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04.15.65

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Orders will be conferred by the Most Reverend Bishop Most Rev. William E. Cousins, Archbishop of Milwau­ k-ee, described Albert Cardinal Meyer, late Archbishop of C-hicago, who died Friday, in his eulogy as "a churchman From apostolic times, the greatest mysteries c! our . Appointment of three new head coaches at three dioces­ an high schools is announced today by Rev. Patrick J. in the best and broadest sense of the word" for whom hi'S on five seminarians for ser­ CARDINAL .IEYER PRICE 10e
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Ordination at Cathedral May 1 The Sacrament of Hoh" Orders will be conferred by the Most Reverend Bishop on five seminarians for ser- :Wee in the Diocese at 10 Saturday morning, May 1, in St. Mary's Cathedral.· . 'hi be ordained are Rev. Mr. George Almeida" 276 Thatcher . street, Attleboro; Rev. Mr. Jos- eph M. Ferreira Jr., 55 Morton Street, Fall River; Rev. Mr. Ter- rence F. Keenan, 509 Rivet St., New Bedford; Rev. Mr. Kenneth A. Michael, 29 Stone Street, Dan- bury, Conn. and Rev. Ralph D. made his college studies at St. Tetrault, 31 Green Street, Fair- Thomas Seminary, Bloomfield, haven. Conn., and completed his edu- Rev. Mr. Almeida cation at St. Mary's Seminary, Rev. Mr. Almeida, son of Man- Baltimore, Md., and Our Lady uel and Anna Almeida, was born· of the Angels Seminary, Albany, in Newport, R.I. He was grad- N.Y. uated from Attleboro High, He will celebrate his First lIlEV. MR. ALMEIDA REV. MIll. FERREIRA REV. MR. KEENAN REV. MR. MICHAEL REV. MR. TETRAULT The CHOR '" A.w A.lIOwof .. .foul, .......... "*"'"-1'1'. PA.. Fall River, Mass., Thursday, April 15, 1965 PRICE 10e Vol. 9, No. 15 © 1965 The Anchor $4.00 per Year Cardinal Meyer Recognized Faithful as Beneficiaries Most Rev. William E. Cousins, Archbishop of Milwau- k-ee, described Albert Cardinal Meyer, late Archbishop of C-hicago, who died Friday, in his eulogy as "a churchman in the best and broadest sense of the word" for whom hi'S episcopal motto, "Thy king- bishop Cousins said that "the dom come," served as "the Churr.h to was him too impor- inspiration fora way of life." Noting the cardinal's "out- spokE'n and forthright" stance at $be ecumenical council, Arcl1- ".:.-..- CARDINAL .IEYER tant a factor in man's salvation not to progress with the needs. of the times." Turn to Page Sixteen Holy Week Services Emphasize Present Personal Realities From apostolic times, the greatest mysteries c! our salvation-the Passion, Death and Resurrection-were cele- brated each year with special attention. Later, the momentous events of Christ's Last Supper were also added to the Holy Days and still later Christ's triumphant entry into Jerusalem Wag given a special place in Chris- tian devotion. Those days were set aside in the Church, all work stopped, . all attention was focused on the working out of OUI salvation- past and present. . H{lwever, with the changes of civilizations and social con- ditions, these most solemn days were just other red-numbered calendar days. Soon, they were thought of as simple commem- orations, an anniversary of an important historical event. Way of Cross The Anchor today publishes pictures of the Stations of the Cross which were made by Sister Louis Bertrand, O.P.. as a project iu arts for her master's degreE< at Catholic Unhoersity. Sister teaches at Dominican AcMiemy, F a II River. Appoint Three New Yet, these climactic days ()f Holy Week are not simple an':' niversaries. They do not lm!y commemorate or emotionally and ritually remember the eventful intervention of God in Turn to Page Describes Father Dowling As Exemplar of Humanity Rev. Edward F. Dowling, pastor of the Immaculate Conception Church, Fall River, was eulogized by Father David A. O'Brien as the exemplar of Christ's life pat- terned when the Divine Master said: "Learn of me, for I am meek and humble of heart." Following a Solemn Pon- tifical Mass of Requiem cel- ebrated Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock in the Immaculate Con- ce!Jtion Church, Fall River, by the Most Reverend James J. Gerrard,Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese of Fall River, Father Coaches FATHER Choices Are Bartek, Connell and Lanagan . Appointment of three new head coaches at three dioces- an high schools is announced today by Rev. Patrick J. O'NP.ill, diocesan school superin- tendent. They are Fredric Bart':!k of Somerset. head coach of basketball at Bishop Feehan lHigh School in Attleboro. Chl1rles Connell of Fall River, head coach of football at Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth. James .Lanagan of Taunton, head coach of football at Msgr. James Coyle High School in Taunton. Bartek, a graduate of Coyle al!.d Stonehill College, is a mem- ber of the history department at the Attleboro regional diocesan high school. He has served as an assistant in football and basket- ball and head track coach since he joined the diocesan institu- tion. Connell, a ·graduate of Coyle and Bradford Durfee College ha" worked as an assistant for Vatican Denial VATICAN CITY (NC)-Vat- ican officials have denied a re- port ·that Pope Paul VI soon will issue a decree altering the pres- ent canon law on mixed mar- riages. The matter has been under study by canonists and theolo- gians since it was brought up during the Second Vatican CounCil. But the council Fathers voted that the whole schema on matrimony should be turned over to the Pope for his decisioQ, five years under Carlin Lynch of Somerset who resigned the post a few weeks ago to accept appointment as a member of the Holy Cross College football team. coaching staff. Lanagan, also a graduate of Coyle and Stonehill College in North Easton, will succeed Jim Burns as grid mentor. Lanagan will continue as basketball coach, a job he stepped into when Burns relinquished that assignment a few years ago. Bartek, who has been writing the sports column for The Anchor since last Fall, will suc- ceed Joe Hughes as the Feehan court coach. Hughes is leaving the diocesan school to join the faculty at Mount Saint Charles Tum to Page Solemn Mass at 11 :30 Sunday morning, May 2, at Holy Ghost Church, Attleboro. Rev. Mr. Almeida will offer his First Solemn Mass on Sun- day morning, May 2, at 11 :30 in the Holy Ghost Church, Attle- boro. Assisting the newly or- dained will be Rev. Jose A. Car- doza, archpriest; Rev. J. Holland, deacon, and Rev. Robert J. Burbank, sub-deacon. Thp. preacher at the Mass wiil be Rev. Robert J. Arway, vice-· rector at Our Lady of the Angds Seminary, Albany, and the ordination sponsor will be Comm. (Ch. Corps) Pius F. KeaHng of Quonset. Rev. Mr. Ferreira Rev. Mr. Ferreira, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Ferreira, was graduated from Msgr. James Coyle High School and was awarded a Bachelor of Arts de- gree in philosophy by Our Lady of Providence Seminary, War- wick Neck, R.I. He has earned a Bachelor of Sacred Theology degree from St. Mary's Semi- nary, Baltimore, Md., where he completed his study of theology. Rev. Mr. Ferreira will cele- brate his First Solemn Mass at 11 Sunday, May 2, in st. Mi- chael's Church, Fall River, with. Rt. Rev. Msgr. Humberto S. Me- deiros as assistant priest. Rev. Edmund J. Doerre will be dea- con and Rev. Joseph Oliveria, subdeacon. The sermon will be preched by Rev. Edmund A. Connors. Father Arthur C. do. Reis will be sponsor at ordina- tion. Rev. Mr. Keenan Rev. Mr. Keenan, the son of Mrs. Annie C. Keenan and the lalie Thomas F. Keenan, was g::aduat£J from Hol,;- High School and St. Thomas Seminary, Bloomfield, Conn. He was awarded a Bachelor of Arts Turn to Page Eighlieen O'BrIen, pastor of S8. Peter and Paul's Church, Fall River, and a friend of the late Father Dowling for more than 50 years, traced the transition of the priesthood in Father Dowling'a 40 priestly years from the able and effervescent young priest to the quiet, meek and humble pastor "scrupulousl,; Turn to Page Four
Transcript
Page 1: 04.15.65

Ordination at Cathedral May 1 The Sacrament of Hoh"

Orders will be conferred by the Most Reverend Bishop on five seminarians for ser­:Wee in the Diocese at 10 Saturday morning, May 1, in St. Mary's Cathedral.· .

'hi be ordained are Rev. Mr. George Almeida" 276 Thatcher. street, Attleboro; Rev. Mr. Jos­eph M. Ferreira Jr., 55 Morton Street, Fall River; Rev. Mr. Ter­rence F. Keenan, 509 Rivet St., New Bedford; Rev. Mr. Kenneth A. Michael, 29 Stone Street, Dan­

bury, Conn. and Rev. Ralph D. made his college studies at St. Tetrault, 31 Green Street, Fair­ Thomas Seminary, Bloomfield, haven. Conn., and completed his edu­

Rev. Mr. Almeida cation at St. Mary's Seminary, Rev. Mr. Almeida, son of Man­ Baltimore, Md., and Our Lady

uel and Anna Almeida, was born· of the Angels Seminary, Albany, in Newport, R.I. He was grad­ N.Y. uated from Attleboro High, He will celebrate his First

lIlEV. MR. ALMEIDA REV. MIll. FERREIRA REV. MR. KEENAN REV. MR. MICHAEL REV. MR. TETRAULT

The CHOR

'" A.w A.lIOwof .. .foul, .......... "*"'"-1'1'. PA..

Fall River, Mass., Thursday, April 15, 1965

PRICE 10eVol. 9, No. 15 © 1965 The Anchor $4.00 per Year

Cardinal Meyer Recognized Faithful as Beneficiaries

Most Rev. William E. Cousins, Archbishop of Milwau­k-ee, described Albert Cardinal Meyer, late Archbishop of C-hicago, who died Friday, in his eulogy as "a churchman in the best and broadest sense of the word" for whom hi'S episcopal motto, "Thy king­ bishop Cousins said that "thedom come," served as "the Churr.h to washim too impor­inspiration fora way of life."

Noting the cardinal's "out­spokE'n and forthright" stance at $be ecumenical council, Arcl1­

".:.-..-

CARDINAL .IEYER

tant a factor in man's salvation not to progress with the needs. of the times."

Turn to Page Sixteen

Holy Week Services Emphasize Present Personal Realities

From apostolic times, the greatest mysteries c! our salvation-the Passion, Death and Resurrection-were cele­brated each year with special attention. Later, the momentous events of Christ's Last Supper were also added to the Holy Days and still later Christ's triumphant entry into Jerusalem Wag

given a special place in Chris­tian devotion.

Those days were set aside in the Church, all work stopped,

. all attention was focused on the working out of OUI salvation­past and present. .

H{lwever, with the changes of civilizations and social con­ditions, these most solemn days were just other red-numbered calendar days. Soon, they were thought of as simple commem­orations, an anniversary of an important historical event.

Way of Cross The Anchor today publishes

pictures of the Stations of the Cross which were made by Sister Louis Bertrand, O.P.. as a project iu arts for her master's degreE< at Catholic Unhoersity. Sister teaches at Dominican AcMiemy, F a II River.

Appoint Three New

Yet, these climactic days ()f Holy Week are not simple an':' niversaries. They do not lm!y commemorate or emotionally and ritually remember the eventful intervention of God in

Turn to Page T~

Describes Father DowlingAs Exemplar of Humanity

Rev. Edward F. Dowling, pastor of the Immaculate Conception Church, Fall River, was eulogized by Father David A. O'Brien as the exemplar of Christ's life ~s pat­terned when the Divine Master said: "Learn of me, for I am meek and humble of heart."

Following a Solemn Pon­tifical Mass of Requiem cel­ebrated Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock in the Immaculate Con­ce!Jtion Church, Fall River, by the Most Reverend James J. Gerrard,Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese of Fall River, Father

Coaches

FATHER ~OWUNG

Choices Are Bartek, Connell and Lanagan . Appointment of three new

head coaches at three dioces­an high schools is announced today by Rev. Patrick J. O'NP.ill, diocesan school superin­tendent. They are Fredric Bart':!k of Somerset. head coach of basketball at Bishop Feehan lHigh School in Attleboro.

Chl1rles Connell of Fall River, head coach of football at Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth.

James .Lanagan of Taunton, head coach of football at Msgr. James Coyle High School in Taunton.

Bartek, a graduate of Coyle al!.d Stonehill College, is a mem­ber of the history department at the Attleboro regional diocesan high school. He has served as an assistant in football and basket­

ball and head track coach since he joined the diocesan institu­tion.

Connell, a ·graduate of Coyle and Bradford Durfee College ha" worked as an assistant for

Vatican Denial VATICAN CITY (NC)-Vat­

ican officials have denied a re­port ·that Pope Paul VI soon will issue a decree altering the pres­ent canon law on mixed mar­riages.

The matter has been under study by canonists and theolo­gians since it was brought up during the Second Vatican CounCil. But the council Fathers voted that the whole schema on matrimony should be turned over to the Pope for his decisioQ,

five years under Carlin Lynch of Somerset who resigned the post a few weeks ago to accept appointment as a member of the Holy Cross College football team. coaching staff.

Lanagan, also a graduate of Coyle and Stonehill College in North Easton, will succeed Jim Burns as grid mentor. Lanagan will continue as basketball coach, a job he stepped into when Burns relinquished that assignment a few years ago.

Bartek, who has been writing the sports column for The Anchor since last Fall, will suc­ceed Joe Hughes as the Feehan court coach. Hughes is leaving the diocesan school to join the faculty at Mount Saint Charles

Tum to Page ~ineteeA

Solemn Mass at 11 :30 Sunday morning, May 2, at Holy Ghost Church, Attleboro.

Rev. Mr. Almeida will offer his First Solemn Mass on Sun­day morning, May 2, at 11 :30 in the Holy Ghost Church, Attle­boro. Assisting the newly or­dained will be Rev. Jose A. Car­doza, archpriest; Rev. Edwar~

J. Holland, deacon, and Rev. Robert J. Burbank, sub-deacon.

Thp. preacher at the Mass wiil be Rev. Robert J. Arway, vice-· rector at Our Lady of the Angds Seminary, Albany, and the ordination sponsor will be Comm. (Ch. Corps) Pius F. KeaHng of Quonset.

Rev. Mr. Ferreira Rev. Mr. Ferreira, the son of

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Ferreira, was graduated from Msgr. James Coyle High School and was awarded a Bachelor of Arts de­gree in philosophy by Our Lady of Providence Seminary, War­wick Neck, R.I. He has earned a Bachelor of Sacred Theology degree from St. Mary's Semi­nary, Baltimore, Md., where he completed his study of theology.

Rev. Mr. Ferreira will cele­brate his First Solemn Mass at 11 Sunday, May 2, in st. Mi­chael's Church, Fall River, with. Rt. Rev. Msgr. Humberto S. Me­deiros as assistant priest. Rev. Edmund J. Doerre will be dea­con and Rev. Joseph Oliveria, subdeacon. The sermon will be preched by Rev. Edmund A. Connors. Father Arthur C. do. Reis will be sponsor at ordina­tion.

Rev. Mr. Keenan Rev. Mr. Keenan, the son of

Mrs. Annie C. Keenan and the lalie Thomas F. Keenan, was g::aduat£J from Hol,;- Fa:::l:!~.\o

High School and St. Thomas Seminary, Bloomfield, Conn. He was awarded a Bachelor of Arts

Turn to Page Eighlieen

O'BrIen, pastor of S8. Peter and Paul's Church, Fall River, and a friend of the late Father Dowling for more than 50 years, traced the transition of the priesthood in Father Dowling'a 40 priestly years from the 10~.

able and effervescent young priest to the quiet, meek and humble pastor "scrupulousl,;

Turn to Page Four

Page 2: 04.15.65

--

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Aprit 15, 1965

Holy Week Services Stress Pres~nt Personal Real;ti~s

Continued from Page One the saving of the human race.

,These holy jays have a greater importance than being simple holidays. They have a tremen­dous present and future impor­~ce too. For the present, they contain a living reality: the occasion of joining ourselves to the work of Christ, the .grace and the obligatIon of working out our own personal salvation along with Christ. For the future therp is the consoling assurance that death is not the end-all for us but, as for Christ, there will be the resurrection and eternal life and-please God-glorifica­tion of and 'With God.

Holy Thursday The original scene of this great

day was the upper room of the Cenacle. There during Christ's celebration of the Jewish Pasch, three great events shook the re­ligious world. First, Christ insti ­tuted the Holy Eucharist; then, h~ instituted Holy Orders; fin­ally, he illustrated His com­manC:ment of brotherly love with the "Mandatum".

'With the new reforms in force f<ir the first time, the early li ­turgical service--the Mass of the Chrism-will clearly emphasize the Priesthood and the ministry whicl: Christ designated for it. The special concelebrated Mass will ;Uustrate the unity of the Priesthood, showing all priests the world over as the divinely a p p (' i n ted instruments sent throughout the world to do Christ's work ir. His Name. This is illustrated in the consecration of tho;. oils to be used through the year in the adm\nistration of the Sacr:;.ments.

In the evening. the Lord's Last Suppp.r is celebrated-celebrated beca'Jse the Lord is again in the midst of us doinr the very same thin~ he did for those in the Cenacle room that night. Again, we bave the institution of the Blessed Sacrament - His Body and His 'Blood

The third great event of this day is the "Mandatum" - the Lord's Commandment - the washing of the feet, Here, the eelel.'rant of the evening Mass will perform to the letter what Our Lord did for His apostles that 'light "I have given you the example, that you might do likewise." Thus, with respect and humility. ~he priest illus­trate:; his love--Christ's love-­for bis people by performing wha~ was for the orientals a great sign of welcome and re­spect If' it is only humility to our eyes, then the words of Christ to Peter should be re­membered: ''Unless you let Me do this, you can have no part with Me." .

Good Friday On this day, the Church does

not offer the holy sacrifice of the Mass. She is too caught up with the immolation of Christ on thE' Cross to stop and renew mystically that very same all ­saving sacrifice.

Thp solemn service of the day is in four parts: 1. the Liturgy of the Word; 2. the Great Catho­lic Prayers; 3. the Adoration of the Cross; 4. the Communion.

The Liturgy of the Word is made up of lessons, chants, med­itations and prayers. Here, pas:' sages of the Old Testament point to the Passion of Christ and fin­ally the Passion according to St. John is solemnly read.

The Great Catholic Prayers are sCllemn recommendations ad­dressed to the crucified Christ, the one and only Mediator of the Church and all creation. All prayerfully hope that the Blood' spilled on Calvary may pour ill J'edemption to all kinds of pe0­

ple OIl the world today. ThY

year some of the prayers have been reworded so that they not only exp:oess our brotherly con­cern for everyon~'s salvation but even in their wordmg they are expr~ssions of charity and love.

ThFl Adoration of the Cross is the heartfelt acceptance of Christ's sacrifice by us whom He saved. In this moving ven­eration, Christ is accepted more like a King on His throne (as He il' described in the liturgy time and time again when speaking of the crucified Christ) than a condemned criminal on his scaffold.

Finally, the Communion Rite brings us to a personal contact with the crucified Christ. What would we have lovingly done if we 1-ad been standing there .in the circle atop Calvary? That we can now do, this day, in our re­ceiving the Eucharistic Christ.

Holy Saturday This Is primarily a day of

mourning just as it was for Mary. the apostles and disciples of Our Lord. However, late in the evening, the Easter celebra­tions begin. Here, the Church remembers thE' troubled history of thp Jews, their Pasch. She, with great emotion, recalls that Christ was foretold in this great , Jewish fpast for the salvation of the Chosen People from the Egyptians is the first stage of the freeing of all people from the sJavery of sir.. But this night means more than that. It is the commemoration of our own freedom--our Baptism. It is the burst;ng joy of the triumphant Christ, triumphant over death, triumphant over sin. triumphant over any and, all plagues of human life.

The night service is in three parts: 1. the Celebration of Light; 2. the Celebration of Water; 3. the Celebration of the Eucharist.

In the Celebration of Light, we illustrate the joyous Resur­rection. In early centuries, the Christians would bless the fire before their celebrations and meetings. After all, fire meant a great deal to them. It was fire that would be their only light, their only warmllh and the only instn'ment of edible food. was then, something fundamental basic and absolutely necessary­just as Christ actually is.

From stone springs fire! Sud­denly there is something active . • . alive! A candle especially decorated will "represent" the glorious and triumphant Christ. Pure, clean and scented, the bee's wax candle shows us the glorious wocnds by which we have been saved-five decorated stones of incense. Just as it solemnly and gradually spreads its fire throughout the church, Christ has influenced and saved the en­tire world.

With the great "Exultet" the Church invites us .allto rejoice. We are saved! As the freed Jews passed through their Red Sea so we if' this night victory are for­ever free and dear to Him. Him.

In the Celebration of Water, the ceremony begins with certain readings taken from the Old Testament. These point to the creative and salutary power of God. -They tell us that: (1) man is created to the image and like­ness of God; (2) just as the waters of Baptism make us adopted children of God, so we are freed of all sin's powers as the Jews were rescued from the Egyptians; (3) to be baptised means to be part of Christ's Church, a valued part of God's vine; (4) as members of Hi. Church, we are not to abuse these divine gifts. We must show ourselv~ worthy of thill vocatioll

M"~s Ordo FRIDAY-Good Friday. I Class.

Black and violet. Mass proper; Solemn Liturgical Service: Le.:;sons and Passion; Solemn Petitions and Collects; Adora­tio" of the Cross; Communion.

SATURDAY-Holy Saturday. I CI..ss. Violet and White. Mass Proper; The Blessing of the New Fire and the Paschal Candle; Lessons; Litany with Blessing 0:': thr: Font and Re­newal of Baptismal Promises. Mass: Gloria; no Creed; Pref­ace, Communicantes and Hane 19itur of Easter.

SUNDAY-Easter Sunday, The Resurrection of Our Lord J e:;us Christ. the Solemnity of Solemnities I Class. White. Mas s Proper; Gloria; Se­quence; Creed; Preface; Com­municantes and Hanc Igitur of Easter (also each day dur­ing the Octave.)

MONDAY-Easter Monday. I C13s~. White. Mass Proper; GlorIa; Sequence; Creed; Pref­ace, etc. of Easter.

TUESDAY-Easter Tuesday. I Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Sequence; Creed; Pref­ace, etc, of Easter.

WEDNESDAY-Easter Wednes­da~' I Class White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Sequence; Creed; Preface etc. of Easter.

THURSDAY-Easter Thursday. I Class. White Mass Proper; Gloria; Sequence; Creed; Pref­ace; etc. of Easter.

and thank God that He has called us to Baptism.

Finally, in a moving ritual, realizing that Baptism means so much to us, we take all care and love to prepare water for the Baptisms of the next year. In a sense, the Resurrected Christ's power is let loose for the year to come.

Then, finally with one burst of joy after another, the Church offers her solemn thanksgiving with the offering of the Eucha­rist. Now, the Resurrected Christ will even stand in our midst and buoy our spirits as He did his fearful apostles in the Cenacle. Alleluia! Christ is arisen! Alleluia!

FORTY H~URS

DEVOTION

Apr. 11-8t. Paul, Taunton. Apr.l8-0ur Lady of the

Holy Rosary, New Bedford.

St. Michael, Ocean Grove. Apr.25-Holy Ghost, Attle­

boro. . St. Joseph, New Bedford.

'May 3-0ur Lady of the Im­maculate Conception, Nort!': Easton. St. Mary, Hebronville.

May 7-St. Vincent's Home, FaI: River

TltI AICHOR Second Class Postage Paid at Fall ItIYer

Masa. Published Ivery Tlwraday .. 41. HI.ghland Avenue. Fall. RIver Mass. bY III catholic Press or ttIe Diocese of Fall lIM1r. SUbscrlptlOll 1JIiCI·... _H. poatJt~ MAl 1* JIll.

Educators Are to Discuss Wide Range of Topics

WASmNGTON (NC)-.High school teachers and ad­ministrators attending the national convention of Catholic' e.ducators will range OVi'r a variety of topics from the new lIturgy to educational television. They will also get an ap;­praisal of Catholic schools from the point of view of two laymen according to a

. ' program l~sued by the Nat­lonal Catholic Educational Asso­dation.

The NCEA's 62nd annual.four­day convention will be held in ~ew York starting Monday, Ap­n119. Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York will be host to the assembly, expected to attract 20,000 persons.

The association also announced that it will operate, during the evening hours of the convention days, a closed-circuit television network which will beam dis­cussions into the hotel rooms of delegates Convention head­quarters will be the Americana and New York Hilton hotels.

Supper for Blind Cardinal Gibbons C i I' C Ie,

Taunton Daughters of Isabella, will serve a ham and bean sup­per to membelS of Taunton CathC'lic Guild for the Blind at its meeting Thursday, April 22 at CYO Hall. Rev. James Lyons will conduct the meeting and chairmen for the month are Mrs. Harr'et Martin and Miss Nellie Leary. '

Necrology APR. 16

Re~. Arthur E Langlois, 1928, On SIck leave. Denver, Colorado.

APR. 18 Rev. Hugh B. Harrold, 1935,

Pastor, St Mary, Mansfield. Rt. Rev, John F. McKeon, P.R.,

1956. Pastor, st Lawrence, New Bedf(1rd.

APR. 20 Rev. Edwarcl F. Coyle, S.S..

1954, St. Mary Seminary,Paca St., Md.

APR. 22 Rev. James L. Smith, 1910,

Pastor, Sacred Heart, Taunton. Rev, Thomas F. Fitzgerald,

1954, Pastor, S~. Mary, Nan­tucket.

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The NCEA secondary school departmen~'s opening session 011:,April 20 WIll feature an address by Bishop Robert J. Dwyer of Reno Nev. I

Th~ session on liturgical re­newal April 20 will be devote<l to its impact on Masses for stu­dents. The speaker will be F1'.. Godfrey Diekmann, O.S.B., 6f St: John's Abbey, Collegeville, Minn., editor of -Worship maga­zine.

Television Values Educational television's valuell

will be discussed April 21 by Commissioner Robert E. Lee of the Federal Communications Commission. Ria talk will center on television stations operated by dioceses and o~r private agencies.

The two laymen to discuss schools at the final depart. ­mental session April 22 are Ger­ard E. Sherry, managing editor of the Georgia Bulletin, news­paper of the Atlantic archdioce. apd J. Alan DE-vitt, director 01 secondary education for the DIocese of Buffalo, N.Y.

The day after the NCEA con­vention closes, lay people in­volved in Catholic education: will hold a one-day session. The April 23 assembly will be spon­sored by the NCEA's School Superintendent's Department.

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Page 3: 04.15.65

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Card.inal Urges. Stronger Catholic School System

OMAHA (NC)-Francis Cardinal Spellman said "it would be a tragic mistake for the Church to abdicate her place of pride in education, and please God she never will."

The New York prelate addressed a rally here inaug­urating a $7.5 million cam­paign to expand archdi- masses in all fields, "at great ocesan educational facilities expen~, .constan.t sacrifice,

staggermg generosity." and acknowIe d ged tha t a Catholic element in this 'coun- Investment try. questions "the wisdom of "We shall not falter now. We having Catholic schools arid must never abandon this great pouring mto tilem vast resources field of endeavor. We must not of money and manpower:" forsake what our fathers fash-

Thread ioned for us ami for future gen-The cardinal told the audience erations. We must go forward

which packed the Omaha Civic not only for our own sake but Auditorium that "education and- for the sake of all America, be­l'eligion go together just as sure- cause ev~ry g!ft we make to. our Stonehill Grads b- as faith and freedom do." s~hools IS no. only a contnbu­He said religion "is not just an- ~10~ to the st~ength of religion,­ Pian Retreat other sut,ject tau~ht in Catholic It IS also an mvestment in the

Paul Reed, Stonehill '60, ofschools" but. is the "integrating gro:vvth" and .greatness of ~~is thread in all education." nahon, Cardmal Spellman said. Brockton, heads the Stonehill

College Alumni Retreat Commit­"The religion-centered school tee that -has planned a RetreatIs not just.a sort of luxury which for men at the Holy Cross Fath­Grandfather Nowpeople who al'e well off can af-. ers' Retreat House on the Stone­ford, but a necessity for which hill Campus, North Easton.people of modest means rightly New' Father

spend their hard.-earned money, The program under the" direc­ROME (NC)--Four Americansbecause it embodIes our very tion of Rev. Lawrence Sullivan,

-a .grandfather 16 times over,ph~losophy of education," he C.S.C., Holy Cross Fathers' Re­

two former army officers and adeclared. ' treat Master, will be - held theformer editor - were ordainedIncomplf;te weekend of April 23, 24, and 25.by Amleto Cardinal Cicognani"We want God honored and along with five of their class­ Further information may beeherished in our schools not mates at Beda College for late obtained by contacting Paulsimply as an act of piety, but as vocations here. Reed, 42 West Ashland .St.,the very. flowering of the teach­

Brockton or from the RetreatThe Papal Secretary of Stateing process. We beleive that House, North Easton.officiated at the ceremony at the

is not only earthbound; it· is Basilica of St. Paul Outside the essentially incomplete," the Pupils in Michigan

schooling which ignores religion

Walls. Six other graduates of the cardinal cont.inued. college returned to Great Britain

He emphasized that "religion for ordination. Plan Shared-Time does not belong t<J learning­ The New U. S. priests are GRAND RAPlDS (NC)-Sev­learning belongs to religion." Fathers John P. Smith, 69, a enty eighth graders from Im­The cardinal said Catholics in widowed lawyer from New York maculate Heart of Mary schoolAmerica have established a vast City; Leon Kief, 52, who served here will launch Grand Rapid'snetwork of democratic free on Gen. Douglas MacArthur's first program of shared-time ed­schools; have educated' millions staff in the Pacific and taught ucation next September.of citizens, and have contributed military science at Purdue Uni­ The pupils will enroll ingreatly to the learning of the versity; Eugene J. Sweeney, a classes in mathematics, science,West Point graduate who served

industrial- arts and home eco­in Italy during the war and later nomics at a public school near was assigned to the Central In­Se'es Great Need their own. ' telligence Agency and the Joint

The arrangement, which is ex­Chiefs of Staff; and Vincent J.For Catechists pected to involve more schoolsGiese, 41, author and former ed­LONDON (NC)-John Cardi­ in 1966, has been approved byitor of Fides Publishing House.

nal Heenan of Westminster said the Grand Rapid::: Board of Edu­Father Smith was ordained forhis archdiocese is in great need cation after details were workedthe Buffalo diocese, Father Kief(If catechists because, despite out by Superintendent Jay L.for Santa Fe, Father Sweeneyenormous sums being spent on Pylman and Father Charles A.for Pueblo and l!~ather Giese forCatholic schools. only one child Kilgoar, O.M.I., pastor of theChicago.in three will be able to attend a Catholic parish, and John J. parochial school. All 11 of their classmates are Spinetto, a lay member of the

The English speaking prelate either British or Irish and were Grand Rapids diocesan school spoke to his archdiocesan Cath­ ordained for British dioceses. board. olic Women's League which is 'Among them are a former An­opening a teachers' training glican clergyman, a former Lon­school for catechists in London don lawyer, a former farmer in this September. . Ireland, a former glassmaker

Cardinal Heenan praised the and a former Brother of St. John ATWOOD many priests who have accepted of God. teaching posts in public schools Father Smith's youngest son. OIL COMPANY to act as unofficial chaplains for James, was in St. Paul's for his the Catholic students. father's ordination.

One such priest was asked by SHELL city authorities to direct all reli ­gious education in the school. Easter Ball HEATING OILS but the offer was declined. "We McMahon Assembly, N e 'VIr do not want to control the South • Sea StreetsBedford KnightCJ of Columbus, l'eligious instruction in these will hold an Easter Monday ban schools," said the cardinal. Hyannis Tel. HY 81from 9 to 1 at New Bedford

While . admitting that the Hotel. Church in Britain "is flagging in many respects," Cardinal Heen­an said the Church there "has not lost the working classes like ANNIVERSARY MASS some countries abroad." He said FOR THE REPOSE Of THE SOUL Of THE LATEthe Church "must be concerned with the education of the poor SENATOR JOSEPH R. McCARTHYas with the rich."

Saturday, May IS, 1965 - 9:00 A.M. Receive Grants

AT LA SALEnE SHRINESister Mary Philemon, R.S.M. and Dr. Ascanio DiPippo, both ATTLEBORO, MASS. of the science department of Salve Regina College, Newport, A bi-eafdm;t ~t1 follow with an address by have received National Science P-r-ofessor Vincent A. McCrossen of Boston College Foundation grants for, Summer

TICKETS $1.50 Order Before May 11, 1965study. Sister Mary Philemon will ':ltudy instrumental methods Make Checks or Money Orders Payable To:of analysis 'at Rensselaer Poly­technic Institute; and Dr. DiPip­ M1:CARTHY MEMORIAL COMMITTEE po will work in the field of % Mrs. Stephen P. C;ollins organic mechanisms at the Uni­ m C9ront Street, NGrth Attleboro, Mass.~rsity of Colorado.

rHEANCHoR~Dioceseof· Fall ~iver-Thurs. April 15, 1965

See Emerging Hierarchy Vatican Council Effect . Americ,~n. Catholics have heard much about the "emerg­109 layman m recent months. But there is someone else "eme:ging" today-the bishop. This is the way one prelate' descnbes the effeCt on the episcopacy of the Second Vatican Council and of its. teachings

that this doctrine makes theabout the hierarchy in the Pop e 'first among equals.''Constitution on the Church.' Others thought the idea SOlDe­Bishops, said Bishop Charues how or other curtails or weak­Buswell of Pueblo, who has been ens the supreme authority of the a pioneer in permitting liturgi­ Vicar of Christ." cal experiments such as eve­ning funerals and afternoon College of Bishops marriage ceremonies, often have "Collegiality," sa i d Richardbeen "rather remote figures" de­ Cardinal Cushing, "emphasizesspite their desire for closer the sharing of all the bishopsbonds with their people. with the Sovereingn Pontiff, in

"No bishop whom I· know," he the universal jurisdiction of thesaid, "desires a bond with his Church."people which is merely institu­

Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St.tional and impersonal. He de­Louis said collegiality "impliessires truly to be the father of that all of the bishops of thehis people." world in union with ·the Bishop'The council's declaration, he of Rome as their head, and neveradded, makes it clear that a apart from him, form the Col­bishop's "chief Iesponsibility" is lege of Bishops, which is respon­to "preside over the Eucharist in sible for the total mission of thethe community of believers." Church Militant."This means for 0I1e thing that

more bishops will iinitate Pope Bishop_ John J. Wright of Paul VI and celebrate Mass fre­ Pittsburgh, a member of the quen.tly among their people, he council's theological commission, predicted. put it this way:

"That the solicitude for an theMistaken Ideas Church and all the churches

Bishop Buswell's comments on which characterized Paul is the the episcopacy and the observa­ vocation and duty of each bishoptions of several other U. S. prel­ and all the bishops so long as, ates were gathered by the like Paul, they are one with N.C.W.C. News Service through Peter." a questio'lnaire and a survey of formal remarks by members of the hierarchy.

Prominent in the prelates' comments was a concern that the council's teaching on the "colle­giality" of the world's bishops has not been understood fully.

"There have been many mis­taken ideas and incompetent re­ports," said Archbishop Joseph T. McGucken of San Francisco. "Some have wrongly thought

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May your life be spiritually reborn of the Master's Sacrifice on Calvary. And

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Page 4: 04.15.65

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4 THE A"-K:HOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. April 15, 1965

Ideas and SU'ggestions for Family Lenten MealsI IHOLY THURSDAY. APRIL 15

Fast

Breakfast: English muffin. marmalade, bev­erage.

Lunch: Easy tomato soup*. erackers. Mother's Special, beverage.

Dinner: Roast Lamb, herbs, matzos. rice, fruit, wine, apple sauce.

Easy Tomato SouP 3 cups tomato juice ¥.! small onion sliced 1 bay leaf lh teaspoon' salt dash pepper VB teaspoon sugar 1/6 cup mayonnaise parsley

Mix tomato juice, onion, bay leaf, salt, pep­per and sugar. Simmer ten minutes. Strain. Stir' small amount into' mayonnaise and then add to tcmato mixture. Mix well. Serves three.

Mother's Special 1 package frozen strawberries (10 oz.) 2 cups miniature marsllmallows ¥.! pint heavy cream 2 tablespoons sugar lh tablespoon vanilla

Place berries in large bowl. Add marshmal­lows and mix until all marshmalows are moist­ened. Let stand overnight in the refrigerator. Marshmallows should absorb almost all liquid. When ready to serve, whip cream, adding sugar and vanilla, and fold into strawberry mixture. Serve in parfait glasses.

Mrs. Gerald Sullivan SS. Peter & Paul Parish, Fall River

GOOD FRIDAY. APRIL 16

Fast and Abstinence

Breakfast: Beverage, hot cross buns. Lunch: Grilled cheese sandwich, beverage.

fruit. Dinner: Herb broiled fish"', peas, whipped

potatoes. green salad, beverage, pretzels.

Herb Broiled Fish 2 pounds fish steaks (haddock, halibut,

cod or swordfish) 6 tablespoons melted butter 1 tablespoon grated onion juice from one lemon 1 teaspoon salt 1J4 teaspoon pepper 1h teaspoon marjoram 1 tablespoon minced chives 2 tablespoons chopped parsley

Put fish on a greased broiler rack. Mix in­gredients and pour half over fish. Broil about six minutes. Turn and pour remaining sauce over fish. Broil six to eight minutes longer or until fish flakes easily with a fork. Makes four servings.

HOLY SATURDAY, APRIL 1'7

Fast

Breakfast: Egg flapjacks"', toast, beverrege.

Lunch: Vegetable soup, baking powder bis­mits, beverage, orange ambrosia.

Dinner: &cC'f Polynesian"', fried rice, Cnin­ese tea, a~rnclld cookies.

Egg Flapjacks

4 eggs 1 tablespoon grated onion % cup flour 1,2 teaspoon salt :/8 teaspoon pepper 1. teaspoon baking powder : lh cups grated cheddar cheese If.! cup fat or salad oil

Beat eggs; add onion; sift in flour, salt, pepper, baking powder and blend well. Stir in cheese. In skillet, heat part of fat. Drop in large spoonfuls of egg mixture, brown on both sides. Add fat as needed. Serve with marmalade. Serves 4.

Boeuf Polynesian

2 tablespoons butter or margarine 1 pound hamburg 1 can (4 oz.) mushrooms, drained 1h cup golden raisins 1 package frozen peas Ih cup beef broth 1 teaspoon curry powder 1 tablespoon soy sauce 1 orange, sliced lh cup salted cashew nuts

Heat butter in skillet. Add ground beef, separate and cook until lightly browned. Add mushrooms, raisins, peas, broth, curry powder, and soy sauce. Break frozen peas apart with fork and gently toss mixture to blend. Arrange orange slices over top. Cover loosely and cook over low heat about fifteen minutes. Mix in'cashews before serving. Serves 4.

Eulogist Affirms Humility of Father Dowling Continued from Page One

afraid of his covenant with God whilE' carrying his cross of men­tal anguish and physical suffer­ing in perfect patience and res­ignation."

Tht: eulogist continued: "Mter his ordination a priest looks the same. but he is forever transformed inwardly by an in­visible power and grace. And yet with all these extraordinary powers and the special graces of of tre office. he retains his hum'lnity though clothed with divinity."

"Father Dowling rendered great. homage to his Almighty Master with his God-given an­gelic voice. As soloist for many yearG at the funerals of brother priests, he brought a throb to every heart. Bu. when he sang the Magnificat at the closing of the 'lnnual priests' retreat, the

o sweetness and warmth of his voiCe still lingers with every priest who heard it."

If in God's judgment, Father still has some atonement to make. let us help him by our prayers. So out of gratitude for his services, out of respect for the office he has fulfilled, out of lo"e for him who loved God and loved you all-plead with all your heart, not only today but through the years, that God may have mercy opo his soul".

ASSIsting Bishop Gerrard at the Solemn Pontifical Mass of Requiem; Rt. Rev. Humberto S. Medpiros, assist.ant priest; Very Rev. William D. Thomson, dea­

con; Rev. Daniel E. Carey, sub­deacon.

Rev. Manuel. Andrade and Rev. Edmond R. Levesque, aco­lytes; Rev. William A. Galvin, thurifer; Rev. Maurice R. Jeff­rey, book bearer: Rev. Edmund T. Delaney, gremiale bearer; Rev. Vincent F .. Diaferio, mitre bearer; Rev. Arthur de Mello, candle bearer.

Masters of ceremonies were Rev. John H. Hackett and Rev. Robert L. Stanton.

On Monday afternoon, Bishop Gerrard presided at the Office of the Dead and chanted the third lesson. The first and sec­ond lessons were chanted by Rt. Rev. Msgr. Alfred J E. Bonneau and Rt. Rev Msgr. Felix S. Childs.

- Fa~her Dowling, the son of Edward J. and Jennie (Brennan) Dowling, was bon: in Fall River and was graduated from B. M. C. Durft>e High School. He pre­pared for the priesthood at st. C h a r I e 15 College, Catonsville, Md. and st. Bernard's Seminary, Rochester, N. Y. and was or­dained on June 6, 1925 in st. Mary's Cathedral by the late Most Reverend Daniel F. Fee­han, D.D.

Hi:. assignments as assistant pastor included Corpus Christi, Sandwich; St. James, st. Kilian and Holy Name, New Bedford, and St. Joseph, Fall River.

He also served as assistant at st. J(lhn the Evangelist, Attle­boro from 1934 until 1949, when he was named pastor of St. JohD

the Baptist Church, Central Village. In 1954 he was appointed pastor of Our Lady of the Isle ChulC'h, Nantucket, and in June 1960 he was named pastor of ImmaC'ulate Conception.

Father Dowling is survived by a sister, Miss Rose M. Dowling of Fr.ll River, and several cous­ins.

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LIKES THE SUGGESTIONS: Mrs. Robert Hargravea of St. Mary's Cathedral parish in Fall River prepares a tasty Lenten dish, the menu for which she took from The Anchor series.

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Page 5: 04.15.65

5 Child's Religious Training Obligation of Parents

By John J. Kane, Ph. D. "Weare foreigners in this country seven years. My

tnree children, 12, 15 and 17, WIll not attend C.C.D. classes because they claim the teachers make them feel left out. I had the same problem myself in those classes with a priest. I have been in a con­centration camp, ill, had a The problems I have outlined

about your life are also true tomarriage that failed and this may explain it. I learned about Catholicism through books and prayer. Now my children refuse to attend C.C.D. because I dropped out."

No teacher whether he handles . Christian Doc­trine or chem­istry will be liked by all of his students. Personal­ities differ and the professor who is popular with most is never popular with ALL. Even those who are disliked by most may be considered out­standing by a few. Apparently you encountered just such a personality clash. It was unfor­tunate. .

Adjustment Problems Anyone moving into a new

country finds certain problems of adjustment acute. To some extent this depends on just how different his native land is from the adopted country.

A Canadian, for example, may Dot find American society so sharply different as a middle European or someone from Asia. Most Canadians have no lan­guage barrier, most Europeans do. But even thE' English speak­ing Canadian discovers differ­ences.

It is only fair to state that some. Americans find it difficult to deal with immigrants. They understand them no better than they are understood by the im­migrant and I do not r~fer

merely to language. Even to call such persons immigrants, whick technically they are, can be an­Doying to them.

Complicated Situation But your situation is even

more complicated than that of the usual immigrant: To have been a prisoner in a concentra­tion camp, is an experience that few Americans have suffered, although some have. The best they know of it is through books and scientific analyses such as those of Professor Bruno Bettel ­heim.

The humiliations, deprivations and degradation of such victims can scarcely be appreciated merely by reading about them. There is little doubt that in most cases this experience has left permanent psychic scars. So per­

. haps you can understand that if you are unduly sensitive, there is reason for it.

As if all of this were not enough, you have also had an unhappy marriage. Clearly then, you are likely to be a bit differ­ent and I think this difference should not be ignored in what happened to you in C.C.D. elasses.

What a pity that at that time you did not try to see the priest alone in the rectory and explain your entire background in detail. I am confident you would have had a sympathetic hearing-as Indeed, you would from most Americans.

Shoes for Victims FRANKLIN (NC)-The Sun and Surf Footwear, Inc., of New Hampshire has donated approx­imately 1,500 pairs of rubber soled shoes in a variety of col­01'6 to the Papal Volun~rs for distribution among victimlJ of the earthquake ill Chile.

some extent of your children aIll of whom were born abroad. Even the youngest lived outside of this country for five years, the oldest for 10.

Their problems of adjustment, however, will not be so acute as yours and an honest appraisal of the matter by you can help them. It will not further matters if you complain to your children about the way you feel the priest treated you.

If you wish to rear your chil ­dren as .Catholics which you seem to indicate, it is vital that they receive religious instruc­tion. It is already a bit late for the two teenagers, but not too late.

Three Suggestions I would make the following

suggestions to you. First, go to your pastor· or one of the parish priests and discuss the matter at length. Tell him all about your background and that of your children.

Second, if at all possible, and it may not be, enroll them in a Catholic school. Here they will receive religious instruction in the classroom and whatever problems C.C.D. may .present will be gone.

Third, if there is an ethnic parish of your nationality within the city and it is feasible to attend services there, consult with your parish priest about this possibility. .

Years ago it was believed that immigrants should become Americans overnight in what was known as the melting pot, Today, social scientists realize this is impossible.

I would urge you to join in parish activities even though at first Y01,1_ may feel out of it all. You may be surprised at the warmth you will be given by some Americans. By estranging yourself, you have increased the problem.

The Americanization of your children seems to be moving rapidly. The fact that they cite your failure to continue with C.C.D. as a reason for them not to attend is a typical, American adolescent reaction. I doubt it would have happened if they remained in the land of your birth.

But if none of these suggestions can be followed, there is one alternative left. You, yourself, must insist on providing reli ­gious instruction within the home. It will have to be done sensibly, using as much persua­sion as possible. Without such instruction there is a grave dan­ger your children may lose the faith.

MONAGHAN ACCEPTANCE

CORP. THOMAS F. MONAGHAN JR.

Treasurer

142 SECOND STREET

f)Sborne 5-7856

FALL RIVER

Pope Paul Backs United Europe

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI again has given his sup­port to the idea of a united Eu­rope.

Declaring that nothing which could bring men closer together could be alien to him, the Pope added: "Not that the Church is competent to decide what are the best p~litic'al solutions to be adopted for the object pursued, but it is this object which inter­ests us and which we find very happily formulated in one of the final recommendations of your consultative assembly: 'the real­ization of a European union that would be as close as possible concerning links among the countries of Europe and as broad as possible concerning its fron­tiers.' "

New Medal Honors Father ~ashington

NEWARK (NC)-A new na­tional award for heroism, named for a priest who gave his life for others, will be inaugurated by the Catholic War Veterans.

Called the Father John Wash­ington Medal, it is named for a priest of the Newark archdiocese who was one of four chaplains to give up life preservers when the troopship U.S.S. Dorchester was sunk in the Atlantic, Feb. 3, 1943.

The medal will be unveiled at a memorial Mass for Father Washington, to be offered by Archbishop Thomas A. Boland at St. Rose of Lima church here in New Jersey Sunday, Feb. 7, 1966.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. April 15, 1965

Methodist Bishop Sa~~tes

New Interest in Religion STEUBENVILLE (NC)-The president of the World

Methodist Council told 250 Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox and Jewish clergymen here that people today are taking a new look at religion. "Many people are now realizing that there is not only a lot wrong with the church, but a lot right," said Bishop Fred Pierce Corson of Philadel­phia. Bi~hop Corson a leader in

ecumenical efforts and an ob­server at the Second Vatican Council, said renewal of the church must take place "before any headway in ecumenicity may be made."

He said the ecumenical coun­cil has given Protestants a new view of Catholicism and a con­sequent new outlOOK on religious unity.

Previously, he said, "the Pro­testant concept of the CathQlic Church has been a great mono­lith in which its members are enveloped in a kind of lock-step. But Vatican II showed me a considetable amount of freedom in the Catholic Church, and as a consequence I myself acquired a new concept of unity."

He had high praise for Pope John XXIII and said that, while the Pope "played it by ear" in seeking to foster ecumenism, "he never made a mistake."

"Without him, guided by the Holy Spirit, we could never have come together," the Methodist leader told his interdenomina­tional audience.

Of Pope Paul VI, with whom he had a lengthy audience soon after his election to the papacy, Bishop Corson said, "he's going to run a tight ship And he is not going to move until he knows where he is going. But he is going."

He warned churchmen against ·continuing to fight y~sterday's

battles" and sllid churches must find ways of working together.

Their real enemies, he said, are secularism, !Ilaterialism and atheism-not each other.

"Pope John started something that nothing can stop," Bishop Corson said. "There are enemies of ecumenicity in all branches of the church. But under God and by the Holy Spirit we shall one day bring to a happy £lower­ing the seeds planted by this wonderful Pope."

Methodists Hear Taped Appeal

DETROIT (NC)-A nun used a tape recording to appeal for funds for the Selma, Ala., Cath­olic hospital during a service at the Central Methodist Church.

Sister Alexine spoke on behalf of Good Samaritan Hospital. A member of the staff of Detroit's St. John Hospital, she has gone to Selma during the demonstra­tions there in response to an ap­peal from the hospital for more nursing help.

The D e t I' 0 i t archdiocesan chancery had given Sister Alex­ine permission to speak after the Methodist religious services, but not during them.

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Bail! Thou King of Victory Our Lord's Resurrection testifies to the ultimate triumph of life everlasting over the grave. With it, dawned a new life, a new challenge for all men-to know and share personally in the sor­row and death of His Crucifixion, the joy and rebirth of His Resurrection.

SAVINGSitizens BANK'" DOWNTOWN fALL RIVER

Page 6: 04.15.65

6 'THE ANCHOR-':Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. April 15, 1965 'Be of Good Cheer' cNew Translation The translation of the New Testament now used at CMass is a new one done by scholars who have translated

from the original Greek rather than from the later Latin translation of the Greek. As such, the tran"slation is an D advance in scholarship and is to be commended as such. By Armand J. Goulet

Put there are still many who, while not criticizing it em the grounds of faithfulness and accuracy of expression­ At the New England Re­indeed, how many are competent to do this ?-still feel that gional Congress of the CCD it leaves something to be desired in its English. held at Boston College a few

This reaction may be the norm·al and expected one years ago, I remember the Most Rev. Charles P. Greceof those who have become accustomed to the translation

-speaking to the assembly. Hethat has been used for abQut a decade now. Familiar phrases was reviewing the spiritual con­are hard to surrender, and, as the late Monsignor Ronald dition of the church in America

. Knox .pointed out in a little book on the subject, everyone during which he stated that the feels at heart that he is a Bible translator. future of the church in the

United States, South AmericaBut the feeling still persists that this new translation and the world in general de­efJacks cla8s." The language used at times is so fresh and pends upon the important work

clown to earth that it may throw new light on old passages, of the CCD for its'very survival. but one could' wish that this had been done with a little He stated that with the world more felicity of ~xpression, in a more than pedestrian vein. population', boom' making its

mark. the shortage of classroomsThe work of tr~mslating the Bible for the use and and the present and worsening.nderstanding of the present age is not just a work for shortage of qualified religious

Scripture and semitic language scholars. It is the work teachers to staff the presentalso of English scholars. school system - all pose prob­

lems which the church must consider in the ecumenical coun­

- cil sessions which were to follow. Answer to Student Restlessness

Yale University has come up with a scheme that might Pastors' Right Armsbe the answer to student restlessness on the campus and

The bishop went on to stressstudent desire to get involved' with the problems of the Reaction that we, as members of a parish

present age. . CCD. could not be expected to The difficulty of such a desire is that a student, by go out and perform great featsBrutality

definition, is an unfinished product, one who is dwelling of heroism or of converting theBy Msgr. George G. Higgins masses as the apostles once did.for a while in the ivory tower that he might be prepared _The New York Herald Tribune reports that on Sun­ .However, as the apostles wereto become involved with his era. And yet, as Sidney Hook

day, April 4, 6,000 Catholic members of the New York only 12, we, together with 11once observed, "Good works off the campus do not substi­ other lay apostles of our ownPolice Department wildly applauded "a defense of Selma tute for good work on the campus," and a student who parishes,' could become thecops" by William F. Buckley, Jr., Editor of Nationalspends much time on extra-campus involvement suffers right arms of our pastors and

Review. The 6,000 police­ the andusually in his school work. these questions is that Mr. Buck­ thus cause realization men are members of the renewal of faith within our par­So Yale, with the support of the Carnegie Corporation, ley sandwiched his callous re­Department's Holy Name ishes which is so badly neededmarks about Mrs. Liuzzo be­is selecting students willing to allow five years instead of by our materialistically andSociety, w hie h . numbers tween generous layers of highlyfour of their degree. These carefully chosen students will atheistically inclined world.10,000, and thp.y were having rhetorical but well deserved

spend their third yeat in underdeveloped regions of Africa, -It is not humanly possible fortheir 47th annual Communion praise for policemen in general, pastors and the few curates thatAsia and Latin America. (Perhaps in time they might even Breakfast.. The whose lot today. he pointed out, are available for parish work to"is especially galling."spend the year in places of need in this country.) They will fact that they spread themselves thin and yet

h~d just. come Much of what he said in de­not undertake any conventional foreign study experience. reach the masses of parishionersfrom Mass at St. fense of policemen needed to beRather they will take a furlough from academic concerns who need the Church's help.Patrick's Cathe­ said, but even this portion of his Li"ke a medical insurance policy,to live and work in cultures and economics strange to their dral made it all speech was interlarded with ex­ parishes cannot afford to beown background. the more iron­ travagant statements which to without a program of lay apos­Since Yale will sponsor this activity, they will still be ical that they put it very mildly, are not in' ac­ tleship.sh 0 u I d have cord with the facts.a part of the academic community but with full opportunity Place of Christro'cked the New The fact that this rhetoricalto get involved without their academic work suffering. A canonical establishmentY 0 r k Hilton's flourish was greeted wit h therefor~ is a mllst and then theIt seems like a good way for the restless student to Grand Ballroom "stand-up applause" doesn't scholastic and professional tal ­have his cake and eat it too. wit h applause speak very wen for the judg­ ent which lie dormant withinwhen Buckley 6f Buckley'sment Mr. enrap­ parishes must be searched outPersecution rlietorically contrasted the al ­ tured listeners. and utilized in order to re-estab­leged "restraint" of SheriffA little news release from Vienna has related the Quotes Writer lish the rightful place of ChristCiark's helmeted and heavilyinformation that a ;wjest in Lithuania has been sentenced in the Church, the home and inarmed policemen with the They know perfectly well

to two years in jail because he gave Holy Communion to of Martin that the vast majority of the the hearts of all-Christian andalleged "defiance" non-Christian alike.ten children at the request of their parents. Luther King's defenseless and American people-including Mr. The Sisters of Our Lady ofBuckley, I should like to thinkFrom time to time readers should do more than scan unarmed demonstrators. Victory of West Harwich are

How account for the fact that -warmly applaud the ingenuityquickly or skip over such an item. busy these days in their TV6,000 of New York's finest stood of the FBI agents who broke theTrue, Lithuania is far away and the whole matter does apostolate. They are producingup and clapped and cheered and Liuzzo case within a matter of

not seem to touch th<.' lives of anyone in this country. But hours. the "Little Flock" program onwhistled for more than a minute Channel 6, New Bedford.such an incident should point up the difficulties of brother at the end of a speech in which They also knew-and so does

This coming Saturday's tele­Catholics~in living their faith and the ease with which this Buckley had told them, in effect, Mr. Buckley, I suspect-that the

cast will again be of special in­that Mrs. Liuzzo of Detroit had majority of Americans will ap­can be done here. terest to parents who are cre­nobody but herself to blame for 'plaud with equal vigor if in­

Pius XI once rl;lmarked that a persecution might almost ating table place settings for thebeing· shot down in cold blood genious FBI agents eventually

be welcomed in the Church. For then the Faith would be succeed-as they probably will Easter season. The center pieces,by four vicious hoodlums? which this week will be fortested and Catholics would be brought face to face with After all, said Buckley with -in getting enough evidence to

Easter day, may well be consid­their inner selves and would be required to stand up and Olympian detachment, she and indict some of "the savage po­ered the linking lines of commu­licemen of Alabama" whose bru­be counted. The sufferings of the early martyrs, of even her fellow demonstrators had nication which parents may use

been warned by Governor Wal­ tality in breaking up the first ofancestors a few generations back, seem unreal and part of in the religious educational de­the Selma demonstrations shock­lace not to come to Alabama in a history-book account until there is a demand here and the first place. ed the conscience of the entire velopment of their children.

DOW of this generation for something of the heroic. civilized world. Plan GraduationEmbarrasses Mayor they used, theAnd for aU too many, the heroic is glorious and desir­ Whatever possessed 6,000 pro­ To save Mr. Buckley the ThE. more are

better they are understood. Theable when the subject of day-dreaming but quite otherwise fessional custodians of law and trouble of tracking down the more they are understood, the

order to laugh and then vigor­ source of the above descriptionin the cold light of fact. better will the graces of God beously applaud when Buckley of some of Sheriff Clark's trigger

appreciated and enjoyed in fam­asked: "Why did this occupy the happy minions let me say that it front pages? Didn't the killing comes from a thoughtful article ily life.

Parishes with CCD Schools of(of Mrs. Liuzzo) confirm what by Gary Wills who contributes

Religion in session are begin­some elements in the South" had regularly to National Review.

ning to plan for appropriatesaid would happen? Fellow Traveler graduation exercises for their

Why did 6,000 members of one I leave it to Mr. auckley to graduating classes. Ceremonies of the best police departments in decide whether this makes his commensurate with those ac­

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER the world respond so emotional­ (and my) friend. Mr. Wills, eli ­ corded Catholic elementaryly and enthusiasticallyPublished weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River so to a gible for membership in the schools held in churches or par­

410 Highland Avenue speech which, reportedly, was ranks of those "who rail un­ ish halls ana with all parents Fall River; Moss. 675-7151 embarrassing to the Mayor of thinkingly at policemen * * *?" invited are recommended pro­

New York and distasteful to Have we reached the stage cedure.PUBLISHER their own superior officer, Com.,. where even one of Mr. Buckley's A well planned graduationMost Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD., missioner Michael J. Murphy, closest· ·:ollaborators is to be exericse is an integral part of

GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAl MANAGER who "sat through it all virtually the operational of asmeared as a dangerous fellow function Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. Jolln P. Driscoll expressionless?" traveller just because he is hon­ CCD School of Religion. Why

MANAGING EDITOR Ho. Rhetoric estly convinced that police bru­ not think about it for your par­Hugh J. Golden Presumably the answer 10 tality is an ugly crime? ish this year?

Deplores Police To Defense of

Page 7: 04.15.65

Frenc" Rev~lution Produces Laicism ,in \ Latin America

From "The churcli in the New Latin Ameriea" Editect by john J. Considine, M.M:~

The French Revolution was not only a major event in the history of the Church in France, but in an other Europ­ean countries as well. It meant the destruction of medi­eval institutions and created for the Church a completely new situation. But the ~s­ ministers. the State often· putition from the medieval to incredible pressures upon the the modern has not bOOn clergy to lessen their prestige realized without problems·. and effectiveness among the

The conflict between the Rev­ people. olution and the Church was .not Struggle for New Hierarchy only the con­ With the coming of indepen­.sequence of s0­ dence, the continent counted six cial and po-. archdioceses and 38 dioceses. litica! factors. Even if this number had ~n New tendencies sufficient during. the colonial pe­jn philosophical, riod it was so no·longer, in view political of the division of the continent .a n d religious into a nUmber of new countries. points of· view The majority, of the 'pre-inde­were involved. pendence bishops had ruled The conflict re­ Metropolitan Sees. These bishops sulted in vio­ had left or had been expelled lent anticlerical­ or had died without being re­ism and even in placed. . persecutions. In Central Europe However much disaster this the revolution gave rise to new caused the Church, Dr. Joseph constitutional states, with sep­ A. Gagliano, a noted historian aration of Church and State. It of the period, feels it is very im­provoked the loss of the Papal portant for us to understand the territories at the end of the 19th great effort that was made to century and the crisis between overcome the impasses that Italy and the Vatican, solved brought about this situation. The only in 1929. simplest assertion that indepen­

In Latin America the move­ dence resulted in a Church with­ment for independence at the out a hierarchy ignores the beginning of the 19th century many years of extremely com­had close relation to the revo­ plex diplomacy between the lutionary movement in Europe. emerging nations of Latin Amer­The religious problems in Latin ica and the Holy See. The in­America were intimately re­ surgents wanted papal recogni­lated to those stirred up by the tion not only to facilitate the French Revolution, even though acceptance of their states in the the basic aims in Latin America community of nations but to were to ilust Spain and its colo­ maintain continuity in the hier­nial administration. After inde­ archy. Several factors militated pendence the relations between against an easy transition in the Church and State were estab­ Latin American hierarchy. The lished on a completely new papal diplomacy of Spain was level. directed against any recognition

In Latin America the anti-reli ­ of the emerging nations. The gious spirit of Europe's philo­ revolutionaries demanded that sophical movements also had the Spanish hierarchy in the great influence. Not only were New World be replaced by traditional privileges abolished, Latin Americans or at least but many other measures were bishops who were not opposed taken to curb the position of the to their national aspirations. Church. Papal Viewpoint

Heritage of Laicism While Spain had insisted that The most characteristic phe­ changes in the hierarchy were

nomenon inherited from the subject to crown approval, the Revolution was laicism. This was insurgents contended that the the banner of the parties which patronato, which the Crown had little by little came into exis­ enjoyed for three centuries, was tence in the last century. transmitted to the newly inde­Tolerance was their key doc­ pendent States as an integral trine, but their followers iil ­ part of their national sovereign­vented a civil religion charac­ ty. The papacy, however, re­terized by an intolerance which garded the Wars of Independence preyed upon Latin American as an opportunity to eliminate Catholicism. Laicism was a nat­ the patronato, and maintained uralistic religion, without dog­ that it was a privilege granted mas, which assumed a different solely to the Spanish Crown character in each one of its fol­ which ended when the Ameri­lowers. All concurred, however, cans separated themselves from in their strong desire to snatch regal authority. from the Catholic Church, one The prolonged and complexby one, the prerogatives which negotiations, coupled with the allowed her to bring religion disruption of communications into public life. The aim was to between the Holy See and the confine her to the sacristy. hierarchy, had an adverse effect

The most important bastion on spiritual life in the New behind which laicism became World. In Colombia, no less than strong. was education. It became six sees fell vacant. By 1829,obligatory (8 good thing), but there was not a single bishoplaicist. In the best of eases, re­ left in Mexico. Eventually heed­ligious instruction became a tDg the admonitions of Cardinal matter of free choice in public Consalvi that unless the Church schools. However, in some coun­ settlement were reached sooo. tries, at least during certain a schism might arise in the New periods, it was totally elimi­ World and Americans would be nated. The Church was denied exposed to "Methodists, Presby­its right to teach religion to terians, and even sunworship­Catholic children. Though the pers," Leo XU decided to restore old system perdured whereby the hierarchy in Latin America,the State paid the ecclesiastical leaving the issue of patronage

for subsequent concordats with the new nations. In 1827 he pre­Rise in Production conized the candidates presented

THE HAGUE (NC)-The re­ by Colombia as proprietary bish­duction of the Eucharistic fast ops. Between 1827 and 1836, sim­from three hours to one last ilar papal agreements with other November has resulted in a 25 nations filled the· vacancies per cent increase in the produc­ which had arisen in the hier­tion of hosts at a large bakery archy during the independence of hosts here ill The Netherlanda. periocL

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7

Liturgical Renewal Comes. Naturally to Africans .~:.~n

DAKAR (NC)-The liturgical renewal with its stress on congregational participation is- a natural for Africa. Communal celebrations are in the very bones of West Afri­can peoples. Even the young, whether intellectuals or not, feel nostalgia for their an- Th Se vi f th W rd . t trad·t· h th th . e r ce 0 e 0 cor­clen I Ions weer ey responds to the ritual convoca­

have been reared in them or tion of a whole family or village not. around a patriarch. It is he w~o

For many African Catholics, expounds on. the meaning of the acceptance of the .Roman liturgy event, recalling t~e merits of ~he has traditionally been a stum- person who has dIed, or explaIn­bUng block which they SUT- ing the purpose of thecelebra­mounted only through faith. Ac- tion. It is normal and necessary cepting Catholic dogma is no for everybod~ to ~ present to ,great difficulty for the African, ~ear the patriarch swords. A.nd at least in principle. This is be- If a stranger appe~ he is ~on­cause he can see Christian do'c- ored by being assimilated Into

Honorary Degree For Prelate·

trine as a clear progression from ~he family to listen to this teach­WEBSTER GROVES (NC)--Jo­ traditional African belief,and mg.

seph Cardinal Ritter of St. Louis the concept of a loving and> Comparable to the -Canon of will give the commencement ad­ unique God is naturally appeal- the Ma~ is .the moment of sa~­dress and receive· an· honorary ing. rifice, for all animistic worship doctorate of diVinity at the June includes sacrifice, which can beHeritage4 commencement of Eden: Sem­ simply a ritually pouring fioUr­inary, graduate school of theol­ But Catholic liturgy was water into the soil, 01' a compli­ogy of the United Church of something else again. Accepting ­ cated immolation of an animal Christ here in Missouri. the Catholic Faith meant for upon a stone. In every case ev­

Seminary president Dr. Rob­ most people giYing up partici ­ erybody present considers this pation in worship and becoming as a joint sacrifice and acceptsert T. Fauth said it is believed

that this will be the first time a spectators instead-spectators at in advance all the effects of the an unintelligible rite in an unin­ sacrifice.Catholic cardinal has addressed telligible language.-the graduating class of a Prot­ Commmoa

estant seminary. The African beritage is one of The third part of. the rite Is • animism, with special forms of"'We are delighted that Cardi­ communion, generally consistingworship and celebration fornal Ritter should be the person of the eating of part of the ob­birth, marriage, funerals and forto do this, for we have come to ject sacrificed. Again, all join in.planting and harvesting. In suchknow him as a dedicated and After this the participantsrites, the entire village takeseffective proponent of the ecu­ spread through the vilIage, butpart. If, during such a celebra­menical spirit and as a leader the ritual remains the main topiction, a stranger arrives at thewho believes that ecumenism of conversation in the villagevillage, he is doubly welcome.mast be made real among us if for the whole day.

it is to have any meaning at all,.. Comparison With this religious background,Dr. Fauth said. One of the happy facets of the Africans carry over into Chris­

The occasion will also mark liturgical renewal and the trans­ tianity a way of prayer in which the first time in history that a lation of the Mass into the lan­ they sense more deeply perhapsUnited Church of Christ semi­ guarge of the people is the fact than do those in more tradition­nary has bestowed an honorary that the Mass can be compared ally Christian cultures the hu­doctorate of divinity on a Cath­ in a way to the ancient three­ man brotherhood that binds all olic prelate. fold animistic rites: men.

155 NO. MAIN ST.

Page 8: 04.15.65

8

Grandma's Easter Eggs Fall Somewhat Short' of Sanctity

By Mary Tinley Daly Happy Easter to all readers of this column! And may

Y011 keep your family E'aster traditions intact. Ours shift. Of course, substantial tradition remains: recognition that Easter is the principal feast of the eccleciastical year; a real endup of Lent with Holy Week practices dating back, preparation for the mid­night liturgical service.

As to the peripheral family Easter eustoms, well, these change at our house.Some­how, Christmas eustoms h a v e become frozen, delight­fully frozen, and we all 'know what to expect. But, with Eas­ter, they are as moveable as the feast itself. Ev­ery year we try something new.

Time was, when a dozen or so eggs could be colored, hidden around the various rooms, and at the sound of a whistle all children would scurry to find what the Easter Bunny had left for them. We would have dinner, with a centerpiece of delicate eggshells in pastel colors, hung from spring tendrils. That part still prevails. Eggshells, of course, are garnered from a breath-consuming process dur­ing Holy Week: prick both ends of the raw egg with an ice pick, blow, blow, blow. Many, many meals of Lenten scrambled eggs are consumed to achieve that centerpiece.

Nowadays, we have to hard­boil and color far more eggs than in the past but we still have our egg hunt, our eggshell center­piece. Thus it shall be, God willing, again this year.

Last year, speaking of chang­ing customs, we heard of a trick, "sure to intrigue chil<lren." All you had to do, said the news­paper article, was dissolve one ounce of alum in one-half pint of vinegar. ("you can 'buy alum in any drug store") was the par­enthetically-phrased addendum. Then, you dip a small pointed brush in the solution and write on the shell. Let the solution dry thoroughy. Then, cook the eggs in simmering water for about 15 minutes. There Will be no trace of writing on. the shell when the eggs are served. But inside (and here's what got us on that sacret-message kick), on the hard-cooked, egg, the writing or design 'will appear bright and clear! '

Exclamation points' at'e 1be writer's, not ours. ,

With grandmotherly enthusi­asm, we resolved to give new incentive to those Easter eggs. We'd say Happy Easter, complete

Hyacinth Circle Hyacinth Circle, New Bedford

Daughters of Isabella, will hold initiation ceremonies and a buf­fet supper at 8:15 Tuesday night, April 27 in Holy !'tame hall. Members will, participate in a sale for the blind Wednesday, April 28 and will attend a se­cret pal banquet at 6:30..Tuesday night, May 4 at White's restau­rant, North Westport. ,

Junior Foresters Fall River Junior' Foresters

are preparing entries for an essay contest on the topic "Our Responsibility in Helping Our Neighbor" Member~ plan a Communion b rea k f a stand dances next month, a roller skat­ing outing in June, a trip to Lin­coln Park and to a Red Sox, game in Jul7 and a ~ayride ill A~ '

with names and messages and maybe even cute designs for every one of the grandchildrenI

First set-back was at the "any drug store." Seems alum comes not in one-ounce containers, three ounces being the smallest. Oh, well, easy arithmetic and we could always use the extra alum for pickles or something.

We proportioned the alum­vinegar solution, found a small pointed brush and set forth on the exciting task of Writing those cute messages. Frustration No: 2: We couldn't see what we were writing, the solution wouldn't stay put on the rounded eggshell, but we persisted, with complete confidence in the printed word, that the message would somehow come through ''bright and clear."

After the "thorough drying" we obediently simmered the eggs and dyed them.

Unfortunately, at the egg hunt, we mentioned to the chil ­dren that secret messages were to be found inside. Then began the game of "egg picking," test ­ing the strength of the shells by knocking one egg against an­other. "Let's see what the Easter Bunny wrote inside." (''I betcha Gramma wrote it" from the skeptical.)

Eggshells were scattered about the whole house. we were clean­ing them up for days, as each grandchild tried to find the "secret messages." Granted, a few came through "bright and clear," though they weren't half as bright as Grandma had In­tended and very few were clear: a smeared "Hi," a doUbtful "Happy Easter/' a few slithery names.

The one Sean found was pretty good: "Hello, Sean" was the In­tended message. Only the "0" was missing from the saluta­

tion - --

Coyle Mothers Coyle High SChool Mothers'

Club will hold a cake and penny sale at 7:30 Wednesday night, April 21 at the school audito­rium, Taunton. Proceeds will benefit the school yearbook. New club officers are Mrs. Wil­liam McQueston, Taunton, presi­dent; Mrs. James Lawlor, Fall River, vice-president; Mrs. Jo­seph Masterson, Raynham, sec­retary; Mrs. James Downing, Taunton, treasurer. Club moder­ator is Brother Richard O'Brien, C.s.C.'

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LEAVING FOR ROME: Mother Mary of the Savior R:J.M., sup.erior ?f the Convent of Jesus and Mary, Fall RIver, receIves gift from Diane Suprenant, representing Jesus-Mary Academy student body, as she prepares to go to Rome for general chapter of Religious of Jesus and Mary..

Fall River Young Adult Organization The newly organized Catholic Gwendolyn Dube and Jeanne

Young .Adult Organization of the Peterson, secretaries; Ronald Fall River .area has. for officers For tin, treasurer; Pauline Henry S. GIllet, preSIdent; Leon- Moran, registrar. Moderator is al'd Burgmyer, vice-president; Rev. Walter A. Sullivan.

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Fall R'iver DistriCt Elects Slate

New officers of Fall River dJa,o trict of the Diocesan Council 01 Catholic Women are Mrs. Vin­cent Coady, Somerset CathoDl Woman's Club, president; Mrs. Wilfred E. Garand, Notre Dame Council of Catholic Women, vice-president; Mrs. William ~

King, Holy Name Women" Guild, treasurer; Mrs. Emile • Auger, Blessed Sacrament Coua­cil, and Mrs. Alfred Almeida, Our Lady of Angels Councn. secretaries; Mrs. Michael J. Mc­Mahon, St. Mary's Cathedral Guild, Diocesan vice-president.

They will be installed at 7:30 Thursday night, April 29 at ss. Peter and Paul Church, Fall River.

Set Reunion Members of the class of 1945

at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fan River, will hold a reunion at 7:30 Thursday night, May 20 at the Quequechan Club, also Fall River.

Page 9: 04.15.65

Cake Will DefightFamily At Easter Sunday Celebration

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick There is one spot in my garden which drove me crazy

lor the first two years we were in our house. It is on the northeast corner of the house and directly under a leaky gutter. The water drips continually on the soil, which is mostly clay causing it to

brought to all believers, thebecome rock-hard and al­ Christians of that time outfitted most impossible to grow any­ themselves in new clothes and thing in. I tried to fix the it was thought that all those who sutter. but with my two left could afford to buy a new outfit thumbs, it refused to stay fixed. for Easter Sunday but refused to So I had no alternative but to do so would be beset with ill ­find something that would grow fortune. This may be a good under the most adverse condi­ argument to use on hubby when tions. the May bills come in. " '. Ajuga solved tQe problem. To show off this finery we also Ajuga (sometimes called bugle tum to Europe, for it was there or bugle-weed) Is a groundcover that on this day the men and which is found mostly in rock women of the parishes would gardens. It is sman and not par­ march in an orderly procession ticularly 'pretty except when it is through the towns and into the In flower. I have a purple flow­ open country. A decorated cru­ered variety although it is avail-, cifix or an Easter candle was able in pink and white. The carried at the head of the group. flower appears in May and june, This custom has become our amall six to eight inch spikes in Easter Parade. dense whorls of color. Aside The following cake recipe is from the flower, however, Ajuga one I consider extra special and does serve the, purpose of cover­ duly fitting for such an impor­Ing a bare spot in the garden. , tant occasion as Easter Sunday.

These little plants have been After a long period of fast, our Indestructible for me, although husbands deserve a real luscious they do suffer from a disease, cake following Easter Sunday ealled rot crown, a fungus dis­ dinner. ease, which is capable of wiping Meringue Cake out a whole section in a few JAl cup butter or margarinedays. Thus far I have -been Ih cup sugarapared this problem so I can 4 eggs, separated ~y hope for the best. % cup milk

Ajuga is not particular as to JAl teaspoon vanilla lIOil, will grow in partial shade, 1 cup cake flour densE' shade or in full sun. It 1% teaspoons baking powder neem- no special attention except Ya teaspoon salt _ occasional thinning out since pinch salt • spreads rather rapidly. In fact, 0 1 cup sugar • friE'nd of mine has it growing 1 teaspoon vanilla In his lawn and uses this as an ~ cup broken walnuts or pecaDlI excuse not to cut his lawn while 1 package frozen strawberriea" the ajuga is in bloom. defrosted and drained

This is one of those little 1 cup heavy cream plants for the lazy gardener. It 1) Preheat OVE'n to 350· and z.equires no care, is green, flow­ grease and flour two 9 inch cake an and ~roduces quickly. It pans.1& perfect for the shady spot 2) Cream the 112 cup sugarwhere nothing seems to grow or with the butter or margarine.the bank which cannot hold the Use your electric mixer on high soil long enough for a plant to speed. set rooted. I have seen these at 3) Add egg yokes one ,at a the nurseries which specialize in time, beating after each addition, perennials for as little as 25 until they are well mixed with cents a plant, which is little the sugar-shortening mixture. enough to pay to be rid of a bare 4) Add the milk and vanilla. 1P0t in the garden. 5) Sift together the flour,

In the Kitchen baking powder, and Ya teaspoonThe long period of waiting is salt Add to wet ingredients and

over as the Easter Vigil ends and combine by beating with your we greet the risen Christ. Our electric mixer. After they. are homes are sparkling, the scent combined, beat 2 additional of Spring flowers fills the air minutes. and the long, bleak forlorn days 6} Spread this thick batter of Winter have passed. It is truly with a spatula in the greased with thankful hearts that we cake pans. The mixture will celebrate Easter Sunday. barely cover the bottom of the

This year we are fortunate. paDs. but don't worry, this is because of the lateness·of Easter, how it should be. In having in addition to the tra­ 7) Prepare & meringue by ditional Easter lily, daffodils and beating the egg whites with the, forsythia to bring sunshine into pinch of salt until foamy. Add our homes. One article I read gradually while beating the 1 recently advocated preparing an cup of sugar and the 1 teaspoon

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SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS: Winner of full scholarship to Jesus-Mary Academy, F'all River, is Sara Lou Graham (seated), daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Graham, Fall River. Partial scholarship winners are, standing from left, Doris Una Desrosiers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Camille Desrosiers, F'all River; and Janice Marie Deschenes, daugh­ter of Mrs. Pauline Deschenes, Westport.

Unusual Appearance 'Unity Does Not Require Uniformity,' Bishop

Joyce Tells Connedicut Free Masons

preparing and choosing for their families, few of us realize that 1Fe are reliving a custom that ~gan in medieval times and which does have religious signif­Icance. To SJDlbollze the "new life" that the Resurrection

Fund-Rais~rs St. Catherine's Fund Raising

~mmittee of Dominican Acad­emy, Fall Rivet. will sponsor a bam and bean supper from 5 to , SaturdaJ' nigh.t, April 24 at IIIe ~'-8dem;r OIl Park ~

nre ANC.'110r<- -,9 Thurs., April 15, 1965

Taunton Nurses Meet Tonight , The monthly meeting of the

Taunton Guild of Catholic Nurses to be held at the Marian Manor tonight at 8 o'clock will feature a dramatic and timely program on "Project Hope."

-Helen Shove, program chair­man, has· announced that Ran­dolph P. Goetze, the New Eng­land Field Director for Project HOPE will speak and show a fi'~ entitled "Hope in Peru." The documentary is narrated b7 Elsa Arana, Pulitzer Prize writ­er for La Prensa, Peru's lead.ing newspaper. The film concerns the hope which the white hos­pital training ship brought to 80,000 people in Peru during its ten month visit there in 1963.

HOPE has visited Indonesia. South Viet Nam, Peru and Ecu­dor. logging over 34,000 miles, or one and a half times around the globe.

Assumption D of , Assumption Circle, Fall River

Daughters of Isabella, will hold a public card party Wednesday, Apn"l 21 at the Catholic Commu­nity Center, Franklin Street, Fall River. Mrs. Agnes Gregoryis,chairman.

May the Risen and Victorious Christ bless us all abundantly in this Holy Season with faith, hope, peace, tolerance and understanding­to ena bJe us to be born again•

The

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fAll RIVER

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Baster wreath similar to Christ ­mas wreaths made out of Spring flower.s, which sounded like a Jlvel~ idea to me. This may Prove to be too ambitious a project at this time of the yeJU' but the presence of any form of flower in the home should be pleasant this Easter. , As we step' forth to Mass in

the Easter finery that mothers IIl1 over the Diocese have ,been

. vanilla, and continue beating until the whites form stiff peaks. Spread meringue on top of bat­ter in pans just as you would for a lemon meringue pie, bring,. ing meringue right to the edges. On one 'layer sprinkle the nuts.

8) Bake for 35 minutes or until cake tests done. set cake on a rack out of drafts and allow to cool in pans.

9) Prepare filling by Whip­ping the cream and folding in the strawberries. Refrigerate until ready to fill cake.

10) Remove the layers from the pans (they come out beauti ­fully even though they look very fragile). Set one layer (the one without the nuts) meringue side down on your cake plate. Spread filling over layer and save a small amount for the top. Set the second layer meringue side up on top of the filling and spread saved 'filling in a small circle on top. This cake keeps beautifullytil the refii4era~ - , -.

HARTFORD (NC)-A Catho­lic Bishop, iD. an unusual appear­ance at a major Masonic gather­ing here in Connecticut, declared that Americans of all faiths must "promote understanding and' sympathy by dialogue,. associa­tion, cooperative action' and mu-, tual acceptance."

Bishop Robert F. Joyce of' Burlington, Vt., substituted as ' principal speaker at the annual, Grand Master's banquet of the Connecticut Masonic G ran d Lodge. He replaced Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston, now recuperating from surgery.

Bishop .Joyce said it is neces­sary to distinguish between a person and his beliefs. "It is a common experience," he as­serted, "to be fundamentally and unswervingly opposed to the be­liefs of some persons or groups, and at the same time to respect and love them as individuals,

and to be convinced of their honesty and sincerity."

He emphasized that ''brother­hood is something much more important and necessary than mere tolerance. Many fields of agreement can be found. This is followed by greater ease in ex­ploring differences and the real­ization that unity does not re­quire uniformity."

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""'"" THE ANCHOR­Thurs., April 15, 1965

Asserts Council Lays Foundation For Laity Role

SAGINAW (NC)-Though laymen have had little to do with the current ecumen­ical council, it has laid the Ilroundwork for lay representa­tion in a future council, should one be held in "the next genera­tion or so."

This view was expressed here in Michigan by Msgr. George C. Higgins, director of the National Catholic Welfare Conference's Social Action Department and a council expert.

Msgr. Higgins, lecturing at St. Paul Seminary on the council and the laity, said that by and large laymen have not been represented at the Second Vati ­can Council "except in a token way"

Better Represented But, he added, "if another

council is held in the next gen­eration or so, laymen will be much better represented. The groundwork has been laid."

He called the selection of representative laymen as coun­cil observers as an "almost impossible problem." While present lay observers might be criticIzed as being unrepresenta­tive of laymen generally, he saH, "this would hold true DO matter wno was appointed."

ThE" .monsignor said it will take "a good deal of time" to work out all the "implications" on the lay apostolate suggested by the ecumenical council's con­stitutIon on the Church. He predicted that the council will adopt a schema on the lay apos­10late this Fall but that it will "fall short of what is desired by some."

Dialogue With Clergy Solutions to problems about

the layman's role in the Church, he said, will not be achieved until "laymen in dialogue with bish0ps and priests clarify their own thinking."

Msgr. Higgins said the .lay apostolate is "too often thought . of as a strictly religious move­ment under the direction of bishops and priests."

"We need a much clearer un­derstanding," hE' said, "that all laymen, whether in organiza­tions or not, are expected to be apostles ... Their work is to be earrkd out in the fields in which they work."

Predicts Diplomatic Ties With Vatican

CINCINNATI (NC)-A jour­nalist veteran of the Vatican best characterized lack of offi ­cial U. S.-Vatican ties as a "gap' in our diplomatic defenses."

Barrett McGurn, Rome corre­spondent of the New York Her­ald Tribune for 13 years, pre­dicted here "it won't be many years before we do have such a representative. It's not a mat­ter of doing homage to the Pope," he told Xavier University students, but simply one of keeping diplomatic channels open."

He said some 50 other nations maintain diplomatic relations with the Holy See. He observed "rival propagandists sometimes aim the clarity of the American position on issues."

Legion Book List Twenty books are listed in the

Spring edition of "Worthwhile 11001<:;0," issued quarterly by New Bedford Curia of the Legion of Mary Readers are asked to re­quest. their public libraries to acqUIre these t:t1e:: of Catholic lIntert:st.

..~

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PRAYS FOR CHURCH: Pope Paul prays at bedside of Laura Sperandio, 70, paralyzed 15 years, as he asks her to offer her sufferings for the Church and the Pontiff. The Holy Father had offered Mass in the square before the church of Our Lady of Guadolupe in the Monte Mario section of Rome. NC Photo

Proper of Mass for Easter Sunday ENTRANCE ANTIPHON: Ps. 138: 18, 5·6

I arose, and am still with you, Alleluia; you rest your hand upon me, Alleluia.

Your knowledge is too wonderful, alleluia, alleluia

Ps. 0 lord, you have probed me and you know me; you know when I sit and when I stand.

Glory be to the Father and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit.

As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, 'world without end. Amen.

I arose, and am still with you, Alleluia; you rest your hand upon me, Alleluia.

Your knowledge is too wonderful, alleluia, alleluia.

GRADUAL: Ps. 117: 24, 1

This is the day the lord has made; let us be glad and rejoice in it.

Y. Give thanks to the Lord for he ~ good, for his mercy endures forever.

ALLELUIA: 1 Cor. 5:7

"Alleluia, alleluia. Christ, our been sacrifice~.

Philippine Prelates Grateful for Aid

NEW YORK (NC) -The ap­preciation and gratitude of the Philippine hierarchy to the peo­ple of the United States for as­sistance given to the poor and needy, particularly in times of natural disaster, was expressed in a letter received here by Catholic Relief Services - Na­tional Catholic Welfare Confer­ence.

The letter was adopted at the annual meeting of the Philippine bishops under the leadership of Rufino Cardinal Santos of Ma­nila. Addressed to the relief age n c y maintained by U. S. Catholics, the letter also com­mended the U. S. government for including the Philippines in its Food for Peace program and other projects to aid .the nee~y.

Mr. and Mrs. Lee Sandborn ()f. Holyoke, Mass" and members of their staff at the CRS-NCWC office in Manila for the agency's Philippine operation5 also were lI:ommended in the letter.

passover, has

.SEQUENCE

Christians, to the Paschal Victim offer your thankful praises!

A lamb the sheep redeemth: Christ, who only is sinless, reconcileth sinners to the Father.

Death and life have contended in the com­bat stupendous; the Prince of life, who died, reigns immortal.

Speak, Mary, declaring what thou sawest, wayfaring. "The tomb of Christ, who is living, the glory of Jesus' resurrection; Bright an­gels attesting, the shroud and napkin rest­in·g. Yea, Chri~t my Hope is arisen: to Galilee he goes before you." Christ indeed from death is risen, our new life obtaining.

Rave mercy, victor King, ever reigning! Amen. Alleluia.

OFFERTORY ANTIPHON: Ps. 75: 9·10 The earth feared and· was silent when God

arose for judgment. Alleluia.

COMMUNION ANTIPHON: 1 Cor. 5:7·8 Christ, our passover, has been sacrificed,

alleluia. Therefore let us keep festival with the un­

leavened bread of sincerity and truth, alleluia, alleluia, alleluia.

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As the Easter Bells triumphantly ring out their glad tidings­May it be all that hear them a renewal of Faith in the

Risen Christ

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PROVIDENCE, R. L GAspee 1-4247

Prayer Essentia I For Ecumenism

GARRISON (NO)-Prayer JII the No.1 essential for ecumen­1sm, Father P. Michalon, S. S. di­rector of the Center for Chris­tian Unity of Lyons, France, as­serted here in New Yerk.

"Too often we think of the need of dialogue, discussions, JD:eetings and the like," Father Michalon told a group of Fran­«;:scan Friars of the Atonement at Graymoor Monastery here.

"But prayer is the most essen­t:al need for the apostolate. We ean never stress this truth tOG much. Prayer for unity does no4 change God and His will but ill changes men so that we become worthy of the graces and bless­ings that God and His love sends to men," the French priest COD­

tinued. Father Michalon, a consultOl'

to the Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity. is visiting vari ­ous cities in the U. S. and Can­ada. He lauded the work of the Atonement Friars, who are ded-' i(~ated to the cause of Christian unity and promote the annual Chair of Unity Octave.

Savio Trophies NEW ROCHELLE (NC)-Sa­

vio-of-the-Year trophies, given to the outstanding members of

.the St. Dominic Savio grade school classroom club, will be awarded Sunday, May 2 to· James Braeckel,' St. Peter's School, Joplln, Mo~; AlbeR' Lyles, Jr., St. Bernadette Mis­sion, Birmingham, Ala.; and Francis Pansini, Sacred Hearts SChool, Brooklyn, :N. Y.

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--

Says Psychology Can Be Helpful To Theology

CINCINNATI (NC)-Psy­ehology has much to tel: moral theologians, a psychol­ogist told an audience that included priests and seminarians he"re.

Dr V.J. Bieliauskas, head of the Xavier University psychol­ogy department. said that today" it is "almost impossible for any­one dealing with or judging human conduct to be effective" without a grasp of psychology's findings about motivation.

Bieliauskas, speaking ina Catholic lecture series, said it can be "very harmful" to assume that man is always a free agent. For example, he said, an individ­ual suffering from extreme anx­iety may lie to protect himself and may be able to make a cor­rect choice only with the help of a psychologist or psychiatrist.

Critical He was critical of the concept

of will power, saying that "even serious people think that the so­called will' power can be in­creased by certain physical ex­ercises such as pushups, cold showers, food deprivation and so on."

What is needed instead, he said, is not the "will power ap­proach to motivation but a train­ing to intellectual understand­ing of values."

He said he considers that the task of the psychologist is to "help the individual to become free * '" * in order to prepare him for making a choice."

..It is necessary to prepare people even as children for free­dom and responsibility," he said, adding: "I am afraid this cannot be done and will not be done through a rigid, punitive * • ap­proach to education."

Interracial School Visits Beneficial

AKRON, (NC)-It's too late tv expect grown-ups" to start doing anything about racial justice, the thoughtful eight-grader de­clared. "If we're ever going to get out of this mess of race against "race, it will be up tct kids--I mean students, like us."

The speaker was :J;,.andis Chris,,: tian, host and guide for one of the 14 children from all-white Holy Family School in nearby Stow who were returning an interracial visit at st. Peter's School in Akron, Ohio. St. Peter's has 67 Negroes in a total enrollment of 539.

A white boy, Kenneth Ma­grath of Holy Family, said he had never known a Negro until the interracial visits. Now he thinks "things can be done with us young people that can't be done with adults."

Ask Clergymen Join Anti-Poverty War

JACKSON (NC) - The Eco­nomic Opportunity Act was the subject of two clergy confer­ences in Mississippi sponsored by Bishop Richard Oliver Gerow of Natchez-Jackson to inform clergymen about the act, with particular reference to commu­nity action programs.

Over 400 invitations were sent to other Christian clergymen of the Jackson and Biloxi areas where the meetings were held. All Catholic priests in Mississip­pi attended.

Msgr. Edward W. O'Rourke, executive director of t he Na­tional Catholic Rural Life Con­ference, Des Moines, Iowa, ad­dressed 'the group. A panel of business and government leaders encouraged the clergymen to arouse interest ill the war QIl

poverty.

Thousands in Madrid's Holy Week MADRID (NC) - More than ing ihe Holy Eucharist.

100,000 persons will march in The convent is the only place 25 separate processions during in the world having permission Madrid's solemn observance of to dIsplay the Eucharist in a Holy Week. procession on Good Friday.

The traditional Holy Week Walk Barefooteeremonies began here today

Of the thousands of personswith a procession that wound who march with holy figuresthrough the downtown streets through the city streets on Goodbearing religious figures made Friday, most are members ofby artisans. Since yesterday af­religious confraternities a n' d ternoon all theaters and places we a I' distinctive sober-colored,01 entertainment have been gowns. Others march to fulfillclosed'.' The downtown streets promises or to give thanks forare closed to automobiles today favors. Some walk barefoot.and tomorrow.

On Good Friday night, more . Perhaps the most moving of than 10,000 men take part in thethe ceremonies ill the centuries­

old procession of the :Holy Burial which is held at a eonvent of ~._

"discalced nuns which houses M-K Restaurant :" many religious art treasures.

Thousands of persons walked featuring through the dimly Itt cloister to liThe Gaslight Room" view a statue of the dead Christ. lcIeal for Communion BreakfastsAt one side of the statue is a Organization Banquetssmall gold monstrance eontain­

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ATTLEBORO AREA CYO LENTEN FORUM: More than 900 members of the Attle­boro District attended the Forums conducted under the auspices of the District Youth Council. Discussing one of the topics with the speaker, are, left to right: David Fitton, Attleboro; Ann Lupica, N9. Easton; Eileen Paquette, No. Attleboro; Maurice Guertin, No. Attleboro; and Rev. Joseph L. Lennon, O.P., Dean of Providence College, who spoke at each Forum meeting. ,-

Processions procession of the Silence. Start ­ing from 15 parishes, the proces­sions come together as they near the center of the city. The men bear the miraculous statue of Jesus of Mendinaceli, as they have from the time that SpaiR was ruled by Moslems.

THE ANCHOR - 1 ! Thll'rs./ April 15, 1965

College to 'Honor Cardinal Bea

PHILADELPHIA (NC) - Au­gustin Cardinal Bea, S.J., ;\}~d

Agriculture Secretary Orville :... Freeman will receive honorary degrees from St. Joseph's Coli­lege here Friday, April 30.

They will be honored at aJj

academic convocation which will be the final event in a three-ciay celebration marking the dedicc'; tion of the college's new $1.2 million Academy of Food Mar­keting building and observinll the college's 114th anniversar~

Cardinal Bea, head of the Vatilo- . ~aJl Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity, will receive 3J:\ honorary doctorate of jurispru­dence. Freeman will receive ... honorary doctorate of laws.

Established in 1962, the Acad;o. emy of Food Marketing at Si, Jos~ph's College provides execu­tive training in food marketiql MId serves as a national researc~

and reference center for the fOOlli industry.

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rHE ANCHOR-Dioc~se,.of Fall River-Thurs. April 15, 1965 t2

Carthage, Bardo Museum Attract Tunisia Visitor

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy The temptation to dwell on Egypt is, like the spell of

the country itself, powerful, but must be resisted if we are to go on with our North African journey. In this article and the next, I intend to offer some jottings about other places vi~ited, an~ in a f.ina! built long after the Punic city one to gIve my ImpreSSIons was demolished. Some of them of the ceremonies in Rome in are of the Byzantine city (its eonnection with the creation basilica, for example) which of the new cardinals. This week succeeded the Roman. I shall touch on Tunisia and Al- Of the Punic city one can see geria. in each of only an occasional burial place which we made unearthed when the excavators a very brief went below a Roman house. The stay. It was in ~uriai. places 3....-e ~d;, in keep-Tunisia that we mg WIth the PhoemClan charac­had the Qoorest ter. But worse than rude are the weather, wet evidences of the Phoenicians' and 'cold. In my cult of the. savage god Moloch. hotel room in These eVldences are easy to 'l'unis was a sign miss, for they are small and far reading. "No ex- fro~ self-explanatory. The y tra charge for conSIst ~ stone boxes, ~ar~y central heating two feet m length, and of lnSIg­in winter." This nificant stone slabs aWkw~rdly was quite as it should have, carved an? eroded and discol­been, for, despite the mocking ored .bY time. The" boxes. once presence of a small radiator, cont81ned t~~ bone•..o~ chIldren there was no heat. offered as ~Vln? Sacnfices to the

A nice bouquet of fresh flow- cru~ and lnS~tiable god (;' pro­era'did not compensate for this jection of his inventors own lack. Nor was there any heat chara~ers), and the sla?& ~ In the- chapel where I offered ~emonals to these pathetic VlC­Mass; that gloomy place was the tims. nearest thing to a deep freeze Museum Eye-opener that I have eve: been in. ' Of the Roman ruins, I shall

write nothing here, preferringMemorable Experienees to discuss later a much better

But even the depressing and example in Morocco. And the punishing weather could not Christian remains are much bet­lPOiI the two most memorable ter presented in the Bardo Mu­experiences in Tunisia. The first seum. was seeing the remains of C8r- This museum, in Tunis, is an tbage: the second. the accidental eye-opener. It is unpretentious discovery of the Bardo Museum. in appearance, and more infor-

Carthage, fronting on the sea, mal than an)' Museum with • was the Punic capital. It was still comparable treasure. The guards another of those settlements of are extremely casual, lounging the Phoenician people who per- around with cigarettes dangling formea remarkable feats of voy- from their lips, and dusting pre­aging long before the Christian clous exhibits in a manner era. Everywhere one goes in the which strikes one as downright Mediterranean area there are careless. traces of them, at least as The contents are Punic, Ro­traders, and I remember being man, Greek, and Christian. The told in Brazil that it is believed Punic exhibits are relatively few; the Phoenicians even reached not only because the Romans set the harbor of present day Rio. themselves so systematically, not

But Cathage was their most to say fanatically, to desstroying famous achievement, as it was every trace of Carthage, but also' , their principal colony. The because the Phoenicians were a North African littoral at this raw, grasping, unartistic people. point provided thE! closest' ap- The sculptures are small, but proximation of their homeland they rivet one's attention be­on the eastern shore of the Med- cause of their crassness of tech­iterranean, and they have made nique and the invariable grim­the most of it. acing quality of every face.

Rival o( Rome Linking in one's mind~ these So thriving did Carthage be- representations of humanity

eome that it posed serious rival- with the coffins of the innocents ry to Rome, and the Punic Wars sacrified to Moloch, one wonders resulted. "Carthage must be de- whether the Rornan determina­stroyed," was the cry, and Car- ,tion to annihilate Carthage was thage was destroyed in 149 B.C., entirely motivated by desire to The city was literally wiped out, eliminate, once for all, an im­and it was not until a century perial rival. Might there not also later·' that Rome decided to re-' have been a loaming for pervep;. build on the· site. and not until sity rampant? two centuries later that the full Roman Items potential of Rome's African The Roman items in the mu­holdings began to be exploited. seum. although some of them are , his sheep and his know him."

The drive from Tunis to the notable, are mostly standard, place that was Carthage is rath- the kind of thing, one sees, in .. short. In our case, the time one's, traveis, over and over Jap Lady NoW' Feels was lengthened by the driver's again But there is an extraor­ At Home in Churchbreakmg some minor, mysteri- dinary grout: of Greek sculp­OllS traffic regulation. This led tures and other objects (utensils KYOTO (NC)-"At last I feel to a protracted discussion, mut- and furniture, for example). It at home in Church," a Japanese tered not shouted, between him fills, two halls and cemprises has told his American pastor and a policeman, the demand what was found in a < trireme after the first Mass in Japanese for and the showmg 'of many' sunk during a voyage from: in hJp parish. , documents, and the making 'of Greece to Africa. An elderly woman, baptized lOme kind of payment--perhaps E:rom the early, Christi,an before the war, echoed this sen­the policeman had the right to perioe (third and fourth cen- timent when she said: ''Now we levy a fine on the spot. turies., mostly) there are won-, all seem to be praying with the

Finally we 'reached a desolate derful mosaics, many from bur- < priest at Mass." artia wreathed in thin veils' of tal places. The museum has an' These are typical reactions to lnist and light rain, an area un- extensive array of these, and the liturgical changes that went even and overgrown with weeds both their synibols and their in- : into. effect on the first Sunday and bare of anything save runty scriptions are powerfully mov-: of Lent in Japan. ruins This was Carthage. Its sit- ing. uation, one saw at oncii, was For they take one back to the: ·D A Alumnaemagnificent. days when' the Church was·

The ruins, although hugging young and flourishing in these. Alumnae of. Dominican Aca~-' ere gT'cund, art' p,••. , -'".~, MOst . paris Sf. Ail/lUStine maT well" ~y, F~, ~ye~ p~D.a Co~u~' ei't,bem are of the' Roman: cit.Yhilve·1ooked oidbem:;" ..:..... '.: ~ h-.o'dast Sunday, MaY 16.

True Compassion

God' Love You ,By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.D.

Having become man, God in His love for us suffered and died on a low hill outside Jerusalem. It was the ITeatest ad of com­passion that the world will ever witness. For what IS eompassion but the putting of yourself Into the Ufe of another-feeling his 811i'fering as if it were your own?·

Today, twenty centuries later, there is no lack of pity In the world. But how much of it is misdirected pity? How little is true compassion! Has mankind really under­stood Our Lord's words on the way to Calvary: "Weep not for Me but for your­selves and for your children"? Weep not for the crucified; weep for the crucifiers. Weep not for the submerged humanity in Latin America, the lepers, in Asia, the persecuted in Africa and northern Europe; weep for those who do. nothing to help them. Weep not for the Agonistic Christ in them; weep for their modern spectators Who do nothing to help Him, ,Be not one

FATHER LAWLER

Peru, Confe!l"ence Hears Missioner Of New Bedford

LIMA (MM)-Father John I J. Lawlor, a New Bedford native who now serves as a pastor in a Lima parish, was among the most active partici ­pants in a two-week Pastoral and Mission Methods Conference which has just concluded in this Peruvian cat:ital city.

The Fall River diocesan mis­sioner, speaking at the first con­ference the Maryknollers have held in 11 years, discussed "Specialization of Personnel in. Relation to Parochial Commit­ment." The New Bedford MIlI7­knoller satd:

"The pastoral life of today cannot be tied down to the sac­ramental or spiritual needs of our parish.

See~ Busy Man "We do have a definite obli ­

gation to take care of our people sacramental-wise. As pastors, we are the spiritual shepherds of those under our parochial juris­diction-but this does not mean that all of our time and energy must be so confined.

"It would seem that more and more in the future, we will be called' upon by the leaders in different fields, be they admin­istrative, liturgical or socio­economic We must not be afraid to take these responsibil ­ities upon our shoulders despite our other obligations. Bishop James A. Walsh always used to say, 'When I want something done urgently, I look around for a busy man: "

After reviewing Maryknoll's work in the socio-economic field, Father Lawler observed: "The success of our efforts in specialized works will ultimate­ly be seen on the parish level where the priest is the shepherd of the flock and where he knows

of thesel

Your gratitude for the first Easter Sunday can be shown this Easter by your cempassion for Chrfst, still suffering in His Mystical Body-in the world's starving and diseased. Christ gave His life for us. What more worthy gift ean we give to Christ than our Ufe-work? ''I want to give the monetary results of my life's work," you might say, "bnt I must live on the income." His Vicar on earth has established a special fund'that meets your needs and works to reUeve as much snffering around the world as your compassion makes possible. Take out an annuity 11Vith The Society for the Propagation of the Faith this Easter. You will give your life-work to Christ and receive the income you need during life. An annuity will do this with no deduetion for service, and you may be assured that at your death the prin­eipal will be given to the Holy Father to be distributed to God's poor, in the world. Direet your request for our pamphlet on

annuities (and the benefits to YOU), inclUding the date of your birth, to Most Reverend Fultou 3. Sheen. 366 Fifth Avenue, New York., New York, 10001.

GOD LOVE YOU to ML.F. for $250 ''You helped me to decide that my Lenten sacrifice this year should go to the Holy Father'. Missions. Perhaps it will help educate a native priest but, if it doesn't, I know that it will go where the need is the greatest." ... to a compassionate child for 84c ''My six-year-old daughter was moved to' tears by the suffering shown in TOur magazine. She asked me to send you 'Everything I hav"'"

Cut out this column. pin your sacrifice to It and maD It to Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Direetor of The Soeiet7 for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue. New York, New York 10001. or to your Diocesan Director,

IU. Rev. Magr. Raymond T. Considine 368 North Main Street

Fall River, Massachusetts

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Page 13: 04.15.65

Yvette Belonger 'of St.· Anthony', Receives Typewriter in Fint Diocesan Typing Contest

Congratulations to Yvette Belanger of St. Anthony" High School, New Bedford, happy possessor of a new type­writer as the winner of the first Diocesan typewriting eon­test. Other awards: Laura Desautel of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro has received. a

to be held Easter week k1 Newfull scholarship to study at York City, will include SisterTruesdale Hospital, Fan M. Yvette, C.S.C. of st. Aft­

River; and Sus'an Connor has thony's and Sister M. Sheila 01 :received a scholarship from Feehan. Duquesne University. Also at Sister Sheila will participate Feehan, Fred Garland has re­ m a panel on social studies in ceived a gold medal as·a math secondary schools; and Sister contest winner and an addi­ Yvette, in addition to attending tional award of a bronze plaque the NCEA convention,' will be as a second-time winner ill the present at the 20th annual c0n­competition. vention of the Catholic Business

Winner of a national home­ Education Assot'iation, b e i n g making contest award for Mt. held concurrently in New York. St. Mary Academy. Fall River, She is chairman of the Diocesan was Mary Kristine Lima. She business education committee plans to enter Salve Regina Col­ At Holy Family. one lm09nl lege come September. WI Spring-the baseball team

And Bishop Stang, North has been p1ck~ by Coach Joba Dartmouth, boasts a double Brennan. • scholarship winner in John Also at D, ~e Sweene7 Golenski, who has received four and Mike Kramer represented year full tuition grants from the school's Junipero Club at a Providence College and Boston meeting in Holyoke, Mass., College. He has chosen Boston wherE the Junipero Club is "the College, where he will continue fourth in the world of its type." extra-curricular interest in de­ Holy Family has the honor of bating and sodality activities. founding the first Junipero Club, He's president of both groups at incidentally. At the gathering Stang. "And another Stangite, the Holy Family representatives Francis Dubreuil, earned second staged a model meeting of thew place in state oratory finals held unit. at Suffolk University's annual Promote Candidacy speech festival. Coyle delegates attending the

Windjammer Dance Southeastern Mass. Stu den t Council Convention to be held atWindjammer is the name of a Feehan High will includedance which will be held by th, Thomas Ross, Steve Chambers,Seventeeners of Sacred Hearts Thomas Kalaker, Albert Pepka,Academy, Fall River, Monday Bruce Gordon and Peter Lacail ­night, April 19 in the school lade. The delegation will begym. Seagulls (real?), fishing campaigning for the advance­nets, sand, shells, a lighthouse ment of their candidate, Peterand a sailboat will lend atmo­Lacaillade, as representative tosphere and a hardworking com­the national Student Councilmittee headed by Susan Reid Convention in Kentucky. Con­will make sure all dancers have tinuing to Ipswich for a statea good time. -meetIng will bfl! Thomas Ross,Diocesan students 1ft goodly James Murphy and J. Mansfield.numbers took the seventh annu­

An interesting recent activityal Mass. State Labor Council of thp Feehan honor society wasScholarship Award Examination sponsorship of a "College Bowl"last week. The two hour quiz

covered labor history, rights, contest. And Feehan seniors are sharp­labor legislation, and eurrent

ening their French wits in prep­labor events. An essay question ,aration for awards that the st.was on the 'Great Society. Prizes Jean Baptiste Duvernay Councftinclude a $1,000 John F. Ken­will present to top-rankingnedy Memorial Scholarship. French students.Students at Dominican Acad­

St. Anthony students are PIe­emy are concluding their annual paring the Easter issue 01retreat today. Retreat master at "Essa," their 24 page mimeo­the Fall River school • Rev.. graphed newspaper which ap­Adrien Francoeur, M.S. pears five times yearly underAnd science students at Holy

Family in New Bedford viewed direction of Sister Yvette, fac­a movie, "The Restless Sea,.. ulty advisor. The periodical ill while seniors are interestedly marking its 23rd year, which receiving results of the General makes its one of the oldest Aptitude Test Battery, which high school papers in the Dio­aids students in choosing an eM>­ cese. eupation after graduation. Elections for student council

Fifty members of' the Coyle officers are upcoming at Coyle. senior class in Taunton have re­ They'll be held next month, and ceived notification of acceptance winners will serve for the next at institutes of higher learning. academic year.

And at Bishop Cassidy High, And students from both Cas­also in Taunton, the Corona, sidy and Coyle have been prac­school memory book, has gone ticing for their annual service to the printer, "but the business of supplying music for Hol)r staff is still busy raising money Week rites at Marian Manor. for it." The latest fund-raising Music's been on the Lenten event was a style show with 15 schedule at St. Anthony's too, as seniors modeling pretty fashioDl glee club members pave sung for the cause. No strain! hymns at the five o'clock Mass

Girls at SHA Fall River heard at st. Anthony's church each a talk by Rev. Edmund Delaney Sunday since the beginning of Tuesday, during w~ch he ex­ Lent. "This is an eftort to en­plained the new Holy Week hance complete congregational ceremonies. Also at SHA, the singing and intensify the litur­student council is pondering gical movement," says Anchor whether freshmen should be al ­ reporter Richard Gelinas. lowed to vote in school electiolll Large Scrapbookf and is also working on a pro­ Covle's student councl1 III posed student handbook. keeping a scrapbook, a new

French Play project for the guiding group at Students at St. Anthony's the Taunton school. "With their

enjoyed a presentation of "I.e many fine activities," says our Soulier de Satin" by Paul Clau­ reporter' hopefully, "many such del, staged by the Dramati~ scrapbooks might soon be filled." Club of Assumption .College. Also at Coyle, 2'18 students on

And Diocesan representatives 28 teams are vying each night to at the. annual National Catholic lee which team will be Coyle lwueatioGal Auoeia&i4!D meetina, IDuamwu chBlllP.J IIMl .....

individual trophies. The baseball team opened its

season against Durfee of Fall River Monday, while the track team met Dartmouth last Friday. The golf team will play North Attleboro Monday, April 26, while the tennis team is prepar­ing to take on Taunton Tuesday., April 27.

Students at St. Anthony's re­ceive "inspirational vitamins" from the honor society every Monday morning in the shape of verse cards, designed to spur the lagging spirit.

Also at St. Anthony's, Anll Marie Hebert and David St. Lau­rent are preparing a debate Oil

the subject "Should the Draft be Abolished," for possible pub­lication in "Current Week," Catholic weekly newspaper for high school students.

At Dominican Academy Nancy Fournier's Beagle team tri ­umphed over Arline Belanger'. Afghans in intramural basket­ball competition, making the Beagles 1965 champs in the an­nual event.

And vacation plans for DA students include attendance at an American history program Tuesday, April 20 at Bridge­water State College and at a ditto Saturday, April 24 at Cam­bridge. French students will take a scholarship exam at Asswnp­tionprep in Worcester.

One hundred and twenty eag~

Cass;dyites will be among par­ticipants in the- CYO World's Fair tour. They'll be accom­panied by Sister Stephen Helen, Siste'!' Elizabeth Marie and Sie­ter Mary Teresita.

Television PrOgram Sunday. April 25 will be an­

other big day at Cassidy. The in­stalhtion ceremony for the local unit of the Future Secretaries Association will take plaee-a televised program with officers of the National Association and other dignitaries _ invited guestfl.

Call~lidy's Student Council wiB be represented at the ConventiOD for the Southeastern Massachu­setts Student Council AuoclatiOll .. I'eehaa Hip ~ ,.....

CHAMPION TYPIST: Happy winner of first DiOCesa1l typewriting contest is Yvette Belanger of St. Anthony's High School, New Bedford, shown with her prize. From left, standing, Edward Leddy, typewriter company repre­sentative; Rev. Gerard Boisvert, chaplain at St. Anthony's; Rev. Patrick O'Neill, Diocesan superintendent of schools.

27 by President Nancy Tinkham, and elected representative Paul­ine Lee. Miss Mary McMahon, who is Secretary of the Associa­tion lind Advisor of the Cassidy Council will accompany students together with the Principal, Sis­ter john Elizabeth.

The Cassidy Mothers' Auxil ­iary will hold their annual busi­ness meeting for the election of officers, Thursday, April 29. Fol, lOWing the trangaction of busi­ness the Franco Family of FaD. River win entertain.

Senior Memorybook Editors for 1966 will be guests of TaylOl' Publlshers at the Conference to be held in Attleboro April 29-

Girls' State Kathleen Kennedy, junior at

Holy Family, will represent the school at Girls' State, held at Bridgewater State College. She'1!l debate club president at HF.

Also at HF, Rev. James Clark addressed Junipero Club mem­bers on the work of PAVLA.

Girls at Mt. St. Mary's enjoyed a joint concert by their own or­chestra and that from St. Xavier Academy. Also at the Mount, many students are volunteering participation in Holy Week ser­vices at St. Mary's Cathedral.

Scholarship winners at Dioc­esan highs include, from Feehan, Susan Connor, grants from Al­bertus MagnUs and Duquesne University; Jeanne Maigret, Salve Regina; Elio del Canal, St. Joseph and Marist; Kenneth Garrigus, Northeastern; Kerry Horman, U. of Mass. and Boston College; Stephen Nolan, Stone-

1'H£ -ANCHOR.... ., . 13 'Fhurs., April 1S, 1965

bin; Danlet Sullivan, ~ eastern and U. of Mass. .

At the Mount Claudette Augel" has been awarded a grant and • Defense Loan from Duquesn~

and a grant from Northeastern; and at Cassidy Patricia McBreea has received a scholarship from Stonehill and Nancy Fornal from Fordham University.

The U. S. Navy Special Show BElJld will perform at Feehan Wed.npsday, April 28 and the second annuai Feehan Awarcm Night is scheduled for Monday. April 26. On this occasion letten and awards will be given ath­letes, cheerleaders, senior band members and senior drill team members.

Also on Monday, April 28, Feehan sophomores will hear a lecture on human genetics by Robert Ouelette of Stonehill College biology department.

And freshmen at Cassidy chose as an Easter project the making of sock dolls for childrea at Ppul Dever School.

And Antone Andrade, SAIl junior and varsity debater, took fifth place speaker trophy at a tournament held at Eastern Naz. arene College. At the same to1J1'ot ­nament Holy Family earned • third place team trophy.

Well, this is the day-H~ "I'bursday,' the beginning of Eas­ter vacation, and also the dread· day of report card distributiODo Some may anticipate Easter'. alleluia, says the SAH reporter. but others may remorsefully sq their "mea culpa." At any rate. a happy, happy Easter to alll

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'4 THE ANCHOR­Thurs., April 15, 196~;

Prelates Stress Social Equality For All Men

TOLEDO (NC) - Bishop (;eorge J. Rehring of Toledo has called for adoption of effective measures to secure 'ustice for all men in housing, employment and opportunities for education.

In a letter to clergy, Religious ad laity, the bishop said:

"In pursuing the objectivea eI. justice, we cannot stop when we have achieved them partially. yV~ must continue to exert our­selves to the utmost for the re­moval of every vestige of in­~tice."

"The road ahead will not al­ways be pleasant," said the pre­late. "I fear it holds surprises for many of us. It may even con­front us with exasperating sit­uations and may occasion some eooling off of friendships that w~ sincerely cherish. However, justice moderated by the Divne Law of fraternal charity must re­main unshakably our guiding principle."

Bishop Rehring took note of the e1vil rights demonstrations in lOuthern states. He said:

Resent Meddling "Many of the old Southerners

ere indignant at what they con­lider 'a meddling in their affairs and a lack of ~onsideration for their feelings and convictions.'

"However, it must be said In all honesty that sympathizers, at home and on the scene, were actuated by only one motive, namely, to come to the cry of the distressed and to aid them in solving their problems. So far as my knowledge goes, partici­

'.r pants from this locality conduc..;. ted themselves in a reasonable and , therefore. praiseworthy. eommendable m~ner."

Press Group Plans Book Competition

NEW YORK (NC) - The Catholic Press Association will sponsor its second annual Cath­olic Book Awards competitioa to "recognize and honor the man y distinguished' achieve­ments in Catholic book publish­Ing today."

Winning books in seven cate­gories, as determined by a panel of judges, will be an­nounced at a luncheon during the press association's 55th an­nual convention, to be held here May 18 to 22.

The competition categories are fiction, biography, spirituality, Christian liviltg, Scriptures and theology, youth and general non-fiction. Entries - w hie h must be books originally pub­lished in 1964--are to be sub­mitted by publishers no later than March 2:). CPA executive ~cretary James A.. Doyle said.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. April 15, 1965 15

Most Reverend James L.· Connolly, Ordinary of the Diocese of FaU River

Most Reverend James J. Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese,

Together with all the Priests a~d Religious;

P'ray as the Glorious Feast of the Resurrection Approaches'

That the Peace Given by the Risen Savior on the First Eas ter '"'- .

May fill the Souls of All the Readers and Advertisers of The ANCHOR

On this Easter of 1965 o

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Page 16: 04.15.65

16 I1i1: ANCHOR-Uiot:ese of Fan River-ThllTs. Apri115, 1965

Mourn Loss of Cardinal M'eyer Continued from Page One

"He was neither ultra liberal nor ultra consenative," he -said. "He was strictly objective, keen­ly analytical and firmly bal­ancerl in all his views. In the opini0ns of many, the cardinal 'camr of age' during the last ses­sion of the council * (, '" His American confreres were proud of him and th<>ir pride was matcl,ed by the high esteem of bishops from every part of the world" Th~ archbishop said Cardinal

Meypr's death represented the loss of "a budding and prudent leadprship in the American Church ':' * * Messages of condo­lence from national figures everywhere give indication that our country shares our Church's loss."·

Strl"ssing the cardinal's con­eern {or human values, he saidl. that "his involvement in social questions was part of his con­eept C'f what he owed all God's

" ereatures. His educational pro­grams were directed to provid­ing hcilities for learning, but he saw beyond mere buildings to the individual boy and girl be­ing prepared for Christian living.

"He int.roduceo administrative innovations, hoping they would makf' the Church of Chicago more efficient in its operation, but he recognized that parishes, pastors, people must be primary beneficiaries. In all things he was the conscientious church­man, striving to make God's kingdom come, to make it real and vital in the hearts and lives of men."

Pontifical Requiem Mass for the reserved scholar who became head of the nation's largest Catholic diocese and a leader at the <>cumenical council, was of­fered Tuesday in Holy Name cathedral.

Cardinal Meyer, 62, died lIuJetly Friday in Mercy Hospi­tal, where he remained for six weeks after undergoing surgery Feb 25 for a brain tumor. He had heen in a general decline for nearly a week and two days before his death lapsed into a coma, from which he did not awake.

Celebrant of the Requiem Mass was Auxiliary Bishop Cletl's F. O'Donnell of Chicago, vicar general of the archdiocese and a personal friend of .the eardiJ.,al. .

Hundreds of dignitaries of church and state crowded the eathedral for the Requiem Mass. On hand were four of the five living U. S. cardinals - Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York, Jamf':> Cardinal McIntyre of Los AngEles, Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St. Louis, and Lawrence Car­dina't Shf'han of Baltimore - as well as Paul Emile CardinaI Leg<>l of Montreal. Unable to atter.ri was Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston, who is re­covering from recent major in­testinal surgery.

A tall (six feet, two inches). pipe-smoking intellectual, Car­dinal Meyer had headed the Chicago archdiocese for six and a half years-since November, 1958. Before that he was Arch­bishop of Milwaukee from 1953 to 1958 and Bishop of Superior, Wis., from 1946 to 1953.

His earlier career was that of • seminary professor and rector, and he retained the outlook and demeanor of a scholar through­out his life.

Known· as an efficient admin­Istrator and a vigorous advocate of racial justice, he received the most extensive publicity of his career for his role at the ecum­enical council, particularly dur­lag the third session last year.

He emerged as one of the chief IUDPorters of the council's pro­

posed declaration on religious liberty.

Albert Gregory Meyer was born March 9, 1903, in Milwau­kee, the third child of Peter James Meyer, a grocer, and Mathilda Thelen Meyer. Two other sons became business ex­ecutives and the family's two daughters both became nuns.

As a small boy the future car­dinal used to play at being a priest, using an old table as an altar. Throughout his grade school years he insisted that he would be a priest when he grew up.

At the age of 14 he entered St. Francis Seminary, Milwau­kee, where he completed high school and two years of college. Then he was chosen for further studies at the North American College in Rome.

Ordained there July 11, 1926, he continued his studies at the Pontifical Biblical Institute. In 1930 he returned to the United States and was appointed curate at St. Joseph's parish in Wau­kesha, Wis.

In the Fall of 1931, Father Meyer was assigned to St. Fran­cis Seminary where he was to spend the next 15 years-first as a teacher of religion, Greek. Latin, Biblical archaeology, dog­ma and Scripture, and later, from 1937 on, as rector.

In 1946 Pope Pius XII named him Bishop of Superior in north­eastern Wisconsin. He was con­secrated in April and enthroned in May.

Seven years later Pope Pius appointed him Archbishop of Milwaukee, and he was en­throned there Sept. 28, 1953. There he stayed until his pro­motion to the Chicago archdio­cese in 1958. He was enthroned Nov. 16 of that year.

One y~ar later Pop~ John named him a cardinal. He re­ceived the red hat in Rome on Dec. 14, 1959. Last November Pope Paul appointed him to the Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office, the Vatican body charged with safeguarding the purity of Catholic faith and morals. In a departure from tradition he was not required to leave his See and reside in Rome.

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New Ohio Bishop Reveals Concern In Two Fields

COLUMBUS (NC)-Deep concern for ecumenism and civil rights, two major issues of the time, has been expres­sed by Bishop John J, Carberry in his first public pronounce­ment as the new spiritual head of 170,000 Catholics in the C0­lumbus Diocese.

Bishop Carberry said "I hum­bly and prayerfully dedicate myself with the 'gentle and strong hope' mentioned by Pope Paul VI to the cause of ecumen­ism "so that the prayer of our dear Lord may someday be re­alized - 'Holy Father, keep in thy name those whom thou hast given me that they may be one, one even as we are one.' "

Speaking of civil rights, Bish­op Carberry reminded that the "Good Shepherd must be de­voted to all his sheep and seek the good of each and every one." He called on "men of good wiD everywhere" to. seek through prayer and action to obtain for all citizens political equali~

fair education and economic 0p­

portunities, good housing with­out exploitation, and a fuD chance for social advancement."

"For all men in the true spirit of the American heritage, civil rights and social justice must not only be defended in theory but assured in practice," he said.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. April 15, 1965 17The Parish Parade -VISITATION GUILD, OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION, Knights of Malta to O~~eiV~NORTH EASTHAM OSTERVILLE

Following 9:30 Mass Easter A Springtime dessert party Centenary of Historic ~a:t[""leSun~ay members will sponsor a will be sponsored by the Wom­food sale at the church hall. en's Guild at 12:30 Tuesday VALLETTA (NC) - Knights off an invading force of 35,000 Chairmen are Mrs. Evelyn Bab­ afternoon, April 27 at Aunt of Malta frore all parts of the Moslems in a four-month siege. bitt. Mrs. Leon Allmon and Mrs. Tempy's Guest House, Parker world will gather in this city in The military Older was knoWD Helen Canon. Thp. unit will hold Road, Osterville. Mrs. James September to mark the fourth at various times as the Hcspi­a supper at 6 Saturday night, Friel is chairman. centenary of a famous siege in tallers of St. John of Jerusalem, April 24, also at the hall. Mrs. Planned for May is a food which the knights repulsed a the Knights Templar and the Canon is in charge of arrange­ sale and a Communion break­ Moslem attempt to capture the Knights of Rhodes. Since moV'­ments. fast. The latter will be held Sun­ island. ing to Italy in tht; late 19th cen­

day. May 16 at Wimpy's restau­ Now an honorary society of tury, the order has held a semi­ST. PATRICK, rant and wil\ have for speaker about 9,000 members with head­ sovereign status and maintainedFALL RIVER Mrs. Mary Reed Newland, au­ quarters in Rome, the Knights &~plomatic ties with 24 nations.

A guildola planned by Wom­ thor and lecturer. of Malta were once a Mediter­en's Guild members will be held ranean power with fortresses in St. Vinc~[~t A!MrnniST. KILIAN,Tuesday, April 27 instead of Palestine, Tripoli,. Rhodes and Alumni and friends of st.NEW BEDFORDApril 20, as previously an­ Malta. ­ Vincent's Home plan a supper inNew Ladie:; Guild officers arenounced. The unit has scheduled ][n 1565, about 8,000 knightsMrs. Nora Richard, president; June, a clamboil in August and a rummage sale, Communion and Maltese headed by Grand a penny sale in September.Mrs Marie Caron, vice-presi­breakfast, calendar party and elections for May. dent: Mrs. Hilda Babiarz, secre­ Archbs~~op After Master Jean de la Valette-who Tickets for the supper will be

tary; Mrs. Jeannette Francis, gave his name to the island­ available next month from group ESPIRITO SANTO, republic's present capital- held members.treasurer. A banquet and instal­FALL RIVER U rgeSi Sfron~e;­lation are scheduled for Wednes­

The PTA will hold a rummage day, June 2 at Harbar Beach sale in the church hall from 7 Lodge, Mattapoisett. Catho~;~ Colleges to 9 Friday night, April 23 and ST. THERESE, CINCINNATI (NC)from 9 till noon Saturday morn­ NEW BEDFORD Archbishop Karl J. Alter ofing, April 24. In charge of col­ Ladies of St. Anne will be Cincinnati urged here that GOOD'lections are Mrs. Olga Cordeiro hostesses for a district meetingand .Mrs. Alice Estrella. Sisters strengthen existingof the Diocesan Council of Cath­ FRIDAY:Catholic colleges rather than es­HOLY ROSARY, olic Women Tuesday night,

tablishing new ones, and seekFALL RIVER April 27. ways to make Catholic influence DEATH BYNew Women's Guild officers ST. LOUIS, felt on secular campuses.

are Mrs. Raymond McGuire, FALL RIVER He spoke at the opening ses­ HUNGERpresident; Mrs. Mario Lucciola, A calendar supper is planned s~on of a six-day workshop thatvice-president; Miss Rose Faz­ by the Women's Guild for its drew officials of 10 colleges 1HE HOLY-FATHER'S MISSION AID TO THI! ORIENTAL CHURCH zina, secretary; Mrs. Frank meeting Tuesday, May 4. The conducted by the Sisters ofPonte, treasurer. Members will unit will hold a rummage sale Mercy of the Union and heads of This morning In Trichur, India, the authorities

attend corporate Communion at Thursday and Friday, April 29 found the bony carcass of a blind man. He died other Sisters of Mercy commu­8:30 Mass Sunday morining, May and 30 and a Communion break­ of starvation last night. ••• Christ Is on the crossnities.23, followed by breakfast in the again in 1965? He shareS the l:1eadaches, thefast Sunday morning, May 16, church hall. A trip to the World's following 9:15 Mass. Archbishop Alter said increas­ IN THE stomach pains, the exhaustion that throbs in

ing college enrollment in the hungry people overseas.••• Pregnant women Fair is also planned for May. GAlA STRIP ST. WILLIAM, coming decade and a thinning are anemic. Three children out of four go hungry ST. ANNE, FALL RIVER A all the time. Pope Paul asks well·fed Americans out of financial resources and FALL RIVER A one-day trIp to the World's 1WO·YEAR.QLD to share with them our milk, wheat and eggs.personnel "pose a problem •.• How can you share conveniently? For only Fair is announced by the Wom­The Council of Cathoijc Women which requires a decision with WHIMPERS $10 you can feed a Palestine refugee family en's Guild for Saturday, Junewill hold a meeting Monday, respect to policy." IN ITS (an entire family) for a monthl For $120 you

12. Mrs. Mary Batchelder is inMay 3 at which a slate of offi ­ can feed a family for a yearl For $300 you can"I'm convinced," he said, "that SLEEP. cers will be presented by a nom­ charge of arrangements and an­ feed, clothe, house, and train a refugee boy in it is quite beyond our financial 1TS STOMACHinating committee headed by nounces that the event is open Nazareth to .be self-supporting for life! ••. Invest

resources to continually expandto all parishioners. A Commu­ IS EMPTY. In the people Christ died for? Your gift at EasterMiss Marguerite Gagnon. Instal­ our college program."ceremonies are for nion breakfast is planned for gives nourishment, energy, and hope to hungrylation set

Newman Apostolate human beings. The Holy Father needs your help.Sunday, May 23 and an installa­Monday, June 7. Do all you can to help him help others becometion banquet will be held Wed­ "It would be unwise for us to HOLY NAME, self·sufficient right now. Your heart will share In

nesday, June 9. make an effort to provide for all Easter's joy!FALL RIVER applicants from Catholic schoolsST. FRANCIS XAVIER, CO To be installed at the Tuesday, asking admission to our col­HYANNIS D SOMETHING SPECIAL FOR DINNER?May 4 banquet are Mrs. William leges," he said.The Women's Guild will meet For $10 a month ($120 a year) you can feed.A. Renaud, president; Mrs~ John

Thursday night, April 22. Mrs. "Instead, therefore, we ought hungry family. In thanks, we'll send you an OliveJ. Kirkman, vice-president; Mrs. to put more emphasis on making Wood Rosary from the Holy Land. Gisela O'Neil will speak onWilliam J. King, secretary; Mrs.

"How to be Beautiful." A rum­ our existing colleges of the high­ o SOMETHING NEW TO WEAR? Frank M. Kingsley. treasurer, est quality-we ought to do a $7.50 will buy a new habit for a missionarymage sale is planned from 10new officers of the Women's Sister. $5 will buy her 8 pair of shoes.

Monday morning, April 26; in first class job in the collegesGuild. SIX o GUESTS INVITED?now in existence."Masonic Hall, Main Street.A food and cake sale will be The priest·to·be·or Sister you "adopt" is like aNEWHOLY NAME, Archbishop Alter said he had member of/our family. We have the names ofheld from 10 to 4 Saturday,

NEW BEDFORD no intention of being "cold­ IDEAS hundreds 0 poor boys and girls who want toApril 24 at Highlands Five and The Women's Guild announces hearted" toward the Catholic FOR become priests and Sisters. The one you "adopt"

Ten Cent Store. will write to you. You need pay only the basica penny sale for Wednesday, students at non-Catholic colleges EASTER expenses: $100 a year (for six yearsrfor a semi.OUR LADY OF ANGELS. April 28 in the parish hall. and universities. narian; $150 a year (for two years) for a Sister.FALL RIVER Grand prize will be a three day Write to us now, and we'll send you the seminar­Miss Clorinda Ventura is new­ trip for two people to the New ian's or Sister's name promptly. . ­ly elected president of the Wom­ York World's Fair. Master of D FIRST AID FOR THE SICK?SERVING - - ­

en's Guild, supported by Mrs. ceremonies will be William $75 will put a medical kit In the hands of a mls· Mary Rodrigues, vice-president; Pendergast. FINE ITALIAN FOOD • sionary overseas. $12 8 year ($1 a month) will

make you a member of our DAMIEN LEPER CLUBMrs. Dorothy Almeida, treasu­ ST. ELIZABETH, for lepers In southern India.rer; Mrs. Mary Coreira and Miss GON DOLA}FALL RIVER D MASS IN THANKSGIVING FORMary Rapoza, secretaries. RESTAURANT and LOUNGEThree seminarians from St. A HAPPY EASTER?A Communion breakfast is set Our missionary priests receive no salary. They'"John's Seminary, Brighton, will on Lake Sabbatiafor Sunday, May 2, following 8 offer immediately the Masses you request. The

o'clock Mass. Mothers, daugh­ I 1094 Bay Streetgive r. demonstration of the Mass

offering you make keeps them in food andat 7 Easter Monday night, Aprilters and guests will be invited. 19 iT) the church. All new

The unit's sewing group will changes will be included and a meet at 7:30 Wednesday night, commentator will explain all April 21 in the church hall. actions and prayers.

ST. JOSEPH. FALL RIVER Call Reorganization

A penny sale is set for 'Satur­ Report Speculationday, April 24 by the Women's Guild A cake sale will be held OTTAWA (NC)-Reports that in May. . the University of Ottawa will be

Men's Club members will drastically reorganized h a v e adore the Blessed Sacrament to­ been described by university night and until 2 Good Friday spokesmen as "pure specula­morning. tion."

CYO Seniors will hold a car According to an article in Le wash from 10 to 3 Holy Saturday. Droit, a French Daily, the uni­

versity will divide into two in­ST. MARY, stitutions, one officially Catho­NORTH ATTLEBORO lic and the other Christian in

The Parish Guild will hold orientation. elections and a buffet supper at The report said the new uni­7 Tuesday night, April 20 in the versity, to be called St. Paul schooJ hall. Guest speakers will University , would be made up include Brother John Fitzgerald of ecclesiastical faculties of the of st John's Seminary, Brighton. present university operated by Mrs. Francis Murphy is pro­ the Oblate Fathers and would gram chairman and also heads retain the pontifical charter 1he election committee. granted 75 years ago.

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Page 18: 04.15.65

18 THE ANC~O~-I);"',,'!.e of Fall River-Thurs .. April 15, 1965

Says Death-Bed Conversion Is Exceptional Phenomenon

By Rev. Joheph T. McGloin, S. J. The poor old character was dying, no doubt of that.

The trouble was that he had been out of the Church for years, and it didn't look like he was going to get back in under the wire. His relatives had argued with him until there were no more argu- Time Uncertain m~nts, and very little breath, Ordinarily, we don't know too lef.t. Over and over again, he much about the time of our came up with the old inani- death. either. It can come at any ties,. "God doesn't want me any time, sooner or later. Young peo­

.more. It's too late." A few priests pie, almost invariabdly, seem to haq also tried think that death is the exclusive to talk sense to prerogative of the old, and that the: man, but only the very old are eligible for wit.h no luck. death. If anything, in fact, he seemed ilIt get more stubborn as the end drew closer and closer. Fin­ally a young

.~ priest, a friend of one of the relatives, was called in. Since this young priest was brand new and almost com­pletely inexperienced, every­body figured he'd fail worse than all the others.

As expected, the young priest ·was met with nothing but stub­bornness and the command, in fact, to "get outi' He didn't get out, however, but only went over tIo the corner, a short distance from the bed, drew up a chair, and sat staring at the man.

Sit and Watch Now this, quite naturally, got

the dying man a bit nervous, un­til he finally yelled .at the priest to get out, since he obviously wasn't going to do any good anyhow. "Why," he demanded, "are you wasting your time sit ­ting around here watching me? I'm not going to have anything to do with you or the Church and that's final."

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The young priest didn't blink, but just sat calmly staring, as he tried, hesitantly, to explain. "You see," he said, "I'm a1 very young priest. :r haven't had a lot of experience--I've never seen anyone go to hell, for instance. So, if you don't mind, I'd sort of like to sit here and watch you do it"

I can't tell you whether or not the story had a happy ending. I can't even assure you that it's· a true story. But, true or not, it does contain one startling, earth­shaking truth. You hear lots of stories about death-bed conver­sions about people finally turn­ing back to God at the last mo­ment, when they had spent a

, :". lifetime lookin~ the other way. Now such stories are, indeed,

wonderful, but the fact is that the death-bed conversion is an exceptional phenomenon, and does not always happen by any means

Mysterious Thing There are lots of things uncer­

tain about death. It's a myste­rious thing. And this is, undoubt­edly, why we fear it. We don't, after all, have many authorities on the subject Lazarus might have been one, but he's left us no record of his impressions.

We not only don't know much about how death operates, but we're not even too well informed on just what it is. We've all seen dead people·, mnybe even seen some actually die. And we know that some life principle has gone out of them, that "they" are sim­piy no longer present before us.

We know, too, that this life principle is theIr soul, and we know by faith that they have gone before God to be judged, to· be welcomed or cast aside. Their body is, just now, only a very loosely joined amount of chemicals.

versity, Fairfield, Conn.. St. Robert Bellarmine, St. Basil'.

Continued from Page One Seminary, Methuen, Mass. and degree in philosophy and com­ Our Lady of Lebanon Maronitepleted his theological studies at Seminary, Washington, D. C.St. Mary's Seminary. Baltimore, He will offer his First SolemnMd Liturgy of Thanksgiving at 12

Rev. Mr. Keenan will cele­ . noon· Sunday, May 2, in St. An­brate his First Solemn Mass at thon·Y· of Padua Church, .Dan­11 Sunday, May 2, in st. James' btiry. .. Church, New Bedford with Rt. Rev. Mr. TetraultRev. Hugh. A. Gallagher as as­

Rev. Mr. ·Teti-ault, son of Mr.sistant priest. Rev. John F. An­Norman Tetrault and Mrs.drews will be deacon and Rev. Miuy (Langford) Tetrault, 31Thomas F. Neilan, subdeacon. Green Street, Fairhaven, wasThe sermon will be preached by graduated from Holy NameRev. John F. Hogan. Sponsor at Sc.hool,New Bedford, Fairhavenordination will be Rev. Donald High School St. Thomas Sem­E. Belanger. inary. Bloomfield, Conn. He was

Rev. Mr. Michael awarded a Bachelor of Arts de­Rev. Mr. Michael is the son of gree in Philosophy at St. Mary's

Mrs Linda· Khoury Michael and Seminary, Baltimore, Md. and the late George ·M. Michael. He completed his theological studies was educated at Fairfield Uni-· at .St. Mary's Seminary, Roland

Park, Baltim~re. . He will offer his First SOleMB Mass at noon Sunday, May Z, ia St. Joseph's Church, Fairhaven. Rev· John Brennan, SS.CC. win serve as assistant priest. Rev. Joseph D'Amico will be deacon, and Rev. Thomas .Harrington, subdeacon. The sermon win be given by Rev. Richard ~. Calla­him, O.F.M. Sponsor at ·ordina­tion will be Rev. Leo T. Sullivan.

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Page 19: 04.15.65

19 Fine Performances. Feature. Baseball, Track Contests

, By Fred Bartek; , Scholastic baseball fans will see a lot of good entertain­

ment and some mighty fine games this Spring if the early season encounters are a harbinger for the remainder of the championship calendar. And, wht1e the diamond enthusiasts have their eyes glued on Gus D'Rubio's Taunton Her­their favorites, major league rings will be making their last scouts will be in the stands appearance in Fairhaven today to ascertain the capabilities in BCl;. competition since Fair­of the area's most likely pros­ haven has decided to quit the pects. Already, it is rumored, league. There is the possibility one American these teams get together in a League club is non-league encounter. giving the 'fine ThE" Coyle Warriors are at. eye' to a catcher North Attleboro today. This for one, .of the should be an interesting game. smaller schools The Warriors are usually con­in thE' northern tenders while North has a num­section of the ber of veterans who saw action county. Ricky in the State playoffs last year. Castro gained Feehan High will travel to the honor of New Bedford today to play the being the first Vocational Artisans. If Bill Nor­

ton's forecast is any indicationMassachu­of what to expect, things don'tsetts slab artist

to hurl a no-hit, no-run game as look too promising for the Voke­he twirled the Diman Vocational ste~. Norton claims it is going aggregation of Fall River to a to be a long, hard season for his 10-0 victory over Apponequet club. Regional High in. the season's Bishop Feehan is entering its

first official season in the BCLopener. Picking up where he left off baseball circuit.

Last year with only threelast year, Castro looks like the best moundsman in the Narry classes to pick his players from, League, at the moment. Castro, Coacr. Chet Hanewich had his who was the loop's strikeout club play, most league teams king in '64, disposed of 15 of the without too much success. The 25 batters he faced in the opener... experience the players gained

Case High of Swansea, seeking. will be valuable for this year's to annex its second straight con­ campaign. quest of the Narry League", Attleboro will not have a

league game today but Mondaytravels to Westport next Mon­will find the Jewelers at Coyle inday.

Parochials Meet Raiders Taunton. Also, Durfee will be playing at "Taunton (at 10 A.M.,ThE" Cardinal" had an easy since i~ is vacation week) and'time in the opener, pounding' North Attleboro at Stang.Holy Family. of New Bedford,'

Track Surprises14-2. Joe Kirkman corralled' ThE' track and field season,most of the honors in the Swan- '

already underway, promises a sea team's triumph as he whiffed few surprises throughout the'11 in his two-hit performance. area. This impression is basedHe also contributed to his club's on early season meets. Thererunproduction with a two-run have been some excellent timeshomer. . turned in by boys who have evi­Thwarted in its initial start, dently come into their own.Somerset confronts Diman of

Dartmouth topped Coyle 45-41Fall River today Prevost topped in a meet that pitted two of thethe Raiders, 4-1, in the opener. area's top te8l1U' against eachIt is expected either Ron.Boiselle other in the season's first meet.or Roland Chagnon will hurl for Peter Fortier of DartmouthSomerset. They combined to scored a "triple" in winning thehold Prevost to four hits in the 100 and 220 yard dashes as well opener. as the high jump. Fortier did theThe Dighton-Rehoboth Fal­100 in a crisp 10.1 seconds. cons. who eked out a close 2-0

Bot- Dewey of Coyle set avictory in the opener at the ex­school record in the 440 with a pense of Old Rochester, tackle clocking of 51.4 seconds. JohnApponequet at Lakeville today. Rossi of Dartmouth ran the mileTwo first innin& runs accounted in 4:41, an impressive perform­for all the scoring in the Falcons ance Joe Cordeiro of Dartmouthwin behind Dave Varley who threw the shot 55 feet 7 inchesfanned nine losers. Lou Perry of which without a doubt is theOld Rochester pitched well over finest toss in this area for manythe entire route after a shaky yearsfirst inning when he walked two

In other meets the Red Rock­and gave up a single to Glenn eteers of North Attleboro toppedField. Franklin. John Medeiros, whoDurfee Hosts Stang last year was the best 220 manPrevost, which looked a little in the county, as a sophomoreweak with the stick against picked up where he left off b;Somerset, will be at home today winning the 220 and 100 yardwith Westport. ~he Parochials dashE's.play Dighton-Rehoboth at the

Stang downed Apponequetlatter's field on Monday. Ron without too much trouble, but,Costa did a fine job on the in that meet, Bill Correiro ofmound in Prevost's opener, fan­Apponequet ani: Joe Bartek ofning nine as ag~inst four passes. Stang cut each other's throats inIn addition, he belted a triple attempts to score "triples."and stole home against the Som­

COlreiro won the 100 anderset Raiders. broad jump but was defeated byIn other action next Monday, Bartek in the 220 which wouldSomerset will be at Old Roches­ have given hin. the "triple."ter and Holy Family will travel Bartek also won the 440 but wasto Lakeville to meet Apponequet. beaten by Correiro in the broadNorth Looks Strong jump in attempting his "triple."Bristol County league teams

will be playing their second games today. Stang High of Sturtevant 6'North Dartmouth will be at Alumni Field in Fall River to Hookface Durfee High which dropped its initial start, 3-1 in a non­ Est. 1897 league encounter to Rogers of Builders Supplies Newport. The Hilltoppers saw a ninth-inning rally fall short ' 2343 Purchase Street when Charley Harrington was New" Bedford thrown-out at home plate due WY 6-5661to a mix-up in si&nala.

THI: ANCHOR-Thurs., April, 15, 1965

Urges Courage In RcceCrisi$

NEW HAVEN (NC}-Amer-o icans were challenged here to use less prudence and more

.NEWLY APPOINTED FOOTBALL COACHES: Left moral courage in meeting the country's racial problems byto nght: James Lanagan, Coyle High of Taunton' Charles Father William J. Kenealy, S.J.. ' Connell, Stang High of No. Dartmouth; Frederi~ Bartek, professor at Boston College law

Feehan High of Attleboro. . school. He told some 2,000 persons at

the Archbishop's Conference ODName Three New Head Coaches I Human Rights in YalE! Univer­sity: "In the name of pruden.ce

Continued from Page One the football coaching staff of the we are urged to pursue the CMl­Academy in Woonsocket where Crusaders of Mt. St. James. tious course of gradualism. It is he will coach basketball. Lanagan will be only the sec­ 'true that a certain amount· of

ond grid coach in the history of gradualism, even in the practiceConnell is accepting the un­. Coyle. Bums held the job from of justice and charity, unfortu­enviable task of succeeding the inception of the'school until ?ately seems to be necessary, orprobably the best high school recently when he announced his m any event inevitable.coach in Eastern Massachusetts voluntary retirement.

when he takes over the reins But Negroes, as other men. next Fall at Stang. Lynch com­ The three new coaches appoin­ grow old. How long must they piled what many believe is the ted today are Bums'. proteges. wait? How long must their chil ­

Burns was one of the most astute dren wait? Or their grandchil ­best high school football coach­8I}d capable coaches in this area. dren?ing record ever in these parts. Lanagan has served as a gridConnell drilled the Stang line­ "All the weak and flabbyassistant to Burns.men under Lynch. human inclinations of laziness,

Bartek will be stepping into selfishness, timinity. complacen­John O'Brien, basketball coach the head coaching ranks in bas­ cy and conformism tend toat Stang High, will continue as ' ketball for the first time. He has strengthen the thesis of gradual­.. head coach of that sport but will been an assistant to Hughes ism and to support the plea ofalso move up and fulfill the since the sports program was in­ pseudo-prudence. But the greatduties of athletic director that augurated at the Attleboro dio­ cardinal virtue of prudence hashas become vacant since the ap­cesan high school. He is a broth­ nothing. whatsoever to do withpointment of Carlin Lynch to er of Pete Bartek, head football these pitiable moral weaknesses. coach at Norton High School, Prudence is not cowardice." and, another of Burns' CoylePope Counsels products.

Brazil Sailors Where A Williamsl FuneralVATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope

Paul VI urged a group of Brazil ­ Home GOOD NAMEian sailors to be faithful to their EST. 1870religion, to theIr families and 1 Washington Squaretheir motherland. Means A NEW BEDFORDSpeaking in Portuguese at an audience with the crew of the Reg. Funeral Director and GREAT DEAL

Embalmertraining ..hip Custodio de Mello, the Pope said: "The life of a PRIVATE PARKING AREA sailor, though difficult and full of sacrifices, is full of possibil ­ TEL. WY 6-8098 GEO O'HA ities for the exercisE' and devel­ ~ .., • RAopment of natural and super­natural virtues· • •

"The Lord of creation who is present in the immensity ) DEBR~~~ OIL ~ CHEVROLETstretching before your eyes is the very Lord who offered His' life for our salvation and whom ) Heating Oils ( you learned to love when you 565 MILl. STREETwere in the bosom of your Chris­ ) and Burners ,tian families.

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Page 20: 04.15.65

Mary Maguire Robert Santos Christine Mello

Youngsters at St. Mary's Home •In New Bedford Would Surprise You By Patricia Francis

"Dear Jesus, we love You," they say in unison. Th~n the small boy-s and the tiny girls ftl the kindergarten at St. Mary's School recite the Out" Father and the Hail Mary as . they kneel, hands clasped and faces reverent. .

This is how they begin their day. What does a six-year-old

know about the Mystery of ~ll time? What do kinder­gartners understand about the Mystery of all time? What do I,:indergartners understand abou'; the God Who came to earth to redeem mankind?

Listen to them. "Why did God come to earth?"

Mrs Francis J. Manning asks her small charges. Hands fly up aU 'wound the bright kinder­garter. room,

"To die on the Cross," replies \J. small bo~', shaking his head :wom'eringly,

"And why did He do that?" ''To open the gates of Heaven

for :lll good people," a solemn­faced little girl answers. . Kmdergartners accept the re­ality of God as they accept the reality of their own families.

"What did Jessus do at the Last Supper?" Mrs. Manning asks.

More small hands shoot up. "He made His body and

blooci." a young man named Timmy says. "Ane1. He said, 'You ... do that, too,' tr the apostles."

"Ttwt's what a priest does," a :voice pipes up.

"T!lat's right," Mrs. Manning says. "Who can tell me what happens at Mas!;?"

"Je~us comes right down out of heaven," answers a dark-' haired little girl in a red plaid

Birth Control Case Under Advisement

WASHINGTON (NC)-For the third time in a quarter century the U. S. Supreme Court is weighing the constitutionality of eonnecticut's 35-year-old birth eontrol laws.

Twice befGre, in 1942 and 1961, the court has been asked to Gtrike down the Connecticut laws against bh·th control. Each time it declined to rule on the merits of the case, holding either that the plaffiti.f1 lacked stand­ing to challenge the statutes or that there was no real contro­versy

The present cese, however, involves the actuel convictions flf two Planned Parenthood of­ficials who opereted a birth control clinb i.n New Haven bl'iefly in 1961.

dress:. She sounds awed by the plains shyly. "Our faces cion't thought. get I'U towels." .

What happened after the Last What happened when Jesus Supper? met the holy women?

"Jesus went to the garden to A boy lifts his face from his pray The apostles went with h9nds to say thcughtfully, "They Him. But, you kr.ow what? They were sad. But Jesus said, 'Don't fell «sleep" Little Robert sounds cry, because I want this to hap­as though he'd never fall asleep pen.' ,. if Jesus asked him to stay awake.

Thf' story of the Stations con­ •tinunl. One child after another pick" up the tale of Love.

"While Jesus was praying, the soldiers came."

"The man said Jesus must die."

"Th':lY put a crown of thorns on His head and they whipped His back··· and they made Him carry a big wood Cross."

"He fell down," a munnur runs around the room. "And the soldiers made Him get up."

Th",n Jesus met His mother. "Anrl she felt bad because He hurt ,-

Did anyone help Jesus? A boy waves his han'd. "They pulled a man out and

they made him help. The man wasn't happy. But then he looked in Jesus' face and he was happy because he kn':lw Jesus was God."

"The man's name was Simon," a girl adds.

WhG't happened next? "A lady wiped Jesus' face and

His face came right on the towel because He was God," a girl ex-

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What did Jesus want to hap. p'!,!n?

"He wanted to die on the' Cross so he could open the gates01 heaven."

Then Jesus got to Calvary,"'" • * and they ripped His clothes . off and l.t hurt because it sticks to His back."

"And they nailed His hands to the Cross and it hurt Him,' too," a small boy says soberly, looking down at his own hands•.

It was Good Friday and Jesus died hanging on the Cross.

The kindergartners are sorrr'

t1lat God hurt. They are sorry that He had to die. But the,. know He wante:! to die, ". * ., to open the gates of heaven for me and everybody."

And their momentary sorroW' is eased by the thought of the glory to come on Easter Sundar when,

"Jl::SUS got right up and walked. out of His grave-because He', God"

This is the story of the Pas­sion :md the Resurrection as the kindf'rgartners at St. Mary'. School know it. Ii there more?

"I Am The Resurrection • •11

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