilegal.a.ction. , .

The court order'waS petitipned'by John L.· ::Antone; .an 'engineer '"for 0kliilioma Gas & Electric Co..;tnd Tesiderit 'of 'Midwest (City~·

Antone, who 'said liis iriterest 1n'·the mase\was "'just 'a ;taxpayer-a

, patron of the J!chools," described'aiimselI as·"non'-.denominatiional-more or less a :free-thinker."

The St. Philip lNeri School is:located dn :the ,Midwest City :are~

.ne,ar ,.Trihker "A~r Force 'Base',which isso-c~ed ''tfederal~­

<impacted" 'mea. ''I1his .means thatfederal aid is provided to the,public schools on the basis of rfuenumber of .sehoolage children

.whose parents :live or work ,-at,iederal installation

. I

'mRANSH(i)RTATIQN .F,{!)R SISTERS.:Wier.y :\Rev. ''l1homasITl"_ \Wialsh, jpastorof ;St. JJ.onn iilie ffilv;angEllis"t (Chm6h, ~t:tle-'

!boro" preBBDits !s't&uon \wagon !keN'S ito ~Sis'ter Ma.I":iY :\Loua.!'\,fsuperior (of ::Eishqp~aD ~g\h School \CODireDt tOt SistersIDf 1Me:nc~. 'illhe ;g(tamon lWiagon IWiillib:r:anaporit Sister.s ·ito ~St'.

John~s j)in~ochial school. Sister Mary :Qo}orlne, .at wheek dBgt;adua'te of :Mt. ~St. "Mary's 1\cademy.."."FaU~Rh"et. .

, .'.

Re,aders H.aU p.aper's.. M@vie :A.d IPdliey ,

MADISON (iNC) -The Wis­·consin State iJotrnIUll 'wliSac­claimed :by ,phone' audman forits decision to refuse, to lprintsuggestive 'theater adY&,tise-

I ments., •'The' newspapet~s''Switchboal'd

kept buzzing and letters 'arri:voedby !the iScore latter the ,paper an­nouncen ltha't it 'Would 'Ill> "longerprint such. advertisements.-

Several of the letter writerSreferred to .someof,the theateradvertisements as "outrageous;"''tlisgraceful'' and "appalling:"

Page 15: 11.09.61

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Smutty PuWieationsSappi~ Morcd Fiber

CLEVELAND (NO) - T h.large amount of in~ litera­ture published in the U. S. •weakening the moral fibel' ofthe nation, Bi!lhop Nicholas T.Eiko of the Byzantine Rite Dio­eese of PittBburgh llQid bere.

"These pubUcatiODS are fIor­bkiden on the IHlWS8tands ofM09OOw," said the Bishop. "Ifthey are indecent fur atbei'8t8who do not believe in God, howean they be good fuir cit-izeRS ofa nation that maintaiN its trwltin God?"

'"Little wonder 1I1ai the c0m­munists boast that their ac<:U­

mulated moral, momentum ofstrength. is due tG the demoral­ized state in~" he con­eluded.

DIOCESAN GIRLS AT'REGIS: Scores of girls from the Fall River Diocese have en.joyed college years at Regis since its founding in 1927. Top lett, it's snack time for MaryElizabeth Minot, ·North Attleboro; Jeannette Benoit, Acushnet; Patricia Crosby, Oster­,ville; Jane O'Hearne, Taunton; standing, Maureen Donovan, Swansea; Nancy Childs andTherese Powers, Osterville.oTop center, Cardinal Cashing and Sister Mary Alice, PhD.,

, . college president. BottomRe!!is Colleg'e in, Weston Con.siders, Diocesan center, Marie O'Neil, South

L/ Dartmouth; Patricia Tobin.

Cirls Among St~dent 80dy Leadere .. West Yarmouth; Elaine 0'-., Keefe, Taunton, discuss biol-

Regis College in We8ton, Mass. is conducted by the Si8t~l'S 6f St..- J'08ep:A of the ogy specimen. Top right,Archdiocese of Boston: At present more thal 20 girls from. this Diocese are among its Mary Aikens, Hyannis<j Genestudents and, college alilthorities say, "We feel they have been leaders." Faculty members Callaghan, New Bedford;feel the potentialities of each student should be developed b-y meaN of providing her Judith Megan, Taunton, pre­with intellectual discipline, pare for seminar. Bottomand "a treasury. M knowl- . "The only reason fur choosing and Rosarme Thomas, New Bed.- right, reading occupies free

~ spend four yean HI a Ubeml ford; and Jeannette Benoit, t· f K thl A'edge, perspectl've and t1.~· lme or' a een gUlar,n~ arts college," the pamphlet OOR- Acushnet. Jeannetle spent her

power to meet the' unknoWJl tinues; ui's to bring about the junior yeat" il'l Fribourg, Swit- New Bedford; Mary Christ­demands and needs of the fu- development of one~s inherent zerlal'ld. From Ost-erviUe is Pa- ensen, Fall River; Maryture." powers. kida Crosby. O'Beirne, Falmouth; Lucille

The College subscribes 1Je ttae "You have potentialitieswbiell RepresentiAg Taunton are Demers, Taunton; 'KathleeA.principle that a college is a you 00 JWt .suspect aM which, Judith Megan and Elaine 0'- Kelleher, New Bedford.community of scholars and holds ltke unsmelted Me, must be I(eefe. Patricia Tobin, West Yar-out to its graduates the ideal 01. mined and refined. 'IIo lift a mouth, is president of the cam- Africans at Collegethe independent, objective, full life you must·use aH of yOW' pus Gove-nment Club and Maryquestioning, int-ereste<i, active talents., To 00 t'hit; you mUBt Elizabeth Milot, North Attleboro WINOOSKI PARK (NC)-Sixand humble mind of the~ have intellectual training and a is cbainnan of religious activi- African republics ~re sending 28

treasury of knowledge. . ties ror 0 Lad' Sod rty students to St. Michael's CollegeMembersbips, AOOI'edt~ ur y sal. here this Fall to train for admis-

"You muB!; also enjoy Ii 1*1'- Marie O'Neil, South Dartmouth,The college is affili-ated wi¢h poseful career, a satisf'8clo1<y ill presideut of the art club and sion to American colleges and

Catholic University and it; ae- fulfillment of yO- :ro!e ill. art editolr of. three campus pub- universities in St. Michael's 16­credited by the New England society, and, the me&a8 of )iviDg licatioBfl. week English :for foreign stu-Association of, Colleges and the trut<h' under God. AH these O&therlne Norris, Ntlw Bed- dents course.Secondary Schools, the National thfngs' will come with W'i6dom. .-----------.--,Catholic Educational Associati~ ford, h9s held several class of-' W H RILEYand the Board of Regents of the "At Regis you witi feIrm. your £ices and is DOW senior resident 'University of the State of New OWR standards as CIl oomplement Jlepresetl,tQtive 119 the student ••York. and n« as a cornpeMWr 1lo men.~ council.' & SO~ I

It holds membership .m 11M Girt. ,...~ 'l'heFe 8Ioe 10,*1' junk>rs kom I~, ne.Association af American Uni- t'he Diocese, four sophomore,versity Women, the Americen Senior class membeJlS:fJtom and two freshmen.Council on Education, the A.. tilis Diocese include Mary Alii-sociation of American Colieges, eA8, Hy>annis;' Gene Ca~k1~a21the American Medical Assoda­tion, the College 'Entrance E'IIIi­amination Board, and the Ne­tional CommissiOft on AClCI'edi-tation. '

Departments pr~v'6e inlilClnlc­tion in 26 fields and COIH'fie8 leadtowards the professioDS of liS­l'-arianship, journaliSllll, teacbing,accounting, medicine and die­tetics, in addition to off.eringwell-rounded ljbeml H46 pi'&­

gmms. •SeniO!l'S ace permi«,ed M~

one day a week in practical 0b­servation 01. their field o! c0n­centration or in browsingthrou@b. Boston's Hbraries aa4museums with a view towards"adding to their k,nowled,ge BAddeveloping their poWer-6 of N­

search."All Needed Tools

"At Regis you will filld anexperienced and broadly trained.faculty," notes a pamphlet sentto prospective studen~. "YOtl.will find ali the tools you Deedfor study in cla-ssrooms, labora­tories, lecture balls, studios and.libilary. Living al'l'angemems ill.dormitories, dining hall, caf-e­teria, lounges and social rooonswiN serve youweR. The gym­nasium, athletie field, infirm­aries and elinics are gesred toyour physical needs. TIN ehaiPtiiii ~ BO'lIl'6 home..

Catholic-Protestan,t.Cooperation Active

LONDON (NC)-Two of Eng­land's foremost churchmen, oneAnglican and the other Catholic,have asserted that the ancientenmities between the two com­munions 'have all but disap-peared. '

Anglican Archbishop GeoffreyFisher, former Archbishop ofC'anterbury, said that the old"Iron Curtain" between Angli­canism and Catholicism has nowgone.

Catholic Archbishop John e.Heenan of Liverpool said that asa result of the visit ArchbishopFisher paid to Pope John lastDecember, "a great outburst offriendship" has arisen betweenCatholics and non-Catholics inEngland. He said the AnglicanPrimate's courtesy call was 'oneof the most powerful gestureamade for centuries."

Center Has SermonService for Priests

OTTAWA (NC)-The CatholieCenter at the University of 0t­tawa is offering sermon mate­rial in English to assist priestsin preaching at Mass.

Mimeographed texts bave beenmailed providing material forsermons for each Sunday and theprincipal feast days of the ye8F.

The new service is similar 110• French service that has beenoffered to priesb for a numba'q.f years.

Prelate GratefulFor Refuge

NEW YORK (NC) - TheCardinal-Archbishop of Havanahas expressed hios gratitude toPresident Arturo Frondizi ofArgentina for being allowed toremain as a guest at the Argen­tine embassy in Havana.

A note frQm Manuel CardinalArteaga y Betancourt was givento the President during hisrecent visit to New York byJulio Amoedo, Argentina's Am­bassador to' Cuba.

Guest Since AprilThe Cardinal also sent his

pectoral - a shield attached tothe cope of a bisnop .:..:- as atoken of gratitude. '

He said in his note that, hehad received from AmbassadorAmoedo "the best hospitality,kindness and affection that couldbe offered at these sad times foa­our Church and our country."

The Cardinal, who is 81 andailing, has been at the Argentineembassy in Havana since lastApril.

Page 16: 11.09.61

16 TttE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fa" River-lt.urs., Nov. 9.1961-----~~~~~I.D:I::ED:I::I."I:I:I::~::s:i:I:I::lICICSllI~~=a::ICIl:IS:~

13th ANNUAL' THANKSGIVINGGbbECTIOD

;.

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.B~'A~ME'S(lOJIHING

Clean your closets' ofworm clothing and ~he

gratitude' of mi51uons•',s yOM'S

Make_ Your·. Thanksgiving A· TimR of-. Thanksgiving for Others

This Message is Sponsored By The following Individualsand Business Concerns in Greater Foil River:

/'

Building Materials, Inc.'Duro Finishing Corp.Enterprise Brewing Co.

. The Exterminator Co..Fall River Eledric' Light Co.Fall Riv,er Trust Co.Globe Manufaduring Co.

Kaplan Furniture Co.Kormon WQter Co.MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc.Mason Furniture' ShowroomsMooney & Co. Inc.'Newport Finishing Co.

Plymouth Printing Co., Inc.Sherry Corp.Sobiloff Brothers

,Sterling Beverages, Inc.Textile Workers Union of

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Page 17: 11.09.61

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Nov. 9, 1961

Red·~rr@~fr~d Wa~1

PreW®O'Dti"~ ACC®$$

To DO~@rm HClB$@8BERLIN (NC)-When com­munist-ruled East Germanyput up the Berlin wall onAug. 13 it extinguished thelast flickering hope of thousandsof East German Christians whohad found comfort and consola­tion at Open House in this di­vided city.

Open House (Offen Tuer Ber­lin) is a religious informationcenter operated by the Jesuit

. Fathers. H has ,never been ad­. vertised much. It is on a sidestreet, a block or two from thegay, bustling KurfuerstendammStrasse, West Berlin's greateststreet.

But thousands of East Ger­mans of all faiths, harassed bythe Reds in the practice of theirreligion, found Open House overthe years: There they prayedand were able to confer withCatholic priests at any hour ofthe dollY or night.

Filled With SpiesBefore the Berlin wall went

up, Open House was often filledwith communist spies. Thepriests had to be very cautiousin giving information about anyof the people who passedthrough.

An old lady, for example,might inquire about a sisterfrom Leipzig in the Soviet zonewho had promised to meet herthere. She was to defect to WestBerlin and together they wouldmake their way to West Germ­any.

'But tlhe priests could never besure ,the old lady was not a Redspy seeking information aboutsomeone who perhaps w a !lthinking of making her way 16freedom but hadn't tried it asyet.

Use Baek DoorEach conference room has &

door leading into an escapealley. Few, if any, of the EastGermans who walked into thfJfront door ever walked out ofit. They were afraid to be seeRseeking spiritual cromfon.

The director of Open Houseis Father Gebhard von Still­fried, S.J.

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Favor CommunasmCoune Bn Schoo~s

MONTPELIER (NC) - TheVermont State School Directors'Association has adopted a reso­lution favoring a program ofinstruction in communism in thepublic secondary school system.

Carl H. Hopkins of Montpelier,a supporter of the action' at thegroup's annual meeting, de­plored Red underhandedness"even now working in the coun­try." He said: "American tradi­tion demands 'a decision to fightwith the unswerving purpose ofwinning complete and final vic­tory, first with every non-mili­tary weapon available and sec- \ond, to meet force with resistlessforce." .

. that a team of LaSalette Fathersand Brothers left 13 years agoto staff a major portion of hisdiocese. Also he had anticipatedseeing the seven Filipino brothersstudying for the priesthood; and

. eagerly awaits their return totheir ,homeland where the free­world's acutest shortage ofpriests exists.

In his address to the commun­ity, the Bishop gratefully notedthe success enjoyed' to date bythe LaSalettes and their impor­tant contribution to the rapidexpansion of his diocese, whichcovers an area the size of Bel­gium and which numbers' morethan a million people.

This is the Bishop's first trip'outside of his country. He at­tended last month's dedication ofthe first Filipino Seminary es­tablished in Rome. He plans tovisit many of the major cities ofthe United States before return­ing to his native land.

LaSalette _SeminaryVocations From Homeland

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TlfiJe@!«»gy Aw~rdWASHINGTON (NC) - The

1961 Cardinal Spellm'an Awardof the Catholic Theological So­ciety of America will be pre­sented to Father Cyril Vollert,S.J., of St, Mary's (Kan.) Collegehere on Wednesday, Nov. 15.

The presentation will be madeby Francis Cardinal Spellman,Archbishop of New York, atHoly· Redeemer College. Theaward, consisting of a scrollsigned by Cardinal Spellman andthe society president, a goldmedal and a check, is given an­nually for outstanding work inthe field of sacred theology.

route from Rome to Manila, wasparticularly interested in theSeminary. For it was from here

Teac~e6"SholrtageRed~ces Grades

CLINTON (NC) -A shortageof teaching Sisters may reduceOur Lady of Angels School inthis Iowa community to threegrades by 1964.

Last year the school droppedits first grade. This year the sec­ond grade was cut. The third,fourth and possibly the fifth maygo in the next three years. Theschool is part of Our Lady ofAngels Academy, which was a12-grade girls' boarding schooloperated by the Sisters of Char­ity of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

Keeps Kindergarten"We just don't have the teach­

ers for those classes," said Sister'M. Richardette, the principal.

"Some of the lower grades haveas few as 25 pupils' and we-can'tcommit a teacher for that smallnumber." .

The school has retained itskindergarten. Sister Richai-detteexplained this was because aspecially trained Sister is avail­able.

Elsewhere in the Diocese ofDavenport the kindergartenseems to be vanishing. Threewere eliminated this yeaI;' underthe crush of increased enroll­ment, shortage of space and lackof funds. Only seven of the 51grammar schools in the dioceseretaip kindergartens.

ReBigoou$ Instructionft n ArgeB'DtDlI1le State

BUENOS AIRES (NC) - Thechamber of deputies of thenorthern Argentine province ofSalta has voted to allow religiousinstruction in the public schoolson an optional basis. .

Salta is the third province toresume religious instructionsince the fall of former presidentJuan Peron in 1955. The vote inthe chamber was 29 to 14, on amotion of Christian Democratic

. deputy Alfonso Peralta.

Be~edlictDne PrioryE~ev(ljil'ed to Abbe~

WASHINGTON (NC) - St.Anselm's Priory of the EnglishCongregation of Benedictineshere has been elevate,<;l to thestatus of an abbey.

Word of the elevation was re­ceived by Father Alban Boult­wood, O.S.B., prior, from AbbotAiden Williams,' procurator ofthe English Benedictines inRome. St. Anselm's wa's foundedhere 'in 1924 as a priory depend­ent upon Fort Augustus Abbeyin Scotland. Since 1949 the localpriory has been independent.

Father Boultwood also dis­closed that plans are being madeto build an abbey church on the45-acre tract which St. Anselm'soccupies in a section near theCatholic University of America.­A new wing to the present mon­astery with facilities for 30 ad­ditional monks is scheduled to bebuilt. St. Anselm's communitynow has 37 monks.

"Communism will never rule the Philippines," Bishop TeoduJfo Domingo of Tug­uegarao, Cagayan, Philippines, has told the LaSallette Seminary faculty and student bodyin Attleboro. He made this statement after vividly portraying the increased communistactivities in' his diocese. In his detailed account he listed two tell-tale signs by ,whichnew organizations are judg­ed as communist inspired.First ill-will is formentedagainst the American people.This hate-America campaign isfollowed by ridiculing theChurch. These subversive activ':'ities are increasingly in evidenceeverywhere, he warned. Therewas a ring of confidence, how­ever, in the voice of this soft­spoken prelate when he assuredhis audience of the ultimatefailure of Communism in theIslands.-

The reason which he gave forhis confidence is that eventuallythe communists in attacking theChurch disparage the BlessedVirgin. And in so doing they un­wittingly attack the Filipinos'most deep-rooted loyalty: theirtender love for the Mother ofGod. Even those who have leftthe Church in favor of otherreligions still cling to their in­herent devotion to Mary, thePhilippine Bishop asserted. "Ifthe Filipinos never abandonMary, how could Mary everabandon her children?" he asked.

Bishop Domingo who is en

Filipino Bishop VisitingPleat;ed To See

FILIPINO BISHOP VISITS ATTLEBORO SEMINARIANS: Most Rev. Teodulfo S.Domingo, Bishop of Tuguegarao, seated, sounded a plea for vocations to staff his IslandSee during his stay with priests and seminarians at Our Lady of LaSalette Major Sem­inary in Attleboro. The Bishop is shown with Filipino LaSalettes studying for priesthood.

Says Race RelationsIn Congo Improved

ALEXANDRIA (NC )-A.trendtoward improved racial relationsin the CO!1go has been observedby an Alexandria priest on as­signment there as representativeof Catholic Relief Services ­National Catholic Welfare Con­ference.

Father Roland Bordelon, ofLouisiana, in a letter from Leo­poldville, said the Congo needsa growing sense of cooperationbetween the Congolese leadersand Belgians still remaining inthe country. He wrote: "Somewould be less optimistic but Isee a trend in the rig'ht direction.One witnesses numerous in­stances of black man and whiteman working together construc­tively for the good of the wholesociet¥."

Announce CroweAward Winners

CHICAGO (NC) - NAACPlegal official Thurgood Marshall;four Skokie, Ill., clergymen; aCatholic high school, and a Chi­cago civic organization have re­ceived the 1961 Thomas J. CroweAwards of the Catholic Inter­racial Council of Chicago.

The awards, named for a pastpresident of the council, are pre­sented annually to individuals,groups or institutions which"have distinguished themselv~

in the cause of interracial justiceand charity."

This year's winners are as f0l­lows:

Thurgood Marshall, director ofthe Legal Defense and Educa­tional Foundation of the NationalAssociation for the Advancementof Colored People. PresidentKennedy recently nominatedMarshall for a Federal judgeship.

Four clergymen in the Chicagosuburb of Skokie-Father ArthurSauer of St. Peter's Catholicchurch; the Rev. Ray Bond ofthe Central Methodist Church;Rabbi Sidney J: Jacobs of theNiles Township. JewisK Congre­gation; and Rabbi Karl Weinerof Temple Judea-who werecredited with outstanding lead­ership when the first Negrofamily moved into their com­munity.

De La Salle High School here,which was lauded for its policyof racial integration among bothstudents and faculty.

The Organization for theSouthwest Community, a Chi­cago civic group which hasworked to prepare an all-white

.community bordering on a Negrosection to deal with the prob-lems of racial change.

Parents' Failure.Cr~me Cause

mn YOMthMIAMI (NC) - A crime

commission director saidhere that the failure ofAmerican parents to giveGod His place in the home andfamily is to blame for delin­quency in children.

o "The ever-increasing rate ofjuvenile crime wili be reversedonly when God becomes a full­time partner of mother and dad,"Daniel P. Sullivan, head of thegreater Miami Crime Commis­sion told the Miami Serra Club.He said there was "little risk"that a child born and reared in aChristian atmosphere, andtrained as a responsible individ­ual will turn out "a burglar, athief or a murderer."

Cha.racter of Home"The home is the center of

child development," said Sulli­van, a former FBI agent and thefather of 13 children. "The futureintegrity and character of thenation rests upon the characterof the home. We should seekprevention of delinquency ratherthan the cure. It is more sensibleand easier to keep good childrengood, than to remake .good chil­dren out of bad children."

Violent CrimeArrests of those under 18 years

of age are increasing 10 timesfaster than persons over 18 yearsof age, Sullivan said. Statisticsreflect that children under 18constitute 50 per cent of allpersons arrested for violentcrime, he added.

Page 18: 11.09.61

\,'" I

Francisco Javier' school iaPuerto Montt.

Unique PreJeet

Operation HandClasp, Is aunique relief project originatedby Commander Donald M. Han­son, U.S.N., winner of the Free­dom Foundation Award for re­lief' work in southeast Asia.Church groups can take advan­tage of Handclasp to aid theirmissions overseas by depositingrelief supplies 'at Navy-desig­nated collection points.

As space becomes available in/U. S. Navy ships embarking formission countries, the goods arecarried aboard without cost. Mis­sioners of all faiths take 'chargeof Handclasp cargo upon arrivaland supervise distribution toneedy communities.

Mew ChanceryWORCESTER (NC) - 'JIhe

principal offices of the Dioceseof Worcester have moved intothe new diocesan chancery build­ing at 49 Elm Street here. Theformer chancery building, whichhad served as diocesan head­quarters since May, 1951, hasbeen sold to the Worcester ArtMuseum.

. .. ' '.:Na~\:~=~. ~r ~, .• ~;. ~ •...... ~ ;~:' .. : .. ~'. ": ~..' ~ .. ~. ~ .. ~ ."

:;<'.,,'.:' -~~" ;~ .••••.~.~. ;••• ~.;, .~~;"" ;'~. ;~;.-~;~ ~.?- ••• lot. ".; ..

.. ;;,~_.,:.."':". Zob'~" •.••••. al-_L. ;•• ,,:••.•.,.:.•:_;. .'.'.':' ,.:~:,~~-.~..~ ~:~I:-p/ .. ;}~.".·•••.••• ~.~ ••• ~~. ~ ..... 4 .,

" :.. ~:.':-:\.': :(;UESTS' FOR'·THANKSGiVINC.!, ~. : ~'''~UR~DAy., November ZSrd,iII. THA:Jl(lCSGiVING DAY-'.. lind 'you'll ttewitb ',our 'famlb'aRd irlends for dinner. WOllIcI

joa ·~ike;·.ill thankslivlDC to 'G~: to· teed a (amil, 01 PalestineaerueeesT For oDI, $10yOll caD" FEED A .FAMILY FOR AMONTH. We'll sendy-ou, as··a toke. of Our thanks,.in OliY8-'

. W~:RoSal'J' fI'oIIIl Ute Hoi, Land: •••"1 wa.l h~,I")', a~' '011"e.d-ME." .' '.

diJ.'llear&stOlisstons~. . fRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Pr••ld."t . :

. W•• J0teH T. if... 'Nat' Sec'j" .. Seed all _ ••icatl_· tol

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST 'WELFARE ASSOCIATION480 Lexington Ave. at 46th St. New Yo'rk 17; N. yo:

Charges .of Fall River Mission,,·Benefit by 'Operation Handclasp'

SANTIAGb-:Rev. Thomas J.Plunkett, Maryknoll Missioner

jrom Fall River, is among. priestswhose school children chargeswill benefit from 10 tons offood'and clothing delivered by the'crew of the U. S. aircraft carrierKitty Hawk, as part of theNavy's "Operation Handclasp'"program. .'

The huge shipment was do­nated 'by Cath9lic org~nizations

in San Diego and La Jolla, Cali­fornia, and placed on the Chile­bound "Kitty Hawk" as part ofthe Navy's' project of aidingcharitable organizations over­seas on a "space available, ,nocost basis."

In a brief ceremony here,Chief Warrant Officer Ralph B.Jackson of the' Inter-AmericanGeodetic Survey' team in Santi­ago, presented the donation toMaryknoll Missioners' FatherCharles McCarthy, San Francis­co, Father Thomas B. Kirchmyer,Buffalo, and Father Plunkett.

'JIhe shipment will be sharedby students in the Maryknollschool of San Juan de Dios, theSanto Domingo de Guzmanschool as well as the Jesuitschool of Osorno and the San

THAT'S THE QUESTION CA1'HOLICS ASK WUEN THIEY -HEAR about the missions. 10 conversation not long ago we

mentioned three villages in E1'HnO­PIA - BIERA, AUO, and BERAZnO.The people in these villages arlll"God's forgotten"-so poor that theywear rags, have scarcely enough toeat. Their money-income fOl" one yearis less than the average Americanearns each week.. Yet these peopleare hUnlall beings, too. They needhelp to save their souls.

In BIERA, fOl" instance, hWldredsof Catholics can't attend Mass on Sun­

\1'& Holy Fathtrt MiJJion Aitlday_because there is no room fOl"for tht Orimtal Churrh them ill the tiny, earthen church.

Children in the village are not properly taught the catechlsm-'because there is no place to teach them. Non-Catholics in theneighborhood-entire families' of them-would become Cath­olics, given the opportunity for instruction and the sacraments••• The Bishop of the Diocese writes us that a new church 'inBIERAis an absolute necessity~ The men, women and childrenof the parish will. do all the excavation and construction workthemselves. They need money, however-$4,'700-to pay for thematerials .•. What can you give? $10? $20? $50T $100?-1I youwill' give something-even $1.:.-other readers wllI give some~thing, too ••. Perhaps you'd like to build this church In RIERAall by yourself, as a memorial to someone you love ..• Or .per­haps you could Interest your family and' friends ... Please do8S much as you can, and now ... With r lit your help, the churchiD BIERA will never be erected.

10 AUO, in the heart of ETHIOPIf., the' priest's house is aone-room hut made of reeds and 'gras:. The dirt floor turns tomud during' the rainy season because the grass roof is full ofholes, and the rain. pours io , . . For $2,200 we can build inAUO a permanent rectory .•. We need 220 people to give $10each ..• Will you be one of them? .

. BERAZIO, in ETHIOPIA, Is noted in missionary history be­cause the Faith was planted there originally by Blessed deJacobis. In 1881 the first church was burned to the ground bysuperstitious natives. After that, Catholics attended Mass secret­ly, for fear of persecution. The time has come now, the Bishopfeels, to build a new church in BERAZIO.· Of plain but perma.nent construction, the churcIJ will be large enoug'h to accommo­date the growIng parish , .. The cost? $4,800 ..• The Catholicsin BERAZIO will do all the work themselves, free-of-charge•But they haven't 8 penny w'ith which to buy materials. You'nbe remembered there at Mass; whenever Mass Is oITered. You'llhave. had .8 share in ~he noblest work. on earth - Christ'smissions. .

.Dear Monsignor:i want ~ cIomy share..Please use the enclosed

,A for'.','., .... ~ .' .. (~ame. Gf place'.

• Furniture• Grocery

.' .E'eCtrical.ContrCictors.,,:, .

.ONE STOPSHOPPING CENTER

• Television• Appliances

164 Allen St" New BedfordWYman '7-9354

CORRlE~A & SONS

Poster Campaign.LONDON (NC) - Two of

Britain's top Protestant leaders,Anglican .Archbishop MichaelRamsey of Canterbury and Dr.W. W. Kay, Moderato!, of theFree Church Fede\."al Council,have joined William CardipalGodfrey in' supporting theChristmas Poster Campaign torestore a Christian ·Christmas.

NEW AUXILIARY: Msgr.Eldon B. 'Schuster has beennamed Auxiliary to' BishopWilliam· Condon of GreatFalls, Mont. The North Da­kota native has been diqces­an sehool superintendent inGreat Falls since 1946. . ~

18

Explai'ns Catholi~ DoctrineOn 'InfaUfbility o'fPope

By Most R~v. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D.)8ishop of Reno'

Who is entitled to speak in th,e name of the CatholicChurch? Whose word are we to trust as the expression ofher mind? Few questions reflect a greater degree ofconfusion in the popular mind, whether asked ,by Catholicsthemselves or by those out- of human rights and. humanside the Church. They' are dignity. ,constantly recurring, in mat- But she has not pronounced,ters of general or particular and she could not reasonably beinterest, in matters transcending expected to pronounce, on everytime and in the purely contem- item of particular legislationporary. 0 n 1y throughout the free world. Espe-recently the y . cially is this true in areas whereweI' e raised debate is still justified.

'All such issues are by nohere and .else-where through- means solidly black or white. Itout· the nation is not always clear whether theyin connection are injurious to human rights orwith a moot are actually beneficial to them.

In such areas she prudently pre-point of .labor fers to abide the clarification oflegislation. In-dividual priests the points under debate. In other~ ere widely words the Cl).urch is not a sortquoted in sup- of universal umpire ready at allport of one side times to jump into every discus-of the issue, and the impression sion with a cut-and-dried an-A$Selff[§. DPholnDeS'was fostered that their opinion swer.necessarily represented the Insists on Charity r.Bl 8 f\ A . 8 T

-" thinking of the Catholic Church. In many instances individual iii uti' lfW\\@tYMIJ'@ . @~At the risk of a certain ped- theologians and even individual /f'tiI. IJ JI -

an try, it may be useful for our Bishops may feel that the issues ~[]'il lJlril(.QJe~e!l1l~Yguidance to recall a few general are sufficiently clear to warrant SOUTHER.N PINES (NC)principles governing this matter; their pronouncement upon them.

The Catholic Church asserts The Church, save in notoriou's' _ Tel e vision broadcastersher infallibility in questions of cases of imprudent action or ob- were warned here to bewarefaith and morals. This infalli- viously, faulty thinking, does notbility resides' in the office of forbid this. of entertainment "phonies"the Sovereign Pontiff as Vicar of Indeed, she is far more liberal who put a "mature" tag on plainChrist on earth. It resides also in in this regard than most of the .

f . 1 l'b I th 1 . indecency.the Apostolic College as repre- pro eSSlOna . 1 era s· emse ves.sented by the Bishops of the Her common sen·se. and her long Robert ·D. Swezey, director of

. f' h ts' the National AssoCiation of'Church, teaching in unison with expenence 0 uman eventhe Bishop of Rome. . have taught her that trial and Broadcasters Code Authority,

It is reflected-no more than error are the best solvents of offered this caution to the Norththat-in the approved teaching many problems where rights' and Carolina Association of Broad:..of the theologians and. (in '. a wrongs are' not absolutely casters. .somewhat theoretical fashion) in defined. He complafned of the activitiesthe common acceptance of the Nor. does she follow a policy of those producers who put abody of the faithful. here of prohibiting discussion "shocking twist in a routine plot,

'Ex Cathedra' and debate, particularly among sprinkle it with prOfanity, injectWhen the Holy. Father, by her qualified theologians. ·All a judicious amount of porno­

himself or in concert with the she asks is that charity be' pre- graphic titiilation, and hail it asB'ishops of the world,. deems it served and that it be made clear a. masterpiece. of mature Ilro­necessary or useful, he speaks that she has not officially' spoken graming."·ex cathedra, and the question is· to end the matter. Swezey also warned of asettled once and for all. The 'Private Pipeline' "problem in the making" foryoice of infallible authority has. The' difficulty is that some television when some objection-been heard. theologians and Catholic publi- able movies now being released

But such pronouncem~nts, ,Cists are prone to write and by the film indust.ry are even­cOnfined as they are to the' speak as though they were the tually offered to television. .spheres of dogma and.' morals,' Holy Father himself.·are both solemn and rare. More Instead of stating the facts andcommonly, without invoking his drawing their conclusions; withsupernatural prerogative of in- emphasis upon the actuallimita­fallibility, the Holy Father tions of their authority, theyspeaks to the faithful simply as sometimes create the impressionthe divinely appointed guardian that they have a private pipelineof faith and human behavior. ,to infallibility. .

In this pattern he is followed It is unavoidable that a certainby the Bishops of the world who amount of confusion should ariseaddress the flocks committed to from this. It is not the Churchtheir care in like manner. that is' at fault, obviously, but

On the parish level, the teach- the overzealous or opinionatedlng of the Church is transmitted among her children.through the pastoral office. So Nevertheless, it is a tribute tolong as these pronouncements her basic tolerance that she pre­are confined' to their proper fers to e~counter this risk rather

., spheres, it is the duty of Catho- than to stifle intelligent discus­lics to ,give them unqualified ad,,: sion. And oddly enough, it is theherence. liberals, who are always de-

Problem of Morality nouncing the Church as obscur-Now it happens that the sphere antist and authoritarian, whe»

of morals is less well' defined most frequently complain aboutthan the sphere of faith. This is this. .not to say that the Church is un- Out of Contextcertain about what is moral or One final point: In politicalimmoral. It is merely to point debate, above alL when it be.-.out that the problem ·of morality c. com'es' heated and violent,)t is

, is inextricably interwoven wit~ 'a fairly common practice for the b .all hl;lman l'E;lations,.. . ...... professional publicistS· to quote'. ~~~~".

It. IS b<?U':ld up .":Ith· t~e ·'gov"":.. anything' ahd'any60dy out of. V.Miernme~t, WIth .poht~cs, With e~-: .. _'context after..the ,ancient pattern: " ~'.'~micl;;.with socioJogy;with~!~;··,,· of-'~"Devil quoting Scdpture'~ .'. ~". ; .'~ith literature"wi~~ applied, ~i':'. ,.'for his purpo~.::" .:. '\'",<'.. ' . .,~'" '.,ence, an.d even With. e~terta.tR.,. , "Great 'care should' be taKen ·ill... :<.: ~a '. "',ment: . '.';... . •... '. : '. .• :.ihe:.C3i1e·of ·quo~tion. froril;i~., . ..:':' .:..:.•....:' ....._:.: ...,.,.....:.:..:....~.....:. '.' :., ...';'.,~..".'~".'.r.... .. It lflvolves,. the. appltca~I~\ol.·'aividu~lpries'ts;oc·theologiari8.io r

;. ~e virtues' ~t. justi<:e, :p.ru4e~ce;, " :rililke'sure that they-have':l>een.te·~Iler~nc~, and fo.rt~tuii~.~. ,a~l. . fuHy ',and .oorrectiy· represen~d': '."'+' c:oun!y~~':' ,:.' ..~.

.. thes~ mamfo~d :and hlgl,tly lOirl- .. More. tban 'one' man has' been' .' .' ......:.w 8ecIford '. . .,. cater-elations..,:.. .':,: ' 'dAmhed on the'skengtheof IFSen-' ,-

Clearly n.eflned Distinction· .. 'ten'ce taken 'out of its setting','.' .Where the distinction between . • •

,right and wfong ill clearly de- fF:;:::==:::S:::s::lI::l::I:!~C::E::I=:C::::r::la::C::::::';::::::::::::C::::::S::::::S::::r::l:S:::~~cafined; the .Church has' not ijesi,. $''. Serving' tlte', Saver . $tated 'tl:! speak out., Thus, in:. the ' . .political field she has condemned ',' and Home.Owner ~ " .....Socialism ~nd Communism; and. '.' . . .'. '.' . Ie'in the field of soCial behavio!." .• The Specialized Job of a Cooperative Ban

~~~ti~~s. aC:;'d~~~e:k~:~i~~,p~~, TAUNTON .cO-OPERATIVE BANK·to speak of genocide. . .

In the 'wake of the industrial VA 4-4084.~; revolution, she has given her . .

closest attention to the vexed WINTHROP STREET ....: TAUNTONquestions which have arisen in A'cROSS THE STREET FROM THE POST OFI1ICElabor-management relations, at-. .tempting to define what is basic Where it PAYS to get togetherand minimal for the preservation'

'. ~

,;

! "', ~

Page 19: 11.09.61

CYO HOLY HOUR: Catholic Youth Week in New Bed­ford reached climax with First Annual Holy Hour for allGreater New Bedford Parishes held in St. James Church.Rev. Edward C. Duffy was in charge.

THE ANCHOk- 19Thurs., Nov. 9, 1961

Estate Goes To SeeST. PAUL (NC)-The will of

the late Archbishop William O.Brady of St. Paul devised hisentire estate to the archdiocese.The petition for probate of thewill estimated that the prelateleft an estimated $10,000 in ia­vestments and $6,452 in cash.

present BC signal-caller, who ~

only 5 feet, 8 inches in height.John is a dormitory student 8&

Be and is home' only weekendB,when he does not report forworkouts. He has two sisters,Tessie, 18, a student at Wynd­ham Secretarial School in Bostoaand Louise, 10, a 5th Grade stu­dent at Dominican Academy illPlainville.

Football FavoriteAsked what his hobbies are,

John's mother spoke and said"Coming home weekends, whilehe wasn't practicing, and watch­ing football games on television.­He likes all sports, but his favor­ite takes him to the gridiron.

This past Spring, after havinghis fine Frosh season, John andthe current quarterback Vall

J'Cott were picked as signal-call­ers for rival teams in a intra­squad game. It is interesting tonote that John masterminded 'hiseleven to a 21.-9 triumph.

Boston College started the 1981grid ca~pajgn off on the rightfoot with a decisive w.inoverCincinnati. But thEm, in succes­sive weeks, the Ea:Oes weredowned by.Northwcstern, HOlls­ton and Detroit.

Home, Games ComingThe Hefferle eleven staged n

comeback with· a sharp 22-6upset win over Detroit, in whichVan Cott turned in a sparkIlng

, performance.-Then, came the battle w1th

.Iowa State ,last Saturday inwhich BC triumphed, 14-10, toeven their season's record at 3-3.

The Eagles· will be out to im­prove their, '61 mark in four te­maining,games of the campaign.at Texas Tech Nov. 11; at BostonUniversity Nov. 18; hosting Syra­cuse Nov. 24 and at rival HolTCross on Dec. 2.

While plans call for John tesee limited action rn the four re­maining BC outings, he will haveample time to display his passingprowess in his Junior and senioryears with the Eagles.

Prelate AdvisesTeen Jourrnalists

'Aim for TruthBLOOMFIELD (NC)

Bishop-designate Walter .W.Curtis of Bridgeport, advised120 high school journalistshere always to aim for the wholetruth in their writings.

The prelate, who will be en­throned in Bridgeport on Tues­day, Nov. 21 after having servedfour years as Auxiliary Bishopof Newark, opened the first an­nual School of Journalism spon­sored by the New Jersey Cath­olic Institute of the Press.

"Stick to the literal truth, thewhole truth," the Bishop cau­tioned, "because it is the powerand the purpose of speech andwriting to convey truth fromone mind to another." Keepbeauty and goodness in mindwhen writing, he advised.

Beauty of God

"You are expected," he said,-not simply to convince a per­son's mind by presenting truthand facts, but to awaken in themthe sense of the beauty of, Godas it is known in things . . ThiDpower to create beauty for othersto see is just like the power afthe artist or the musician whois able to arouse the best ir.lmen by presenting to them thebest of himself."

Bishop Curtis said "no matterwhat you write, you write as ahuman being and you write foranother human being." Thus, besaid, "you ought to write alwaysas one who is good and who

·loves goodness."

ate, his career as a quarterbackbegan when he was a Sopho­more. He was quick to learn andfast became a feared pass spe­cialist, under the direction ofCoach Bill Parsons.

The 20-year-old Be gridder'sroom at home is already adornedwith· trophies, among them, onefor. being the outstanding Seniorin his class, when he captainedthe Mansfield High eleven. An­other is a special award he re­ceiVed in 1959 for being a four­star athlete in football, baseball,basketball and track.

All Around AthleteBesides his grid prowess, John

is a threat on any basketballcourt and he received a varsityhoop trophy in his last year atMansfield. One of his other

. awards is from his Little Leaguebaseball days, when he batted.625 in his final year of play.

He set a home run record inthe Little League in his last sea­son by recording 10 circuit·clouts, a mark which has neverbeen equaled.

A unanimous selection for All­Star grid teams in' the Hocka­mock League during his' highschool days, John: also piayed'CYO baseball for his St. MaryChurch ' teams. .. Prior toent.etiilg Boston Col:"'lege, the' big quarterback took' apreparatory course 'st 'VermontAcademy. He directed 'the acad­emy's grid unit 'while 'a studentthere.

Spanish Maior" John is enrolled in the Schoolof. Education at BC,. where he ismajoring in Spanish. His ambi­tion after he receives his degreeis to teach, while he would also-like to become a· coach.

A chunky youth who stands6 feet and, weighs 195 pounds,John is easily the Eagles' biggestquarterback. There is anotherQ.B. who is taller at 6-3, but isnot as strong and heavy as theMansfie1d gridder. And thenthere is George Van Cot!;. the

JOHN ANTOSCA OF MANSFIELD~

Diocesan Youtlt Passing Specialist,

Great Boston College Gridiron ~areerLooms for John Antosca of Mansfield

By Frank TrondThe Boston College grid

squad has only had Hmitedsuccess this year, due mostlyto injuries suffered by keyplayers, among them SophomoreJohn B. Antosca of Mansfield,one of the finest quarterbacks tocome along in many seasons.

There is no doubt that Antoscewould have seen a great deal 01.action this year for the Eagles.But Coach Ernie Hefferle's plansfor the strong-armed quarter­back were ruined when Johnwas injured in a pre-season drilL '

On sept; 3 in that practice ses­sion John wail fading back toloose one of his picturesqueaerials, when suddenly one ofhis knees buckled and he fell tothe ground. .He had to undergosurgery and had a cartilege re­moved from his knee at St. Eliz­abeth's Hospital in Brighton,where he was confined for •week.

, Practicing AgainThe son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis

G. Antosca of 21 Brach Street,John has been running' andworking out for th'e last twoweeks. .

"He will, "be used only spar­ingly in games he'gets into thisFall;" a BC Athletic Associationspokesman reported the· otherday. "We don't want John to gethit hard as yet," he explained.

A soft-spoken youth, Johnstarred last year iIi the four­game schedule of the B.C. Fresh­man grid unit. He mastermindedthe young Eagles to a sharp 3-1record, being called upon mainlyfor pass plays,' while another

'quarterback was used for ground,or running attempts.

Signal CallerJohn, who played four years'

of varsity football at MansfieldHigh School, is attending BostOllCollege on a full grid schola~

ship.A 1959 l\IlansDeld Hich gl'aQQ-

Dot

interrupted jump pass provedTaunton's undoing as Barn­stable's fleet Hostetter went 75yards for the deciding tally. Afourth quarter Doyle to Brezin­ski aerial moved Coyle out infront to stay after a spiritedFairhaven defense contained theWarriors most of the afternoon:

Dartmouth High posted itsbiggest win of the season Satur­day before an appreciative home­coming crowd at Memorial Sta­dium. The Indians, led by TomDaCosta and Rick Barry, edgedstrong North Attleboro,14-12.Rpn Poirier tallied twice for theRed Rocketeers whose season'srecord now stands at 5-2. Dart­mouth has an identical slatehaving sustained early seasondefeats by Coyle and Durfee.

The greatest upset of the day,however, was pulled off .by RonGentili and Co. who representMansfield High. Coach Jim Cas­sidy of Attleboro, particularly,will be happy to see the big fel­low graduated. For the secondyear in a row Gilntili has person­ally led his teammates to an

,electrifying win over the Jewel­ers who on both occasions en­tered the game undefeated. Giln­tili's scoring runs were 15 and '35 yard jaunts. He's the ladNorth will ~ey on Saturday.

Voke-N.B.New Bedford High after get­

ting out front early against Mal- .den Ca tholic lost the scoringtouch until midway in the fourthquarter 'w hen Tom Bulgarcracked over for the insurancetally that brought the Crimsona hard-earned 22-12 verdict.Cross-town rival Vocational, au- ',thors of two upsets against thehighly-favored Crimson in re­cent years, will shoot the worksin an effort to salvage whatstarted .out as a most productiveseason. .

Bob Tavares, former Somersetstandout, now a sophomore atAmerican International Collegein SpringfIeld was named line­man of the week for his perform­ance in the Springfield game aweek ago. Nick Cariglia whoofficiated in the contest reportedthat Bob turned in a terrificgame at guard twice makingcrucial fumble reeoveries. A.I.C.won it, 7-6 on the educated toeof reserve quarterback Joe Oc­chiuti, former Durfee- star.

A host of friends and well­wishers from the ranks of sportsofficialdom attended a testimo­nial in honor of Stan Grabiec inNew' Bedford on Sunday: Thepopular Stan who piloted NewBedford to the Eastern Mass.basketball title last year has re­signed from the coaching ranksto concentrate his efforts in thefield of Guidance at New Bed­ford High. The former Crimsonstar posted a brilliant 105-42record in his eight years at theNew Bedford helm.

RivalriesTraditionalSaturday's Holiday Slate '

By Jack KineavySaturday's alate of games on the high school eireuit

lists a nu~ber of traditional riV'alries that rank second tothe Thanksgiving Day finals. In New Bedford Coach NickMonis' undefeated Crimson 3l"e scheduled to put theirClass B leadership on theline against luckless NewBedford Vocational whose1-6 recor:d belies the truecalibre of the team that has ex­ltended Aitt1'eboro, Coyle andStang on suc­cessive week­ends.

In the West­ern part of theDiocese, upstartMansfield Highwhich lastweek­end unceremo­niously dumpedhit her t 0 un­beaten - untiedAttleboro fromthe ranks of theelite is at North Attleboro illsearch of its sixth win in sevenoutings. North was edged byDartmouth,' 14-:012, in' a realthriller last Saturday in Me­morial Stadium. The setting isalmost the same as last yearwhen North turned the tableson the Hornets who had comeoff a sensational 20-16 victoryover Attleboro.

The headline on Tri-County'sagenda has Class D leadingBarnstable at once beaten-twicetied Case. The undefeated Capeeleven moved into prime conten­tion in the State standings overthe weekend by virtue of its 12-8victory over Class C Taunton. 0

Coach Jack McCarthy hopes tohave his key operatives - withthe exception of end Gilrry Car­penter--!-back in harness' to makethings ioteresting for the power­ful visitors. The Cardinals wereheld to a scoreless deadlock byBourne last Saturday.

Durfee-CoyleBristol County fans will jam

Alumni Field, Fall River, Satur­day, for the annual Veterans'Day classic between Coyle andDurfee. This is a must game forthe Hilltoppers who are current­ly tied with North Attleboro forsecond place in BCL play, onegame off the pace. Coyle, on theother hand, always a tough lateseason club, has been movingwell of late and poses a realthreat to Durfee's title aspira­tions.

Launching the heavy weekendgrid program is the Apponequet­Stang tussle carded for tomor­row afternooh in MemorialStadium. Coach Carlin Lynch'sSpartans posted a 22-12 come­from-behind win over Vocationala week ago, while Apponequetregistered its third victory of theseason, a 12-8 verdict over Han­over. The Spartans are 4-1-1 Oll

the season; Apponequet has beendefeated twice. The nickel saysStang, handily.

The only other BeL encounterof the week has Fairhaven atTaunton. Both teams turned infine performances last Saturdaybefore finally bowing to Coyleand Barnstable, respectiveq-. An

Page 20: 11.09.61

20 THE ANCHOR-DioceH of Fa" Rivet-Thurs., Nov. 9, 1961

Promote Diocesan Military Chaplains to Posts

Treasurer

FALL RIVER

FOODS

MONAGHANACCEPTANCE

CORP.

142 SECOND STREET

OSborne 5-7856

Thomas F. Monaghan Jr.

Prelate Defines Roleo Of Ca.tholic Nurse

'MANCHESTER (NC) -Man­. chester's Bishop Ernest J: Pri­meau said the role of the Cath­olic ~urse .calls for alleviating,interpreting .and spiritualizingthe suffering of patients.

He spoke at the sixth NewEnglanp. Conference of Nurses,attended by some 600 nursesfrom the six states.

Bishop Vincent J. Hines ofNorwich, Conn., in his sermon ata Solemn Pontifical Mass in St.Joseph's Cathedral, discussed thespiritual role of the Catholit:nurse in caring for the elderlypatient. He emphasized the sig­

'nificance J)f the virtues of pa­tii:mce and charity.

SEA

•••••

Major John ·F. Denehy of the U.S. AirForce, Chaplains Corps, has been alertedfor a change of assignment which will seehim serve as assistant staff chaplain forthe Eastern Transport Air Force with his homebase at McGuire Air Base in N.ew Jersey.

The diocesan priest, a native of Fall River,is currently a chaplain at Kindley Air ForceBase in Bermuda.

In his new capacity (East AF-MATS), FatherDenehy will assist in the supervision of AirForce Chaplains at bases scattered along theEastern coast of continental United States Il6

well as several Atlantic overseas' areas.Father Denehy, who was ordained to the

priesthood in St. Mary's Cathedral in September1945 by the late Most Rev. James E. Cassidy,second Bishop of the Diocese of Fal'! River, hasbeen on active duty with the AIr' Force Chap­lains Corps since 1950. .

Major Denehy's first diocesan assignment. was as an assistant at Our Lady of the Isle atNantucket.• He was transferred in 1947 to· theSacred Heart Church in Oak Bluffs where heserved for three' years until he entered themilitary service as a Chaplain in the Air Force.

Father Denehy, who has been stationed ata number of bases in the United States, was at

the Otis Air Force Base on CapeCod prior to his transfer to his

.present Bermuda post.The diocesan priest ha's re­

ceived several awards and dec­orations for his exemplary andmeritorious service.

Major Denehy, the son ofMrs. Elizab~th A. Denehy of 697Second Street, Fall River, andthe late Timothy R. Denehy,begins his new assignment onDec.!.

, UNION WH~Rf, FAIRHAVEN

FOU.R WAYS TO SERVE CHRISTAS' A HOLY CROSS FATHER

Priest-Teacher Home MiuioMl'Foreign 'MissiollCllY Parish Priest

For information ohout ....

Holy Cross Fathen orBrothers, write toe

HOLY 'CROSS FATHERSNorth Easton, Masiac.........

• • • •

McLEAN'S

"MADE FOR

PARTICULAR PEOPLe-

STOR! HOU~

Mon., Tues., Wed., 9 to 6 P.M. - Thurs. and Friday, 9 to 6:30

Satf'udoy 9 to 6:30 P.M.

CLOSED AU, DAY SUNDAY

~cccccccccccc==c=cccc===cccc=c

----.--. •• +

Spiritu·al Growthterial and social improvemeni'

.must go hand in hand with spiri­tual development."

Msgr. Magner asserted OurLady of Guadalupe can serve asthe. inspiration for "a new eraof cooperation between spiritualand temporal powers of the NewW'orld," as well as for "a stronger

. organization of the Church for.the fulfillment of its social mis­sion."

to

FR. JOHN F. DENEHY

Linked

Write to:.P. O. Box 5742­

Baltimore- 8, Mel.

Is

Trinitarian'" Fathers

BOYS WANTED 'for thePriesthood and Brotherhood.La~k of funds NO impedi­ment.

Attorneys for the Communist ing Communist Party members .­Party have argued that require- "to destroy incriminating docu­ments o(the 1950 law violate the ments which might be used in

'prosecution against them."rights of party officers to pro- ..tection against self~incrimina- "What You Show'tion. It is possible that they will Hoover said Hall has been tell-try even further court tests. .ing Communist Party members:

Three times already the Sub-' "It is not what you know, butversive ActiVities Control Board 'what you show."has ordered the party to register . "Hall, with his catchy phrase,its officers and reveal its finan- was setting the 'line' for thecial setup to the Attorney Gen- 'partY in its maneuvers to thwarteral. So far, the CP has avoided the law," the FBI director de-d,oing this.' clared.

"Hall's phrase, 'It's' not whatJ. Edgar Hoover, director of you know, but what you show,~

the Federal Bureau of Investiga- is more than just an admonition.tion, has stated that the, Com- ·It· is also a devastating descrip­munist Party is going further tion of. all the elements of theunderground. He said Gus Hall, .current Communist Party line,general secretary of the Com- for the party"knows that the realmunist Party in the U. S., "has purpose of its line must be de­been on a whirlwind, whistle- ceitfuliy covered up with ~hatstop tour of the eountry'" warn- _. it 'shows' the American. people."

. Social Mission

Msgr; Magner said Our 'Ladyof Guadalupe typifies "thespiritual mother of the entirehuman family, interested in ourearthly existence as well 116 inour final salvation."

"For this reason," he added,"we turn to her for guidanceand inspiration in our strugglefor human justice and better­ment, on .the principle that ma-

tians doesn't fit in with thatclimate," he continued.

"Out of the council shouldcome one that does. It will' beless canonical, more a picture ofChristians who simpiy loveChrist, and their neighbors inChrist. It will involve no· changes'in dogma or basic beliefs-justan adaptation of the Church tomodern times," the Jesuit added.

.Father' Leeming is a theolo­gian of note who teaches at Hey­throp College in Oxfordshire,England. Although he speaksonly with' the authority of aprivate theologian, his worda.carry we,ight.,

FR. JOSEPH C. CANTY

'Less Canonical'

"Pope John is not only awareof the new climate-of friendli­ness among Christians. He wantsto promote it. An image of theChurch that repels sOme Chris-

Msgr. Magner declared thatdevotion to Our Lady of Guada­lupe "was undoubtedly one 'ofthe most important factors in theconversion of the Mexicanpeople to Christianity in thecolonial era."

Says Material Gain. WASHniGTON (NC) - Ma- "This same devotion in one

terial betterment and spiritual form' or the othe'1" has been angrowth must go hand in hand in outstanding feature of CatholicLatin Ameri~a,: according to life throughout Latin AmericaMsgr. James A. Magner, author during the past four centuriesand lecturer on Latin America and promises to be one of theand procurator of the Catholic strongest bulwarks against the.University of America. He made inroads of c.ommunism today,"the statement before a congre- he declared..gation· including top rankingmembers of the Latin Americandiplomatic corps in attendanceat a Mass honoring Our Lady ofGuadalupe as Empress of theAmericans.. .

Theo~ogian Says Pope PromotesNew Am;ty With NonlllCatholics

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-TheChurch's hand is out, ready tograsp that of any non-CatholicChristian willin~ to drop ancientbitterness and make commoncause for Christ, l;lccording to avisiting Jesuit priest.

Credit for extending the handbelongs to Pope John, saidFather Bernard Leeming, S.J.,who observed: "Pope John is notonly aware of the new climateof friendliness growing 'among'Christians, but wants' to Promoteit." -' . .

"The Holy Father has made tt.clear that an. important order ofbusiness at the com'ing ecumeni­cal council will be a hard look at·the customs and discipline of theChurch," Father Leeming said.

."And where there appears to beanything that creates enmity to­ward the Church I believe it'ssafe to say there will be changesmade..

WASHINGTON (NC)-Effortsto make the Communist Party inthe United States comply withthe Internal Security Act of1950 will be watched with in­terest.·First major develbpmentsare expected within a month. Itcould be a long, drawn-out bat-tle however. .

The U. S. Supreme Court re­fused to review its decision oflast Spring that the CommunistParty must register under the1950 law as a subversive organ­ization. The party' had 30 daysafter the court's order becamefinal to furnish certain informa­tion to the Attorney General.

Following the high court ac­tion a' "Pl;lrty official'~ wasquoted in the press as saying theCP would defy the law. TheDepartment of Justice, on itspart, said it is ready to act if this

.' happens. .

Rev. Joseph C. Canty, a diocesan priestwho holds the rank of Captain in the Chap­lains Corps of the United States Navy, isnow on the high seas enroute to Londonwhere he will assume l)is new duties as Force'Chaplain on the Staff of' the Commander-in­ChIef of Naval activities in Europe.

The Taunton born priest left New YorkCity yesterday aboard the SS. United States forhis new assignment.

. Father Canty, who has been on active dutyin the Navy for the past 19 years, has mostrecently served as Senior Chaplain, Marine Corps,at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina, and asSenior Chaplain, at the U.S. Naval Hospital atSt. Albans, Long Island, New York.

Father Canty entered the Naval ChaplainsCorps in February 1942. He was then an assistantpriest at St: John the Evangelist parish in Aitle­boro.

Father Canty, a native of Taunton, was bornAug. 17, 1909, son of the late Charles E. and EllenMcGann Canty. He graduated from St. Ma'1"Y'sHigh and made his classical studies at BostonCollege. He attended St.' Bernard's Seminary inRochester and was ordained by the late BishopCassidy on May 26, 1934.

Father Canty filled assignments in EastTaunton, Norton and St. John'sChurch in Attleboro. He enteredthe Chaplain Corps in March of1942 and is the holder of severaldecorations for his outstandingservice through the war.

Sc i~lJ'i.l(Ce· GrantVILLANOVA (NC)-Villanova

University has announced recep­tion of a grant of $13,000 fromthe National Science Foundationfor its biology departnient. Theun~ersity is conducted by Ai;­sumptionist Fathers.

Reports Gr<eatl'errAntnaSmMft' Effort

WASHINGTON (NC) - TheU.S. Post Office Department.hasreported a "significant increase"in arrests and convictions dur­ing 1961 for violation of thepostal anti-obscenity' laws.

Postmaster General J. EdwardDay said that through the thirdquarter of 1961, ending Septem­ber 15, the Postal Inspectio.nService arrested 98 persons onobscenity charges.

This represents an increase of.21 per cent over the same periodlast year. .

Day disclosed that there havebeen 69 convictions this year, asa result of Postal InspectionService investigations - an in­·crease of almost 17 percent overthe conviction total for the sameperiod in 1960.

Taunton Csyics Club 0

Receives CharterThe Civics Club of· Sacred

Heart School, Taunton, has re-. ceived a charter from the Com­mission on AmeriCan Citizensnip,Washington. The local unit, oneof thousands of. Catholic CivicsClub throughout the nation, in­cludes eighth grade students atSacred Heart.

Officers are James W. Murphy,president; Francis Mendoza, vicepresident; Anne L. Kennedy, sec­retary; Pamela A. Devereaus,treasurer.

The students are. studying·Your Family in Today's World"dS a club project for the year.Aim of the clubs, affiliated withthe national organization at theCatholic University of America,is to develop informed, respon­sible young citizens.

Emphasis on Results

The Post Office commentedthat announcement of the quar­terly cumulative totals' was inkeeping with Day's policy, an­nounced earlier in the year, thatthe department would in generallimit' its public statements onobscenity in the mails to reportson cases investigated and con-victions obtained. .

Day expressed the opinionthat the latest report "supportsthe wisdom of our poiicy ofplacing emphasis on results ob­tained, rather than publicizingthe fact that obscene and por-

. nographic matter is available toour youth through the mails.. "Such ballyhoo can only serve

to weaken our enforcement pro­gram," he added.

.~.,

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